Modu Unveils Modular, Transformer-style Phone 88
An anonymous reader writes "A company called Modu has come up with an innovative take on a mobile phone. Instead of giving you the finished product, you get a base unit and a choice of 'sleeves', which you can plug the base unit into and turn it into a variety of devices. "If, for example, you're going out clubbing, you can pop it into a fashion sleeve with a fancy design. If you're on a business trip and you need a phone with a Qwerty keypad and large screen, you just have to pop it into a 'jacket' with those features." There's also the option to plug it into a satellite navigation device or even a car stereo. While it seems like an interesting system, I wonder whether modular devices are better than buying standalone products or all-in-one products?"
If it allows... (Score:2)
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when you go work for the CIA or other places with that level of information security.. you don't get to take any phone and some times you arn't even allowed to see where you are going.
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It is easier for the company to disalow cameras without permission than to par
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I take it you're not allowed to just get a normal phone and either 'remove' or otherwise 'disable' the camera?
Some ideas:Forget QWERTY, I wanna BOOM! (Score:2)
http://crave.cnet.co.uk/mobiles/0,39029453,49295452-4,00.htm [cnet.co.uk]
I want one of those Boom buttons for my work keyboard. Maybe every time I hit it the whole building shudders under a big BOOM... Would be a fun way of getting rid of the loud people talking in the hallway in front of my door...
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Sleeves for personalizing gizzmos is about as old as forever.
Show me a phone that already does that.
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And I think they have been doing it for years. I remember seeing them in 2004.
Perhaps not a phone, but ipaq for one (Score:3, Informative)
Modular systems are nothing new.
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This is just a repackaging of this concept where the core phone bit is included in the removable part, so you wouldn't need to duplicate all the radio electronics in each of your handsets.
Lots of people already have a PDA and a sleek handset that they move their SIM back and forth between.
A big advantage is that y
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Lots of people already have a PDA and a sleek handset that they move their SIM back and forth between.
I'm one of those people. This idea intrigues me because I'd sure like something easier than my current method:
1. Remove smart phone from leather holster.
2. Remove smart phone batter door cover.
3. Remove smart phone battery.
4. Extract SIM from smart phone holder.
5. Replace smart phone battery.
6. Replace smart phone battery cover.
7. Replace smart phone leather holster.
8. Remove slim phone battery door cover.
9. Remove slim phone battery.
10. Flip up slim phone MiniSD holder.
11. Insert SIM into slim phone.
12. R
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My hunch is that this thing will be clumsy, fragile and expensive. Hey, just like the iPhone that already does all those things with a cooler interface!
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I for one (Score:2)
Re:I for one (Score:5, Funny)
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Yes, they come in blue too...
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For those new to the intarwebs, you might not have seen the Soundwave breakdancing video. [youtube.com]
And because these things often go uncredited for some strange reason (laziness?):
Directed and Produced by Charlie Bayliss
Co-Directed by Irfan Nathoo
Producer Mark Wilenkin
3D Modeling and Animation by Charlie Bayliss
Additional 3D Modeling by Dan Kohn
Composited and Edited by Mark Wilenkin
Music by LAZER
Studio_w and LAZER Mu
open system? (Score:5, Insightful)
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so- if I unsderstand correctly-- (Score:3, Insightful)
isn't all that possible with moving a sim card from phone to phone?
do we really need the intermediate step? I know people who move their sim from a sleek 'heading out' to a pdaphone.
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It's sooooo nice to have to use two hands and a stylus to make phone call, especialy while riding a bike.
Then if you actually press the thing to your ears (for blocking traffic noise etc.) you'll push one of the touchscreen buttons with your cheekbone and disconnect the call...Now that's what I call a good thorough design. Way to Go HTC !
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Actually, it appears to be a very basic phone unit, with the transmitter, antenna, etc, built in. Think of it like a cell phone PC Card [wikipedia.org] that can plug into a variety of host devices.
Only real difference is it seems to have a base functionality without the host.
Cool, someone actually GETS it! (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not sure where people got the idea that this phone-gadget was like an oversized SIM card. A SIM card is basically a low-capacity flash-memory card with keys for identity and encryption. This device is basically an entire cellphone, which I understand is functional all on its own at a basic level. The closest thing to this is the W-SIM card which is a SIM with a cellular transceiver welded to its back, but even that lac
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My thoughts exactly. A SIM card with more capacity and more functionality would be just as good. The only thing the SIM really lacks is the ability to store music and pictures. I suppose you could just use an SD card for that.
The only way I could see this being useful is because if you buy it you are stuck with proprietary technology and can't easily switch over to a different phone manufacturer. (useful for the company not the consumer)
Re:so- if I unsderstand correctly-- (Score:5, Interesting)
1) The base device can supposedly function "stand-alone"; however, it looks like it must be a pain to use in that way. Not sure the advantage of using it stand-alone...
2) The base device brings more of the "common" functionality with it from jacket to jacket, so there's no need to buy that piece of the system over and over again.
There's an intuitive feel that (2) creates an economic advantage, and I guess for someone who would otherwise buy multiple mobile devices there might be (depending on the actual pricing, factoring in bundling -- which seems to defeat the point, but whatever). Is it cost-advantageous if I only use it with one jacket? Two? Five? How many cell-based devices do I have to "need" before this becomes economically useful to me?
That's my question, then: how much need does any given person have for a bunch of devices to which he or she can add cell phone capabilities? The car radio looking thing and the nav device might be interesting if they integrate the cell service in an interesting way, but couldn't you do the same thing wtih an inexpensive data cable to the phone (and maybe a car mounting kit, which you can easily get today)? The only particular advantage to building the devices this way (IMO) would be to leverage an already-existing deployment of Modu base units, and clearly there's not one.
As for the hand-held sleeves, like one with a larger screen and QWERTY keyboard... maybe useful, but are there trade-offs (like is the combined device bulky or otherwise clumsy when compared to a stand-alone unit)?
Then again, the fact that they lead with the example of a "stylish" cover you'd use to go clubbing probably indicates that I'm not the target audience, since I find that indescribaly stupid.
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I would love to have "transputer" (Score:1)
A better model already exists (Score:1)
This Modu thing is just
Hmm (Score:3, Funny)
Unless 'going clubbing' means taking a +1 Club of Awesomeness, this particular example is worthless to the
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Wouldn't It Be Easier... (Score:2)
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Er... (Score:3, Insightful)
What is the benefit of this, other than the fact that they want me to likely spend as much on a "sleeve" as I do for a complete unlocked phone on eBay?
Re:Er... (Score:5, Insightful)
Many Slashdot readers do not understand that while convenience is a sliding scale, there are important thresholds along the way that enable (or disable) certain applications. For example, what you state is entirely correct: you can swap SIM cards around different devices.
However, most people don't do that regularly, probably because you generally have to remove a battery to reveal the SIM slot and so on. The SIM is also not designed to be plugged and unplugged many times, so you may develop contact problems after a while. Finally, the SIMs that I'm familiar with can't generally store all the data (full contact information, email logs, browser bookmarks, etc.) that you want to take along with you.
So, if the idea is to switch "sleeves" daily or more than daily, then the SIM solution is just not convenient enough. Not to say this Modu phone will solve it, but no, you don't already have this.
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LS
Oh, like an iPAQ sleeve? (Score:2)
Shiny Neato - no chance (Score:1)
The thing that will be the deal-breaker is going to be the price. Having separate pieces will drive up the costs of the subassemblies, in turn driving up the price to the end user. And the majority of the market for cellphones is based primarily on price (hey sorry, the truth is that's what the majority of people do). And with the high price will come low volume/quantities which will exacerbate the cost problem
Key question (Score:1)
More importantly (Score:1)
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Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to bang my head against the wall for a few hours.
Do it all (Score:1)
CDMA? (Score:2)
CDMA phone users don't care about SIM cards. If this technology were available on a CDMA phone, I could see it catching on. Especially since there is no good way to move data between CDMA phones and no standard across manufacturers.
Looks like we're all Transformers now (Score:4, Funny)
Does that mean that if I start out in my underwear (the "base unit") and then, if I'm going out clubbing, I put on some fashionable clothes, possibly incorporating fancy designs, then later go on a business trip wearing a suit and tie, plus maybe pop on a wristwatch for some extra functionality, does that make me a "modular, Transformer-style human"?
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No, just a geek for considering the possibility.
Ericsson did this (Score:1)
Doesn't sound like Transformer-style (Score:1)
Here's the website... (Score:1)
The article that I got the link from also has a picture of their CEO showing off the base unit: Modu to launch tiny phone 'module' [komotv.com]
Bluetooth? (Score:2)
Why not just have a black-box "communcations device?" Something that can sit in your pocket, purse, backpack, whatever and just offer bluetooth services to a variety of devices. Have a handset if you want one, a graphical display if that suits you, or any other device that can communicate via bluetooth to your hidden communications device? Yea, you'd need to charge everything up separately, but so what? You'd get a hell of a lot more functionality out of the modular devices. And network flexibility
But does it run... (Score:2)
allow me to state the obvious (Score:1)
Seth
Got one. (Score:2)
Didn't they do this years ago? (Score:1)
The man behind Modu (Score:1)
This has been his top secret project for the past 2.5 years. I think that there are great things to expect from it (and no, I do not work at Modu).
It's the best, beats the rest! (Score:2)
This phone will be fantastic! (Score:1)
Unless for some reason they make all the standards for building the jackets proprietary and unavailable to the public... but a cell phone company would NEVER do that!
modu demo video! (Score:1)