Thu Sep 11, 2008 5:25PM EDT
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One of the more interesting items from the always-sleepy fall edition of the CTIA trade show is a reference design for a satellite/terrestrial combo phone from the folks at Elektrobit.
A Finnish company, Elektrobit stands to change everything you think you know about satellite phones. In fact, if you check out the (unnamed) design for its smart phone (see photos above), you probably wouldn't realize it's a satellite phone at all. Where's the enormous antenna, as thick as a broom handle?
Gone, that's where, nestled inside the device. There are five other antennas in there, too: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, GPS, and two standard cellular network radios. All told, the device is a little thicker than a standard smart phone, but weighs about as much as a Treo.
As hardware and software design goes, the Elektrobit phone is nothing out of the ordinary, and that's intentional. It's a QWERTY handset with the usual set of keys and with Windows Mobile 6 loaded out of the box. But you aren't likely to see the device hit the market looking exactly like this. Elektrobit isn't an OEM for the device, but is rather looking to license it to already established device manufacturers. Those OEMs will likely tweak the device further, in either hardware, software, or both, and run with it from there, at least once satellite provider TerreStar completes its satellite launches and has the network it's designed to run on up and flying.
If all goes well, expect to see the device on the market worldwide in 2009. Prices won't be cheap, though, and it'll be up to manufacturers and carriers to set them. Best guess is in the $600 to $700 range.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
just buy an iPhone......
just buy an iPhone......
@couldo23 - iPhone has a satellite phone in it now? Wow, I guess I missed that speech...
Reminds me of the time I saw a group of stranded Japanese tourists in outback Australia. They tried their standard phones - only to discover a total lack of signal. Then one of them smirked and took out his satellite phone... to discover it only worked with One Particular Satellite, which provided a tight beam coverage of Japan... and of course he was way out of range. Fortunately, a call on the HF CB saved them.
1 Posted by rogueist on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:49PM EDT Report Abuse
Nice! I would buy one of those in a heartbeat!