Toronto – No Hard Keyboard For First Of New BlackBerrys

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    Tim Neil, Research In Motion Ltd.'s Canadian Operating Director of Operations, Platforms and Tools, speaks about the Blackberry 10 architecture during the RIM Blackberry 10 Jam World Tour in Toronto on Thursday June 21, 2012. The first BlackBerry device running RIM's new operating software will not have a physical keyboard, only a touch-screen one. RIM is expected to start selling BlackBerry 10 touch-screen devices this year. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Aaron Vincent Elkaim)Toronto – The first BlackBerry device running Research In Motion Ltd.’s new operating software will not have a physical keyboard, only a touch-screen one.

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    The BlackBerry 10 software will be offered on devices with physical keyboards in the future, but RIM spokeswomen Rebecca Freiburger declined to say when. RIM is expected to start selling BlackBerry 10 touch-screen devices this year.

    Top-selling smartphones these days, including Apple Inc.’s iPhone and several running Google’s Android software, also lack physical keyboards. But RIM’s attempts in the past to offer touch-only phones have largely flopped.

    Many corporate users have stuck with the BlackBerry solely because of its physical keyboard, given a perception that it’s harder to type emails on a touch screen. The BlackBerry 10 system has already been delayed about a year, and with additional delays to get a physical keyboard, those people may not be willing to wait any longer, especially as the iPhone makes greater in-roads in corporate settings. Those users may simply get the new iPhone expected this fall.

    RIM’s hopes hang on the BlackBerry 10 system, which is meant to offer the multimedia, Internet browsing and apps experience customers now demand. The Canadian company is preparing to launch the new software later this year, just as North Americans are abandoning BlackBerrys for iPhones and Android devices.

    Colin Gillis, an analyst with BGC Financial, called it puzzling that RIM isn’t leading with its strength by releasing a keyboard BlackBerry first.

    “The physical keyboard is the most dominant item that separates out Research In Motion from its competitors,” Gillis said. “If you are not playing to your historical strengths you may find it more difficult to get traction.”

    Gillis said there is a spot in the market for RIM but the company “just got to get it together.”

    But Jefferies analyst Peter Misek said BlackBerry 10 is all about touch and closing the gap with Apple, so people should not be surprised that the initial model will have only a touch screen.

    “They are going to build a BlackBerry device with a keyboard, but it’s just going to take longer,” Misek said. “Maybe it will come a month or two after, but frankly it might be already too late.”

    RIM once dominated the corporate smartphone market but failed to adapt to the emerging “bring your own device” trend, in which employees use their personal iPhones or Android devices for work instead of relying on BlackBerrys issued by their employers. As the movement caught on, the iPhone made the BlackBerry look ancient.

    RIM’s future is far from certain as its flagship devices rapidly lose market share to flashier phones. With more than $2 billion in cash, bankruptcy seems unlikely in the near term. But RIM’s U.S. share of the smartphone market fell sharply from 44 percent in 2009 to 10 percent in 2011 according to market researcher NPD Group.

    RIM said Wednesday it has started laying off employees as part of a restructuring plan aimed at saving about $1 billion this year.

    RIM’s stock fell 27 cents, or 2.6 percent, to close Thursday at $10.07.


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    5 Comments
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    11 years ago

    All is well with the new designs. But their network is still a major broblem. I switched to Apple a while ago, and my phone no longer freezes up every time I use the web. Blackberry Sucks!

    ari
    ari
    11 years ago

    I-phone makes blackberrys ancient.

    Don’t insult Ancient.

    Anon Ibid Opcit
    Anon Ibid Opcit
    11 years ago

    But of course nobody here will care. Since the asifa we have all gotten rid of our smartphones.

    MayerAlter
    MayerAlter
    11 years ago

    Sure just like every woman burnt her Indian hair sheitel. The fools who ditched their Blackberries, iPads etc. will live to rue the day when the excitement over the “Assifa” wanes as it has already B”H started to do. Ask the women who ran to burn their sheitels and now regret it. Life moves on, Assifa or no Assifa.

    my4amos
    my4amos
    11 years ago

    I thought RIM and Blackberry were dead already. I am on pre-oder for Galaxy S III (trying to be patient, it’s supposed to ship by July 9); this one will make iPhone even further behind Android that they already are, and Blackberry – worse than a joke.