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compal-vibo-smarterphone-os-sA lot of attention has been given to sub-$100 e-readers such as the new crop of Kindles. But a report from PaidContent suggests another generation of sub-$100 devices might be on the horizon: the sub-$100 smartphone.

PaidContent reports that consultants at Deloitte see an impending wave of cheap smartphones hitting the market—as many as 500 million of them by the end of the year. By and large, these will not be Android, iOS, RIM, Symbian, or Windows Phone based phones, but rather they will run on closed, proprietary platforms. Most consumers care more about touchscreens or keyboards than what OS the device is running.

These phones will not likely have 3G, but could have other useful features:

WiFi is likely to become a “standard” feature of these devices, as will email, instant messaging, a pared-down form of apps and a camera—a list of services, that, along with the touchscreens, seem to now be the smartphone bare essentials. As prices for components continue to drop, specifications for these sub-$100 phones will continue to get better (or smarter, as the case may be).

It’s not clear, of course, whether any of these phones will have the ability to read e-books. But I wouldn’t be surprised if Amazon or other major e-book companies reached out to cut deals with carriers to get their readers included on that “pared-down” list of apps. A smartphone is a digital device you’ll probably keep with you at all times, and if you can read e-books on it, chances are at least some of you will.

 
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