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Mobile Phones

Motorola Drops Webtop Phone-as-PC Concept

Motorola Drops Webtop Phone-as-PC Concept
October 8, 2012 10:47AM

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Analyst Laura DiDio said that one of Webtop's key problems was it was "too early to market." DiDio also noted that, when Google bought Motorola Mobility, it "got the technology and the patents, but not the people," and that it was the engineers who had championed Webtop. Google reportedly made the decision to kill Motorola's Webtop.

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A smartphone that acts as the PC Relevant Products/Services brains for a display and other peripherals, allowing a user to construct a laptop Relevant Products/Services when needed. That was the idea behind Motorola's Android Relevant Products/Services-based Webtop software Relevant Products/Services and concept -- which has now been terminated.

Motorola Mobility, owned by Google, has announced that it is ending that software, which had been embedded in several smartphones, including the Droid RAZR, Droid 4, Droid Bionic and Photon 4G Relevant Products/Services, but which never got very far with buyers. When a Webtop-enabled smartphone was connected to a Lapdock, it could act like a full-blown PC, to which peripherals could be added.

Not 'Strong Enough'

Motorola's demonstration of the Atrix 4G smartphone with Webtop software and the accompanying Lapdock at the 2011 Consumer Electronic Show attracted a great deal of media attention, and more than a few industry observers had suggested at the time that this was the future of smartphones and of laptops.

Motorola said in a recent statement that, "while consumers around the world have adopted Webtop and their concept spurred a lot of innovation in the industry, the adoption has not been strong enough to justify continued resources being allocated to developing Webtop on future devices."

One of the obstacles to acceptance was the price. With its Lapdock, the Atrix 2 was sold by AT&T Relevant Products/Services for $500. Other reported problems included error-laden, bulky hardware implementations of the dock, and the decision to bury the smartphone behind the Lapdock -- meaning that the screen could not be viewed or accessed when it was used in laptop mode.

According to Web-based reports, it was Motorola Mobility's new owner, Google, that decided to end the Webtop concept. The theory is that Google is not completely ready to launch Android as an operating system for laptops, as it would need to do if Webtop got traction as a build-your-own laptop system.

'Too Early'

Google reportedly does not see its Net-oriented, thin-client Chrome OS as its serious laptop operating system entry, and the technology giant, according to this thinking, knows that it will likely only have one shot for a laptop OS -- and it doesn't want to jump the gun with Webtop. Meanwhile, Android is beginning to add various desktop-like features.

Webtop was actually taken through release 3.0, which was a major revision of previous versions. The newest release took advantage of several features in Android 4.0, including the ability to dynamically change apps Relevant Products/Services' resolution and to allow apps to run full-screen when in PC mode.

The Webtop concept originated with Motorola engineers in mid-2009, and the intention was to give a docked smartphone the full Firefox browser experience, as well as full Adobe Flash and multi-window multitasking.

Laura DiDio, an analyst with industry research firm Information Technology Intelligence Consulting, said that one of Webtop's key problems was that it was "too early to market." She compared it to Novell's embedded NetWare back in 1995, or Apple's early handheld Relevant Products/Services Newton, both of which later re-emerged as mainstream product concepts.

DiDio also noted that, when Google bought Motorola Mobility, it "got the technology and the patents, but not the people," and that it was the engineers who had championed Webtop.

Based on your interest in this article, here's something that may be of interest to you also:

Recommended Reading: Search & Destroy: Why You Can't Trust Google Inc. Synopsis: This is the other side of the Google story. In Search & Destroy, Google expert Scott Cleland, shows that the world's most powerful company is not who it pretends to be. Google pretends to be a harmless lamb, but chose a full-size model of a Tyrannosaurus Rex as its mascot. Beware the T-Rex in sheep's clothing.

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:

Joehannay@pinterestingsty:

Posted: 2012-10-12 @ 11:20am PT
One of the reasons I bought the Lapdock in the first place was "Motorola Mobility" Marketed it as "able to be used in all Motorola Smart Phones in the future. Some one should get a class action lawsuit together and sue Motorola / Google for not keeping good faith on the product and not fixing this issues around the problem with the lapdock

DMason:

Posted: 2012-10-08 @ 3:06pm PT
What a bummer! I hope the ones we have will still be functional; I'd hate to be deprived of it. If that happens it will be terribly unfair. I have liked it a lot and come to really think of it as a handy, lightweight laptop replacement. I believe it was just catching on with others. A bad move by Google, imo.

KO:

Posted: 2012-10-08 @ 12:42pm PT
Hate to see it go. It did replace my laptop. The last version worked great for the job I have.

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