Mobile Phone News

14
May

BlackBerry Thunder, Hear My Cry

By Kate Crowley

Oh yes, oh yes, oh yes: the touchscreen BlackBerry (codenamed “Thunder”) will apparently launch in Q3 of this year. It’s 100% touchscreen (no keyboard, thank you very much) and has only 4 physical keys. These are, unsurprisingly, the send/end keys, the BlackBerry menu key and the back key.

The Boy Genius Report claims that the BlackBerry Thunder will launch as a lifetime exclusive on Vodafone and Verizon. This is big news for Verizon fans because it’ll be the first time the provider has an exclusive handset. However, if Verizon fail to meet the sales targets set by BlackBerry then they’ll lose their exclusive deal.

I’m looking forward to seeing overweight business men in Savile Row suits hunched over their BlackBerry Thunder, trying to access their emails but failing because their fat fingertips take up half the screen with each touch.

BGR have a mock-up of the BlackBerry Thunder, but here’s our artist’s rendition of what it might look like:

fake BlackBerry Thunder
28
Apr

Will the Touchscreen BlackBerry kill the iPhone?

By Kate Crowley

touchscreen blackberry

I know, I know, I’m a hypocrite. I complain that every new touchscreen handset is promoted as an “iPhone killer”, yet I can’t stop posting about them. This “iPhone killer” story is particularly interesting because it’s about that behemoth of the mobile phone world, BlackBerry.

RIM CEO Mike Lazardis isn’t a fan of touchscreens. In a
New York Times
story about how RIM is reacting to Apple’s assault on the mobile phone market, Lazardis is quoted as saying “I couldn’t type on [the iPhone’s glass screen] and I still can’t type on it, and a lot of my friends can’t type on it”. Despite their lord and master’s misgivings, RIM is still hard at work producing the BlackBerry touchscreen. RIM engineers have dubbed the long-rumoured touchscreen BlackBerry the “the A.K. – for Apple Killer”. Brave words indeed, RIM engineers.

The NYT article also revealed that BlackBerry’s tactic is to stick close to carriers. This is the opposite to the approach adopted by Apple and Google, who are trying to “dislodge the carriers from the nexus of the North American wireless market”. BlackBerry partner with 350 carriers around the world, and they often sell heavily discounted BlackBerry handsets. Apple sells the iPhone from its own stores and calls the shots with its carriers, offering them comparatively stingy deals. Google has been (unsuccessfully) bidding for wireless spectrum this year, in an attempt to force carriers to be more open to allowing a variety of handsets and internet services on their networks.

BlackBerry’s problem seems to be that they don’t know which market sector to appeal to. The traditional BlackBerry customer wants a business phone which is highly functional but doesn’t necessarily have all the bells and whistles (e.g. games, applications etc.). Apple has shown that there is a big market of potential customers looking for a business phone with a bit more pizzazz. Perhaps the touchscreen BlackBerry will offer exactly that.