Apple plans smaller SIM card

 

Plots path to thinner devices.

Apple has proposed a standardised SIM card smaller than those it currently uses in the iPhone and iPad to be able to produce thinner devices, an Orange executive told Reuters on Tuesday.

The move by Apple to work with operators is symptomatic of warming relations as Apple, no longer a new market entrant, depends on mobile carrier subsidies to help it maintain high volumes of iPhone sales.

A spokesman for European telecoms standards body (ETSI) confirmed Apple had made the proposal for the new standard for SIM cards, but decision on starting the standardisation work, which can take more than a year, was not yet made.

"This process may take some time, up to a year or more, if there is strong disagreement between industry players. However, when there is broad consensus among the companies participating in the standards committee, the process can be accelerated to a number of months," he said.

Orange said it, and other operators, welcomed the move.

"We were quite happy to see last week that Apple has submitted a new requirement to ETSI for a smaller SIM form factor -- smaller than the one that goes in iPhone 4 and iPad," said Anne Bouverot, Orange's head of mobile services.

"They have done that through the standardisation route, through ETSI, with the sponsorship of some major mobile operators, Orange being one of them," she told the Paris leg of the Reuters Global Technology Summit.

She said first devices using such SIM cards could come out next year. If the smaller SIMs become standardised, other phone makers are also likely to adopt them.

"At some point other vendors will follow as size and weight will be crucial for smartphones," said analyst Francisco Jeronimo of technology research firm IDC.

Apple was not immediately available for comment.

Apple was a divisive force in the mobile industry when it launched its first iPhone in 2007, releasing the coveted device only through selected partners and effectively forcing operators to offer unlimited data plans.

Bouverot said: "As long as it supports the requirements that we have for the SIM card, which is a very important asset for operators, which we absolutely want to continue to support, then we're happy that this is a development."

"It's certainly showing that they're willing to work with the standardisation bodies and with the operators, which we welcome," Bouverot added. "We're discussing how to improve our relationship."

(Reporting by Leila Abboud, Georgina Prodhan, Marie Mawad and Tarmo Virki; Editing by James Regan and Jon Loades-Carter)

Copyright Reuters Copyright Reuters. Click for restrictions.



Apple plans smaller SIM card
"Answering to Ezy2Confuze: Good on ya mate! That's the way. Get more people to do that so there will be less people queing from Apple products."
By cootified
 
 
 
Comments: 6
Mark D
May 18, 2011 10:31 AM
It's actually not that smaller than the second generation SIM card, only roughly 1mm shorter. Really got to ask why bother? or is this just Apples marketing team grabbing for headlines?

Apple, complicate it.
ITnovice
May 18, 2011 11:35 AM
Did people ask for a thinner iPhone? No they did not!

People want other features not yet included, especially if the thickness comes at the expense of battery life. Another case of Apple ignoring its customers wishes and doing its own thing instead.
kenrob
May 18, 2011 12:44 PM
No it'll just make it harder for dis-satisfied users to migrate from that new super-slim-SIM-using device to a competitor's device that may use one of the existing SIM form factors. It'll make it harder to use an alternate device, e.g. an old spare phone, when the super-slim-SIM-using device fails.

Why would the cariers encourage an increase in their SKUs of SIMs? I smell a rat. Shades of the scandal over the ISO ratification of OfficeXML formats...

Standards, aren't they fantastic. How many would you like?
Ezy2Confuze
May 18, 2011 1:53 PM
Prsonally i would prefer Apple spend their time and resources on training their Apple Store staff about their products and customer service. We are looking at iPads for board members, all we wanted to know is how we can secure the data on the iPads in case a unit is lost or stolen and how we can integrate them with our Windows network. A staff member made an appointment a week ago to talk to their Business specialist. Wehn he arrived, the specialist was with a customer and they could not confirm when he would be available, he was the only "iPad 2 specialist" they have. After waiting around, he couldn't even answer basic questions about connecting the unit to a Windows network or securing the contents on the unit. Looks like the new Fujitsu Q550 will be the way we go. Goodbye Apple.
cootified
May 18, 2011 9:24 PM
I think Apple needs to be part of GSM Congress before any Telco or handset manufacturer can approve of this.
cootified
May 18, 2011 9:29 PM
Answering to Ezy2Confuze:

Good on ya mate!
That's the way.

Get more people to do that so there will be less people queing from Apple products.

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