Research In Motion Announces BlackBerry Storm 2

blackberry-storm-2Research In Motion has announced an updated version of its touchscreen phone, the Storm 2. The latest BlackBerry handset promises a better display and wireless connectivity. And like its predecessor, the Storm 2 will be available on the Verizon network.

RIM launched the first Storm phone in November last year. The device met with some very harsh reviews from critics who derided the phone’s poor touchscreen, glitchy software and lack of Wi-Fi connectivity. Yet the Storm sold more than one million devices in just about two months after the launch.

With Storm 2, RIM seems to have taken note some of the criticism. Here are two things that it has improved on in the device.

  • Touchscreen: The biggest criticism against the first generation Storm phone was its touchscreen. RIM claimed that the screen would offer the ‘click’  feedback of a physical keyboard but most users found the touchscreen difficult to use.  A Wall Street Journal review of the Storm 2 says the new touchscreens are better. The device now “allows for faster, smoother typing,” says the review.
  • Wireless connectivity:  In a rather puzzling move, the original Storm phone didn’t support Wi-Fi. And since the Storm was billed as a smartphone, it seriously crippled the device. RIM seems to have fixed that with built-in Wi-Fi connectivity in the Storm 2.

RIM hasn’t disclosed pricing or availability for the phone. But it is likely to launch it in the U.S. next month for under $200 with a two-year contract. The Storm 2 will be available on the Vodafone network in Europe.

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Leaked BlackBerry Atlas gives Curve 8900 its CDMA counterpart?

Gemini had its Aries, and now it seems Javeline (a.k.a. the Curve 8900) has found its own CDMA equivalent in the BlackBerry Atlas. (Isn’t a shame that RIM’s device codenames are so often catchier than their final designation? But we digress.) A new BlackBerry has hit the internet in grainy photograph form, and according to Salomondrin with additional notes from Crackberry, the pictured leak (it’s the one on the left) boasts CDMA bands, WiFi, and a 8900 series keyboard. Mum’s the word, officially and otherwise, on pretty much any other details, but hopefully RIM won’t keep us waiting too long.

[Via Crackberry]

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Leaked BlackBerry Atlas gives Curve 8900 its CDMA counterpart? originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 29 Sep 2009 22:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple Gets OK to Keep Palm Unplugged From iTunes

Palm Pre owners, get ready to kiss your iTunes music goodbye.

The most recent turn in the Apple vs. Palm debate makes it even less likely that the Palm will again be able to sync with iTunes.

On Wednesday, Palm received a letter from the USB Implementers Forum, a group overseeing standards for USB connections, in reply to their complaint that Apple is constricting trade by not allowing Palm and other devices to sync to iTunes. The letter from USB-IF not only dismissed any violation by Apple, but also stated that Palm was actually the one in violation of the group’s membership agreement. That’s because Palm was misrepresenting the Pre as an iPod in order to access iTunes — a violation of the rules USB member companies have agreed to.

Palm and Apple have been in contention over iTunes syncing since the launch of the Palm Pre. One of the Pre’s selling points was that it could sync with iTunes music, a convenient feature for users of the popular music application. Apple soon struck back, disabling Pre syncing with a series of iTunes updates.

But there are other ways Palm could get around this decision for their customers. Research in Motion, the mobile OS for the Blackberry, has developed software to allow the transfer of music from iTunes to selected Blackberry devices. Users can transfer music from their computer to the Blackberry’s media player. However, only songs without digital rights management apply to this alternative to syncing. If you haven’t upgraded your iTunes purchases to be DRM-free, then only music purchased after January of earlier this year will work.

Unfortunately for Palm, the ability to sync to iTunes was a key feature for consumers who use iTunes to manage their music. Without a solution to the iTunes block, Pre owners will have to find other ways to keep their mobile music alive.

Apple Gets Green Light to Block Palm From iTunes [New York Times]


Video: BlackBerry support coming to REDFLY Mobile Companion, adds only marginal appeal

Listen, we feel your pain, we know you’ve been dying to find another use for your REDFLY Mobile Companion, and while we’re not sure this is it, at least you’ve got another thing you can tell your friends when justifying the purchase. Celio Corp’s announced it’ll be bringing BlackBerry support to the Companion C8N and C7 as a free update in mid-Q4 of this year. It works via either physical cable or Bluetooth, and at this point supports Bold 9000, Curve 8900, and Tour 9630, with more phones promised as they’re released. Crackberry’s managed to obtain a video demonstration, which is after the break if you’re interested. It’s okay if you’re not, we understand.

Read – Press release
Read – First look

Continue reading Video: BlackBerry support coming to REDFLY Mobile Companion, adds only marginal appeal

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Video: BlackBerry support coming to REDFLY Mobile Companion, adds only marginal appeal originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Sep 2009 19:48:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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5 Things RIM Needs to Fix in its BlackBerries

bberry-busted

Apple may get all the press, but the venerable BlackBerry is untouchable when it comes to sales. Three of the top five best-selling smartphones in the first quarter of the year were BlackBerries, according to research company The NPD Group.


So why aren’t the devices better? Sure, BlackBerry users rely on their physical keyboards to pound out e-mails, as they always have, and Research In Motion’s longstanding support for push notification and corporate mail servers means you’ll never miss an urgent message from the boss.

But even though BlackBerries have been adding gee-whiz features like multimedia playback and touchscreens, the devices still seem like a mishmash of undercooked ideas. Here are five things RIM needs to fix if it wants to maintain its lead.

Browser: Take a poll among BlackBerry users about what they don’t like in their phone and the poor browser comes up every time. Unlike the iPhone or the Palm Pre, the BlackBerry does not display web pages just the way your PC would. Instead, Blackberry users have to contend with a stripped-down, mobile version of a web page that is decidedly 1990s in its look. BlackBerry users also complain about the slowness of the browser.

RIM isn’t oblivious to the complaints. Last month, the company bought Torch Mobile, which makes  the Webkit-based Iris browser.  Webkit is the layout engine that is also used by the iPhone, Android and Symbian mobile operating systems.

But there’s no word yet from RIM on when the company’s own devices will start getting Webkit-based browsers.

Touchscreen: BlackBerry Storm. Need we say more? RIM introduced its first touchscreen phone last year but was a lackluster debut, to say the least. Though some die-hard BlackBerry users like it, the Storm’s touchscreen pales in comparison to the iPhone and the Palm Pre. RIM’s decision to introduce haptic feedback by making the whole screen click down whenever you pressed a virtual key just didn’t help: Ironically, it made typing on the Storm slower than on either an iPhone or a BlackBerry with a physical keyboard.

But this is one problem the company seems ready to fix quickly. The Storm 2 is expected later this year and leaked videos online suggest that it will sport a new, improved touchscreen. This time around, RIM will not just have to do better than the first generation of the Storm but also beat the benchmark that the iPhone touchscreen has set in terms of responsiveness and ease of use.

App store: Over the past decade RIM is estimated to have sold more than 65 million phones. The company has about 56 percent share of the U.S smartphone market. It sold 26 million phones in just the 12 months ending February 2009. By comparison, Apple said in June that it has sold 40 million iPhones in the two years since the device debuted. With millions of users more than the iPhone, there’s no reason the BlackBerry app store should lag behind the iPhone’s so much. Apple’s iPhone App Store has about 70,000 applications available while the BlackBerry marketplace has 2,322 apps in it, according to Medialets. Even the Android marketplace, so far available on just three phones in the United States, has 9,148 apps available.

The success of Apple’s App Store has shown that consumers like the idea of easy-to-use, fun applications that take the phone beyond just voice and data. Even if they don’t wind up actually using many of those apps, the mere presence of 70,000 possible ways to upgrade your phone is a powerful incentive to go with an iPhone. But RIM seems to have embraced that idea only half-heartedly. It launched its app store in March but the company has done little to get consumers excited about the apps in it. While Apple has made its catchphrase, “There’s an app for that,” part of pop culture punchlines, RIM is still riding on the glory of push e-mail — which it no longer claims exclusively.

Sure, there’s a difference between the Apple and the Blackberry audience. While the iPhone is almost completely a consumer product, RIM is a favorite of business users. That’s not to say BlackBerries are not popular among celebrities and general users. Nearly 45 percent of RIM’s subscribers last quarter were non-business users.

If RIM wants to grow that user base, it needs to make the BlackBerry more fun to use.  The company will have to court developers and put its marketing muscle behind its app store. Catching up to Apple may be tough but at least beating Android should be easy.

Wi-Fi: Research In Motion clearly bills itself as a premium handset maker. Then why would it have smartphones that come without Wi-Fi connectivity? Wi-Fi has become an immensely popular feature among mobile phone users and even telecom carriers recognize that. Earlier this year, AT&T bought Wi-Fi services provider Wayport for $275 million. In so doing, the company added about 10,000 Wi-Fi hotspots to its network. Overall, AT&T has about 80,000 hotspots worldwide.

Sounds great, except for BlackBerry Storm or users of the recently released BlackBerry Tour.  Both the Storm and Tour offer 3G connectivity but don’t have Wi-Fi. RIM reportedly plans to release another model called Essex that will essentially have all the features of the Tour, plus the addition of Wi-Fi. It can’t come soon enough. Meanwhile, why doesn’t the company have Wi-Fi in all its devices?

Desktop software: Even the most loyal of BlackBerry users are quick to fess up to how difficult it can be manage their music and data through the company’s software. The BlackBerry desktop software runs on the PC and is ostensibly designed to make it easier for users to transfer files, music and data. But the software needs a rethink. Online forums are filled with users who can’t get the software to work as promised. The system also significantly lags Apple’s relatively seamless setup process. If RIM’s going to play in the consumer space, it needs to overhaul the software and make it as easy to use with the BlackBerry as iTunes is with the iPhone.

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Photo: peyri/Flickr


BlackBerry 9700’s arranged marriage to T-Mobile leaves its mark, seen in the wild

Sure, it’s more or less just a BlackBerry Onyx with a trackpad, but slap a T-Mobile logo on it, and the excitement is all rejuvenated. Such a device was spotted in the wild by the folks at Crackberry, sporting a silver chrome and a leather-clad battery cover. Not much to say here, but with that branding, we’re hoping it’s not long before heading into the consumer channels. Don’t worry AT&T friends, we’re sure your GSM-equipped 9700 is just around the corner, too.

[Thanks, Glenn]

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BlackBerry 9700’s arranged marriage to T-Mobile leaves its mark, seen in the wild originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 11 Aug 2009 00:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry App World 1.1 unleashed, makes welcome improvements to store navigation

If you’ve been using your BlackBerry in the last 24 hours or so, you’ve probably noticed that red star plastered on the App World icon, signaling it’s time for an upgrade. Yes, RIM’s version of the app store has hit version 1.1, and the bulk of the update concerns better navigation options — new categories, top downloads for free and premium apps, and the ability to sort search results by name, release date, rating, price, and developer. Outside of that, we’ve also got the option to now archive apps on SD card or other memory, but unfortunately there’s no option to run those programs without reinstalling to internal memory. The update is available for all countries, including the recently-introduced group of ten. Full details after the break.

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BlackBerry App World 1.1 unleashed, makes welcome improvements to store navigation originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 01 Aug 2009 19:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RIM settles with patent holder Visto to the tune of $267.5 million

Research in Motion hit a milestone today, only “achievement” wouldn’t necessarily be the best way to describe it. The BlackBerry maker has finally ended a long-running patent dispute with Visto Corp., paying out $267.5 million to settle the matter — a much larger fee than the $7.7 million Visto got from Seven Networks, but conversely a fraction of the reported $612.5 million RIM paid to settle with NTP years back. With it, however, comes a fully paid license to use Visto’s patents, and some of the plaintiff’s intellectual property by way of transferred ownership. So now that we can move on from that dispute, who’s next to take the mantle and vie for a piece of BlackBerry’s pie?

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RIM settles with patent holder Visto to the tune of $267.5 million originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Jul 2009 17:18:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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7Digital to debut BlackBerry direct music downloads

Even if no one’s ever bought a BlackBerry (or, for that matter, a BlockBerry) for its multimedia prowess, things are starting to get a little interesting for the rock’n’rollers over at RIM. According to the Telegraph (UK), the music download site 7Digital will be launching a service for U2’s new favorite handset this September. Based around an application that will be available in BlackBerry’s App World, customers will be able to download music (with “most” tracks being DRM-free) directly to their phone for 79 cents a pop. Are you excited? No? Well, RIM CEO Jim Balsillie sure is. According to the article, he believes that the market’s experiencing nothing less than the “birth of digital music 2.0.” What do you think?

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7Digital to debut BlackBerry direct music downloads originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 13 Jul 2009 14:44:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Storm 2 spec’d, 3G-equipped original en route to AT&T?

You haven’t forgotten about that BlackBerry Storm 2, have you? The Boy Genius Report is claiming it’s gotten device specs for RIM’s touchscreen-centric maven, also reportedly called the 9550, and while not surprising (and not confirmed), according to his source the CDMA device will be sporting 802.11b/g (which we already sort of knew), a 3.2 megapixel camera, 360 x 480 capacitive touchscreen, and BlackBerry OS 5.0. If that’s not enough, the site’s also saying a GSM version of the original, with 3G in tow, does exist as the 9520 and is possibly on track for release soon on AT&T and Rogers. All nice fodder for dreams, but we’re not getting our hopes up until something more official rears its SurePress-laden head.

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BlackBerry Storm 2 spec’d, 3G-equipped original en route to AT&T? originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Jul 2009 10:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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