[url=http://www.smh.com.au/digital-life/mobiles/motorolas-project-ara-the-modular-phone-you-can-build-yourself-20131030-2wewp.html]I just learned about this and I think it's genius.[/url]
[quote]Motorola wants to let consumers design their own smartphones.
The Google-owned manufacturer has launched Project Ara to create a free, open and standardised platform to let people pick and choose the components they want in their phones, Motorola said in a blog post.
The goal is to create a standard endoskeleton, or frame, that can hold different modules, such as a battery, a physical keyboard, a screen, a camera, an extra-powerful processor or memory chips for storing more music, all based on the customer's preferences.
An early design for Project Ara.
An early design for Project Ara.
"Our goal is to drive a more thoughtful, expressive, and open relationship between users, developers and their phones. 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," Motorola said.
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Motorola's vision of do-it-yourself smartphones builds on parent company Google's success with its widely used Android smartphone platform, which it offers for free and allows manufacturers to customise. Android also gives people more leeway to tweak the features on their smartphones than Apple's iOS platform offers to iPhone users.
Motorola said it has been working on Project Ara for more than a year and that it recently teamed up with Phonebloks, an open source project that has also been working on creating modular smartphone components that can be easily replaced.
The announcement of Ara follows Motorola's launch earlier this year of the Moto X smartphone, which lets customers choose the colours of the front and back panels and buttons.
On its website, Phonebloks envisions an online store letting consumers read reviews of smartphone components, order custom-designed handsets and shop for new and used parts.
Project Ara is also a bit of a throwback to when many technology-handy consumers assembled their own desktop PCs using hard drives, power supplies, CPUs and other custom-picked components.
That has become slightly less common as laptops, which are more difficult to customise, have become more widely used, but computer components are still made at standard sizes that can be slotted into most PCs.
Motorola said it will work on the project openly and create experimental modules. It plans to invite developers and recruit "Ara scouts" to help research and shape the project.[/quote]
What do you think of this? Would you buy one?
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You watched the phil defranco show and now you made a blog about it and how it will revolutionize X part of your life. Sorry to get all hipster. But i saw this a while ago, good thing Google got on it.