Soumik Bhattacharya
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Dell Thunder
Dell Thunder is running under Android 2.1. This device is expected to arrive on the market sometime in the fourth quarter of the ongoing year, bringing forth an impressive 4.1-inch touchscreen display.
Boasting features as impressive as those included in Lightning, the Dell Thunder comes with a sleek design, a 4.1-inch OLED touchscreen display that boasts a WVGA resolution, and with a custom Dell "Stage" UI on top of Google's mobile operating system. Those who are familiar with HTC's Sense solution will find some similarities with it in Dell's interface. However, the UI is heavily customized, and it is also able to offer enhanced connectivity with social networking sites, it seems.
Dell Lightning
Engadget has today posted a document outlining Dell's plans to be one of the first to market with a Windows Phone 7 device, and it's a doozy. The document outlines the specs for the as-yet-to-be-confirmed Dell Lightning, a WP7 smartphone with a 4.1-inch OLED touchscreen display, 9GB of storage (from a strange mix of 1GB internal and an 8GB microSD), a WP7-mandatory 1GHz processor, 512MB of RAM and all the connectivity options you could hope for, including the Wi-Fi 802.11n protocol.
It will also feature something we don't think you'll have seen before, a full QWERTY keyboard under a slider. To be honest, and feel free to disagree, but this keyboard seems like the kind of thing that smartphone lovers will hate, but full points to Dell for trying something new anyway.
If the documents are legit, and they certainly seem that way, we can expect the Lightning in the second-half of the year, no doubt to coincide with the official WP7 launch.
Plastic Chips Monitor Body Functions
Each year, about 80,000 people in Germany become seriously ill from occlusions of veins caused by blood clots. Such thromboses can cause pulmonary embolism or even heart attacks. Even airline passengers at long distance flights can be affected by deep vein thrombosis. But with the new system, a fast and easy test of a risk of travel-related thrombosis will soon be possible...
Airline passengers would only have to relinquish one drop of blood to the measuring device. The special feature of this miniscale lab-on-a-chip: the system is designed in plastic for an inexpensive production, sheets or reel-to-reel. This would facilitate cost-efficient manufacturing of disposable diagnostic systems. Such tiny analysis systems are still science fiction. In the EU project DVT-Imp, researchers from eight European countries are developing essential foundations for the laboratory on the plastic chip.