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Motorola Mobility to Release First Commercial NFC Phone

Motorola Mobility will soon release its first commercial NFC phone, an upper-end Android LTE smartphone that U.S. mobile carrier Sprint plans to introduce.

The phone could be out as early as next month, sporting a full QWERTY slide-out keyboard and “business ready” full corporate security.

Sprint announced the phone Thursday, although didn’t disclose the release date. And it didn’t say whether the phone would support the Google Wallet or NFC payment–despite the fact that Motorola Mobility is now a division of Google and Sprint remains the only operator supporting the Google Wallet.

Sprint also is planning its own mobile wallet, Touch, although there was no mention of that, either, in its announcement of the Motorola phone.

Regarding NFC, Sprint only said the phone, which runs Android 4.04, Ice Cream Sandwich, would support the enhanced peer-to-peer NFC feature, Android Beam, which Google introduced for Android 4.0.

Motorola didn’t mention the NFC functionality in the phone at all on the pages of its Web site promoting the new handset. Google has said the division will be autonomous from its other businesses.

Nine Out of 10, but Not Apple
Still, the announcement of the phone now means that nine out of the top ten handset makers worldwide by unit shipments support NFC, including Samsung Electronics, Nokia, ZTE, LG Electronics, Sony Mobile and HTC, notes Einar Rosenberg, head of U.S.-based NFC application provider Narian Technologies.

The obvious exception is Apple, and despite all the rumors that the tech giant will incorporate NFC in its next iPhone, that is anything but certain. Some knowledgeable sources told NFC Times they doubt Apple will support NFC this time and instead will wait until next year.

Rosenberg, a veteran watcher of Apple’s possible moves toward NFC, says he doesn’t know whether the next iPhone–due out this fall–will have an NFC chip inside it or not. Yet, despite Apple’s clout in the smartphone industry, Rosenberg notes that the iPhone and its iOS continue to lose ground to Android smartphones, led by models from Samsung. 

According to U.S.-based research firm IDC, 59% of smartphones shipped worldwide during the first quarter of 2012 supported Android compared with 23% for iOS. That’s up from 36.7% market share for Android and 18.6% for iOS a year earlier.

Android phone makers have embraced NFC, noted Rosenberg, who estimated that a cumulative total of 20 million NFC phones have been shipped in the U.S. as of this month, nearly all of them Android phones. That includes the Samsung Galaxy S III and its predecessor, the Galaxy S II, along with the HTC One X and its cousin, the Evo 4G LTE, as well as Google’s Galaxy Nexus, made by Samsung. Worldwide, NFC phones are approaching 100 million units over nearly the past two years, he estimated.

“Nine out of 10 phone makers are shipping, and the fact (is) that Apple’s might has been shrinking rapidly in the past 12 months,” Rosenberg said. “Why do you think that Apple is running scared with all these patent fights? You think they didn’t have these patents a year or two ago. Why now?”

It is a matter of opinion just what impact another snub of NFC by Apple will have. But in addition to Android, the first Windows 8 Phone devices supporting NFC are expected this year.

As for Motorola Mobility’s first commercial NFC phone, the Photon Q 4G LTE almost certainly uses an NFC chip from NXP Semiconductors, which has supplied all Android NFC phones to date. And more and more Android NFC phone makers are ordering NXP’s PN65, which comes stacked with an embedded secure chip. These phone makers include Samsung and HTC, NFC Times has learned. The NFC chips also can support the single-wire protocol connection to the NFC chip.

Motorola has worked on NFC technology for years and holds some key patents. Its SLVR L7 was used in NFC trials at least as far back as 2007.

The separate Motorola Solutions company introduced a PDA-like NFC phone, the MC75A HF mobile computer, in 2011 targeted at enterprises.

Article source: http://nfctimes.com/news/motorola-release-first-commercial-nfc-phone

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