¿WHAT IS ARA´S PROJECT
MODULAR PHONE OF GOOGLE?
We've
been keeping an eye on the progress of Google's Project Ara for a while now,
and the radio silence had us a little worried. The idea for a modular
smartphone, where individual hardware components like cameras, speakers and
battery packs can be easily swapped out to customize your device, was too
intriguing to languish in limbo. But Ara will languish no more, as the tech
giant gave the project some much needed attention at its I/O conference last
week. We now know a lot more about how the system works, how it fits into the
current landscape of modular phones and why we should be (at least cautiously)
excited about it.
As
consumers, we're already used to customizing our phones, whether it's
downloading apps according to our lifestyle, or picking out cases based on our
sense of style (or tendency to drop the phone). The concept of modular
smartphones takes that several steps further, allowing us to essentially build
our own phone, picking and choosing the hardware pieces we want. Are you
constantly snapping and Instagramming photos? Slide in a higher resolution
camera. Go camping a lot and can't charge your phone for a few days? Take an
extended battery pack with you. As new hardware is released or if something
breaks, upgrading individual pieces is cheaper, easier and less wasteful than
just binning the whole phone and starting over.
Phone
modularity is an ambitious idea, and it's one that could completely change the
industry and the direction of technology for years to come – or it could just
peter out into nothing. Google is obviously banking on the former, devoting ten
minutes of an I/O talk last week to reassuring us that Project Ara is still
coming, and revealing some features for consumers and technical details for
developers.
If
you'd asked us a week ago how much confidence we had in Project Ara being
revolutionary, we probably would've grimaced and pointed to the grave of Google
Glass. But with this new batch of info, we want to believe this is the next
generation of smartphones. We don't yet, but we want to.
Rafa
Camargo, the Technical and Engineering Lead at Google's Advanced Technology and
Projects (ATAP) division, explained the specifics. The Ara frame contains the
hardware essentials – CPU, GPU, antennas, sensors, battery and screen – so
module makers don't need to worry about the basics. "Developers can focus
on their technology, while users will be guaranteed a consistent user experience
when using Ara modules," Camargo says.
There
are six slots for these modules, and Camargo was quick to assure us that all
slots are generic and will support any functionality, so pieces can be put
anywhere in the frame. Greybus, the Ara software stack, enables runtime
detection of modules, so it's plug-and-play with no need to reboot the device
or hunt down drivers.
Future-proofing
is a key concern as well. "Current modules will work with future frames,
future modules will work with current frames, protecting the investment of both
users and developers," says Camargo. These future frames could be larger
or smaller, or cryptically, "something completely different than a
smartphone." Color us intrigued.
"Completely
different" seems like a running theme with Project Ara. Several times
during the presentation, the speakers mentioned Ara bringing in technology that
we've never seen in a smartphone, and it seems plausible: some features might
be too niche and expensive to bother building into a phone, but make it an
optional module and it suddenly becomes a whole lot more viable. A phone with a
built-in 3D camera might struggle to earn its keep, but there's probably a
market for a 3D camera Ara module. And that's just an easy example: developers
could come up with far more inventive things for our phones to do.
Along
with the expected modules like better speakers, cameras, or expandable storage,
ATAP's Head of Creative, Blaise Bertrand, discussed the example of a
glucometer, the device people with diabetes use to check their blood sugar
levels. Incorporating that into a module would allow people to perform their
readings from their phone, without having to carry around an extra device.
Those readings can be given context from data on your phone, like whether you
were exercising or sitting beforehand, and show how that affects the
measurement. Again, not everyone will need a glucometer, but for the
approximately 6 million diabetic Americans who use one several times a day, the
module could prove handy.
Ideas
like this will sell people on the device, but a few other factors we haven't
heard about yet could swing people either way. Module pricing is a potential
stumbling block, considering consumers will need to fork out for multiple
pieces of their phone, but with the starting price of only US$50 for the frame,
that still leaves a lot of room in someone's new-phone budget for some
splurging. Not to mention that the sometimes-daunting task of shopping around
for a new phone is all but removed completely: it's an attractive prospect to
know you can change your mind later, and won't be locked into a phone full of
features you don't use.
It's
important to note the arena that Project Ara is entering, too. Modular
smartphones aren't entirely new (LG already has one on the market ... sort of), but Google looks to be in a
good position now – largely because the company has snapped up the rights to
previous attempts at the technology. Believe it or not, we've had modular
smartphone concepts almost as long as we've had the smartphone itself.
The
first modular mobiles came out way back in 2008. Called Modu, from the Israeli company of the same name, the
device utilized different "jackets", or cases, that added functions
like MP3 playback, keyboards and hands-free calling capabilities – all things
we expect on even the most basic phones now.
Modu
never really took off, and the company went under in January 2011. A few months
later, who else but Google snapped up the rights to several of Modu's patents.
After spending US$4.9 million, we're inclined to think that at least the shadow
of the tech is at work in Project Ara.
In
2013, the concept resurfaced as PhoneBloks, spearheaded by Dutch designer Dave Hakkens.
His primary goal was to reduce the amount of e-waste we, as a
"throwaway" society, produce. Declaring it "a phone worth
keeping", Hakkens wanted people to switch out broken or unwanted pieces,
rather than ditching a whole phone when something stops working or we just feel
like an upgrade.
Hakkens
launched a social media campaign aimed at enticing developers and companies to
jump on board, and Motorola Mobility, under the extensive Google umbrella,
revealed it had been working on a similar concept (thanks to Modu?) for the
past year. The two joined forces, with Motorola developing the hardware and
Phonebloks essentially maintaining the project's social media voice and
presence.
Today,
a couple of similar products exist, but none that really pose a threat to
Project Ara. Released in September 2015, the FairPhone 2 was the
first commercially available modular phone, but it has very different goals.
Its modularity isn't so much for customization as it is to allow the user to
repair components themselves, but even that takes a backseat to the company's
primary goal, which is right there in the name: ensuring fair trade practices,
that all of its components are responsibly sourced, and its factory workers
worldwide enjoy better conditions and pay. These are all things to admire, of
course, and it doesn't look like Google is too concerned with these issues,
considering the PhoneBloks mission to reduce e-waste hasn't really come up
since they joined forces.
Closer
to Project Ara's turf is Nexpaq, a modular case for existing phones.
It seems solid enough, but we can't help but feel like it isn't a long-term
solution, considering how smartphone sizes change with almost every iteration.
On top of that, Google will no doubt have a much easier time seducing third party
module developers to work with it.
Neither
of these look like true competitors, leaving Project Ara looking like the horse
to bet on in the modular smartphone race. "Ara is our vision for the
future of phones," says Dan Kaufman, the Deputy Director of ATAP.
"And even more so, our vision for an entirely new hardware
ecosystem."
Project
Ara will live or die on how well that ecosystem thrives. Already, Google has
partnered with companies like Samsung, E-ink, Micron, Sony Pictures, and Harman
to produce modules, and a lineup that strong is encouraging. We don't have too
long to wait to see how it plays out, with the Developer Edition shipping out
towards the end of 2016, and the consumer model to follow early next year.
Google's Project Ara: Reinventing the smartphone with building blocks
Google's
modular phone, called Project Ara, will make its way to developers this fall,
the company announced at its I/O developer conference last week. And as Ara
inches closer to reality, so too does its potential to change all smartphones.
Project
Ara, Google's version of the
Phonebloks project, is similar to most
Android phones, but with an emphasis placed on modularity. Instead of buying
one phone and being stuck with a single configuration, the phone's frame allows
you to change out various parts of the device as necessary, making upgrading
your phone as easy as swapping CDs in a CD player or changing Game Boy games.
The idea is fairly retro, but the benefits, if executed right, could make waves
across smartphones as we know them.
LESS
WASTEFUL. MAYBE.
If
done right, Project Ara may make replacing that cracked screen much easier,
simply a matter of buying a new one and clicking it into place. If a user just
wants next year's better, extra-pixel-dense screen, they can just buy that
part. Same goes for other aspects of the hardware.
Smartphone
buyers won't be forced to get rid of an entire phone in order to get the
latest, greatest experience. Today, if your built-in battery craps out, for
example, when you upgrade, you're also tossing a perfectly usable camera, SSD
flash drive for storage, RAM memory, processor and more.
But
there's still some waste entailed in modularity. Depending on how Google
executes its Ara plans, the plastic involved in making each part of the phone
its own module could negate the benefit, with each component inside your cell
phone requiring its own plastic housing, and packaged and sold separately.
Project
Ara devices will make their way to developers this fall of 2016. Consumers
can expect the modular phones sometime after.




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