Dell Venue Pro Specs

8.5
PhoneArena Score
Dell Venue Pro Review
9.3

Description

Dell Venue Pro meshes functionality and style together to offer a compelling offering to the new beginnings that Windows Phone 7 is about to embark upon. The Dell Venue Pro is a portrait slider smartphone that features some truly awe-inspiring specs that perfectly matches its sweet and sexy exterior look that brings some attention to a form factor that usually gets little notice. It features a 4.1” AMOLED touchscreen, 1GHz QSD8250 Snapdragon processor, 5-megapixel auto-focus camera, 8GB internal storage, 512MB RAM, 1GB ROM, GPS, FM Radio and full Flash support including playback.


The phone is offered unlocked or with T-Mobile USA service plans through Dell.com, and not directly by T-Mobile.

This device is also known as Dell Lightning

Pros

  • Hardware QWERTY keyboard

Cons

  • Thick body (0.59 inches)
I want it 19 users
I have it 12 users
I had it 10 users

Popular Comparisons

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Display

Size: 4.1 inches
Resolution: 800 x 480 pixels, 228 PPI
Technology: AMOLED
Screen-to-body: 61.34 %
Features: Scratch-resistant glass, Ambient light sensor, Proximity sensor

Hardware

System chip: Qualcomm Snapdragon S1 QSD8250
Processor: Single core, 1000 MHz, Scorpion
GPU: Adreno 200
RAM: 0.5GB
Internal storage: 8GB
OS: Windows Phone, 7.5 Mango
ROM: 1024 MB
Device type: Smartphone

Battery

Capacity: 1400 mAh
Type: Li - Ion, User replaceable

Camera

Rear: Single camera
Main camera: 5 MP (Autofocus)
Flash: LED
Video recording: 1280x720 (HD) (24 fps)
Dimensions: 4.76 x 2.54 x 0.59 inches (121 x 64.4 x 14.9 mm)
Weight: 6.74 oz (191.0 g)
Features: Full keyboard
Keys: Right: Volume control, Camera shutter

Cellular

3G: Bands 1(2100), 4(1700/2100), 8(900)
Data Speed: HSDPA 7.2 Mbit/s, HSUPA 5.76 Mbit/s, UMTS

Multimedia

Headphones: 3.5mm jack
Radio: FM

Connectivity & Features

Bluetooth: 2.1, EDR
Wi-Fi: 802.11 b, g, n
USB: microUSB, USB 2.0
Features: Charging
Hearing aid compatible: M3
Location: A-GPS
Sensors: Accelerometer, Compass
Other: Computer sync, OTA sync

Regulatory Approval

FCC approval:
Date approved: Nov 02, 2010
FCC ID value: E2KV02S002
Measured SAR:
Head: 1.12 W/kg
Measured in: 1700 MHz
Body: 1.39 W/kg
Measured in: 850 MHz

Buyers information

Price: $ 450

Availability

Oct 11, 2010
Officially announced: Yes
Despite our efforts to provide full and correct Dell Venue Pro specifications, there is always a possibility of admitting a mistake. If you see any wrong or incomplete data, please

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Alternative variants

Dell Venue Pro 16GB
Differences from the main variant:
Internal storage: 16GB
OS: 7.5 Mango

News

User Reviews

Overall User Rating
Build quality
10
Camera quality
8
Performance
9.7
Display
10
Battery life and charging
9.3
Rating breakdown (out of 10)
10
Amazing Phone, Stunning Looks and Price.
Phone owned for less than a year

Bought the Dell Venue Pro back in December of last year (2011) and I love this phone. In a world of boring standard square smartphones, the Venue Pro breaks the style mold. It's curvy, smooth and shiny on all fronts. With a screen that is actually curved it's a real head turner.
The phone has a gorilla glass AMOLED screen and let's just say I've dropped it a few times (I've got a phone armor shield on everything but the screen) and the screen hasn't scratched or chipped at all.
On a phone this big I'd expect battery life to be terrible, however... I leave Bluetooth and WIFI on 24/7 and i get a full days use of it. My HTC Aria would be lucky to get 12 hours without that stuff turned on.
Another reason I bought the phone was for the slide-out QWERTY keyboard, turns out however, the on-screen keyboard is so good that I rarely ever use the physical keyboard.
Although the DVP is only a single core with 512mb of ram, you wouldn't know it. WP7.5 is so smooth (made for single core) that I feel like I'm running a dual core 1.5ghz processor with at least a gig of ram. I guess it just proves how bloated Android is.
I "hacked" my phone to take out the standard 8gb microSD and put in a 32gb microSD, it works fine for storage and movies and on a daily basis but I have noticed the phone kinda lags a bit on some functions and wired sync to zune on my computers no longer works (although wireless sync does), 8gb of storage (what it came with) isn't very much now-a-days but my memory card swap definitely made the phone worse performing...
My only real complaint with the DVP is that game developers haven't made cross-platform games (like Words with friends, Draw Something, etc) for WP7 yet, so although you can play great xboxlive games and great WP7 only games, for the time being you'll not be able to play with android or the iphone...
Other than that complaint, I notice the phone thinks it has no service when it does (I didn't mark this as a real complaint because this very well may be a symptom of my memory card swap because the phone always has service, it just thinks it doesn't sometimes).
Overall, it's a great phone, and if you tweak the camera settings (drop exposure compensation to -.7) you can make the camera work perfectly.

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9
I wanted to like this phone
Phone owned for less than a month

I've had a Palm Treo forever, if not longer, and know it is time to move on, The DVP has a portrait keyboard. The Venue Pro is a great phone, well built, comfortable, responsive. Windows Phone 7 is great smooth, responsive, and one of the best things Microsoft has come up with.
Here comes the Cons, dell support and the bluetooth signal from the phone to the headset. Since Dell is the only retailer to get this phone, you have ot go through them to get a reapir or placement. i called about the bluetooth issue and was told it woul dbe 5-7 days for a replacement phone. Unacceptable when you need your phone on a daily basis, i use approximately 7000 minutes a month. So, i am on my second unit, same problem. The volume isn't lound enough from the phone to the headset. Turned the volume up on both the phone and headset, i even bought a new headset, nope..
So unless you use a wired headset, and where do you get those, or hold the phone to your ear, not an option for me, it had to go back.

So now i must decide between staying with Windows mobile 7 and remaining hopeful that it will be around for some time and use a HTC Arrive since it has a phyiscal keyboard, or go old school and return to the truly the OS that made everything else possible PALM.

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9
Love IT
Phone owned for more than a year

This is my old review when I first got the phone

>>>>>

Let me first say this is the most beautiful phone I have ever owned. It feels great in the hand. Some say its heavy, I tend to find it perfect. The 4.1 screen is perfect, and when you slide it to open the keyboard, it doesnt affect the balance. The keyboard is fantastic.. I have large hands and I actually find it works very well. The buttons are raised perfectly so you can feel each one. I prefer it over the onscreen buttons that my big fingers never seem to hit the right button. Being a Dash 3G and Blackberry user I much prefer this style of keyboard over the landsacape mode.

The only gripes I have with it are mainly in regards to Windows Phone 7. Mind you I Love the WP7 OS, its feel, look and usefullness. Its the missing things that bother me.. primarily tethering. I use my phone a few times a month as a modem and not having that feature, does irritate me a bit.

Speed of the OS is perfect.. the speed of the internet service seems to be the biggest bottleneck. I found my old Dash 3G took ample advantage of T-mobiles HSPDA+ network to the tune of 1.2 - 2 MB download speeds. On average the DVP gets about 800K, not terrible, not sure it's the local T-mobile towers or the phone.

As for call quality and speaker sound. I find both to be clear and loud. Without any "static" the video reviewer mentioned.

Overall.. this is a classy, very professional looking phone. The unique form factor is really useful and makes the phone a standout. No matter the OS.

>>>>>

I used this phone for 2 years ( A lifetime in smartphone technology). But upgrading it to 7.8 really opened the phone up and gave it extra life. But alas LTE speeds and a better camera got me in the end. That said, this is still my backup and I have replaced or repaired at least 6 of these over two years.. ( Not phones fault I am a HEAVY user on my phone ).

Overall if your considering this as a economical phone or NEED a QWERTY with the limited options out there. You can get them pretty cheap now on eBay and they are still a good phone.

Just which an update to the this model came to be in the future.

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