Entelligence: Here's what I want in my next phone
Entelligence is a column by technology strategist and author Michael Gartenberg, a man whose desire for a delicious cup of coffee and a quality New York bagel is dwarfed only by his passion for tech. In these articles, he'll explore where our industry is and where it's going -- on both micro and macro levels -- with the unique wit and insight only he can provide.

First, the table stakes. It's got have a great voice capability -- I want to make crystal clear calls and never drop them. It's also go to have perfect contact and calendar features, a modern web browser, and an email client optimized for both Exchange and Gmail. Of course, a robust set of third party applications are a must, including a good RSS reader that syncs to Google Reader and a great version of Tetris.
Second, I'd like my phone to be somewhat agnostic toward the rest of the services I use in my life. Increasingly, vendors are tying devices to ecosystems and creating a non-substitutable infrastructure that makes it hard for users to switch devices or services. Android phones for the most part are tied to Google services -- which is great, unless you happen to use Exchange. Then you'd better hope your manufacturer has added some support on their own. The iPhone supports Gmail, but only as an IMAP client, and forget a native app for Google Voice. Windows Mobile devices are excellent Exchange clients, but forget syncing your music directly to iTunes. While some of these limitations can be overcome with party applications and services, I'd like my next device to simply support the combination of services and tools I want to use. I can switch back and forth between services on my computer with no penalty: I log into Gmail in the morning and use Exchange in the afternoon. I chat on AIM and then switch over to Skype. Why can't I do the same on my phone? I use a diverse set of tools and services on my desktop, and I'd like that flexibility on my next phone.
To call today's phones 'phones' is a polite euphemism. They're hardly phones; they're PCs that fit in our pockets. |
Finally, my next phone will be small. I want it to be with me always, have great battery life and get me through two very hard days of use. Ideally it will support multiple Bluetooth profiles so I can easily link into my car's handfree system, connect external keyboards, and tether it to my PC. While I'm at it, I'd like the ability to run applications in the background -- I'm not happy with the current state of any device in this regard. Like my PC, I want to decide which apps to run, when they're running and have an easy method to quit the ones I don't want taking up memory. Almost every phone on the market today fails in this capacity to some degree or another.
To call today's phones "phones" is a polite euphemism. They're hardly phones; they're PCs that fit in our pockets. That's a fine step along the road, but I don't really want a PC in my pocket -- I'd like something more. Today's mobile devices and platforms are great, but none of them will meet the needs of users tomorrow. That's why this year's going to be such a major mobile inflection point. I'm looking to see who might bring me the next phone I really want to use -- it might be quite a surprise.
Michael Gartenberg is vice president of strategy and analysis at Interpret, LLC. His weblog can be found at gartenblog.net. Contact him at gartenberg AT gmail DOT com. Views expressed here are his own.





















Thats not quite it for me.
I need a full comfortable keyboard as well.
@Jeremiah In fact there's a whole long list of things I really want and I'm going to go work on it now.
This guy just wrote an article about how he wants EVERYTHING in his phone.. and since most of us want everything, this article has become a little useless in my eyes..
@gargle Agreed. I mean, seriously, two hard days of battery life? If you're working hard on your phone, you're lucky to get through the day. You're saying you want a phone that can run two days with heavy use, this year? I think that's asking way too much.
Other than that, this article seems like just another wishlist. I want a 3.7in or larger OLED screen Android 2.1 phone with Sense, Snapdragon, Nokia-quality 8mp camera with xenon flash, hard buttons for Home/Menu/Back/Search, and the 3.5mm headphone jack at the BOTTOM of the phone. You see how no one else besides me cares about that, and the most they can say is "I agree/disagree."
On another note, the Bravo looks really close to fulfilling my list. Here's hoping.
@Jeremiah
I love these sorts of articles. They litter the mainstream periodicals. Here is the formula:
1. In the future, users will need x
2. Right now, technology only offers y
3. I want x right now.
Here's a clue: IT TAKES TIME TO MAKE X
@Henzapper Thats pretty much what I want in my next phone. I'd trade off camera resolution for a larger screen. 4.5" 480x800 should actually let you surf the web without needing to zoom in and scroll around much (if at all)
@Jeremiah
Lets all poop in one hand and wish in the other and see which one fills up first.
@Henzapper
I prefer the headphone jack on the top of the phone. It wouldn't be a deal maker/breaker, but I put my phone in the midget pocket of my jeans, so the headphone jack on the top is far more logical to me.
And this is why there isn't a single phone on the market. Everyone has different needs and wants. I don't get why Apple differentiates the Touch and iPhone that way though. Anyone have any insight?
Give me a reliable hardware keyboard, a (good) >3.5 inch touchscreen, along with snapdragon, and either WinMo 6.5.5 or Android 2.1 and I'll be a fool all too happy to part with his money.
@Henzapper you know what's funny ten years ago we were wishing for the type of technology we have now and now were wishing for technology that probably wont be available ten years from now :P
@Henzapper
You can get 2 days of battery from any BlackBerry, today. Including phone calls, browsing, hours of music playback with BT and messaging.
But you also want it to be pretty with a huge screen and animations, that's what you secretly hate to give up.
@Henzapper I heard mini-fusion reactor technology is being produced sometime this year! Maybe Apple, RIM, or HTC will look into this...
@Jeremiah
It seems like most of what he wants can be found in the Pre?
@Musicman247
I know Palm Pre doesn't do multi-tasking as ideally perfect as this guy would want, but it comes pretty darn close. He seems averse to Palm...
@Henzapper
I've always wanted a phone with a headphone jack at the bottom. So much more convenient for pulling it out/putting it back in my pockets. I've only really found the HD2. And, while we're at it, i think an android HD2 (supersonic, much?) will do me just fine.
if you combine everything the author says....you'd get N900!!!
I'll take the same he's having plus an app that gets my work done at the office, with a foot massager, martini shaker, that solves my sudokus... oh, and a monthly plan that pays ME, $69.99 a month for using unlimited data... wait, and a side of fries...
@Eclectico69
I've also provided a unique wit and insight, right? does my comment make me elegible to be a VP, analyst and blogger as well?
@Jeremiah
The phone that seems to fit those things very well is the Nokia E71 or E72. Both are small, have the full keyboard and a battery life that under heavy use WILL last over 2 days, and has support for exchange, GMail, skype and tons of 3rd party apps
also feature are MULTITASKING and now unlimited free worldwide GPS navigation with offline capability
Sure, the UI isn't as flash as an iPhone, but is that really a big sacrifice for a great all round device?
@BigJayDogg3
...When your phone is in your pocket, why can't you just put it upside down?
@Jeremiah - Visual Voicemail..... why is the awesomeness of this concept so hard to grasp for phone companies (ahem, Palm!!! next update please???)
@Jamma I was going to say the same.. I had N78, now have 5800 NavEd, both do all of this (and have for years)
@thrillchuckles My mawmaw loves that expression.
@gargle Exactly my point....it has more of a Christmas wishlist than a useful article.
John
The insides of the iPhone abd iPod touch are very different.
In the phone, there us a radio chip, and a memory chip.
The iPod doesn't have a radio chip, do it's able to have two memory chips, which is why it has more capacity.
The differences in the size and shape of these chips correlate to the differences on the outside.
I just want my phone to work the way it should. I'm tired of my phones being amazing at something and terrible at something else.
@SomEngangVar
Agreed. In fact, you should expect the same standards out of your next girlfriend. (hint: you won't have a next girlfriend)
@SomEngangVar
Anyone else get the feeling this Gartenberg guy is kind of a dick?
I compare his editorials to some one updating their facebook status that they're taking a shit...
Transforms
@allenade mine transforms into a mobile porn machine.
hahaha. I've been telling my friends that I want the same exact thing you Photoshopped for months! Android, a BlackBerry keyboard, and the iPhone's touchscreen.
@Will Smith I thought the same thing! I want that Photoshopped phone above.
@Will Smith Same here, this is exactly what I've had in mind for ages. RIM, Google and Apple should just get over themselves and collaborate on this, it will simply slay.
@Will Smith
Give me a webOS version of the above phone! (with a ultra fast processor and 2X the ram in the pre plus, and a high-res screen)
@Will Smith
I agree with the choice of WebOS over android. Android just isn't for me, the iPhone OS cannot multitask, and for the most part I love the way my Pre works. It is just that the build quality really isn't quite what it should be, the screen could be bigger, and the battery life is atrocious (at best). On the plus side, at least Palm is awesome about implementing features, the just need to get the hardware down and expand sales to more of the carriers to improve adoption rates, thereby (likely) increasing the size of the app catalog.
Who knows though, maybe some new player will come out, ace it all and snag the general populaces attention :).
I hope you want it to cost a fortune, because with all those features you'll be burning quite a hole in your picket.
@DanMan Hey, who you callin' an a-hole?
@DanMan
i usually don't leave my monies sitting on my picket fence all that much, so i'm not worried about it ;)
Of course, a robust amount of third party applications IS a must... When did grammar go out the window?
@Greedyhands Dude... It's the Internet. I'd say grammar's been and gone since, what, 1994? :)
Wasn't there an article just like this about a year ago on Engadget?
I want to of article that be proof read so the I can red it.
@flextopia It's also go to have great grammar.
@csnoke No wonder they are looking for new writers. My 5 year old niece is free--she could write better than this.
@flextopia
what a terrible thing to say about your niece!
@flextopia Kickin' it Scott Brown style.
I 'd like a WebOS phone with:
-the guts of a Palm Pre Plus (or better)
-horiz sliding keyboard
-great battery life - just one real full day (18-24 hours) is good.
-snappy app launching (no lags like Android phones or Palm Pre now)
-native gmail/calendar app by google
-a todo list app that syncs with google
-notes app with optional secure password feature by note (like the old palm OS) that syncs!
-access to all of iPhone's apps
-androids notification system
-trackball
can someone make this already?
I'm guessing if anyone makes this, it'll be Palm. Just a hunch, though.
@qrius Access to all of the iPhone apps? That's like saying I want the next Xbox to play Playstation games. Or I want to be able to put Toyota parts on my Honda. Or I want to be legally able to hook up with family members. It ain't gonna happen.
@statelypenguin that's why it's just a wish list! :P
@qrius Most of that is realised in Nokia N900 ;)