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Motorola to call on Google in cell overhaul

Company is expected to focus on Android operating system in a revamp of its struggling handset division, according to a report in <i>The Wall Street Journal</i>.

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Steven Musil is the night news editor at CNET News. He's been hooked on tech since learning BASIC in the late '70s. When not cleaning up after his daughter and son, Steven can be found pedaling around the San Francisco Bay Area. Before joining CNET in 2000, Steven spent 10 years at various Bay Area newspapers.
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Steven Musil
2 min read

Motorola is expected to place a heavy bet that Android phones with Google's mobile operating system can turn around its struggling cell phone division.

Sanjay Jha, Motorola co-CEO Qualcomm

Sanjay Jha, the company's co-chief executive and head of mobile devices, is expected to focus on Google's operating system in an overhaul of the cell phone division that includes additional job cuts and the elimination of four platforms, according to a report Tuesday in The Wall Street Journal. Jha is expected to detail his plans as early as Thursday when the company announces its earnings.

Motorola is expected to trim the number of operating systems it uses to three: Android for its midtier devices, as well as Microsoft's Windows Mobile and its own platform, P2K.

Business Week reported earlier this week that Motorola was prepping a social-networking smartphone based on Android that will debut in the second quarter of next year. Motorola's Android phone, according to the report, is expected to feature a touchscreen similar to Apple's popular iPhone, as well as a slide-out QWERTY keyboard that allows people to connect to such social-networking sites as MySpace and Facebook. It is unclear how similar it will be to T-Mobile USA's newly released G1 phone, manufactured by HTC, which also uses Android.

Motorola tapped Jha in August to be co-chief executive and head of the mobile devices business after announcing earlier that it will separate the mobile devices from the rest of the company. Jha, 45, spent the past 14 years at cell phone chipmaker Qualcomm, where he most recently ran the company's CDMA division.

In August, Motorola surprised Wall Street with a small profit for the second quarter. But the company's handset division continued to drag on earnings. Most of the gains in the second quarter came from cost cutting and from its Internet and cable businesses. Still, the company managed to hang on to its market share position, a surprising result, as many analysts had expected No. 1 Nokia and No. 2 Samsung to pick up share.