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Google Working on a Mobile Phone? 118

An anonymous reader writes "Are the boys from Mountain View planning a move into mobile hardware? silicon.com has been encouraging analysts to dissect rumours that the search giant has designs on building a mobile. It says 'If Google were to get into the device game, it would be more likely to concentrate on the wi-fi side of things — perhaps a single-mode VoIP phone optimised for Google services such as Gmail.'"
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Google Working on a Mobile Phone?

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  • Pure Data Phone (Score:3, Insightful)

    by proc_tarry ( 704097 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @09:55AM (#18346539)
    It's about time someone develops a pure data phone for GSM, and not sell it through one of the carriers. But instead sell it independently, and have the users get their own SIM through a carrier and sign up for a data only plan. Then have VoIP, or whatever, I'm not a techie, but someone could figure it out.

    Why phones remain tethered to carriers is beyond me. They give away the phones so they can ream you with the monthly charge. I got pay-as-you-go via t-mobile & I pay much less, and without a contract, than a monthly plan.
  • hooray! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by TinBromide ( 921574 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:06AM (#18346677)
    Hooray for gPhone!!!

    I wonder who has that trademark?

    However, i can understand the need for a fully searchable sms archive and address book (oh goodness! how will i ever find out which girls sent me a message "u r a qt"!?), and i also understand google's impulse to get a phone into the market before microsoft, I'd prefer to let them do what they do best - Create really nifty and usable online apps that cease to work when you can't get online. I don't use vonage for my phone line because i can't fathom my voice communications being dependent on my online connectivity and not the other way around. I've seen dsl not work but still be able to take/make calls, but never vice versa. So, unless the gphone works on mobile carriers (good) and internet access through that way, I'm not sure it'll do very well.

    For the record: Competing with iphone = good. Competing with vonage? Redundant and i'm not sure how google can improve an internet phone in any useful way unless they roll out a phone over internet service to compete on a full scale.
  • by 91degrees ( 207121 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:08AM (#18346703) Journal
    Google is a web service company. Branching out into electrnics makes no sense. I could imagine them banching into mobile services, and maybe even partnering with an exisiting company to make a specialised handset, but making a mobile phone? It doesn't mnake sense.
  • by MosesJones ( 55544 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:11AM (#18346751) Homepage
    Okay so they are getting into mobile hardware, but why stop there lets add other things to "consider" that will generate more buzz

    1) Google are getting into the MP3 player market, it will have a 1TB disk hence Google's search dominance will be critical
    2) Google are going to buy Garmin and merge GPS with Google Earth over WiFi and 3G connections
    3) Google are going to develop snowboards with integrated messaging and mapping to help you get the best tracks

    There must be a load more wild speculations that we can add in, something around them buying Sony & Viacom & lots of other media companies to make sure they don't get sued.

    Google truly are the new apple, they can generate news on what people think they might do, not just what they say they will do (Microsoft) or have done (IBM).
  • Re:Pure Data Phone (Score:4, Insightful)

    by marcello_dl ( 667940 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:21AM (#18346889) Homepage Journal
    Think a single company having control on your email and phone conversation, your position and your internet browsing. I don't assert they're particularly evil (i use gmail too) but I don't feel comfortable anyway.
  • Re:Pure Data Phone (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:29AM (#18347009)
    Um, it is already this way for some people with those omnipresent telecoms like AT&T and Verizon; so, how is this any different?
  • by altoz ( 653655 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:38AM (#18347161)
    Contextual Ads, my man. Think about it, you're in some city and are walking to meet a friend (stored on google calendar, of course). The gPhone GPS gives you a contextual ad showing that there's a new cafe about 2 blocks away with exact directions on how to get there. There's also a new movie playing at the movie theater you guys are going to anyway, and of course, you can order the tickets direct without having to stand in line. And by the way, the restaurant near by also would like your attention. Maybe you can even pay for the meal with your google checkout account and receive a $10 discount. The possibilities are endless. The thing that a phone gives google is the ability to be where the user is at.

    Organizing information is their thing. It's much more useful if the information is there at your fingertips.
  • Re:VOIP phone? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Silverstrike ( 170889 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:46AM (#18347269)
    I know you were being funny, but in all seriousness, its not an absurd idea.

    Go back to 1950 and ask the IBM engineers if they thought that in 2007 we'd have terabyte storage systems on our desks with over 3 Ghz processors.

    Remember, anything that you don't understand, is by default magic.
  • Doubt it (Score:3, Insightful)

    by iabervon ( 1971 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:51AM (#18347351) Homepage Journal
    So far, Google hasn't made any physical products. They haven't sold anything to consumers (except for Google Earth Plus, which Keyhold was already selling when they bought them). They haven't designed or produced any custom hardware.

    Google is almost certainly working on mobile phone stuff, because, by policy, people work on random stuff part of the time, and mobile phones aren't quite so uninteresting that nobody at Google would care about them at all. But they don't have the right skill set to be trying to make their own phone. I'd say what this is about is trying to make a standard Google Talk program for a range of phones. And I could see them doing something where you can link your Google Talk account to your cell phone so your contacts can start a voice call on your phone by selecting your Google account.
  • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @10:59AM (#18347479) Homepage Journal

    Google is a web service company.


    Is it? It wasn't so long ago, after all, that it was a search engine company.

    One of the interesting things about Google is the options that its enormous technology assets give it. Google maps and Google mail are in a sense a side effect of Google's technological capability of handling massive amounts of data and requests for that data.

    One mysterious thing they have been doing is buying/leasing lots of dark fiber. Dark fiber is capacity that was added when long distance cables were laid, because the marginal cost of adding capacity was negligible compared to the cost of running the cable. 97% of the fiber in the US is "dark".

    Possibly a web services company might by some dark fiber to link its data centers together, but reports are that Google is investing as much as 1.25 billion dollars. That's a lot of dough to spend on something you don't have explicit plans to use.

    Cringley thinks they are preparing for the time in the not too distant future that video brings the Internet to its knees, in which case they will step in and offer a solution -- for a price. Given the YouTube acquisition, it seems plausible that they're thinking in that direction.

    But one thing that is clear is that while they are not a communications company like Sprint is today, they are at least keeping the option to do something that involves moving tons of data around. If they do, those companies already in the business aren't going to be happy. If they were preparing an entry into wireless services -- well, that's a market that's begging to be shook up. If you've ever used TCP/IP over a cell phone, and needed to call support, you'll know that wireless companies are really ambivalent about it. They don't want to become pushers of commodity bandwidth.

    Maybe Google is contemplating an end run around the net neutrality debate. Wireless companies are the poster children for the evils of non-net-neutrality. If the move towards wireless skews the market toward the current wireless providers, the Internet will be balkanized into a bunch of minimally connected proprietary AOLs. This would be bad for Google, which mostly makes it money off of people accessing data held by third parties. On the theory that the best defense is a good offense, the best time to react to that is now when they have the cash.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 14, 2007 @11:55AM (#18348251)
    Every bloody article about phones and some wanker who can not be arsed to look at *any* of the fucking mobile phone manufacturers posts this.

    Yes "simple" mobile phones still fucking exist you twat.

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