Google Cell Phone in the Works?
Reports say Google has developed a customized handset, is talking to cell phone 
manufacturers and wireless carriers.
Ben Ames, IDG News Service

s within a year, and plans to offer consumers free subscriptions by bundling 
advertisements
with its search engine, e-mail and Web browser software applications, according 
to a story published today in The Wall Street Journal.

Google is showing the prototype to cell phone manufacturers and network 
operators as it continues to hone the technical specifications that will allow 
the
phone to offer a better mobile Web browsing experience than current products, 
the story said.

Google did not return calls for comment.

The move would echo another recent product launched by a phone industry 
outsider, Apple Inc.'s iPhone. But Google's product would draw its revenue from
a sharply different source, relying on commercial advertising dollars instead 
of the sticker price of at least $499 for an iPhone and $60 per month for
the ATT service plan.

Negotiating the fairest way to split those advertising revenues with service 
providers could be a big hurdle for Google, one analyst said. Another problem
is the potential that consumers could be scared off by the prospect of 
listening to advertisements before being able to make phone calls, said Jeff 
Kagan,
a wireless and telecommunications industry analyst in Atlanta.

"I don't know how successful it's going to be. The model of an ad-supported 
wireless Web has not been successful over the past 10 years," he said, referring
to municipal Wi-Fi networks that offer free Internet connections to users 
willing to view advertisements while they surf the Web.

"The average adult who can afford a cell phone is not going to want to listen 
to ads. So this is mainly for teenagers, twenty-somethings, high schoolers
or people who can't afford a phone," said Kagan.

Industry watchers have long heard rumors that Google was designing its own 
mobile phone. Google added fuel to that speculation in July when it announced
it was willing to spend $4.6 billion to buy wireless spectrum in a U.S. Federal 
Communications Commission auction.

At the same time, an increasing number of industry newcomers have made bids to 
enter the market, such as Apple with the iPhone and The Walt Disney Co.,
which launched a wireless version of its ESPN cable sports channel that 
ultimately failed.

"We see the cell phone industry continuing to evolve," Kagan said. "We're still 
going to see traditional handsets, but the Apple iPhone was a brand new
category in wireless, and it wasn't from a handset vendor and wasn't from a 
network."

Google's success in its venture will depend largely on the details it is still 
defining with its manufacturing and network partners, and whether customers
are willing to trade user fees for intrusive advertising, he said.

"There are a lot of unknowns, but generally speaking, it hasn't worked yet," 
said Kagan.

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,135393/article.html

Vikas Kapoor,
MSN Id:[EMAIL PROTECTED], Yahoo+Skype Id: dl_vikas,
Mobile: (+91) 9891098137.
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