Thursday, 26 April 2012

Cobble Together Your Personal Cell Phone

For crafty tech fans tired of having to pay high costs for mobile phones, an answer might be at hands: help make your own.

MIT's Media Lab produced a do-it-yourself mobile phone, with parts running about $150. Once put together, the wooden phone can make calls utilizing the same systems and SIM cards as traditional phones, as well as features caller identification.

The finished product appears like a clunker from 1997, far from present day sleek mobile phones, however the challenge of putting it together may attract tinkerers and those that catch the DIY bug from excessive Pinterest use.

The telephone is not practical -- many top quality mobile phones cost comparable, perform a much more, and do not need set up -- however the project shows mobile technologies have advanced to some extent where piecing together a fundamental phone is simply by putting together an Ikea mattress.

The house-grown phone kits will most likely not become readily available for commercial use because of FCC rules about using U.S. airwaves for homemade products. However, MIT's project helps guide you easy it's to put together a rudimentary phone, which might inspire others to test their hands at creating a fake apple iphone or underground community Universe S, although cobbling together all of the features individuals mobile phone models offer would considerably boost the cost of parts.

Still, there's curiosity about these type of tinkering. One guy already attempted his hands in a mock-up apple iphone, although it didn't call people. Another handy student went further, purchasing a touch screen and piecing together old computer parts to produce a completely functional faux-iPad for around $125.

Phone customers searching for personalized encounters frequently "jailbreak" their phones, overriding conventional configurations to adjust software options. Sometimes this produces problems, because it leaves phones susceptible to adware and spyware and security invasions, however it points to consumer need to seize control over their mobile technology experience and also to deepen their knowledge of the systems at the office.

MIT's DIY package may attract that kind of phone user, because it encourages personalized hardware, and even though it will not be accessible for in shops, it shows the growing curiosity about customizing phone hardware.


Cobble Together Your Personal Mobile Phone initially made an appearance at Mobiledia on Thu Apr 26, 2012 2:00 pm.

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