Google patent app points to possible Nexus slider phone

While it appears that there will be no new BlackBerry phones coming out of this week's Research In Motion's annual smartphone shindig BlackBerry World, Google could be looking to pick up some of that slack very soon, if a new patent filing is any indication.

Google's latest patent application could reveal an upcoming Nexus phone to appeal to BlackBerry refugees.
(Screenshot by Eric Mack/CNET)

The patent application, published late last week, gives top billing to Android chief Andy Rubin, and details a design for a smartphone with a slide-out keyboard. A hard keyboard will be a first for Google's trademark line of Nexus phones, if that is what this application actually portends.

Google's manager of global communications and public affairs, Jim Prosser, told CNET in an email that the company files "patent applications on a variety of ideas that our employees come up with. Some of those ideas later mature into real products or services; some don't. Prospective product announcements should not necessarily be inferred from our patent applications."

But there are a few hints that the filing is serious business; namely, that Rubin's name is on it, and that it went from submission in January to being published this month — much faster than the typical 18-month turnaround time.

Much of the patent filing details the actual slide-out mechanism, including a few different options, but they'd all look more or less the same to the user. Google stresses the benefits of the mechanisms, noting that the configurations allow for a significant amount of keyboard space with room for larger keys or even the inclusion of a mouse or a track pad on the hard keyboard itself.

Android has reportedly been struggling to keep up with iOS in penetrating offices and other workplaces, but a Nexus phone with a hard keyboard could be a strong lure for disillusioned BlackBerry users looking to hang on to a tactile QWERTY experience. We also learned recently that Apple toyed with the idea of a physical keyboard for the first iPhone, but the multi-touch experience on iOS has since come to be a defining feature, so it's hard to imagine the notion popping up in any serious discussions in Cupertino, Apple's headquarters, these days.

The notion of a slider Google phone has me humming a bit of Elton John's "Circle of Life". After all, the first commercially available Android phone was the G1 on T-Mobile — with a slide-out keyboard.

Via CNET

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I am intrigued to see what they have patented here... the article doesn't really go into it, and i struggle to understand what is patentable about a slider phone

Also with the iphone keyboard reference, Tony was asked if any of the three prototypes had physical keyboards and he gave a flat out "NO" .. totally contradictonary to the link articles take on it.
The physical keyboard was only internal debate on the topic during development cycles.

I will go back and watch the full interview again, but seems a bit of a stretch interpretation.
Posted by Im Batman
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