海角大神

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Project Ara, Google鈥檚 LEGO-like smart phone, arrives this year

At its second Project Ara developers conference, Google announced that it will begin testing its customizable smart phones in Puerto Rico later this year. Ara phones can be customized with different modules, so customers can build exactly the kind of smart phone they want.

By Jeff Ward-Bailey, Correspondent

At a developers conference last April, Google laid out its plan for reaching the 鈥渘ext 5 billion鈥 smart phone customers: those living in areas where mobile networks are beginning to expand, making it feasible to switch from using a feature phone to using a smart phone.

Google鈥檚 Project Ara aims to let those users whip up a built-to-order smart phone that has exactly the features they need, at a lower cost than current powerhouse phones.

The phones, made by Motorola and start-up company Phonebloks, would be grey slates that users could customize with different modules. Need a great camera? Add one to the board. Need long battery life? Add that, too.

On Wednesday, Google held the second Project Ara developers conference, at which it explained its plans for getting the modular phones out to customers. Google plans to launch a pilot program in Puerto Rico in the second half of 2015, in partnership with the country鈥檚 OpenMobile and Claro carriers. At the time of the pilot launch, Google says, users will be able to choose from as many as 30 different modules to customize their Ara phones.

Google chose to do a pilot program, rather than putting Ara phones on the market for everybody to buy, in order to get data about how people use the phones and what modules are the most useful. (Building one鈥檚 own smart phone can be a daunting proposition, and Google wants to be able to offer guidance so that users aren鈥檛 overwhelmed by choice.)

Paul Eremenko, the director of Project Ara, told the audience, 鈥淲e have a variety of unanswered questions, and the only way to get answers is to get actual data.鈥

The actual phone customization will be done via the Ara Configurator app, which hasn鈥檛 been released to the Google Play Store yet. Google says it will also open some mobile stores in Puerto Rico where people can handle and play with the Ara phones before deciding whether or not to buy one. 聽Puerto Rico is an ideal testing ground for the project, Google says, because it has good mobile broadband coverage and free trade zones where Google can import components.

Google didn鈥檛 provide any specific pricing information at the developer鈥檚 conference, but it said at the previous conference that the phone frame will cost about $50. That price will go up as modules are added, of course, but the idea is to keep the initial cost low so that people can build inexpensive, no-frills smart phones if they want to. The phones could then be upgraded over time, so when a particular handset starts to fall behind the curve, users don鈥檛 have to throw it away and buy a whole new one.