Alphabet Inc. will not release the
Ara modular smartphone, reports Reuters. The
company was working on a smartphone with interchangeable parts before Google
became a division of Alphabet Inc. as part of a corporate restructuring scheme.
The move has seen a number of ambitious Google X projects scrapped, and Project
Ara of the search engine giant’s Advanced Technology and Projects (ATAP) is the
latest to get the boot.
The parent company apparently wants
to take a different direction when it comes to such hardware. The innovative
smartphone will not directly be released by Alphabet itself, but partners can
seek licensing agreements for its release. According to PC World, Google has
confirmed the report, but refrained from making any comments. This might
indicate that such a licensing agreement might very much be in the works, and
Project Ara might yet make it to the market eventually.
The lego blocks inspired smartphone
model came with Google’s acquisition of Motorola Mobility. The software was
subsequently peddled off to Lenovo Group Ltd. The open and free hardware
platform was expected to usher in a niche market of easily modifiable
smartphones, courtesy of Google’s hardware and software partners. This would
have provided a commendable solution to the problem of replacing phone parts,
users might be able to buy replacements for any damaged part at a reasonable
cost. They could effectively build a smartphone of their choice, even by
putting in two batteries instead of one to increase its standby time.
The possibilities were endless, but smartphone industry
players such as Apple Inc. and Samsung Electronics keep innovating in this
domain every year. The new iPhone 7 is set to come out later this month, while
Samsung even has successful tablet devices such as the Note series to keep
users busy. In short, most of the customers’ needs are already met by the
smartphone market at both the high-end and low-end range.
Alphabet Inc. has recently embarked on a mission to target profitability over innovation, assessing the long-term viability of projects. This saw the implementation of cost-cutting measures for Google Fiber, the company’s ultra-high-speed broadband cable service that now focuses on wireless Internet provision instead. Keeping this in mind, the writing was on the wall for Project Ara’s apparent discontinuation.
That said, Project Ara itself has not taken off as fast as Alphabet would have liked; most companies would give up on the concept of a smartphone that has not borne fruition after years of research, especially when the product is not marketable to the masses. A phone with literally so many variables would have been hard to keep track of, and Google was perhaps aware of the somewhat convoluted brand image it would present to its customers with the phone.
The smartphone’s plus point is that
it would have been environment-friendly, and would have reduced electronic
waste to some extent. It might have attracted some customers just for the
novelty factor, as was the case with Samsung’s Galaxy S6 Edge smartphone.
However, despite indicating at Google I/O 2016 that Project Ara was making
progress, Google has decided that the technology is not worth it.
It will be interesting to see if
modular phones still make their way in the market. It can be argued that, with
Google already laying claim to the Nexus line, a second (and notably different)
smartphone line would not have been such a bad idea. It now looks like any
modular smartphones of the future will not be directly associated with Google.
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