Boeing developing a super safe Android phone!
Boeing,
the US-based aerospace and defense giant, has revealed it is planning an entry
into the Smartphone
market
sometime in late 2012.
Company
officials told National
Defense Magazine that “the Boeing phone” would run an
encrypted version of the Android operating system to secure business
communications while ensuring ease of use.
A more secure Android
Brian
Palma, Boeing’s vice president of secure infrastructure, said the Smartphone
was nearing the end of its development cycle and would target high-end business and government
users.
“We believe that there is
significant interest in the defense side as well as the intelligence side and
in the commercial world as well,” Palma told the National Defense Magazine.
He
added that while competing secure devices developed with proprietary software
and hardware could cost between $15,000 and $20,000 (£9,420-£12,560), Boeing’s Smartphone
would be launched at a lower price, though not as low as the consumer market
offerings of Apple and RIM.
Boeing’s
decision to move into Smartphones is reportedly motivated by the
BYOD trend. As increasing numbers of companies and government
departments are developing strategies to integrate consumer devices with
workplace security, this super secure Smartphone may help to bridge the gap in
a single device.
The Boeing phone will
supposedly give users “what they are used to seeing [on consumer Smartphones]
and give them the functionality from the security perspective,” Roger Krone,
president of network and space systems, told National Defense Magazine.
Last
month, the NSA announced a similar Android-based secure Smartphone created
entirely from off-the-shelf components. The agency’s use of Android’s open source platform
echoed Boeing’s rationale in that it helped keep the government up to speed
with consumer products while allowing significant security modifications.
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