Skip to main content

INQ shows off Facebook-optimized Cloud Touch on video; UPDATE: Specs detailed

INQ Cloud Touch Facebook PhoneFacebook can deny its rumored phone all it wants, now there’s video footage. INQ exec Andrew Bennet paid a visit to TechCrunch today and offered an up-close demo of the INQ Cloud Touch, an Android-based smartphone optimized for the social network on all levels. Facebook is fully integrated into the phone’s layout and functions: For instance, your News Feed and friends’ status updates are immediately available on the home screen, and the phone focuses on your “top friends,” bringing you their updates in an easily accessible widget.

We reported last month that Facebook and INQ were collaborating on a phone, and also wondered whether the INQ Spotify device was the same product. Looks like we were right. In the demo, Burnett shows off the phone’s Spotify music player, which nudges out Android’s custom music application. For months now, Facebook has vehemently denied it’s working on a phone, which really just boils down to the fact that it’s not manufacturing its own branded device. But this thing is short one Mark Zuckerberg portrait from being called a Facebook phone. Still, some sources aren’t convinced Facebook isn’t still working on its very own mobile product.

According to Bennet, the phone features an Android OS with a Facebook layer. Its four main applications are the familiar Facebook People, Events, Notifications, and Places logos, and you can guess where those take you. Your closest friends are determined by Facebooks open graph, and their updates are logged specifically.

The phone basically draws as much information as it can from Facebook’s open graph to fill in applications like your address and phone book, instant messaging contact list, calendar, and so on. For example, your calendar references Facebook events and birthdays that are then added to your native Google schedule.

INQ will also introduce a model with a full QWERTY keyboard, the ING Cloud Q, which is still in development. The Cloud Q and Cloud Touch will launch in the UK in May, and its stateside debut is slated for, oh…let’s say…whenever it can convince a US carrier to pick it up.

Facebook might be treading on e-mail’s territory, but it certainly isn’t going to steal too many smartphone users. It’s blatantly marketing the phone towards teens and young adults whose pockets aren’t terribly deep – with some carriers’ contacts and subsidies, it may be only $50. Without, however, it’s possible it will cost you $250 – pricing and a specific launch date have yet to be confirmed.

According to TechCrunch, Facebook is still working with HTC on its own phone optimized for the social network. For now, check out the video of the INQ Cloud Touch below.

(Photo via PCMag)


[UPDATE]

Here’s a look at the specs leaking out about the Cloud Touch and Cloud Q. The Cloud Touch has a 3.5-inch HVGA touchscreen display, 4MB of memory, a 5-megapixel camera, and a 600MHz Qualcomm MSM7227 processor. The still-in-development Cloud Q will sport a 2.6-inch display along with its slide out full QWERTY keyboard. Both phones will run Android 2.2.

Molly McHugh
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Before coming to Digital Trends, Molly worked as a freelance writer, occasional photographer, and general technical lackey…
How to view Instagram without an account
An iPhone 15 Pro Max showing Instagram via a web browser.

Instagram is one of the largest social media platforms on the planet. Whether you want to share a family photo, what you had for lunch at your favorite cafe, or a silly video of your cat, Instagram is the place to do it.

Read more
Something odd is happening with Samsung’s two new budget phones
A person holding the Samsung Galaxy A35 and Galaxy A55.

The Samsung Galaxy A35 (left) and Galaxy A55 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

I’ve been using the Samsung Galaxy A55 for almost two weeks and have now swapped my SIM card over to the Samsung Galaxy A35. These are the latest entries in Samsung's budget-minded Galaxy-A series. In all honestly, I can barely tell the difference between them.

Read more
Learn 14 languages: Get $449 off a lifetime subscription to Babbel
A person using the Babbel app on their smartphone.

Learning a new language no longer requires you to make time for formal classes because there are now several language learning apps that you can tap. One of them is Babbel, and you can currently get a lifetime subscription to the online learning platform for only $150 from StackSocial. That's $449 off its original price of $599, but we don't know how much time is remaining before the offer expires. If you want to take advantage of the 74% discount, it's highly recommended that you complete the transaction immediately.

Why you should buy the Babbel lifetime subscription
A lifetime subscription to Babbel not only unlocks the possibility of learning one or two new languages, as the platform encompasses a total of 14 languages: English, French, Spanish, German, Italian, Portuguese, Swedish, Turkish, Dutch, Polish, Indonesia, Norwegian, Danish, and Russian. You'll be learning your new language of choice with lessons that only take 10 minutes to 15 minutes each to complete, so unlike classes with a rigid schedule, you can learn at your own pace and at any time you're free through Babbel. The lessons cover real-life topics, and they use speech recognition technology to help you master pronunciation. You'll then test yourself through personalized review sessions that will help make sure that you retain all the information that's being taught to you.

Read more