Acer Liquid Smartphone Uses Android, Qualcomm's Snapdragon
Acer offers a few teaser details about Liquid, a slim new smartphone that will feature Android 1.6, Qualcomm's Snapdragon processor and a so-called ultrafluid interface. Acer has not yet spilled pricing or timeline details for the mobile device.
Acer has shared news of an upcoming slim beauty
of a smartphone called the Liquid, which will eventually also spill over into a
series of devices. It will be the first to pair Google's
Android 1.6 operating system, aka "Donut," with Qualcomm's zippy
Snapdragon processor.
The Snapdragon processor will also be featured in HTC's
HD2 smartphone, where it will be paired with Microsoft's Windows 6.5, and Toshiba
also paired Snapdragon with Windows in its TG01 smartphone.
The Acer Liquid will have a WVGA touch screen and a camera-which some sources
say is 5 megapixels-with geotagging, ISO for controlling film speeds,
self-timer options and auto-focus. A new user interface is said to more helpfully
offer access to entertainment options and bookmarks, and smarter power
management will offer battery life that should impress.
"Acer Liquid provides instant access to Web pages, smooth streaming of
videos or music, and instant response from popular mail, maps and search
applications," Acer wrote in an introduction posted Oct. 14 on its U.S. and UK sites. "The high-speed processing capability and
high-speed Internet access (HSPA) of Snapdragon [bring] to life the Android
experience: no idle time, almost instant uploads of Web pages and downloads of
rich multimedia contents."
The Liquid's address book integrates with Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Picasa
and Flickr for real-time status and content updates, and an application called
Spinlets provides free streaming music and video that can be shared through
e-mail or Web posts.
Liquid will come in red, white and black, and Acer said the smartphone was
designed to be ergonomic. However, the company was less forthcoming about
Liquid's price and when and where it will be available.
PC maker Acer is perhaps best known for starting the netbook trend. Its move
deeper into the smartphone space comes at a time when Dell
is also expanding its business to include smartphones and phone maker Nokia
has jumped into the PC arena with its Booklet 3G netbook on Oct. 13.
On Oct. 14, a busy Acer
introduced two new laptops-the first Aspire with a touch screen and an
11.6-inch Timeline. Both feature Intel processors and the Windows 7
operating system.








