Dell to Make Android Phones for AT&T
By wchung | 19 Mar, 2026
Dell Inc. is working on a “smart” phone for AT&T that runs Google Inc.‘s Android phone operating system, according to a newspaper report Wednesday.
The touch-screen phone could be ready early next year, The Wall Street Journal reported. Representatives for Dell, AT&T Inc. and Google all declined to comment.
In the year since the economic meltdown, businesses and consumers have sharply cut back spending on Dell’s main products — computers and servers. Research groups IDC and Gartner Inc. have both predicted a year-over-year decline in PC shipments in 2009, which would be the first such drop since 2001.
Mobile is one area where Dell sees a chance to expand and diversify. Dell hired Ron Garriques, a Motorola cell-phone division executive, to lead its consumer technology group in 2007. That sparked rumors that the PC maker was readying a smart phone.
Garriques told analysts at a meeting in July that wireless carriers want a consumer “solution” from Dell, but didn’t give any specific details about design, hardware or software plans.
In August, Dell showed off what appeared to be a smart phone at a Beijing event hosted by China’s biggest cell phone carrier, China Mobile. The Round Rock, Texas-based PC maker said it was a “proof of concept mobile device prototype.”
Android, which is free for phone makers to use and modify, is increasingly making its way onto higher-end phones as a potential rival to Apple’s Inc.‘s iPhone. AT&T is the iPhone’s exclusive carrier in the U.S., but AT&T has not shied away from offering competing units, such as BlackBerry devices and phones that run Microsoft Corp.‘s Windows Mobile software.
10/7/2009 5:42 PM SEATTLE (AP)
Articles
- Musk Says SpaceX AI to Keep Ordering Nvidia GPUs at Scale
- Apple's China Smartphone Sales Jump 23%
- Heavy Social Media Use Found to Erode Well-Being of Young Adults
- Pop Mart Taps Sony to Produce Labubu Movie
- Tariffs Keep Inflation Elevated, Says Powell
- How the Number 3 Smartphone Maker Did What Apple and Samsung Couldn't
- Japan Sets February Record with 3.46 Million Foreign Visitors
- Microsoft Considers Suit Against Partner OpenAI Over $50-Billion Cloud Deal
- Samsung Union Approves Strike Plan to Worsen Global Memory Chip Shortage
- Japan Pressured to Violate Pacifist Constitution, Send Escort Ships
