It’s been a busy weekend for the rumor known as the Googlephone, which has
been around for years in one form or another and has recently appeared to be
firming up into something that just might be
real<http://technologizer.com/2009/10/20/one-true-google-phone-im-skeptical-but-hopeful/>.
Very little is official, but we know a few things for sure, more scuttlebutt
has emerged, and it’s still fun to ask questions even if we have no way of
answering them yet.

Herewith, a quick recap of where we are as of early Monday morning:
*What we know*

   -

   Last week, Google doled out Android phones to employees. It admitted as
   much in a blog post Saturday
morning<http://googlemobile.blogspot.com/2009/12/android-dogfood-diet-for-holidays.html>,
   which used Silicon Valley’s always-appetizing metaphor of eating one’s own
   dogfood to explain that the phones were being used to test “new mobile
   features and capabilities.”
   -

   The phone apparently is the one in the photo above (which I stole from
   this Twitpic <http://twitpic.com/tbdig>). That would appear to make it a
   version of an upcoming HTC phone known as the
Passion<http://www.engadget.com/2009/12/07/htc-passion-runs-android-on-3-5-inch-oled-and-snapdragon-in-veri/>
   .
   -

   It’s got a trackball, obviously. If it’s a Passion variant, it also lacks
   a physical keyboard. It’s a GSM phone, which means it’ll work on AT&T and
   T-Mobile but not Verizon or Sprint. And Engadget has some more
photos<http://www.engadget.com/2009/12/14/exclusive-first-google-phone-nexus-one-photos-android-2-1-on/>and
says that it runs Android 2,1, adds “3D elements to the app tray,” and
   has Web-OS-style previews of all the home screens. In another
post<http://www.engadget.com/2009/12/14/htc-nexus-one-blessed-by-the-fcc-with-t-mobile-and-att-huspa/>,
   it says it has MicroSD, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and 7.2mbps down and 2-MBps up.
   -

   It’s named (or at least code-named) the Nexus One.

What we may know

   -

   TechCrunch says it’ll be sold
unlocked<http://www.techcrunch.com/2009/12/12/the-google-phone-unlocked-confirmed-and-more-details/>–direct
   by Google and at retailers–and adds the following details: *“The phone is
   ‘really, really fast,’ says someone who has seen one in action. It runs on a
   Snapdragon chip, has a super high-resolution OLED touchscreen, is thinner
   than the iPhone, has no keyboard, and two mics. The mic on the back of the
   phone helps eliminate background noise, and it also has a ‘weirdly’ large
   camera for a phone. And if you don’t like the touchscreen keyboard, a
   voice-to-text feature is supposed to let you dictate emails and notes by
   speaking directly into the phone.” *
   -

   All Things Digital’s Peter Kafka is reporting that Google plans to sell
   the phone without a subsidy from a wireless
carrier<http://mediamemo.allthingsd.com/20091213/google-pals-up-with-t-mobile-to-push-its-nexus-one-phone/>–but
   that T-Mobile will help market it. He doesn’t have much in the way of
   details.


What we don’t know

   -

   *Is it transcendent? *Or at least significantly better than the best
   Android phone to date, Verizon’s
Droid<http://technologizer.com/2009/10/29/verizon-droid-first-impressions/>?
   A Googlephone that’s modestly better than the competition is going to be a
   disappointment.
   -

   *How much will it cost*? If Google is simply selling it unlocked and
   trying to make a profit the old fashioned way–by charging more for the
   hardware than it costs to make–this phone is almost certainly going to cost
   $500 or more.
   -

   *Does Google have some radical business model up its sleeve? *If the user
   interface involved Google ads, might it sell the handset at a remarkably low
   price–or at least one similar to what you’d pay a carrier for a phone on a
   two-year contract–and make its profit through the commercial messages you’re
   exposed to?
   -

   *How will Google’s partners feel about a Googlephone?* If it’s
   manufactured by HTC and marketed in part by T-Mobile, they’re okay with it,
   I guess. But how about Verizon and Sprint and Motorola and Sony Ericsson and
   Samsung and every other company that’s selling or making Android phones?
   Will they accept a Googlephone willingly, grumble about it, or punish Google
   by taking their OS business elsewhere?
   -

   *Can an unlocked, unsubsidized phone be a mainstream hit in the U.S.? *I
   like to buy ‘em myself when possible–I just don’t like committing to a
   carrier if I can avoid it–but I don’t have a lot of company. Would Google
   sell a Googlephone that’s a poor-selling niche offering? Or is it going to
   try to change the way America buys phones?
   -

   *Did Google think it could give Googlephones to vast quantities of its
   own employees and keep them secret?* Or was it all a devious plot to whip
   up excitement while appearing to keep the phone hush-hush?
   -

   *Is Sascha Segan right?* The PCMag.com writer says that everybody’s
   hyperventilating over what’s probably minor
news<http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2357081,00.asp>:
   this is just a new HTC phone running a new version of Android, and possibly
   an unsubsidized T-Mobile phone that won’t appeal to many folks.

I still count myself as a supporter of the *idea* of the Googlephone: I
think most of the fresh ideas that’ll change phones over the next few years
will come from companies other than the incumbent wireless carriers and
hardware manufacturers, and I’d like to see Google’s vision of what a phone
can be in its purest form. You gotta figure that another shoe’s going to
drop–maybe several of them. At the very latest, I figure we’ll know all by
mid-February, when Mobile World Congress, the phone industry’s big show,
gets underway in Barcelona.

Any other Googlephone guesses, wishes, or doubts?


http://www.pcworld.com/article/184615-2/googles_phone_rumors_facts_and_speculation.html


-- 
Salam,

Agus Hamonangan
[email protected]

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