BlackBerry Storm2 hands-on and impressions

For a company with the most starched, buttoned-up roots of any major wireless manufacturer, RIM’s venture out of its enterprise comfort zone to the consumer space went amazingly smoothly thanks to the introduction of the original Pearl, a phone that’s still sold in a variety of colors, configurations, and carriers to this day. At some point, though, it became clear that the industry was moving toward touch — a space RIM had never dabbled in — and the trend gave birth to the Storm, a product that had obviously been rushed to market with countless software bugs and a dodgy SurePress concept that caused more problems than it solved. With prototypes floating around in the wild mere months after its predecessor’s release, RIM’s message was loud and clear earlier this year: “we need to fix the Storm, and we need to do it quickly.” Ultimately, it’s ended up taking the company just about a year to get the Storm2 to market, a product that attempts to tweak Waterloo’s touchscreen strategy just enough to undo a few mistakes and send it down the right path. Mission accomplished? Read on.

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BlackBerry Storm2 hands-on and impressions originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Nov 2009 15:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Walmart offering $100 gift card with any BlackBerry purchase (but only next week)

We’re onto you, Wally World. Granted, you already confessed that you’d be dishing out a deal a week until sometime in the future, but hey, we’ll feign surprise without thinking twice. Next week’s bargain is a good one for those in the market for one of RIM’s handsets, as Walmart shoppers will be given a $100 gift card (to Walmart, obviously) if they purchase practically any BlackBerry phone on a 2-year contract from AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile or Verizon Wireless. The offer begins at 8AM local time this Saturday and runs through November 20th, and if you’re looking to see exactly which handsets are included in the deal, have a look past the break.

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Walmart offering $100 gift card with any BlackBerry purchase (but only next week) originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 11 Nov 2009 10:42:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Research In Motion Woos BlackBerry Developers

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SAN FRANCISCO — BlackBerry maker Research In Motion has been losing developers’ hearts to newer, sexier platforms like the Apple iPhone and Google-backed Android operating system. Now RIM is trying to win them back with a host of enhancements to the BlackBerry services platform and new ways for developers to make money.

RIM will allow in-app transactions, create a new payment service, build a better browser and offer higher quality mobile gaming support, Jim Balsillie, co-CEO of Research In Motion promised developers at the company’s second developer conference today. RIM will also support Adobe Flash for BlackBerry phones and allow developers to create Flash-based content for the smartphones.

The announcements probably aren’t enough to help RIM steal developers away from rival operating systems but could put the BlackBerry on a more equal footing, experts contacted by Wired.com say.

“All these things are just a matter of getting to parity,” says Steve Howard, president and CEO of MobiHand, an operator of app stores for smartphones. “They are not dramatically leapfrogging anyone else on the platform side but they are creating a more creative environment for BlackBerry developers.”

RIM has about about 56 percent share of the U.S smartphone market and sold more than 65 million phones, landing the company in Fortune magazine’s recent list of fastest growing firms. But it faces stiff competition from rivals such as Apple’s iPhone and the new army of smartphones running Google’s Android operating system. RIM launched its app store, the BlackBerry App World, in April but it hasn’t attracted the same number of developers to its platform as the iPhone or Android. The App World store has just about 2,000 apps available for download, compared to the iPhone App Store’s 100,000 apps or Android’s 12,000.

RIM isn’t giving up, though.

“We heard you,” Balsillie told developers. “We know you want much more native APIs, access to app data and deep rich integration.”

Here are some of the announcements that RIM hopes will stir developers.

Monetization of Apps: RIM plans to present a new BlackBerry Payment Service that will allow developers to make more money off their apps by selling digital content, upgrades or subscriptions. In-app transactions are already popular with developers on Apple’s App store. With BlackBerry apps, users will be able to use either PayPal or RIM’s payment service to pay for the transactions. RIM will also partner with telecom carriers to offer billing through the wireless service providers. The payment service and SDK are expected to be available in mid-2010.

RIM will also offer a BlackBerry Advertising Service to allow developers to integrate rich media ads into their apps. For instance, a user can initiate a call from an ad, add a calendar entry or contact entry from an ad and directly link to an application in BlackBerry App World store from an ad. Developers will alos have access to advanced analytics from the ads.

Adobe Flash Support: Support for Adobe’s Flash technology has been one of the most asked-for features in smartphones and it is coming to the BlackBerry. RIM and Adobe have partnered to allow application developers to use Flash platform technology and other Adobe tools such as PhotoShop to create apps for BlackBerries. Apple has yet to offer Flash on the iPhones, although Adobe recently began offering a way for developers to turn Flash apps into iPhone apps.

The move could attract a huge number of Flash developers who currently create Flash-based content for websites.

“It’s a competitive blast at Apple,” says MobiHand’s Howard. “There are a huge number of developers qualified to develop in Flash and tightly integrating Flash with the BlackBerry environment injects energy into the BlackBerry platform.”

Richer Browser: BlackBerry’s browser has been a sore point for consumers and developers. But RIM is working to fix that. A new enhanced browser capable of full HTML rendering will be available early next year, says Balsillie. The BlackBerry Browser 5.0 will be a result of the September acquisition of Torch Mobile, a company that makes the Webkit-based Iris browser. Webkit is the layout engine that is also used by the iPhone, Android and Symbian mobile operating systems.

“We have made significant strides with our 5.0 Browser,” says David Yach, chief technology officer, software development for RIM. An updated version of the browser is expected to have Javascript enabled by default–something that the iPhone or the Palm Pre browser already offers.

Better Mobile Gaming: Games and the BlackBerry don’t really go together. But as the lines between consumer and enterprise users blur, mobile gaming is becoming an increasingly juicy area for handset makers and developers. Apple’s iPhone, for instance, has become a major platform for mobile games, and some of the most successful apps in the company’s App store are games.

Now RIM is trying to catch up. The BlackBerry maker says it will support OpenGL ES, a 3-D graphics API for devices such as smartphones and video game consoles. The move will allow Java developers to build 3-D games and graphics for BlackBerry smartphones running BlackBerry OS 5.0 and higher.

“It takes gaming to a whole new level,” says Balsillie.

The OpenGL ES support will become available through an update of the BlackBerry Java SDK.

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Photo: (malyousif/Flickr)


RIM unveils tighter Adobe partnership, new app payment platform, OpenGL ES support, more

There aren’t any new devices in the mix, but RIM has unleashed a torrent of BlackBerry OS-related news today at its BlackBerry Developer Conference in San Francisco that’s sure to make devs happy in the short term — and you know how that goes: when devs are happy, it doesn’t take long before end users reap the benefits. Here are the highlights:

  • BlackBerry devices running OS 5.0 and higher will be able to benefit from OpenGL ES support, the 3D platform used by many of the world’s high-power smartphones for delivering killer games. There’s a beta of the SDK already, so let’s get cracking, everyone — we need some first-person shooters that totally negate BlackBerry’s ultra-productive image.
  • A new plugin for the Eclipse development environment should make building BlackBerry app GUIs easier than ever, which should hopefully lead to prettier apps; it’ll be available in mid-2010.
  • BlackBerry Theme Studio is now available, simplifying theme creation with support for changing the home screen layout, fonts, icons, colors, cursors, and more; it supports BlackBerry OS 4.2.2 and higher, which means that virtually every BlackBerry in a pocket (or holster) today should be able to take advantage. The timing’s perfect on this one, because RIM has also announced that themes can now be submitted to App World.
  • BlackBerry Payment Service has been announced for mid-2010 availability, bringing in-app payments, subscription support, and a variety of billing options, which all sounds far more robust than the PayPal-only setup they’ve got going today.
  • The Push Service made available to Alliance Program members earlier this year will be made available to all comers in “early 2010,” making it easy to push bite-sized chunks of “time-sensitive alerts” to phones quickly and easily.
  • BlackBerry Advertising Service has been announced for 1H 2010 availability, bringing a unified ad platform for developers with a variety of existing ad networks on board. If this means more free apps in App World, we’re all for it.
  • Expanding on the Flash partnership previously announced, RIM has teamed up with Adobe yet again to unveil tight integration with Creative Suite 5 with direct file exports for BlackBerry-optimized formats and the creation BlackBerry-specific web layouts. End users will also be able to pull files directly off their BlackBerrys into consumer offerings like Photoshop Elements. This particular news seems pretty fluffy since Adobe products are already capable of opening and saving media formats that the phones can use — but as with many of the other announcements here, we’re on board as long as it means better-looking apps.

Sure, we wouldn’t have complained if some crazy Storm2 with a QWERTY slide had unexpectedly shown up, but all things considered, BlackBerry software shops have to be salivating at the bounty here.

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RIM unveils tighter Adobe partnership, new app payment platform, OpenGL ES support, more originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 09 Nov 2009 12:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Curve 8530 now official on Sprint

As we revealed this morning, the BlackBerry Curve 8530 — a CDMA remix of the 8520 now available on T-Mobile — is coming to Sprint to do battle with its Verizon-branded cousin. Unlike Verizon, which promises a November 20 launch for $99.99 on contract after rebate, Sprint isn’t revealing pricing or availability details for the low-end BlackBerry — but naturally, if they’re smart, the answers will be “cheap” and “soon,” respectively.

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BlackBerry Curve 8530 now official on Sprint originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Nov 2009 15:03:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Verizon launches BlackBerry 8530, LG Chocolate Touch, Samsung Convoy, and prepaid data

HTC’s DROID ERIS is arguably the biggest announcement out of Verizon today, but that’s not the only thing getting real this morning — far from it, in fact. If BlackBerrys, music-centric dumbphones, rugged flips, or commitment-free data are your bag, head on over to Engadget Mobile where we’ve covered the rest of the action!

Read – BlackBerry Curve 8530 brings optical trackpad to Verizon
Read – Verizon’s LG Chocolate Touch skips on the BL40 influence
Read – Samsung Convoy is a rugged push-to-talker for Verizon
Read – Verizon broadband data goes prepaid

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Verizon launches BlackBerry 8530, LG Chocolate Touch, Samsung Convoy, and prepaid data originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Nov 2009 09:45:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Bold 9700 Impressions: Small and Chirpy, Like a Black Hummingbird

The BlackBerry Bold 9700 in a word? Compact. It’s efficient, almost cramped, like a Japanese car from the 80s.

Succinctly, it’s the new BlackBerry to buy if you’re on T-Mobile or AT&T. Doubly so on T-Mo, since it’s their first 3G BlackBerry.

It’s not very much like the original Bold at all, which was the Escalade of BlackBerrys: big, obnoxious, but seriously comfortable to drive because it gave you tons of room to spread your legs (err, thumbs). If you’re used to that, at first the 9700—which is even smaller and lighter than the Tour on Sprint and Verizon—feels like you’ve been shoved inside of a clown car because the keyboard and screen, while retaining the same shape and resolution, respectively, have been shrink-rayed. (Update: Actually, the resolution’s been bumped up 40 pixels, to 480×360, from 480×320.)

But, then you realize you’re not typing any slower, or less precisely. The 9700’s keyboard isn’t as flat out comfortable as the original Bold—purely a matter of physics—but it’s a minor marvel of ergonomics that RIM has recession-sized the keyboard this effectively. They’re simply brilliant at building keyboards. The screen has the same resolution as the Bold’s, but in a smaller size, meaning it has a higher pixel density. Despite that extra clarity, I felt a bit constrained by it, especially browsing the web.

It’s the second BlackBerry to ditch all-too-easily-slain-by-lint trackball for an optical trackpad, and the first that’s not built for Walmart. You’ll miss the trackball for about 15 seconds. Like I said before, the trackpad’s 90 percent as good as the ball. You might miss the physical feedback, and it sometimes doesn’t totally accurately interpret a diagonal swipe that you know wouldn’t be a problem with the ball but it’s good enough, and by far the most accurate and responsive trackpad I’ve used on a phone.

It’s running BlackBerry OS 5.0 which isn’t tons different than the OS that shipped on the original Bold or Curve 8900, but it’s definitely springier and it has a few brushstrokes of added polish here and there. One place you notice is the browser—while not as fast as the iPhone 3GS or Android, it has some extra zip to it, and it even sped past the Storm 2 loading pages, despite racing on T-Mobile’s 3G network vs. Verizon’s.

Note: In the gallery, the T-Mobile one is the Bold 9700, the AT&T phone is the original Bold.

Basically, barring any major bugs that pop up over the next couple of days, this is the BlackBerry you probably wanna bug your corporate overlords to handcuff to your pants if you’re on AT&T or T-Mobile, since it’ll slide into them easier than any BlackBerry yet. I just hope you enjoy the feel of faux leather. [BlackBerry]

BlackBerry Bold 9700 hands-on and impressions

RIM’s successor to the original Bold — the BlackBerry Bold 9700 — has finally landed on our doorsteps. The 9000 is in many ways a hard act to follow. Hardware-wise, it lived up to its name, going where most phones never went with its retro, leathery, nearly clunky looks in an age of rounded edges and shiny curves. Don’t get us wrong — we loved the 9000’s aesthetics obsessively — which is why we couldn’t wait to get our hands on its newborn child. A few questions we had in mind: would the 9700 live up to its predecessor’s notoriously uncompromising fashion sense? Would the new Bold feel as good to hold and use in the hand as its loving parent? How would it stack up against other, new devices from RIM? If these are the kind of questions you think you might want answers to, read on for our impressions.

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BlackBerry Bold 9700 hands-on and impressions originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 05 Nov 2009 00:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Has Research In Motion’s BlackBerry Lost Its Edge?

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Over the past decade, Research In Motion’s BlackBerry phone has become a cultural phenomenon. But can it stay one?

With a confusing mix of new products, poor developer support, lack of innovation and an unwillingness to take risks, RIM is in danger of being outsmarted and overshadowed by aggressive new rivals, such as HTC and Motorola.

RIM is a victim of its own success, says Michael Mace, principal at Rubicon Consulting, a strategy consulting firm for technology companies, struggling with problems around execution and distracted at the pace at which the smartphone market is changing.

“Does RIM have a lot of problems? Yes, they do,” says Michael Mace, principal at Rubicon Consulting. “Can they fix it? Sure. But the question is do they want to?”

RIM did not respond to Wired.com’s request for comment.

Since RIM released the first BlackBerry smartphone in 2002, it has gathered about 56 percent share of the U.S smartphone market and sold more than 65 million phones, landing the company in Fortune magazine’s recent list of fastest growing firms.

But its future may not be as promising. Its market share among smartphones could shrink from a 20 percent overall market share today — which includes both smartphones and feature phones — to 12.8 percent at the end of 2012, says research firm Gartner. Google’s newly introduced Android operating system could move ahead of the BlackBerry and bag the No. 2 position, after Symbian.

Unless RIM acts fast, it may soon find itself facing treading the same path as Nokia. Despite its position as the largest handset maker and a huge presence in emerging markets, Nokia’s profits have eroded and its share in the smartphone market shrunk significantly.

So what’s ailing RIM?

Too many smartphones

Apple’s one-size-fits-all approach may be too spartan for most handset makers, who like to give consumers a choice of different devices. But RIM may have gone a little too far in its approach. At any time, RIM offers more than 20 handsets, most of which are minor variations of each other. Take the Storm and its updated version Storm 2. The two are near identical in terms of features. The difference? Storm 2 offers Wi-Fi capability, a feature missing in its predecessor. Now try spotting the difference between the BlackBerry Curve 8900 and the Tour. Again, almost similar features except for that fact that Curve has Wi-Fi capability and the Tour doesn’t. The Curve 8900 is a GSM phone, while the Tour is a CDMA version.

Having too many handsets, with each named differently, confuses consumers, says Mace.

“RIM is doing all these different configurations because it is what the operators want,” he says. “But it is better to give up some growth than become a mediocre product in your current market, which is what they are in danger of right now.”

It will be bitter medicine for RIM. With its $34 billion market capitalization, RIM can’t afford to offend Wall Street. But Mace says the company needs to step back and streamline its product portfolio.

Not knowing which handsets to focus on also takes a toll on BlackBerry developers. It drives up development costs for programmers who want to create software for the device. Developers have to test their programs for multiple handsets and that is difficult and expensive, says Peter Sisson, founder and CEO of Toktumi, a company that created the Line2 app for the iPhone. Sisson is a seasoned entrepreneur who sold his last startup, Teleo, to Microsoft.

“Once we got into it developing for the BlackBerry, I realized, ‘Oh my God, this is an absolute nightmare.’ There are all these phones out there and the hardware is not abstracted,” he says. “By the time you get your app out of QA and into production, a new model comes along that is not quite compatible with the others, requiring further coding changes or even a whole new build.”

Innovation in handsets

When RIM first introduced the BlackBerry, the device’s push e-mail capability set it apart from its peers and created a legion of BlackBerry addicts.

But now a smartphone is no longer a device that just makes calls and checks e-mail. The rise of social networking tools such as Facebook and Twitter means users want a device that can help them stay connected beyond e-mail. Sophisticated consumers also want integrated contact management that can pull in contacts from different buckets. Add to that list a good web browser that lets them surf on the go and maps that can offer accurate turn-by-turn directions. Almost all these features have increasingly become de rigueur in smartphones. Except in the BlackBerry.

The BlackBerry has gained notoriety for having a browser that seems stuck in the last decade. RIM is reportedly working to fix that. In September, 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.

While rivals such as Motorola and HTC are experimenting with new interfaces for their devices, RIM has stuck to a formula that works for now — but makes its devices look boring.

If the Storm, RIM’s first touchscreen phone, is any indicator, creating a radically new product isn’t easy for RIM. The Storm was BlackBerry’s first attempt to create a device that wasn’t a variation of its earlier handsets. The Storm was widely panned by reviewers, although it sold more than a million units in just two months of its launch.

“They shipped a product that wasn’t completely tested and debugged,” says Mace. “It is something that the old RIM wouldn’t have done. The first Storm is the sign that they lost control over their handset development process.”

Despite some recent mis-steps, discounting the BlackBerry is a mistake, says Dulaney. “The Bold and Curve are very well-done designs for those who like a keyboard,” he says. “And for business users they tend to work very well since they want to use their devices in portrait rather than landscape mode.”

Support for developers

Meanwhile, Apple’s success with its App store forced every handset manufacturer to attach an app store with their device. RIM is no exception. In April it introduced the BlackBerry App world.

But the BlackBerry platform was never created with the intention of allowing a swarm of independent developers to write software for it.

“RIM needs to clean up the platform and make sure the technology is more flexible,” says Mace. “These are things that take time and do not yield revenue immediately. You have to take a bunch of engineers and clean up all the garbage in the background.”

The complexities of the platform also mean that fewer developers know how to code for the BlackBerry, says Sisson. A few weeks ago, Sisson posted an ad on Craigslist looking for developers for the iPhone and the BlackBerry platforms.

Within hours, he says, he received more than 100 resumes from iPhone developers, while just a few responded to the BlackBerry posting. “There’s a shortage of talented developers who are both interested and capable of writing code for Blackberry apps,” says Sisson. “This spells major trouble for the future of the BlackBerry.”

A quick look at the BlackBerry App world bears this out. The App World store has just about 2,000 apps available for download, compared to the iPhone App Store’s 90,000 apps or Android’s 12,000.

Sisson suggests RIM come up with a new device that can take on the Droid, iPhone, the Palm Pre and the host of new smartphones cropping up. It could be a device targeted at consumers, that would integrate with the company’s app store and put the BlackBerry on equal footing with its rivals.

“They will still have their existing loyal customer base that wants e-mail and the typical BlackBerry experience,” says Sisson. “But they can also cut free from the older models and create a frictionless experience for consumers and developers.”

RIM is trying to solve some of these problems. The company recently restructured its Alliance program, its resource for independent developers to offer better access to support and a faster cycle to get application developers up and running.

But that is not enough, says Sisson. “Unless RIM makes major changes to its platform — standardizing the hardware and OS, offering a QA test lab for engineers and streamlining the Alliance program still further — the BlackBerry will never have the quantity and quality of Apps that iPhone or Android phones will have.”

Telecom carrier challenges

A major catalyst in RIM’s growth and success is the company’s ability to work with a wide range of telecom carriers. But the cozy relationship with carriers also means that the company may be kowtowing to wireless service providers a little too much.

Even though Wi-Fi has become a must-have feature for most smartphones, some reports suggest BlackBerry reportedly left it out of the Storm at Verizon’s insistence. RIM’s relationship with Verizon paid off. Despite extremely tepid reviews and user complaints about the difficult touchscreen and buggy software, Verizon’s position as the biggest U.S. carrier helped sell more than 1 million units of the Storm in just two months of the device’s launch.

Meanwhile, AT&T’s exclusive partnership with iPhone changed the dynamics for RIM in the United States. Three years ago, AT&T and Verizon Wireless represented about 20 percent each of RIM’s sales, estimates an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein. Today AT&T is down to 15 percent of RIM’s sales, while Verizon is up to 28 percent.

But the dependence on Verizon is now starting to backfire. Last month, RIM introduced an updated version of its touchscreen phone the Storm 2. The phone is expected to be exclusively available on Verizon. But Verizon is putting its marketing muscle behind Motorola’s newly released Droid phone. Droid has gathered much better reviews than the Storm 2 and is being backed by an aggressive advertising campaign from Verizon. Together that could eat into Storm 2’s sales, says Ken Dulaney, vice-president of mobile computing with Gartner.

“You will have to watch Verizon’s result in the next quarter for signs of weakness at RIM,” he says. “The Droid will compete against the Storm and the Curve. If we see degradation of sales for RIM, then we can say RIM is under attack in the soft underbelly segments that they have.”

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Photo: (Ninja. M/Flickr)


Rejoice! BlackBerry support arrives on Celio REDFLY

We heard it’d be here in mid-Q4, and sure enough, it’s here. And by “it,” we mean “BlackBerry support for Celio’s largely unwanted REDFLY Mobile Companion.” Starting today, those looking for the Foleo‘s long lost cousin can snap up a REDFLY and download a free driver that adds compatibility for RIM’s BlackBerry Bold 9000, Curve 8900 and Tour 9630. Granted, it’s not like the BlackBerry web browser will be any less painful to use on an enlarged screen, but hey, whatever suits your fancy.

[Via TestFreaks, thanks Nirckolas]

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Rejoice! BlackBerry support arrives on Celio REDFLY originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 03 Nov 2009 19:11:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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