Blackberry 10′s map will not feature 3D viewing

We’re not sure how many of you guys absolutely need the 3D feature on Apple’s Maps app and Google Maps, but it’s still a nice feature to have. Well if you rely on that feature a lot and you were thinking about making the switch to Blackberry 10 in the future, you might want to take note that according to RIM, Blackberry 10’s maps will not feature 3D viewing, a feature which RIM thinks is unnecessary.

RIM has partnered with TomTom for their mapping feature and given TomTom’s reputation for their GPS systems, we expect you should be able to find your way without really needing 3D, right? What do you guys think? Do you think 3D viewing is a make or break feature, or could you care less as long as you get to your destination?

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Blackberry Link desktop software hinted at in Blackberry 10 screenshot, Blackberry 10 N-series spotted in leaked video,

SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: October 1, 2012

Well look at that: one minute we’re in the middle of summer, and then October is suddenly here the next. Let’s jump into the Evening Wrap-Up, shall we? Today we heard that Apple may begin sending out invitations to its rumored iPad Mini reveal event on October 10, and we were impressed by the leaked specifications for an upcoming BlackBerry 10 phone called Aristo. The Kindle Paperwhite started shipping to excited readers across the country today, and we found out that the Android remote wipe is still roaming around out there.


Apple and Verizon have admitted to (and fixed) an issue with iPhone 5 that makes data charges go through the roof, while Apple was busy blocking in-app ads for digital stores other than the App Store. A recently discovered Twitter security flaw allows the less favorable people of the world to steal your account, and we found out today that one of The Pirate Bay’s founders is still in jail without any charges. User adoption of Windows 8 seems to be lower than it was for Windows 7, and we caught wind of a new rumor that claims the next Nexus phone could be right around the corner, along with a new version of Jelly Bean.

Mark Zuckerberg visited Russia today to talk about setting up a Facebook research center there, and a particularly funny glitch was seen telling former MobileMe users that their free iCloud storage wouldn’t expire until 2050. There were a couple different team ups today, with Samsung and Peel coming together to offer interactive content during the upcoming presidential debates, and NETGEAR and Qualcomm joining forces to offer a new developer program. The US Navy has helped a team of scientists at Indiana University come up with a particularly scary new bit of malware, while Ten One Design announced the new Pogo Connect Bluetooth 4.0 stylus.

Minecraft Xbox 360 Edition has officially hit 4 million sales, and things aren’t looking too good for the ultrabook. The new MSN portal is taking some design cues from Windows 8, and Netflix has added its “Just For Kids” section to its iPad app. A Google buyout of Viewdle is said to be closing soon, and our old friend the CD turned 30 years old today. Finally tonight, we have a review of the new Vizio All-in-One PC by Chris Burns, so be sure to check it out! That does it for tonight’s Evening Wrap-Up – enjoy the rest of your night everyone!


SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: October 1, 2012 is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


BlackBerry 10 Aristo specs leak out

It wasn’t too long ago that we were introduced to the the BlackBerry 10 L-series thanks to a leak, and today, another leak is giving us our first look at the A-series. One of the phones in the BlackBerry 10 A-Series has been named “Aristo” and judging from the specs list below, which was uncovered by Rapid Berry, it looks be packing a lot of power under the hood. If the spec list for the Aristo is anything to go on, then it appears that the A-series will be RIM’s high-end line of BlackBerry 10 handsets.


The Aristo uses a Qualcomm APQ8064 Krait quad-core processor clocked at 1.5GHz, which should prove to be a pretty powerful processor. On the front, we have an OCTA Glass OLED 4.65-inch touch screen running at 1280×720 resolution, which naturally means 720p high definition. The OCTA screen, which was developed by Samsung, is what allows the Aristo to be the thinnest BlackBerry device yet, coming in at just 8.85mm thick. Not too bad.

We’ve got a welcome 2GB of RAM running under hood, and when coupled with the processor, the Aristo should be capable of moving pretty fast. There’s also 16GB of internal flash storage to take advantage of, which is expanded through the use of a 16GB microSD card. As far as connectivity is concerned, you’ve got microUSB, mini HDMI, WiFi direct, NFC, DLNA, and Bluetooth 4.0 at your disposal, so connecting and sharing shouldn’t ever be an issue.

There’s a beefy 2,800mAh sealed battery to power the whole thing, so no, it sadly can’t be removed. We’ve also got an 8MP camera on the back, along with a 2MP camera on the front – standard fare these days, but it’s clear that RIM wanted to bring spectacular specifications to other areas of the phone. The specs listed here are certainly getting us excited for next year’s launch of BlackBerry 10, and it looks like RIM is serious about getting back into the thick of it, at least as far as offering a range of smartphone choices is concerned. Stay tuned.


BlackBerry 10 Aristo specs leak out is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


BlackBerry 10 L-series tutorial videos surface online, give a literal peek at the future (video)

BlackBerry 10 Lseries tutorial videos surface online, give a literal peek at the future video

Those of us who’ve used a BlackBerry PlayBook will be familiar with the inevitable first-boot tutorials showing how to navigate the swipe-driven interface before we’re let loose. Thanks to a series of demonstration videos leaked by BlackBerryItalia, it’s apparent that we won’t escape that educational process on BlackBerry 10 devices, either. The four clips show the basics of what we know the gesture experience will be like on full-touch L-series phones, including the signature BlackBerry Peek to check notifications and the unified inbox. Anyone looking for a direct clue as to what production BlackBerry 10 hardware will entail might be frustrated, mind you — the rendered phone appears to be a placeholder rather than the L-series or a Dev Alpha B, and the device name is censored in an attempt to protect the source. That said, the clips provide a very straightforward explanation of the new interface concept and give us one more indication that RIM is closer to launch.

Continue reading BlackBerry 10 L-series tutorial videos surface online, give a literal peek at the future (video)

Filed under: , ,

BlackBerry 10 L-series tutorial videos surface online, give a literal peek at the future (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 29 Sep 2012 08:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink CrackBerry  |  sourceBlackBerryItalia (translated)  | Email this | Comments

SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: September 28, 2012

It’s Friday once again folks, with most of you already enjoying the weekend. Today, the iPhone 5 launched in 22 additional regions around the world, setting Apple’s plan to have it in over 100 countries by the end of the year on track. Apple CEO Tim Cook apologized for the sad state of Apple Maps today (recommending some other Maps apps in the process), and we took a closer look at his words in a new column. Even more surprising is the fact that the iOS App Store now features a download page specifically for other Maps applications.


All of you Apple dissenters will definitely want to watch the iPhone 5 get destroyed by some powerful lasers, and Sharp reassured today that it’s making plenty of iPhone 5 screens, which are rumored to be the bottleneck on production. Today we got a closer look at the vibrator inside the iPhone 5, and learned that it costs less than $1 to charge your iPhone for an entire year. Microsoft has assured that it has tested Windows 8 thoroughly ahead of next month’s launch, and it seems that Kodak will soon be dropping out of the inkjet printer business.

Google now lets YouTube creators re-download their movies in their original format, and the FCC has approved an auction to reclaim broadcast TV spectrum. HP has launched Open webOS 1.0, and Amazon gave us a little video detailing the technology behind the Kindle Paperwhite. Good news for all of you Call of Duty fans: Modern Warfare 3 is free-to-play on Steam this weekend, and there are rumors floating around that HP will soon be jumping back into the mobile market.

Microsoft was spotted lamenting the lack of highly skilled technology workers today, and Notch is refusing to certify Minecraft for Windows 8, despite Microsoft’s requests. For the first time ever, Instagram has beat Twitter when it comes to daily mobile users, Sony has invested $640 million into slowly dying camera company Olympus, and a new BlackBerry 10 video gives us our first look at RIM’s new QWERTY device. Finally tonight, Chris Davies takes an up-close look at RIM’s Q2 results, which were posted yesterday, while Chris Burns has a new review of the movie LOOPER, starring Bruce Willis and Jason Gordon-Levitt. That does it for tonight’s Evening Wrap-Up, enjoy your weekend everyone!


SlashGear Evening Wrap-Up: September 28, 2012 is written by Eric Abent & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


RIM’s Q2 shake-up: Reawakening dragon or death rattle?

RIM’s painful love song to developers had left us prepared for the worst, so a rise in users and a glimmer of financial hope in Q2 2013 numbers came as no minor surprise. Admittedly, shrinking your losses to $235m versus $518m is most generously described as “slightly less terrible” than the quarter before, but the market seized on a little Canadian good news and RIM’s stock price jumped as much as 25-percent in US trading. RIM’s challenge, though, remains clear if you take anything more than a glancing view at the latest figures.

“If they can have another quarter of not burning cash and can get the device out in a few months, then investors are thinking, ‘Perhaps they have a chance to come back,’” Veritas Investment Research analyst Neeraj Monga suggested to BusinessWeek. That’s perhaps a naively top-level view, however. Although user numbers might be up and losses reduced, that new user-base isn’t in high-spending markets; instead, as CEO Thorsten Heins observed, Asia, the Middle East, and Africa are the areas waking up to BlackBerry and BBM.

“It’s amazing when you go into those countries and you see how BBM is just kicking it” Heins told investors, though it’s seemingly the affordability of the messaging service that has convinced new customers more than anything. As was observed in competitive markets like the UK in recent quarters, cheap BlackBerry handsets paired with low-cost (often prepaid) service plans cater to a frugal audience wanting ubiquitous communication.

That desire might be the shared with the enterprise user-base BlackBerry has long catered to, but the budgets involved are very different. Low-cost Curves may be keeping RIM ticking over, but it will need takers for its mid-to-high-end BlackBerry 10 range if it’s to turn things around for the longer term come 2013. A sizable chunk of RIM’s income stems not only from device sales but BlackBerry Exchange Server (BES), still at the heart of many business customer systems – for the moment, at least – but of practically zero interest to the budget consumer audience.

RIM’s strategy to shore up BES demand has, so far, been extending its remote-management capabilities to include support for Android and iOS devices. BlackBerry Mobile Fusion delivers some of the technology system admins have grown familiar with on BlackBerry devices – like 256-bit encryption, remote profile control, and more – to those with devices from other vendors.

It’s appeal, however, is only there if your business actually wants to keep BlackBerry smartphones in its collection: if you don’t really care about using a BlackBerry 7 or, as of next year, a BlackBerry 10 handset, then BlackBerry Mobile Fusion has significantly less appeal. And, again, none of this is of any interest to the developing market audience which has growing to offset waning enterprise sales.

BlackBerry 10 is shaping up to be an interesting OS, with RIM obviously learning from its rivals and elements like Peek offering a finessed way of collating mobile alerts and information without providing unduly distracting. As we saw with webOS, however, a beautiful platform is nowhere near sufficient for market success: timing is equally important even if, as Heins admits, you’re only aiming for third place. That might sound defeatist out of the gate, but despite a better-than-expected quarter, RIM is still a long way from achieving even that come 2013.


RIM’s Q2 shake-up: Reawakening dragon or death rattle? is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


Blackberry 10 N-series spotted in leaked video

One of the defining features of Blackberry phones would be its full QWERTY keyboard, a feature which (thankfully for some) will be introduced in upcoming Blackberry 10 devices as well and is expected to be part of the Blackberry 10 N-series. The L-series will be a full touchscreen experience while the N-series will have its trademark QWERTY keyboard. Either way thanks to an uploaded video (which has since been removed, but not before screenshots were grabbed), it looks like we now have an idea of what RIM’s upcoming Blackberry 10 N-series handsets might look like.

There is the possibility that the device in the screenshots could merely be a placeholder, but given that the L-series pictured next to it does resemble the leaked photos, there is a chance that the N-series pictured in the screenshots could also be the real thing, or at least close to the final design. While we haven’t seen the video ourselves, those who did speculate that it was a video created for internal use and probably used as marketing pitches. The screens appear to have been photoshopped onto the N-series so it’s not the most accurate depiction, but we hope you get the idea. If anything we have to admit that it resembles the Blackberry Bold 9900 so for those hoping for something new, you could be disappointed. If you’d like to see the rest of the screenshots, head on over to Crackberry (source link below) for the pictures.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: More Blackberry 10 screenshots have been spotted, Another Blackberry 10 L-series photo has leaked online,

BlackBerry 10 demo video gives first glimpse of QWERTY hero device

If you’re looking to get a rather early look at the next generation of RIM devices in the BlackBerry 10 universe, you’re in luck – a video has surfaced – leaked, rather – with a great first peek at the system. You’ll be able to see the BlackBerry L Series and the BlackBerry N Series in all their glory. The L Series is something you may have glimpsed before, it having a full touchscreen interface, while the N Series has what you might recognize as a more classic BlackBerry look, complete with a lovely full physical QWERTY keyboard – minus the massive trackball, of course.

The video you’re seeing here has not been absolutely confirmed beyond a shadow of a doubt as being legitimately created by RIM for the public, but it does look to have been made for RIM at the very least. The original source for the video appears to be the original editor of the video, Rob Jury, according to CrackBerry. This video was very likely created by a marketing agency for RIM as a pitch for a final product (a video ad) that would then be cleaned up and edited to perfection before the final spot appeared.


What we’re seeing here is some navigation, some fabulous Twitter integration, simplicity across the board, and that great predictive keyboard we got a bit of information on earlier this year. RIM’s stock, we must hypothesize, will grab a boost from this video, even if it is a leak that was never meant to happen. RIM’s fortunes appear to be turning around for the better if what we’ve seen this past week are any indication.

The video also shows a creative engine – or project, rather – which will have BlackBerry 10 users passing a device on from one person to the next in an effort to bring attention to the media creation powers of the platform – interesting stuff! This marketing project will have 10 people selected – stick with me now – from a collection of famous and non-famous universes. These people will be united by a desire to do something great in the creative realm. The example has folks like Lady Gaga and Ridley Scott in the same lineup, they creating a song or a movie in a single day. Once the product is made and feedback is gathered, the next user will move on from there.

Scott would be able to use BlackBerry 10′s “Time Portal” technology for editing of photos – this being similar to what we’ve seen in the past as well. This technology would allow a single photo to be edited in time, moving sections of each photo backwards or forwards in time (to capture a smile that almost wasn’t, for example). You’ll also see some homepage widgets action with rectangles the same size ratio as the display, one of these widgets re-sizing in what appears to be real-time to a full editable document alongside weather, video chat, and a map.

All of the new features would be shown off at BlackBerry World with the CEO of RIM being handed a BlackBerry 10 device that’d been used by famous and non-famous people alike, holding awesome projects on it that’d each been made in a single day. The project would be continued after the event as well, with key features being shown off in advertisements one by one with the agency that’s presenting the video you’re seeing here being at the head of it all. We’ll see if this all comes to fruition now that the video leaking it all has been spewed onto the web.

sg_blackberry_10_7
sg_blackberry_10_8
sg_blackberry_10_9
sg_blackberry_10_10
sg_blackberry_10_11
sg_blackberry_10_12
sg_blackberry_10_13
sg_blackberry_10_14
sg_blackberry_10_1
sg_blackberry_10_2
sg_blackberry_10_3
sg_blackberry_10_4
sg_blackberry_10_5
sg_blackberry_10_6


BlackBerry 10 demo video gives first glimpse of QWERTY hero device is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.


RIM: first BlackBerry 10 devices to focus on mid-range and up, entry-level may be ready in 2013

BlackBerry 10 Dev Alpha B

RIM’s Q2 earnings details have had a common theme of a silver lining to darker clouds, and that edge may have grown a bit brighter with hints of the company’s longer-term BlackBerry 10 roadmap. When asked about the release strategy, CEO Thorsten Heins said that the first BB10 devices would focus on both the mid-range and high-end of the market, a bit wider than the chiefly high-end approach that has been rumored so far. While shy on details, he confirmed that the full-touch smartphone would have a screen with an HD resolution — that’s higher than on the iPhone 5, the executive was eager to point out. More intriguingly, Heins teased the prospect of an entry-level BB10 device arriving as soon as 2013. Although development was in the early stages, the new starter phone just might be ready next year if all goes well. There’s a lot of questions left to answer about RIM’s strategy, so we won’t get too excited yet; even so, the statements are signs that the BlackBerry designer doesn’t want to leave any product gaps open for very long.

Filed under: , ,

RIM: first BlackBerry 10 devices to focus on mid-range and up, entry-level may be ready in 2013 originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 27 Sep 2012 17:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments

RIM Fiscal Q2 2013 brings on slightly less terrible results than last quarter

Compared to the earnings report in the quarter directly before this one, RIM is looking pretty good considering they’ve had a nat GAAP loss of $235 million USD on revenues of $2.9 billion. The quarter before this one we saw RIM with a net loss of $518 million on $2.8 billion in revenue – this is also the first time in the last three quarters that they’ve pushed their quarterly revenue upward instead of downward. This report comes after a particularly positive BlackBerry Jam session earlier this week which saw a boost in stock prices for the Canadian company.

The earnings we’re seeing here has RIM reporting a loss of $0.45 per share diluted, which isn’t fabulous, but is better than what was expected by some analysts. There’s been a relatively positive user base growth according to CEO Thorsten Heins earlier this week, this tying in well with the report today letting the public known about 7.4 million more BlackBerry devices shipping this quarter alongside 130,000 PlayBooks. That’s not quite as good as last quarter, but in that they’ve lost less this quarter than last, they must be doing something right, yes?

BlackBerry 10 is just around the quarter and RIM is certainly going to be hoping that their record losses in their fiscal Q1 2013 will never be repeated. You’ll find that with a new software build coming out soon, BlackBerry users will likely stick around for the show rather than jumping ship after an extended period of similar-feeling builds on devices for quite a few months – and years, depending on how you look at the situation. RIM’s BlackBerry 10 is a touch-friendly system that they company hopes will turn their fortunes around in a very big way.

You’ll find that this quarterly report does not look fantastic in the very long run – as RIM is not exactly doing as well as they have in the distant past – but it does definitely look like an upturn in the short term. Keep your heads high, BlackBerry fans! We’ll be seeing better days soon – right?


RIM Fiscal Q2 2013 brings on slightly less terrible results than last quarter is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.