The E in DELL is tilted because when Michael Dell was creating the design he cut out big letters spelling D-E-L-L. When he went to sleep that night a minor earthquake struck and in the morning the E was tilted he saw it and like it.
The E in dell is slanted to represent a 30% annual increase in profit, which was accurate for the most part when dell was first 'big' but has since been more-so on a roller-coaster (going up and down)
The reason I know this is because I am an Ex-Dell employee (thanks to their layoff of thousands of Americans for outsourcing) But that's one of the first things we were taught, and I'm pretty sure it's an insider knowledge-base and not meant to be shared, but I'm sharing it because I no longer work for them and no longer care!
Because the E that is at an angle is part of their logo to make it unique so everyone could recognise that it is DELL.
Cuz it can bee tilted bittchh wish sumbodii could put it on here so ii can copy ndd paste ithd
it is named after Michael dell....
I think it is DELL but with the E slanted
Its because DELL is a computer company and the E looks like a floppy drive going into a computer
The Dell logo (the slanted E) is simply the building(s) where Dell manufactured- much like the logo of our own company which had a another letter (slanted F). Above answer is not correct. Siegel+Gale developed the Dell logo. The slanted E represents Michael Dell's wish to "turn the world on its ear". The runner up logo sits behind Alan Siegel's desk in NYC.
a slanted letter
Roberta E. Dell has written: 'The United States against Bergdoll'
Dell is overall a better computer than E Machines. Dell also offers on their website computers that you can customize to your specific wants and needs.
crepe with a dash slanted down on the left on the first e
Dell System E-Support Tool
you can go on youtube and type in "what is micheal dell's phone number"
The Dell E is a business catalog. They have a number of computer products for sale there including PC computers, laptops and accessories to be used with them.
The word for after in French is apres (with a slanted left downward accent on the e).
No, it doesn't.