RIM
BlackBerry Storm Launches 11/27
Nov 15th
The long wait appears to be over as BlackBerry’s first foray into the touchscreen world has begun with the BlackBerry Storm. First off, the device looks like a serious contender for Mobile of The Year. It is sleek, shiny and the screen just pops out at you in both portrait and a stunning landscape mode that BlackBerry lovers have been waiting 9 years to see. Its got anything and everything a smart phone should have and more except of course for WiFi which seems odd and out of place nowadays, I mean even the lacking G1 has wireless capabilities. The highlights are as follows:
3 MegaPixel Camera that supports both still and video
GPS with BlackBerry Maps
Corporate Data Access
1 GB internal memory with support for microSD
MMS (hint hint Apple)
Speakerphone
Stereo Bluetooth
High resolution 480 x 360 pixel color display
MP3 ringtones
Tethering capabilities
Wireless Modem
On screen keyboard: portrait SureType® and Multi-tap, QWERTY landscape
Microsoft Exchange Support
- UMTS/HSPA: 2100 MHz
- North America: 850 MHz GSM®/GPRS networks
- North America: 1900MHz GSM/GPRS networks
- Europe/Asia Pacific: 1800MHz GSM/GPRS networks
- Europe/Asia Pacific: 900MHz GSM/GPRS networks
- Dual-Band: 800/1900 MHz CDMA/Ev-DO networks
It touts a revolutionary tactile response with a technology they call SurePress, it feels like you are touching real keys and a real keyboard eliminating one of the biggest complaints with touch screen devices. The only real draw back I see is that it is being sold on the Verizon network which isn’t GSM now is it? Not sure the reason Research In Motion went this route but my guess it was cold hard cash as opposed to common sense. Luckily its a quad band phone that can do just about every network and data system outside of Sprint. The tough part of the equation is if you want this thing unlocked for your worldly GSM network get out the Amex card and be prepared to pay upwards of a thousand, yes bones or clams or whatever you call them.
This is the device that could put BlackBerry into the mainstream but with a price like that it just might be pricing itself out of the game before the national anthem is even sung. That’s not to say its not an impressive smartphone but anything over the $500 range isn’t going to get many takers in the economic landscape we now find ourselves in. Lets hope soon there after its hits T-Mobile or AT&T with a large subsidy that puts it in the $300 2 year contract range sometime after the holidays.
Verison has announced a launch of November 21st and a price of $199 with a 2 year contract after a $50 rebate
As of today it has launched in the U.K. on Vodafone and is free with a 2 year contract and a £29.79 per month rate plan.
Blackberry Bold
Nov 14th
The long wait for the new look in Blackberry’s ended this week with the launch of the BlackBerry Bold aka the 9000 via AT&T Mobile.
$399.99 upfront with a $100 rebate for new activations via AT&T.
$249.99 upfront with a $100 rebate for new activations through Amazon.
If this seems a little pricey, it is. To buy it outright is $645.00 and for that price I could get a couple of Eee Pc’s. The reason I think its somewhat overpriced is that the thing costs $169 to build which is a 300% markup. This is surprising considering Rim seems to have made a reputation by making somewhat affordable devices. I guess the final say in all this will be the sales figures and if the buzz of this device is any indication than it should continue to fill the coffers of the Canadian companies piggy banks.
Blackberry’s Operating System, mobile email for the masses
Jan 31st
Today in our continuing look at mobile phone software we concentrate on the most overlooked of the bunch and one that essentially changed the way we communicate.
Research In Motion (RIM) invented mobile email as we know it and blew the doors off of what slim offerings were available. Up until they came aboard all that we could do was synch a PDA with a computer and setting up that email account took a software engineer. I personally remember spending many an hour with a Jornada to no avail.
When the first Blackberry came onto the scene, the 5700 series, few where impressed. It was a data only device, was very complicated and its interface was difficult to navigate. More often than not it crashed and the reboot process took up to five minutes to complete. And yet, once you got your account set up and you suddenly had the ability to send and receive email instantly it was if you had found the Holy Grail of email. In addition you were also able to hook up a BES server at you office and have corporate email as well, allowing you to keep in touch with your workplace from such locations as the golf course or a business conference.
Some seven plus years later many have tried to duplicate them but all they really have achieved is the ability to sign into your Gmail or Yahoo account through the phones browser. This is of course not the same and this accounts for the Blackberry being the dominant mobile device of Government and Corporate landscapes.
Some might blame the Blackberry for changing the way business is done and not for the better. Being able to communicate instantly with business associates can have an adverse affect on ones private life. Studies have suggested that every time we hear that beep indicating the arrival of a new message, we get an endorphin rush. Some might call it staying ahead of the game while others consider it an addiction, thus the term CrackBerry. Even with all the supposed ‘negative’ aspects it has become an invaluable tool. To be able to send receive open and edit attachments at any hour has increased productivity dramatically.
RIM has now added everything from WiFi to GPS to Cameras into their SmartPhones that don’t resemble anything like their humble beginnings. They are sleek, aesthetically pleasing, intuitive, and as multi functional as anything else in the mobile landscape. With version 4.3 of their software set to launch in February, many are anticipating big changes that will continue to keep Blackberry at the forefront of SmartPhone development.
For those BlackBerry users out there I would recommend joining the Owners Lounge for everything from the latest downloads to tricks and tips to info on upcoming model launches.
New Blackberry 8820 coming to an AT&T store near you
Sep 19th
I can’t believe it. I really can’t. It’s amazing. Astounding, even. Who would have thought that it has taken this long for Research in Motion(RIM), producers of the grandaddy of all smartphones, the Blackberry, to release a device that includes Wi-Fi in the US.
All I can say is, it’s about time.
Also included with the 8820 is assisted GPS through TeleNav, a push-to-talk service, and the ability to purchase online music through eMusic Mobile (Home of great, DRM-free MP3s) and streaming music from XM Satellite Radio.
This device packs a serious punch for Blackberry lovers, giving them access to a great many features that you can’t find in other smartphones. I’m pumped for any current or future Blackberry owners, having been had a Blackberry in the past myself. But, that was in the days before my iPhone.
But, with a reported price of $300 with a two-year contract, I can see this little beauty as a nice alternative to the iPhone. Especially for business users that need Exchange support.
Read Electronista | Image
The American Dream…in Europe
Aug 9th
Many recent developments in the mobile phone industry have had one thing in common and that is Europe, a place we left some 300 years ago and have largely forgot about except when they need help stopping Germany from from taking over and making everyone wear really tight leather pants.
Case in point the BlackBerry 8830 World Edition SmartPhone that has recently been gracing our televisions sets in Verizon adverts featuring the ‘can you hear me now guy’ speaking French and handing off the phone to some actor at a fake airport. The odd thing about the ad is that it is essentially advertising the companies massive flaw and that is their phones only work in the U.S. Why is this the case? Well gather around the campfire kids and let me spin ya a story about telecommunications in the good old USA.
You see in the late 80’s when U.S. cellular companies were starting to build out their networks they realized that analog networks (AMPS) had the potential to provide greater coverage area with less towers due to the basic technology involved. But as with everything in the US no one could agree on a single technology and each individual company developed their own version of the cellular network. The thinking behind this was that the individual companies thought they would dominate the market and then the other companies would have to eventually abandon their own technology and pay them for the use of theirs.
Of course this never happened as all these companies were too stubborn to consider what was best for the consumer and that is why we ended up with CDMA (Verizon) TDMA (Sprint) AMPS (McCaw Cellular). At this same time the European Union was having the same problem so they decided that they needed one standard and mandated that efforts would be put into a system that would be universal in all countries. This led to the GSM technology being implemented along side the old analog system and the two worked seamlessly together. They could travel virtually anywhere and their phones would work as well as when they switched carriers.
This certainly wasnt the case for any Americans traveling overseas when their only options was to rent a phone at their destination. This continued into the late 90’s until Voicestream Wireless used Hawaii as a test market for the first US GSM service and after that success, launched in a few western states promoting features and prices that were unheard of elsewhere in the country. The technology used data stored in a SIM card that could be moved from phone to phone and with it allowed a virtual phone book of personal numbers to be moved as well. The company grew rapidly and now for the first time Americans could take a phone from stateside and use it in Europe and Asia.
The others companies grew nervous of this development and it even caused AT&T to convert, at considerable cost, to the GSM technology. This caused a ripple effect and soon all these companies were gobbling up smaller ones, merging with larger ones, and even terminating roaming contracts that made it easier for customers to piggyback onto other networks. It seemed the battle had just escalated and with Nextel’s success another technology was thrown into the mix. All the while Europe was developing high speed data networks that would be years away in the U.S. all because they had focused on one technology and advancements benefited all the companies, not just one.
This is why technology developed in North America is now launching in Europe, simply for the reason that the U.S. market is just too slow to develop a high speed GSM data network that actually is available in more than a handful of cities. Case in point is T-Mobile whom was ahead of the curve on WAP, BlackBerry Server implementation, and data tethering. But for reasons that defied logic simply stopped developing anything after their GPRS network was launched and as a result fell behind in virtually every aspect of the industry. They are now paying for their mistake with a massive outlay of cash to build a UMTS network that if ever launched will be so late in the coming that it will nearly obsolete when it does.
And all this is why we see the perfect Blackberry 8820 being launched in the U.K. and the 8310 showing up in those oh so tight leather pants in Germany. So while we might have the iPhone before the rest of the world, we still have to settle for dial up speeds unless we want a phone that will only work if you never leave the cozy confines of a large metropolitan area and if you ever decide to leave that company for another you will have a very expensive paperweight mocking you for not having been born in London, Barcelona or even Tokyo.
Nokia must be butter cause they are on a roll
Aug 3rd
Nokia is leading the way in the mobile phone industry with innovation and massive profitability and its paying off huge for their stock holders. Lets break the recently announced numbers down and yes there is math involved so get out that number 2 pencil folks…just kidding.
Net Sales of 12.6 Billion (That’s Billion with a B people) which is an increase of 2.7 Billion over Q2 ‘o6 earnings. A Gross profit of 3.9 Billion (Thats nearly 4 Billion in 3 months) which amounts to an increase of 700 million over Q2 ‘06 earnings. Nokia now has an estimated 38% market share which dominates the mobile industry.
This news caused Motorola to fall to its knees and start weeping uncontrollably like the dude that Jessica Alba just kicked to the curb. They pondered aloud that they have really really thin phones and that it is all customers want so what was the problem? I sent them a text message advising that direct sales and unlocked mobile phones are really what people want but they didn’t respond, which is really bad texting etiquette. Perhaps they were just really engrossed in TRL due to all of its cutting edge interviewing and just forgot to respond or maybe they were just using the T-Mobile network and it was one of the 25% of the messages that never reach their intended destination.
Whatever the reasons lets hope that not only they but the rest of the mobile phone manufacturers start to adopt the ways of Nokia. However with Apple and AT&T taking such steps to make sure that no one can unlock the iPhone its doubtful that a change in the industry will be coming anytime soon. One can understand the reason why AT&T would take the steps it did to ensure only its network would work with the Jesus Phone but Apple really shouldn’t care as sales is what they want and need. One can imagine what kind of sales that T-Mobile and every other GSM provider in the world rack up if they were able to sell the iPhone.
Why Sony Ericsson, HTC, Motorola, Palm, Samsung or even Research in Motion would allow other companies to unlock their products and sell them at a markup is beyond me. Nokia has proven the market exists for direct sales and as proof they shipped 9 million Nokia N-Series Phones and almost 2 million Nokia E-Series devices during the second quarter of 2007 alone. The focus on high end devices, like the Nokia N-95, allowed the company to gain an additional 4% of the handset market share. This has completely caught analysts off guard and they continue to be amazed at Nokia’s huge profits and sales.
This all points to the fact that Nokia’s dominance will continue as they take the chances that keep them ahead of the curve, CTO Tero Ojanper predicts when the features of the N95 are common place around the world in 2-3 years the mobile entertainment business will explode and Nokia will be there ahead of the pack once again. Few could argue with this assessment as focusing on the European and Asian markets have helped them stay on the cutting edge and that is exactly where the competition wishes they were.
[Source]
Apple iPhone sales lower than expected
Jul 25th
When the iPhone launched many analysts predicted up to 500,000 units being sold the first weekend, however reality set in today when the real numbers were announced by AT&T and that number was about 146,000 customers. This caused Apple’s stock to tumble more than 3% and some people are now saying that with the numbers announced and how available the iPhone seems to be all across the country that it might not be the sales powerhouse that at one point it was destined to be.
Speculations is that a lot of customers were hesitant because of the fact that AT&T doesn’t have a high speed network so download speeds wouldnt be capable of handling what the actual device was intended for. Not to mention in recent days there has been a lot of negative stories about the iPhone, for instance a bug report that detailed over 68 problems with the software emerged from AppleHound , even though some don’t think its a problem due to it being an all new device I beg to differ as I never heard these kind of issues with RIM’s BlackBerry or even Motorola’s BlackJack.
Some of the bugs seem to be troubling as fuctions as simple as the clock and the calendar can cause the device to crash or freeze. Add this to the battery problems and the newly announced security issue where a hacker could take complete control of the device remotely using its internet connection by installing a piece of malicious code via its Safari internet browser. Add all of this with the fact that more than a few sources are questioning the security of the device and this could spell trouble for not only Apple but for AT&T which reportedly shelled out big bucks for the exclusive rights to sell the Jesus Phone.
Launch News: BlackBerry 8820
Jul 18th
This is a model that has virtually everything that Crackberry addicts have been waiting for: WiFi, UMA, and GPS. However there seems to be rumors out there that is only coming to the UK, this of course makes no sense as European networks have no idea what Edge is as they have had 3G longer than we’ve had GSM.
Some might point to the fact that this device has no camera but I for one applaud the efforts to not have yet another bad camera added to a great multi-functional device. Blackberry devices are great for email, browsing, opening attachments, texting, and for having great signal footprints and this device seems to be no different in that regard but with the addition of UDA which allows for seamless WiFi to Cellular transfer along with the GPS capabilities this just might be the perfect mobile office. Of course we hope that the data gets upgraded to UMTS in the next model however with RIM’s seemingly novel approach of actually listening to their customers this should happen soon enough.
This will seemingly launch with AT&T even though it seems to fit perfectly with T-Mobile’s @Home service.
Feel like you’ve been left out in the cold?
Jun 29th
Don’t be sad if you can’t get an iPhone because of a cell phone contract with another provider or just plain lack of funds. The one standout feature of the device is now available on the BlackBerry 8800 series, BlackBerry Pearl, BlackBerry Curve, Treo, and Windows Mobile devices. Thats right, the Visual Voicemail that made every mobile phone junkie jealous, can now be yours. No more having to listen to a bunch of messages to get to the one you really want, now you can see who left a message and then listen to them in any order you want. The service by SimulSays is in its beta form and can be downloaded here from your computer of here from your mobile.
Add this to their already popular service where you can read your voicemail on your mobile phone, portable device or e-mail and you truly have an exciting development. Imagine all the places that you cant listen to a message through your headset, now you can just scroll through your messages and read exactly what the person said right on your screen.
It costs $10 a month, which covers 40 messages; each additional transcription costs 25 cents. The company plans to offer better deals for heavy users including an unlimited plan sometime in the future, however they do have a free week trial to see if it works for needs.













