Project Ara Modular Smartphone To Cost $50 (Rumor)

Project Ara Modular Smartphone To Cost $50 (Rumor)Google looks all set to launch its first Project Ara developer’s conference this coming April, but is there all there is that meets the eye? Well, assuming Google has its very own way, it ought to cost approximately $50 a pop, assuming you have it arrive in just the standard edition minus all of the bells and whistles. In fact, the very same team behind Project Ara intends to roll out what it calls a “grayphone,” which happens to be a barebones customizable exoskeleton that will arrive with just a display, a chassis and a Wi-Fi radio to help you get started. Anything that is beyond that, it remains up to you to add on those items.

(more…)

  • Follow: Cellphones, , project ara,
  • Project Ara Modular Smartphone To Cost $50 (Rumor) original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Google To Host First Ara Developers’ Conference In April

    Google To Host First Ara Developers Conference In AprilOne of the cooler concepts that we are actually interested in seeing made a reality is Project Ara. The project was originally announced back in 2013 by Phonebloks, before it was revealed that Motorola would be helping to turn the project into an actual product. What made Project Ara so unique? Well for starters it is a completely modular phone.

    What this means is that users will be able to swap out components like battery, camera modules, flash modules, storage, and so on. Presumably third-party manufacturers would also be able to create these modules which ultimately would result in a highly-customized smartphone. (more…)

  • Follow: Cellphones, , project ara,
  • Google To Host First Ara Developers’ Conference In April original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Google’s Project Ara Modular Smartphone Gets Its Own Developer Conference This April

    Google is not abandoning Project Ara, after taking over the ambitious experimental smartphone design concept along with the Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP) group from Motorola. ATAP only just announced Tango, its 3D-environment sensor for mobile devices, and now it’s revealing a two-day developer conference April 15 and 16 at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View. Ara, for… Read More

    Google will be hosting a Project Ara Developers’ Conference this spring to walk devs through its mod

    Google will be hosting a Project Ara Developers’ Conference this spring to walk devs through its modular smartphone platform, which might one day allow people to design exactly the phone they want. Not a dev? There will be a livestream, too.

    Read more…


        



    Daily Roundup: PlayStation 4 and Xbox One comparison, unlocked iPhone 5s from Apple, Yoga Tablet review and more!

    DNP The Daily RoundUp

    You might say the day is never really done in consumer technology news. Your workday, however, hopefully draws to a close at some point. This is the Daily Roundup on Engadget, a quick peek back at the top headlines for the past 24 hours — all handpicked by the editors here at the site. Click on through the break, and enjoy.

    Filed under: ,

    Comments

    Motorola Teams Up With 3D Systems: Project Ara One Step Closer To Reality

    Motorola Teams Up With 3D Systems: Project Ara One Step Closer To RealityIf you recall, it was a couple of months ago that we reported on Phonebloks a modular smartphone concept which sounded like a great idea, not only in terms of allowing customers to customize their phones, but a great way to save the environment as ruined components could easily be swapped out instead of throwing the whole phone away. Motorola announced that they would be working with Phonebloks to make the project a reality, announcing Project Ara in the process. Well the good news for those who loved the idea is that it looks like the phone is one step closer to becoming a reality.

    3D Systems has recently announced that they will be partnering up with Motorola to create a high-speed 3D printing platform for Project Ara. This deal is expected to last for the new few years, and if successful, will also see 3D Systems create their own smartphone enclosures and modules and will Motorola’s “exclusive fulfillment partner”. According to Avi Reichental, President and CEO of 3D Systems, “Project Ara was conceived to build a platform that empowers consumers all over the world with customization for a product made by and for the individual […] 3D printing promotes a level of sustainability, functionality, and mass personalization that turns these kinds of global ambitions into attainable local realities. Project Ara combines two exponential technologies, and we expect that the resulting high-throughput advanced manufacturing platform will have far reaching implications on the entire digital thread that stitches together the factory of the future.”

    There’s still no telling when Project Ara will start making its way into the hands of consumers around the world, but it definitely looks like we are one step closer to that happening. So, who else is excited?

  • Follow: CellPhones, , project ara,
  • Motorola Teams Up With 3D Systems: Project Ara One Step Closer To Reality original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    Motorola Taps 3D Systems To Produce Parts For Its Crazy Modular Smartphones

    Back when Motorola revealed that it’s seriously trying to bring modular smartphones to the masses, it left more than a few of the particulars shrouded in secrecy. Granted, that’s probably because most of the particulars haven’t even been fleshed out yet, but the Google subsidiary is slowly starting to reveal its vision for how these crazy things will actually be made.

    Their approach? 3D printing, and lots of it. Motorola has just announced that it’s locked up an exclusive partnership with 3D Systems that will see that printing pioneer producing “Ara smartphone enclosures” and the nifty component modules that snap onto the phone’s main body.

    Haven’t been keeping tabs on Project Ara? Here’s the gist of it – Motorola has apparently grown a little weary of the traditional notion of a smartphone where all of the things that make it tick are wrapped up in a plastic body, away from curious eyes and prodding fingers. Now that Motorola has basically inherited Google’s penchant for kooky ideas (not to mention the money), it’s working on creating a phone body with a display (they call it an “endoskeleton”) that users will ultimately be able to snap new components into as needed. Growing weary of your old camera? Pop a new one on there. Need a snappier processor? That’s not out of the realm of possibility.

    Now 3D Systems is an interesting player, to say the least – while it’s devoted resources to cracking the consumer market with low-cost printers and 3D scanners for the past two years or so, it’s bread and butter continues to be the sort of hefty, industrial printers that can turn around jobs at a much faster rate. That’s not to say that the company in its current form is ready for the sort of rigor Project Ara demands, so 3D Systems has apparently been asked to create a “high-speed production platform” to churn out those modules and enclosures with the quickness. At this point there’s still no word on when production will start (Motorola is still soliciting early feedback from its so-called “Ara Scouts”) but the company has said that it’s aiming to get the alpha version of its Module Development Kit out the door and into hackers’ hands some time this Winter.

    Motorola’s Project Ara Announced: Modular Smartphones Are Coming

    Motorolas Project Ara Announced: Modular Smartphones Are ComingModular smartphones are an interesting idea and earlier in September the Phonebloks concept was revealed. Well it looks like that concept will soon become a reality as Motorola has recently announced Project Ara, an open-source initiative that will support third-party hardware development for individual phone components, ultimately allowing users to mix and match the perfect smartphone for themselves. Motorola will be working with Phonebloks and will be engaging with the Phonebloks community to help make their idea a reality by combining their ideas together with Motorola’s technical expertise.

    For those unfamiliar with Phonebloks, the idea behind it is to create a modular smartphone where certain components can be switched out and upgraded individually without having to buy an entirely new phone. The device will consist of a basic structure and the modules can range from cameras, to displays, to keyboards, to batteries, or the more unusual such as a pulse oximeter, according to Motorola. Motorola will soon start to reach out to developers to start creating Ara modules with a developer’s alpha kit to be released this winter. Interested developers can head on over to Motorola’s website to sign up to be an Ara Scout. Sounds like exciting times are ahead of us!

  • Follow: CellPhones, , project ara,
  • Motorola’s Project Ara Announced: Modular Smartphones Are Coming original content from Ubergizmo.