T-Mobile roadmap shows Dell netbooks, BlackBerry Gemini, and more

Leaked carrier roadmap documents of unknown age and origin aren’t necessarily the most accurate things in the world, but they are one very awesome, important thing: leaked. Pictured above is a fragment of one such spreadsheet that we’ve had the good fortune of receiving for T-Mobile USA — obviously it’s a little bit on the small slide, but no sweat, we’ll walk you through what it’s saying. Again, we wouldn’t take these dates as the gospel truth, but we’d venture to say they’re a good rough guide for what to expect out of these guys for the next few months. Move along for the full list!

[Thanks, anonymous tipster]

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T-Mobile roadmap shows Dell netbooks, BlackBerry Gemini, and more originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 05 Jun 2009 08:30:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RIM buys Dash Navigation

Remember Dash? The upstart connected GPS maker who put out the much-loved Dash Express but didn’t realize people didn’t want to pay a monthly fee for GPS services and eventually folded in on itself? Well yeah — they’ve just been snapped up by RIM, presumably meaning we’ll see some nifty new online GPS action in future BlackBerrys. Terms of the deal aren’t yet known, but we’re eager to see how RIM plays with this with its carrier partners, most of whom charge extra fees for GPS features.

[Via Phone Scoop]

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RIM buys Dash Navigation originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 04 Jun 2009 15:38:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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RIM CEO: “SurePress is here to stay”

In a scandalous, but not entirely shocking turn of events, RIM CEO Mike Lazaridis has declared from the stage of D7 in no uncertain terms that “SurePress is here to stay.” The trouble is, there’s no clarification of what he means by that, since the Storm 2 we’ve been toying with quite obviously lacks a click-screen mechanism. Our best shot-in-the-dark guess is that RIM has developed some alternative to a physical click that may or may not duplicate the functionality adequately, while hopefully removing some of the frustration experienced by the physical click of the Storm. What is clear is that apparently whatever face-saving technology that turns out to be, Mike and co. plan on calling it SurePress.

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RIM CEO: “SurePress is here to stay” originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 May 2009 18:08:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Research In Motion CEO Mike Lazaridis live from D7

We’re snug in our plush, comfortable seats at D7, waiting patiently for RIM CEO Mike Lazaridis to take the stage. Sit tight and the show should begin momentarily. No word on what’s coming up, but you never know…

Thanks to our editor-at-large and gdgt co-founder Ryan Block for handling photo duties during the show!

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Research In Motion CEO Mike Lazaridis live from D7 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 27 May 2009 17:23:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Every Mobile Browser Should Give Up and Just Go WebKit

The ZuneHD looks like a lovely catchup to the original iPod touch—you know, before apps allowed it to be so much more—except for one thing. That damn browser. It’s not just they’re basing it off hellacious and reviled IE—it’s that it’s not WebKit-based.

There simply isn’t a better mobile browser than WebKit right now. It powers the internet in the iPhone, Android, Symbian S60 and Palm Pre, and destroyed all comers in our Battlemodo. It’s fast, it’s competent and most importantly from a development perspective, it’s open source. Meaning Microsoft could adopt it for its mobile devices with (relatively) little shame (okay, maybe a lot of shame) and it’s ready to go right now, meaning there’s no wasting time building a new engine just to attempt to play catchup to a browser that handily delivers the best mobile internet experience right now across multiple platforms.

Mozilla’s Fennec could become a contender to the throne, true, but it’s still far from final. Opera and Skyfire are interesting and good, but they’re both proprietary, meaning there’s no chance in hell they’d ever be adopted by Microsoft or RIM, much less the entire industry, as the basis for their mobile browsers. Update: BTW, Ballmer himself mentioned they might look at WebKit.

You could rail against the idea of WebKit becoming a “monopoly,” but you’d be foolish to do so: Web standards are important, and WebKit, which is again, open source, is dedicated to standards compliance and performance. A performance and compliance standard that web developers could count on in every single mobile device wouldn’t be a bad thing—far from it. It would mean even more amazing web apps, since developers would know they’d run on any mobile device, no matter what “OS” they were running underneath—the web would be the real OS.

That day is coming. I just hoped I’d see it a little sooner.

Blackberry Magnum, Onyx, Pearl 3G, and Gemini to harmonize on AT&T

BlackBerry lovers, AT&T beckons. Looks like the just-reviewed Onyx is heading to AT&T and, as rumored before, so is the Magnum. We’ve got no pics of the latter device, but it’s being touted here as the “BlackBerry Bold portfolio evolution” and uses the same processor as the Bold. It’s also got a HVGA touchscreen, QWERTY pad, quad-band GSM / GRS / EDGE, GPS, and WiFi. Want more? How about an apparently non-flip Pearl 3G with 3.6 Mbps of HSDPA goodness, Bluetooth, 3.5mm headset jack, trackball, SureType, and aGPS. Rounding out this quartet is the Gemini, with a 512MHz processor, 256MB flash memory, 128MB RAM, Bluetooth, QVGA LCD, 2 megapixel sans flash, trackball, QWERTY keyboard, 3.5mm headset jack, a microSD slot, possibly GPS, and sadly, no 3G. There’s no release date in sight, but hey, knowing they’re on the way is half the battle, right?

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Blackberry Magnum, Onyx, Pearl 3G, and Gemini to harmonize on AT&T originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 May 2009 18:54:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Onyx reviewed way before RIM intended it to be

We don’t know exactly what they’re feeding the engineers up in Waterloo, but we’re guessing it’s a combination of Red Bull, NoDoz, and speed, because they appear to be working on about ten devices at once — awesome news for anyone looking to pick up a new BlackBerry in the next 6 to 12 months. We’ve already seen the Onyx in the wild, but as a refresher, this puppy does UMTS (and we’d assume HSDPA as well), a 3.2 megapixel AF cam, an undoubtedly gorgeous 480 x 360 display, GPS, and WiFi in a body more svelte than the Bold’s; now, CrackBerry‘s managed to score a unit and give it a quick once-over. All told the impression seems very positive, with the takeaway being that RIM has taken the best personality traits of the 8900 and 9000 series and stuffed it all into a single device. We’re not necessarily expecting this one on the market any time soon — AT&T just launched the 8900 a couple days ago, after all, and CrackBerry believes RIM could replace the trackball with a Gemini-style optical pad prior to launch — but it’s something to look forward to.

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BlackBerry Onyx reviewed way before RIM intended it to be originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 May 2009 14:32:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Aries spotted: a Gemini with CDMA in its heart

If you had your eye the BlackBerry Curve 8520 / Gemini, somehow above all the other number of RIM devices that have surfaced as of late, it looks like the stars have aligned (har har) for you. The gang at Crackberry have gotten a first peep at the Aries, which they say is essentially a CDMA-equipped Gemini that’s likely to go by the eventual name Curve 8530. Not much else to note here, here’s hoping we got some more concrete details — and maybe a committed carrier or two — in the not too distant. As for the naming conventions, we now anxiously await for alliterative darlings like a touchscreen Taurus, slide-out Sagittarius, and 18 megapixel Pisces.

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BlackBerry Aries spotted: a Gemini with CDMA in its heart originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 24 May 2009 13:33:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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BlackBerry Storm 2: the official unofficial hands-on


We’ve been bumping into the new BlackBerry Storm 2 for quite a while now on the so-called “information superhighway,” but we’ve finally had a chance to escalate those encounters and spend a few sweet moments with a live unit in the flesh. First off, let’s confirm the huge news: RIM’s abandoned the original Storm’s SurePress click-screen and gone with a traditional fixed capacitive display for the sequel. It’s over, guys. Unfortunately, the Verizon-branded dual-mode GSM / CDMA unit that we played with has a bug preventing us from getting past the license screen so we couldn’t dive deep into the OS (and yeah, we tried scrolling to the bottom of the agreement — no dice), but we can tell you what we do know: the Storm 2’s sleeker style and more heft combined with the newly-stable screen collaborate to make everything feel a wee bit higher end than the original. Follow the break for more impressions!

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BlackBerry Storm 2: the official unofficial hands-on originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 21 May 2009 13:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone Q1 Market Share Soars

Apple_iPhone_Pics.jpgA new Gartner study reports that the iPhone’s market share doubled from 5.3 percent in Q1 2008 to 10.8 percent in Q1 2009. That’s amid a 12.7 percent gain in smartphone sales–to 36.4 million worldwide–and an overall drop of 8.6 percent for all cell phone sales during the same period. Research in Motion, makers of the BlackBerry, also saw tremendous gains, from 13.3 percent share in Q1 2008 to 19.9 percent in Q1 2009.

Meanwhile, Nokia saw a mild drop in smartphone sales from 45.1 percent to 41.2 percent worldwide, according to the report. That latter figure is always a surprise to U.S. viewers like us, since Nokia barely sells any smartphones here in the U.S.  The excellent Nokia E71x could finally change that, though–assuming smartphone buyers in AT&T stores stop at the counter long enough to see it before walking out with an iPhone.
(For more on the iPhone, BlackBerry, and other smartphones, be sure to visit our sister site, Smart Device Central.)