Sean Moss-Pultz, an FIC product development manager, introduced the Neo1973 -- and OpenMoko -- as the "Mystery Guest" at the inaugural "Open Source in Mobile" conference in Amsterdam, 2006.
(I do not own the copyright of this material.)
Google's Motorola has unveiled Project Ara, an open hardware platform for building modular smartphonesThe idea behind the project, led by Motorola's Advanced Technology and Projects group, is to turn almost everything in a smartphone — display, keyboard, battery, processor — into a module that can be replaced.Motorola envisions two basic components of such a smartphone: an endoskeleton (or endo), the structural frame that holds all the pieces together, and the modules which are fitted on the endo.
The goal is to drive a more thoughtful, expressive, and open relationship between users, developers, and their phones. To give you the power to decide what your phone does, how it looks, where and what it’s made of, how much it costs, and how long you’ll keep it.
With a Project Ara phone, modules can be replaced one at a time. Want a new Bluetooth model? Just snap it in. New battery, camera, processor? Easily done. The concept should give you, the user, the power to decide what goes into your phone: how it looks, how much it costs and what it does. As Motorola puts it, all of this should do for hardware what the Android platform has done for software. The results should be a third-party developer ecosystem and faster innovation.
Motorola has been working on Project Ara for a year. Immediate plans involve sending an invitation to developers to start creating modules for the platform in a couple of months.
If the project becomes a consumer-level reality available to billions of users, the effect on the smartphone industry as a whole could be very interesting indeed to witness. For one, it could affect the rate at which manufacturers release new models. Assuming the prototype functions well enough to continue, and assuming the public launch is received well — which is still a long ways off — this could be a major win for consumers over the long haul.
Citrix XenApp-Touch Enabled Just add hopTo
Leverage your existing Citrix infrastructure to deliver all of the Windows apps on your desktop to mobile devices with an unparalleled user experience- without compromising security. hopTo Work combines the power of existing Windows apps with the ease of use and convenience of modern mobility. Transport and transform Windows applications to mobile devices with a great user experience- with no coding required
hopTo Work combines the power of Windows® and Internet Explorer® apps with a full touch-enabled experience. hopTo Work delivers a complete Mobile App eXperience for existing apps to your mobile devices with the following features:
MAXControl – Map app functions to touch buttons.
MAXEdit – Touch-enabled text editing.
MAXCam – Leverage local device camera to scan bar codes, QR codes, and
photos.
MAX-IE – Instantly mobilize and touch-enable Internet Explorer® based web
applications, including applications that employ Java, Adobe Flash, or Silverlight technologies.
Easily multitask and switch between apps without closing or minimizing.
Secure, touch-friendly Office® document editing, on the
internal network.
Technology products that will disappear in the nextVision World Club
With the speed of innovation in the tech industry, we can’t know every piece of technology that will fill our everyday lives in five years, but we can predict what won't
Apple’s Next Magic Keyboard with Morphing KeysLaptop Keys
If you are an Apple laptop user, here is good news for you. Apple is going to launch innovative peripheral for their users that is a magic keyboard with Morphing keys.
Google's Motorola has unveiled Project Ara, an open hardware platform for building modular smartphonesThe idea behind the project, led by Motorola's Advanced Technology and Projects group, is to turn almost everything in a smartphone — display, keyboard, battery, processor — into a module that can be replaced.Motorola envisions two basic components of such a smartphone: an endoskeleton (or endo), the structural frame that holds all the pieces together, and the modules which are fitted on the endo.
The goal is to drive a more thoughtful, expressive, and open relationship between users, developers, and their phones. To give you the power to decide what your phone does, how it looks, where and what it’s made of, how much it costs, and how long you’ll keep it.
With a Project Ara phone, modules can be replaced one at a time. Want a new Bluetooth model? Just snap it in. New battery, camera, processor? Easily done. The concept should give you, the user, the power to decide what goes into your phone: how it looks, how much it costs and what it does. As Motorola puts it, all of this should do for hardware what the Android platform has done for software. The results should be a third-party developer ecosystem and faster innovation.
Motorola has been working on Project Ara for a year. Immediate plans involve sending an invitation to developers to start creating modules for the platform in a couple of months.
If the project becomes a consumer-level reality available to billions of users, the effect on the smartphone industry as a whole could be very interesting indeed to witness. For one, it could affect the rate at which manufacturers release new models. Assuming the prototype functions well enough to continue, and assuming the public launch is received well — which is still a long ways off — this could be a major win for consumers over the long haul.
Citrix XenApp-Touch Enabled Just add hopTo
Leverage your existing Citrix infrastructure to deliver all of the Windows apps on your desktop to mobile devices with an unparalleled user experience- without compromising security. hopTo Work combines the power of existing Windows apps with the ease of use and convenience of modern mobility. Transport and transform Windows applications to mobile devices with a great user experience- with no coding required
hopTo Work combines the power of Windows® and Internet Explorer® apps with a full touch-enabled experience. hopTo Work delivers a complete Mobile App eXperience for existing apps to your mobile devices with the following features:
MAXControl – Map app functions to touch buttons.
MAXEdit – Touch-enabled text editing.
MAXCam – Leverage local device camera to scan bar codes, QR codes, and
photos.
MAX-IE – Instantly mobilize and touch-enable Internet Explorer® based web
applications, including applications that employ Java, Adobe Flash, or Silverlight technologies.
Easily multitask and switch between apps without closing or minimizing.
Secure, touch-friendly Office® document editing, on the
internal network.
Technology products that will disappear in the nextVision World Club
With the speed of innovation in the tech industry, we can’t know every piece of technology that will fill our everyday lives in five years, but we can predict what won't
Apple’s Next Magic Keyboard with Morphing KeysLaptop Keys
If you are an Apple laptop user, here is good news for you. Apple is going to launch innovative peripheral for their users that is a magic keyboard with Morphing keys.
Your boss has an iPhone, so of course he wants an app. But does an app really make business sense? Or is a responsive design website enough?
And with hundreds of thousands of apps out there, what will make people choose and use yours? What makes a good mobile user interface? And how can you make sure your company actually delivers one?
Responsive design might make sense if you've got a content driven website. But how should your web team work together when every web page they are making needs to work at any width and resolution? And can you get the content under control to make pages that really make sense on small screens and big ones?
Digital natives: freedom and hackability in a mobile futureTristan Nitot
I'm an old digital native. I've learned to tinker with computers that encourage "hacking" like the Apple II. It shipped with a disassembler, electronic schematics, 8 expansion slots. You did not need a screwdriver to open the lid.
Compare this with today's smartphones, with a centralized AppStore on which one company has total control. This discourages tinkering.
How will the next generation of digital natives learn to tinker if all they have is closed ecosystems?
Mozilla is working on this with the Open Web through two separate initiatives:
* Webmaker.org is a set of tools and events to encourage ordinary people to have a look under the hood of technology.
* Firefox OS aims to ship HTML5-powered smartphones that can run Web applications like other smartphones run native apps.
A strategic overview of developing for Chrome on Android and native on Android. Touching on the migration from the open web to walled gardens of applications.
Multi-Touch Tangible Interface; HCI trends, projects, and developmentJazmi Jamal
Lecture series on Multi-touch. Topic covers; History of HCI, Environment computing, Introduction to tangible interface, IT Project management, and multi-touch workshop. Created in Q1 2010
Emerging Experiences - More Personal Computing (MPC) - Tim HuckabyITCamp
How are natural & intuitive interactive emerging experiences designed into software? How do you design inspirational Emerging Experiences in new scenarios across the broadest range of devices, from big screens to small screens to no screens at all? How do you build software for a world that is more mobile, natural and grounded in intuitive?
Join Tim in a demo heavy, entertaining and technical discussion of the future of More Personal Computing and Emerging Experiences. Touch, Gesture, Voice Recognition, Demographic Profiling, Facial Recognition, Emotional Recognition, Holographic Experiences and more: All the bad; all the good; privacy law, all the real customer demos and stories, and the tools, tips and tricks learned along the way.
This demo-heavy session will show you a number of real emerging experiences solutions (from propriety solutions to broadcast television solutions you see every day). Tim will show you the use cases where these types of emerging experiences solutions are happening. And those coming in the immediate future and beyond.
1. Open, But Not As Usual.
How to disrupt an industry, but make more money for
everyone.
2. Introduction.
I’m going to babble about Mobile Phones.
• What I don’t like about them
• What I want to do about this
• And revolutionize our industry
• How I can help make you money.
3. “Every good work of
software starts by
scratching a developer’s
personal itch.”
--Eric S. Raymond, The Cathedral and the Bazaar
4. I've got two big itches.
That I’ve been wanting to scratch for years.
• I can never upgrade or customize my phone. I
have to buy a new one every few months if I
want some new (software) feature to work.
• Mobile platforms are proprietary and scattered.
Developers have no easy way to create
applications and deliver services that span all
users.
5. So Listen Up.
And I’ll tell you why I love the GSM Market.
• GSM is standardized. It works the same, just
about anywhere in the world.
• The GSM market is totally saturated. Big
handset makers must sell millions of phones to
make profit.
• Mobile Internet is stagnant. Applications and
services have yet to explode into a booming
industry.
6. Ecosystems gone bad.
Where did we all go wrong?
PC Mobile Phone
Service Google, Yahoo, AOL, Windows Live, YouTube
Apps
Web browser. All kinds of vertical
niche applications.
No Solution
GUI Common “desktop” paradigm
Input
Generic: usually keyboard, mouse,
and monitor
Specialized: keypad, buttons, and
inconsistent (and often limited)
screen space
HW x86 (Intel, AMD, VIA) Lots of different platforms
Source: Henry Holtzman (MIT Media Lab)
7. Where am I going with all this?
There really is a point to all this whining.
• Ignore the trends in the current market
• Create our own market
• Give our customers what they really want
• Build a new platform
• Help everyone in this room.
8. “How will we understand
the needs of diverse
customers spanning the
entire world?”
So that “ignore the trends” stuff just blew up in my face,
right?
9. “We can’t. We never will.
And we shouldn’t even
even try.”
Sean Moss-Pultz, just now.
10. Way #2 to skin a cat.
Instead we build a mobile phone that
• Has only the most basic features
• easy phone dialing
• easy messaging
• And great hardware
• beautiful screen
• nice to hold in your hand
• easily expandable memory
11. Oh and well, one more feature.
An adaptation of my favorite command in all
of computing.
root@filbuntu:~# apt-get install
12. The Application Manager.
Captain Obvious, is that you calling?
• Create an application that lets end users install
exactly the applications they want!
• Then have the system keep itself updated.
Image by www.bluelinecomics.com
13. Sounds great.
But install WHAT applications?
• There are hundreds of thousands of brilliant
free applications available for Linux.
• So we need some way to use Linux applications
on this handset.
• Then we can concentrate on the framework:
• UI -- Common look & feel for end users
• Data -- Common storage model for applications
• Libraries -- Common platform for developers
14. On a Mobile Phone. Part 1.
• Use a smartphone
architecture to isolate
systems
• Use an Open Source
framework to run
applications
• It looks something
like this...
How to use Linux Apps.
Smartphone Architecture
Application
Processor
(Open Source)
Location
(Proprietary)
Connectivity
(Proprietary)
15. Open Source based Architecture.
Mobile Handset Hardware
Linux 2.6 Kernel & Device Drivers
udev blueZ dbus GSM GPS
matchbox GTK+2
kdrive 7 libX11
Linux Core Services (Linux User Interface)
core net UI PIM
(OpenMoko Application Framework)
X11
Applications
Dialer
(Finger Applications)
MainMenu
MediaPlayer
Clocks
(others)
Contacts
(Stylus Applications)
Messages
ApplicationManager
Search
(others)
WebBrowser
(3rd Party Applications)
IM
BookReader
Terminal
(others)
OpenEmbeddedx86SDK
(Target Board) (PC)
16. Definition: OpenMoko
Pronunciation: 'O-p&n, 'mO-(")kO
• “Moko” is short for Mobile Kommunikations.
• “K” is a tribute to all hackers around the world
that build software that drives innovation into
the platform.
• “Open” means that developers around the
world can evolve the platform in anyway they
like.
17. “So you have this phone
that geeks and coders
love...but I can hardly
program my VCR. You
think I’ll buy this?!”
My Dad, (When I came home after 6 months to tell him my
latest “great” idea.)
18. “Most Geeks think they
can change the world
with technology.
Empower them with the
right tools and they just
might do it.”
Me, again (a true Geek at heart)
19. Give the Geeks what they want first.
You'll get your cake soon enough. Here’s the Big Picture:
• Make a great mobile phone running Open Source Software.
• Give away our SDK. Target everyone who loves to tinker
with electronics.
• Help build a worldwide community of developers working
together to write and port applications.
• Guide them in creating kick-ass looking and easy-to-use
applications. (This is straight-forward because our
framework is so good.)
• Watch our application list grow by the day.
• Now your mom and dad have all the applications that they
want, too. This is the part where you eat your cake.
21. “How are you going to
make money for everyone
in the industry?”
Vineet Gupta, Sun’s Java CTO, (After first hearing about
my idea for an open source platform.)
22. Mobile Standardized.
Mobile Phone, say hello to Apps & Services.
PC Mobile Phone
Service Google, Yahoo, AOL, Windows Live, YouTube
Apps
Web browser. All kinds of vertical
niche applications.
Custom Applications
OpenMoko 2007
GUI Common “desktop” paradigm
Input
Generic: usually keyboard, mouse,
and monitor
Specialized: keypad, buttons, and
inconsistent (and often limited)
screen space
HW x86 (Intel, AMD, VIA) Lots of different platforms
Source: Henry Holtzman (MIT Media Lab)
24. Enjoy the economics of openness.
OpenMoko Triangle of Value.
OpenMoko
(Triangle of Value)
Carriers
Handset
Makers
End
Users!
!
25. OpenMoko for Handset Makers.
A better lens to focus on your real value.
• Improve your margins
• More R&D dollars to
spend on visible value
• Use the best of
open / commercial
software components
• Faster time-to-market.
R&D
OpenMoko+
€€€
26. OpenMoko for Carriers.
Applications are the next ringtones.
• More data airtime
(better ARPU)
• Lower both Churn
and SAC
• Offer compelling new
services
• Enter new Vertical
Markets.
Phone
OpenMoko+
€€€
27. OpenMoko for End Users.
It’s about more power to the people.
• Customize your phone
any way you see fit
• Install exactly the
applications you want
• Automatically keep
your phone updated
• Unlock the true power of
your phone.
Carrier
OpenMoko+
28. Move over Web 2.0. Here comes Mobile 2.0.
Open Ecosystems.
Source: Professors Butt and Hole
data cost
network speed
apps & services
users
2006 2007 2008 20092005
Enter OpenMoko.
29. Absolut Open.
Special thanks to FIC.
• The most open-minded
company in all of Taiwan
• David “The Godfather”
Huang (My Boss)
• And Timothy Chen
• Without their support,
an open source phone
would still be only
a dream.
30. Thank You.
Sean Moss-Pultz
A Geek (at heart) with two big itches
★ The Neo1973 Smartphone from
FIC. On Sale January 2007!