News
Assault on mobile phone battery market by Philips with AAA inserts
by James Sherwood | posted on 21 February 2008
Philips has created a handset that stops dead your excuse of "I couldn’t call because my phone’s battery died," because its latest mobile phone accepts AAA batteries.
No surprise where the idea came from: Duracell was demonstrating this technology at 3GSM a year ago, in Barcelona. But someone else has run with it.
Dubbed with the curious name of 9@9j, the candybar handset has a standard lithium-ion battery inside and, should it run out of life, then the AAA battery, which slides into a slot at the bottom of the phone, kicks in to give the handset’s lithium-ion battery a little more juice.
The phone, which Philips paraded at this year's Mobile World Congress Barcelona, was developed in conjunction with Israel-based battery specialist Techtium.
It calls the 9@9j’s dual battery design Backupower and a company spokesman has told several online sources that the AAA battery will give the lithium-ion battery an additional three hours of talk time.
Philips’ 9@9j handset forms part of its Xenium handset trio, which are sold on their battery life credentials. For example, in 2005 the existing Xenium 9@9C clamshell handset made it into the Malaysian Book of Records for its ability to provide over eight hours of continuous talk time and 14 days in standby.
A release date or price for the Philips 9@9j hasn’t been given.
Copyright Reg Hardware 2008
Technorati tags: battery
...assault on battery? Oh dear - You can discuss this article on our discussion board.
in News
WiMAX makes it into Vanco portfolio of managed services
Qualcomm and "intellectual piracy" debate at Mobile World Congress
The mystery of Amazon's Kindle - is it a mobile phone? And why 160 books?
you're reading:
Assault on mobile phone battery market by Philips with AAA inserts
WiFi frees Playstation from the PC - plan to download direct
Cisco's version of WiFi 11n trashed, as it "sells" to Duke University