| 1st March
- Sales of smartphones are expected to overtake those of laptops in the next 12
to 18 months as the mobile phone completes its transition from voice communications
device to multimedia computer. Convergence has been the Holy Grail for
mobile phone makers, software and hardware partners, as well as consumers, for
more than a decade. And for the first time the rhetoric of companies like
Nokia, Samsung and Motorola, who have boasted of putting a multimedia computer
in your pocket, no longer seems far fetched. "Converged devices are
always with you and always connected," said Olli-Pekka Kallasvuo, Nokia chief
executive at last week's Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. Last year
Nokia sold almost 200m camera phones and about 146m music phones, making it the
world's biggest seller of digital cameras and MP3 players. In the coming
year the firm predicts it will sell 35 million GPS-enabled phones as personal
navigation becomes the latest feature to be assimilated into the mobile phone.
Form and function Nigel Clifford, chief executive of Symbian, said:
"All of those single use devices - MP3 players, digital camera, GPS - are
collapsing onto the phone." "We are going past the point where
this was a phone with a few other things," he said. Symbian's operating
system shipped on 188 million phones last year and a third of those came with
GPS. "We see mobile phones evolving into multi-functional devices
that now support consumer electronics, multimedia entertainment and mobile professional
enterprise applications; all converging," said Luis Pineda, from mobile phone
chip firm Qualcomm. More and more people are snapping shots with a
handset Convergence is being driven by a combination of software, services
and hardware. The first phones powered by a chip running at 1Ghz will hit
the market later this year, seven years after the first desktop chip broke the
gigahertz barrier. Qualcomm's 1Ghz Snapdragon chipset will debut inside
a number of handsets, including some from Samsung and HTC "It's a
first in the industry for a wireless chipset," said Mr Pineda. As
well as raw horsepower Snapdragon also features a dedicated application processor,
as well as the ability to handle 12 megapixel digital photos and up to 720p high
definition video imaging. Mr Clifford from Symbian said the mobile industry
had to deliver multi-function devices which did not compromise. He said:
"When we look at what is collapsing on to these devices and people's expectations
with their experiences on single-use specialized devices there is going to be
rising expectations." Chip shop More than 90% of the world's
mobile phones are powered by technology created by British firm Arm. It designs
chip architectures that it licenses to semiconductors makers such as Qualcomm
and Broadcom. Ian Drew from Arm said future mobile phones demanded ever
more processing power. But building chips with greater processing was not
a straightforward, he said. The future of the internet and computing applications
is not going to be in the home or at the office; it's going to be mobile Nigel
Clifford, Symbian "If you look at a typical phone the first thing you
have got to do is get within the half a watt envelope. "It needs to
get into your pocket. And there's no fan. It needs to work for days rather than
hours." He added: "When you start adding multi media experiences
- such as 3D graphics, video, and games - there are two ways to do that: you can
get bigger and bigger processors or you have multi core where you can switch off
a processor when you don't need it." Arm is demonstrating a chip architecture,
called Coretex A9, that will offer four cores, or processors, on a single chip.
Symbian has been working with Arm on future uses for multi-core mobile
phones. "You can use massive amounts of processing if you need it.
But if you don't you can power down the cores that aren't required," said
Mr Clifford. Symmetrical Multi Processing will drive the next generation
of applications on a phone, he added. "Silicon vendors are looking
very seriously at how they integrate SMP." Mr Clifford added: "The
future of the internet and computing applications is not going to be in the home
or at the office; it's going to be mobile." The gaming abilities
of handsets are rapidly improving He said gaming would be the next feature
to collapse into phones. "That is one of the next single usage devices
that will start feeling the pressure from the mobile device," he said. 3D
graphics acceleration is becoming standard on many of today's mobile phones and
specialists like Nvidia have joined the market. Mr Clifford said today's
most powerful mobile phones, such as Nokia's N96 and NTTDoCoMo's 905 series have
the same power as a laptop from 2000. Nvidia's APX 2500 chip has enough
3D graphics acceleration to handle Quake 3, a PC game from 1999, on a mobile phone.
Handset owners were also beginning to expect the same online experience
they have on their desktop PCs on their mobile phones. "Web 2.0, social
networking and video sharing; that's a real driver of horsepower," said Mr
Drew from Arm. He added: "But you need to be able to get data in.
The next generation of mobile phones need high performance radios - they will
have high data rates that will enable this content to be streamed to you."
Symbian is working on technology called Freeway to give phones the ability
to move seamlessly between wireless networks, like wi-fi and cell networks like
3G and 4G. "We don't want people to feel the mobile web is a second
class experience." Back
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