Technology that could power tomorrow’s handsets was on show at this week’s
Mobile World Congress (MWC) in
Barcelona, including Google’s
Android platform, and a
programmable radio that can be configured for different network standards.
Chip makers including ARM and Texas Instruments showed off prototype hardware
running Google’s Android phone platform, which is based on Linux and provides
email and other applications. LG Electronics also reiterated its plans to
release an Android-based device as early as this year.
Google also released an update of the Android
SDK,
promising a simpler user interface and improved location-based tools. Bloggers
said the additions took the technology much closer to production quality.
However, BKI Media mobile search analyst Bena Roberts was scathing about the
prospect of Android devices.
“Android lets Google get onto mobiles via developers and widgets, and use
third-party services to trigger deals, but this is not the best approach for
mobile or advertising,” Roberts said. “Yahoo has focused on mobile search and
advertising and done it right. Google got over confident in mobile too quickly
and it will feel the pinch.”
While Nokia announced at the show that it would integrate Google search
within its own mobile search platform, T-Mobile revealed it was dropping Google
in favour of Yahoo. T-Mobile and Yahoo will optimise and further develop mobile
services including instant messaging and email.
“Nokia’s own attempts to do search have failed and it is checking out the
competitors,” Roberts explained. “T-Mobile is saying that the mobile internet
should be considered in its own right and Yahoo is the best at providing it.”
Elsewhere, the GSM
Association announced that in future it will welcome operators of Long-Term
Evolution (LTE) networks into the association. LTE is an upgrade path for the
GSM/UMTS technology that underpins GSM and 3G networks, and is due to launch
commercially in 2009. It holds out the promise of download speeds up to
100Mbit/s and upload speeds up to 50Mbit/s.
BitWave Semiconductor
launched the world’s first programmable transceiver for handsets. The BW1102
Softransceiver chip is software configurable across all channels in the
frequency bands between 700MHz and 3.8GHz, the firm said, enabling it to operate
multiple wireless protocols such as GSM, GPRS, HSDPA, 802.11b/g, and LTE in
future.
“Handset designers can now provide one model that works on any network, at
any frequency, using any protocol, anywhere,” said BitWave chief Michael Farese.
Vendors can future-proof designs by upgrading them in the field to support
additional standards, he added.
Linux was the focus of many other announcements at the event.
Trolltech released
version 4.3 of its Qtopia Phone Edition platform for Linux-based phones, which
adds support for touch-based user interfaces and a new Qtopia Sync Agent that
can synchronise with Microsoft Outlook.
DataViz also unveiled a Linux version
of its Documents To Go software that enables users to open and view Word, Excel
and PowerPoint email attachments on handsets. The tool is shipping with
MontaVista’s Mobilinux 5.0 phone platform.
Sony Ericsson used the MWC show to unveil its first phone running Microsoft’s
Windows Mobile software. The Xperia X1 has a 3in VGA display that slides to one
side to reveal a full qwerty keyboard and supports HSDPA and Wi-Fi
communications.
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