Google has developed a prototype
mobile phone that could be made freely available to users who agree to receiving
advertisements as part of a bundled service, according to reports.
The search specialist is reportedly showing the prototype to phone
manufacturers and telecoms firms, with a view to the device hitting shelves
within the year.
This is not the first set of rumours to surface about a Google-branded phone.
The search giant reportedly held talks with
operator Orange late last year about
partnering to offer a mobile device that enables web browsing. However, Google
is not expected to develop the device itself but instead looks likely to rely on
a third-party handset manufacturer. Taiwanese firm
HTC is rumoured to be the most likely candidate for supplying the hardware.
At an informal press event at its London Victoria offices on Wednesday,
engineers were tightlipped on the rumours about a Google phone. But they
passionately discussed how well the firms' applications, including
Google maps
and
Gmail,
worked on mobile platforms such as the BlackBerry.
Despite today’s flurry of new reports, Google declined to confirm any
concrete details of a forthcoming mobile device.
"What our users and partners are telling us is that they want Google search
and Google applications on mobile, and we are working hard every day to deliver
that,” a spokeswoman said. “We're partnering with carriers, manufacturers, and
content providers around the world to bring Google search and Google
applications to mobile users everywhere."
If Google does go ahead with a branded mobile device, naming it could prove a
challenge – or expensive. US-based carrier GlobalPhone already owns the
gphone.com domain name, while
googlephone.com is currently used by a site offering mobile phone downloads.
Apple faced similar difficulties with the launch of its iPhone earlier this
year, as that name was already trademarked by Cisco acquisition Infogear. It
reportedly paid at least $1m for the iphone.com domain last month, which now
directs traffic to its
apple.com/iphone web site.
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