Puerto Rico: Google announced on Wednesday that it will unveil a modular smartphone in Puerto Rico this year as part of a pilot program that will allow people to choose their own hardware based on their needs and interests.
The company will partner with Mexico-based carrier Claro and local carrier Open Mobile to offer the product, which will be sold from free-standing stores that look like food trucks, said Jessica Beavers, a Google marketing executive.
She said Puerto Rico was chosen in part because more than 90 percent of households on the island of nearly 3.7 million people use a cellphone and 77 percent of Internet access occurs through mobile devices.
“All of this makes for a truly interesting carrier landscape,” she said at a module developers conference at Google's headquarters in California. “Mobile devices are a huge part of daily life” in Puerto Rico.
The pilot program is still being developed, but Beavers said she envisions stores first opening in the capital of San Juan, followed by Ponce, the island's second largest city. Stores would eventually open in other cities.
Google would manufacture and sell the phone frame as well as modules created by individual manufacturers that can be added to it like Legos. Modules would range from a screen to a camera to speakers to even a pedometer, depending on people's needs.
“We want people to walk away and say, ‘That was really freaking awesome,”' Beavers said.
Google says it's too early to say how much the phone could cost, but it might be in the $50 to $100 range.
The company has had success with its Chromebook computers, which are lightweight, low-priced laptops that require Internet connections to access most programs and other features, but it relies on outside manufacturers for the product. It has had more difficulty selling devices it makes on its own. Google Glass, its Internet-connected eyewear, still hasn't made it to the mass market more than two years after its release to developers and a digital media player called the Nexus Q was scrapped within a few months of its unveiling in 2012.
Rafael Leon, a Radio Shack employee in San Juan, said he expects many Puerto Ricans to embrace the modular phone, noting that they are always eager to buy the newest mobile devices and don't mind standing in long lines.
“They always want to be ahead with what's newest, with what's innovative,” he said, adding that despite the island's long economic slump, cellphone sales have always been good. “You tell them it costs $800 and they're not fazed.”
Others took a more reserved stance.
Carl Lizarraga, a San Juan engineer, said he was surprised by the announcement.
“Typically, the island isn't used as a testing ground for this sort of project,” he said. “I'm not planning on buying it yet as at this point it seems more a gimmick than anything else. When the idea is further developed and able to compete with the current flagships, I would consider it.”
Giancarlo Gonzalez, chief information officer for Puerto Rico's government, said in a phone interview from Google's headquarters that the company approached him and other officials in mid-2014 with their proposal.
He said he hopes the pilot program grows into something bigger that will allow programmers in Puerto Rico to develop modules and export them.
“It would represent great technological growth,” he said.