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Open Standards for Cell Phone Components

PoisonousPhat writes "STMicroelectronics, Texas Instruments, Nokia and ARM have formed the Mobile Industry Processor Interface Alliance (MIPI), who seek to define open standards for cell phone components. Forget that expensive camera phone, just plug in a third-party device." Update: 07/30 18:13 GMT by T : Thanks to Alain Mellan for the link to STMicroelectronics.

7 of 139 comments (clear)

  1. I need a charge by maroon_dog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I been wanting a standard interface just for recharging. I hate buying new recharging equipment (desktop, cigarette lighter, etc.) every time I get a new phone. I also hate buying multiple versions of charging equipment for the multiple cell phones in my household.

  2. Good idea, this has worked so well for laptops by Hairy_Potter · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This has worked so well with laptops, which are much bigger and more expensive than cell phones, so there's obviously more of a demand for it.

    I can take any laptop, and swap hard drives. And I can swap, well, PCMCIA cards.

  3. That'll need a shift of policy from Nokia then... by Boss,+Pointy+Haired · · Score: 4, Interesting

    who insist on a completely new design of power supply and data cable for every phone that they bring out :(

  4. cool! by Catcher80 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This idea is good in theory. I've always wanted to get a cell phone and have the availability of nice features without having to spend outrageous prices. Now (in theory) I can buy a cell phone, basic model, and then buy an external device for whatever extra features I want, and have them work on the next phone I buy in 2 or 3 years if I want.

    There are a ton of possibilities for external things, they just need to design the OS for the Nokia phones, which also shouldn't be too much of a hassle.

    But you know this is going to be expensive as hell.

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  5. Missing by GeckoFood · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Strangely absent from that list is Motorola... This is probably a good thing, but their absence is very conspicuous.

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  6. Enough with the feature bloat! by kneecarrot · · Score: 4, Interesting

    With standardized cell-phone components, I am sure companies will be even more likely to stuff every last feature known to man onto their phones. Personally, I think it's getting ridiculous. I don't want to play Tony Hawk 4 on the 1" x 1" screen on my cell phone or struggle with watered down GPS functionality or grainy photos. On the other hand, what I do hope is that chargers become standardized. Now that would be something useful.

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  7. I'm waiting for... by SharpFang · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...a cell phone that would have as "flexible" architecture as PC.

    Imagine this:
    - Case: Different looks, about same width but different lengths. It provides two or three "slider layers" that enable you to install components.

    - Necessities:
    a) GSM decoder module (your frequency variant, possible sat phone)
    b) Battery: Different sizes, different capacities. Separately a small power management module (change batteries, replace them, examine power levels, switch between batteries)
    c) Main CPU. Different speeds and possiblities.
    d) Internal memory (different sizes, may use more than one module)
    e) Keyboard (normal, big, different highlight colors, qwerty whole, qwerty 2-parts (on 2 sides of screen)
    f) Screen. Text-only, b&w, big, color, whatever you wish.
    g) Speaker and receiver. May be different inputs.
    h) SIM card socket. Possible double, triple, big, small...

    - Extras:
    MP3, Radio, FM, MIDI, IRDA, Bluetooth, USB, loud speaker, camera, TV pilot, whatever you imagine you can put in a phone.

    And the case provides a single bus you plug your modules in. Each module occupies certain number of "slots" (of course keyboard, battery and LCD are big. Toys like MP3 player take way less).

    You buy parts in variants you need. Want a good SMS'ing box? Qwerty and big b&w screen. Want gaming platform? Gamer's keyboard, color screen, strong CPU and a lot of memory. Want to keep it small? "mini" case and only necessary stuff of minimum sizes. Want a laptop-like thing? Carry a half-pound brick in your pocket with everything installed and 5 strongest batteries and built-in AC charger.

    Add to that fully or mostly open-source communication software layer so people could write their own apps for it...

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