Google-owned phone firm Motorola has announced a new project
to let users customise their smartphone components.
Motorola has partnered with Dutch designer Dave Hakkens, who
has created Phonebloks, a modular phone idea, on the project.
Experts were unsure on how big a shake-up for the mobile
phone industry the customisable handsets would represent.
In a blog post, Motorola said that it had been working on
the project for more than a year.
"We want to do for hardware what the Android platform
has done for software - create a vibrant, third-party developer
ecosystem," the firm wrote in a blog post.
"To give you the power to decide what your phone does,
how it looks, where and what it's made of, how much it costs and how long
you'll keep it."
The project will consist of what Motorola is calling an
endoskeleton, the frame that will hold all the modules in place.
"A module can be anything from a new application
processor to a new display or keyboard, an extra battery, a pulse oximeter - or
something not yet thought of," the firm said.
Motorola plans to begin inviting developers to create
modules in a few months time with a module developer's kit launching soon
afterwards.
Motorola came across the work of Dave Hakkens, the creator
of Phonebloks, while developing the project and asked him to team up with them.
Phonebloks has gained much interest in recent months.
Lego phone
Mr Hakkens launched Phonebloks on crowd-promoting website
Thunderclap and quickly amassed 950,000 supporters.
"We've done the deep technical work. Dave created a
community," Motorola added in its blogpost.
Chris Green, principal technology analyst at the Davies
Murphy Group consultancy, dismissed the project as a "gimmick".
"I don't see this as being a big deal. It is not
responding to any particular demand and there is no real benefit to assembling
your own device,
"The days of DIY IT, people building their own desktop
PC, are gone due to falling costs of hardware," he said.
Ben Wood, a mobile expert from CCS Insight, is equally
unsure of how mass market such a product can be.
"Creating a Lego-like phone seems on the face of it
like a great idea but the commercial realities of delivering such a device are
challenging. Consumers want small, attractive devices and a modular design
makes this extremely difficult.
"It's a nice idea on paper but whether we'll ever see a
commercial product remains to be seen. Right now it would be a great
improvement if it was easier to replace batteries and screens but even that seems
unlikely in the near term."
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