The Dell Streak 5 (previously known as the Dell Mini 5) is a phablet that uses the Android operating system, released in 2010. It comes with a capacitive touchscreen and two cameras, a 5Megapixel one with dual-LED flash on the back and a VGA-resolution one on the front for video calling; both are capable of video.
The three buttons at the bottom (or right, when held in its normal Page orientation) are capacitive. The Android buttons used are Home, Menu, and Back. It features a Dell skin on top and has a cradle adapter with HDMI out. The phone lacks the navigational trackball found in many previous Android devices. While FM radio support is not an official feature, an FM radio chip was found upon inspection of the Streak's internal hardware, and can be accessed though a user's modification of the OS.
A seven-inch version of the Streak was announced at the Consumer Electronics Show in January 2011. The Wall Street Journal reviewed it unfavorably in February. Dell Streak 7 is No Real Deal Wall Street Journal 2011 Feb 09 A long-rumored ten-inch model went on sale in August in China. Streak 10 makes global debut in China VR-Zone, 19 July 2011
Dell discontinued the Streak 5 on as of August 15, 2011. Customers attempting to purchase the device were directed to a "Good Bye, Streak 5" landing page. The larger Streak 7 was discontinued on December 2, 2011; Dell continued to sell a 10-inch tablet in China at that time. Another Streak Tablet Bites the Dust PCWorld. 2011-12-05
There is a root method for the Dell Streak, and many roms are available, including iterations of the CyanogenMod ROM. These are available from the xda-developers website along with other ROMS.
InfoWorld has suggested that Dell treated the Streak as a "Frankenphone business", where OEMs see tablets as a short-term, low-investment opportunity running Android OS, but this approach neglected the user interface and this failed to gain long term market traction with consumers.
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