Showing posts with label BlackBerry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BlackBerry. Show all posts

Friday, November 29, 2013

Sony's Crackle arrives on BlackBerry 10, reminds us to not watch Bad Boys II

Sony's Crackle arrives on BlackBerry 10, reminds us to not watch Bad Boys II data = {blogUrl: "www.engadget.com",v: 400};when = {jquery: lab.scriptBs("jquery"),plugins: lab.scriptBs("plugins"),eng: lab.scriptBs("eng")}; var s265prop9 = ('20648442' !== '') ? 'bsd:20648442' : ''; var postID = '20648442'; var modalMNo = '93319229', modalVideoMNo = '93320648', modalGalleryMNo = '93304207'; when.eng("eng.omni.init", {pfxID:"weg",pageName:document.title,server:"acp-ld39.websys.aol.com",channel:"us.engadget", s_account: "aolwbengadget,aolsvc", short_url: "",pageType:"",linkInternalFilters:"javascript:,",prop1:"article",prop2:"cellphones",prop9:s265prop9,prop12:document.location,prop17:"",prop18:"",prop19:"",prop20:"", prop22:"joseph-volpe", prop54:"blogsmith",mmxgo: true }); adSendTerms('1')adSetMOAT('1');adSetAdURL('/_uac/adpagem.html');lab._script("http://o.aolcdn.com/os/ads/adhesion/js/adhads-min.js").wait(function(){var floatingAd = new AdhesiveAd("348-14-15-14d",{hideOnSwipe:true});}); onBreak({980: function () { adSetType("F");htmlAdWH("93319229", "LB", "LB"); adSetType("");}}); EngadgetMenu NewsReviews Features Galleries VideosEventsPodcasts Engadget ShowTopics Buyers Guides Sagas Store Hands On More Betterer HD Mobile Alt Announcements Cameras Cellphones Desktops Displays Gaming GPS Handhelds Home Entertainment Household Internet Laptops Meta Misc Networking Peripherals Podcasts Robots Portable Audio/Video Science Software Storage Tablets Transportation Wearables Wireless Acer Amazon AMD Apple ASUS AT&T Blackberry Canon Dell Facebook Google HP HTC Intel Lenovo LG Microsoft Nikon Nintendo Nokia NVIDIA Samsung Sony Sprint T-Mobile Verizon About UsSubscribeLike Engadget@engadgettip uswhen.eng("eng.nav.init")when.eng("eng.tips.init") onBreak({980: function () {htmlAdWH("93308280", "215", "35",'AJAX','ajaxsponsor');}});Sony's Crackle arrives on BlackBerry 10, reminds us to not watch Bad Boys II MobileBypostedJul 3rd, 2013 at 8:08 PM 0

Sony's Crackle arrives on BlackBerry 10, reminds us to not watch Bad Boys II

Slowly, but steadily, BlackBerry's building its BB10 app catalog with some major gets. Today, that burgeoning list grows by a very important one with the addition of Sony's Crackle. The free, ad-based streaming video service, which culls together content from Sony's various TV and film studios, is available to download now from BlackBerry World. It's also compatible with the Q10's teeny, 3.1-inch screen, so if you hate your good eyesight, you can devote an hour or two to reliving the opus that is Bad Boys II. Sure, popular apps like Instagram, Hulu Plus and Netflix have yet to make their way over to BB10, but you can't fault the Waterloo-based outfit for getting users what it can. Even if that means bringing them Bad Boys II.

Show full PR text

BlackBerry and Sony Bring Crackle App to BlackBerry 10 Smartphones

Sony Pictures Television's popular video entertainment network, Crackle, will be available for download on BlackBerry World

[Culver City, CA and Waterloo, ON] – Sony Pictures Television and BlackBerry® (NASDAQ: BBRY; TSX: BB) announced today the availability of the Crackle app for BlackBerry® 10 smartphones on the BlackBerry® World™ storefront.

Crackle is a popular, next-generation video entertainment network that offers hundreds of Hollywood movies, television series and originals for free with minimal commercial interruption. Content is uncut and unedited, and programmed from several genres, including action, comedy, crime, anime, horror, music, thriller and sci-fi. BlackBerry worked with Crackle to create the app for the new BlackBerry 10 platform, and is now available for the BlackBerry® Z10 and BlackBerry® Q10 smartphones.

Crackle is available in 22 countries, including the U.S., Canada, the UK, Australia, Brazil and other countries in Latin America.

"Crackle users have demanded a high-quality, cross-platform viewing experience when and where they want it," says Phil Lynch, senior vice president, Digital Networks & Games, Sony Pictures Television. "With the launch of the Crackle App on BlackBerry 10, we're excited to offer BlackBerry customers the opportunity to access Crackle's premium programming on the go."

"Mobile entertainment is a very important part of the BlackBerry 10 experience," said Martyn Mallick, vice president of Global Alliances and Business Development for BlackBerry. "The Crackle application is a great complement to the robust catalogue of television shows and movies on BlackBerry World."

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Saturday, November 2, 2013

Blackberry shipped just 2.7 million BB 10 handsets last quarter (updated)

Blackberry shipped just 2.7 million BB 10 handsets last quarter (updated) data = {blogUrl: "www.engadget.com",v: 320};when = {jquery: lab.scriptBs("jquery"),plugins: lab.scriptBs("plugins"),eng: lab.scriptBs("eng")}; var s265prop9 = ('20642023' !== '') ? 'bsd:20642023' : ''; var postID = '20642023'; var modalMNo = '93319229', modalVideoMNo = '93320648', modalGalleryMNo = '93304207'; when.eng("eng.omni.init", {pfxID:"weg",pageName:document.title,server:"acp-ld39.websys.aol.com",channel:"us.engadget", s_account: "aolwbengadget,aolsvc", short_url: "",pageType:"",linkInternalFilters:"javascript:,",prop1:"article",prop2:"cellphones",prop9:s265prop9,prop12:document.location,prop17:"",prop18:"",prop19:"",prop20:"", prop22:"steve-dent", prop54:"blogsmith",mmxgo: true }); adSendTerms('1')adSetMOAT('1');adSetAdURL('/_uac/adpagem.html');lab._script("http://o.aolcdn.com/os/ads/adhesion/js/adhads-min.js").wait(function(){var floatingAd = new AdhesiveAd("348-14-15-14d",{hideOnSwipe:true});}); onBreak({980: function () { adSetType("F");htmlAdWH("93319229", "LB", "LB"); adSetType("");}}); EngadgetMenu NewsReviews Features Galleries VideosEventsPodcasts Engadget ShowTopics Buyers Guides Sagas Store Hands On More Betterer HD Mobile Alt Announcements Cameras Cellphones Desktops Displays Gaming GPS Handhelds Home Entertainment Household Internet Laptops Meta Misc Networking Peripherals Podcasts Robots Portable Audio/Video Science Software Storage Tablets Transportation Wearables Wireless Acer Amazon AMD Apple ASUS AT&T Blackberry Canon Dell Facebook Google HP HTC Intel Lenovo LG Microsoft Nikon Nintendo Nokia NVIDIA Samsung Sony Sprint T-Mobile Verizon About UsSubscribeLike Engadget@engadgettip uswhen.eng("eng.nav.init")when.eng("eng.tips.init") onBreak({980: function () {htmlAdWH("93308280", "215", "35",'AJAX','ajaxsponsor');}});Blackberry shipped just 2.7 million BB 10 handsets last quarter (updated)BypostedJun 28th, 2013 at 8:38 AM 0

Blackberry shipped just 27 million BB 10 handsets last quarter updated

BlackBerry got off to a roaring start with with the Z10, which shipped a million devices in its first three weeks on the market and led many to predict there'd be at least 3 million shipped this quarter (the first full quarter of Z10 availability). That turned out not to be the case, as the company said during an earnings call for Q1 2014 that it managed to get just 2.7 million BlackBerry 10 OS handsets out the door, despite the Q10 having joined the Z10 on shelves for a good part of that period. Those figures make up just 40 percent of its handset numbers, meaning most of the 6.8 million phones it shipped consisted of cheaper last-gen products. They refused to break those numbers down between the Q10 and Z10, so that's all we have to go on at this point -- but taken with its announcement of an $84 million loss, it's far from encouraging.

Update: Apologies, folks. Our original headline said 2.7 million were sold, whereas in fact the figure indicates shipping numbers. The post itself is unchanged and accurate. For reference, BlackBerry's actual sales to end users lagged behind shipments by around 30 percent when they revealed the previous set of figures back in March.

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BlackBerry 10 not coming to BlackBerry PlayBook tablets

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BlackBerry 10 not coming to BlackBerry PlayBook tablets

If you were hoping your BlackBerry PlayBook would get a taste of BlackBerry 10, think twice. Despite earlier plans, Thorsten Heins just revealed that the newer OS isn't coming to his company's tablet due to "performance and user experience" concerns. The executive didn't discuss the long-term future of the PlayBook, but it's clear that the current model is at the end of the road. When the company's earnings are back in the red, devoting attention to a long-struggling device isn't likely to be high on the priority list.

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Wednesday, October 30, 2013

BlackBerry ships 6.8 million smartphones but loses $84 million in fiscal Q1 2014

WATERLOO, ONTARIO--(Marketwired - June 28, 2013) - Research In Motion Limited (doing business as BlackBerry(R)) (NASDAQ:BBRY)(TSX:BB), a world leader in the mobile communications market, today reported first quarter results for the three months ended June 1, 2013 (all figures in U.S. dollars and U.S. GAAP, except where otherwise indicated).

Q1 Highlights:

-- Revenue $3.1 billion, up 15% sequentially from the previous quarter

-- North America revenue grows sequentially 30%, APAC revenue grows 35%,
EMEA revenue grows 9%

-- LATAM revenue declines 6% as Venezuela foreign currency restrictions
negatively impact $72 million of service revenue recognition in the first
quarter; company gross margins negatively impacted by 2%

-- Shipments of 6.8 million smartphones, up 13% sequentially from the
previous quarter

-- GAAP loss from continuing operations of $84 million, or $0.16 per share

-- Adjusted loss from continuing operations of $67 million, or $0.13 per
share

-- Venezuela foreign currency restrictions impact reported GAAP earnings and
adjusted earnings by approximately $0.10 per share; excluding such impact,
adjusted earnings in-line with previously provided outlook of approaching
breakeven financial results

-- Cash flow from operations of $630 million

-- Cash and investments balance of $3.1 billion
Q1 Results

Revenue for the first quarter of fiscal 2014 was $3.1 billion, up 15% from $2.7 billion in the previous quarter and up 9% from $2.8 billion in the same quarter of fiscal 2013. The revenue breakdown for the quarter was approximately 71% for hardware, 26% for service and 3% for software and other revenue. During the quarter, the Company shipped 6.8 million BlackBerry smartphones and approximately 100,000 BlackBerry PlayBook tablets.

GAAP loss from continuing operations for the quarter was $84 million, or $0.16 per share diluted, compared with a GAAP income from continuing operations of $94 million, or diluted earnings per share of $0.18, in the prior quarter and GAAP loss from continuing operations of $510 million, or $0.97 per share diluted, in the same quarter last year.

Adjusted loss from continuing operations for the first quarter was $67 million, or $0.13 per share diluted. Adjusted loss from continuing operations and adjusted diluted loss per share exclude the impact of pre-tax charges of $26 million ($17 million on an after tax basis) related to the Cost Optimization and Resource Efficiency ("CORE") program. This impact on GAAP loss from continuing operations and diluted loss per share from continuing operations are summarized in the table below.

The total of cash, cash equivalents, short-term and long-term investments was $3.1 billion as of June 1, 2013, compared to $2.9 billion at the end of the previous quarter, an increase of approximately $200 million from the prior quarter. Cash flow from operations in the first quarter was approximately $630 million. Uses of cash included intangible asset additions of approximately $335 million and capital expenditures of approximately $83 million.

"During the first quarter, we continued to focus our efforts on the global roll out of the BlackBerry 10 platform," said Thorsten Heins, President and CEO of BlackBerry. "We are still in the early stages of this launch, but already, the BlackBerry 10 platform and BlackBerry Enterprise Service 10 are proving themselves to customers to be very secure, flexible and dynamic mobile computing solutions. Over the next three quarters, we will be increasing our investments to support the roll out of new products and services, and to demonstrate that BlackBerry has established itself as a leading and vibrant player in next generation mobile computing solutions for both consumer and enterprise customers."

Outlook

The smartphone market remains highly competitive, making it difficult to estimate units, revenue and levels of profitability. Throughout the remainder of fiscal 2014, the Company will invest in BlackBerry 10 smartphone launches, and the roll out of BlackBerry Enterprise Service 10, to continue to establish the new BlackBerry 10 platform in the marketplace. The Company will also invest resources to evolve BlackBerry Messenger into a leading cross platform mobile social messaging application, and launch other revenue initiatives associated with new services and emerging mobile computing opportunities. Based on the competitive market dynamics and these investments, the company anticipates it will generate an operating loss in the second quarter. The company will also continue to implement the cost savings and process-improving initiatives it started last year, in order to drive greater efficiency throughout the company, and redirect capital from these savings to areas of investment that will drive future revenue growth.

Reconciliation of GAAP loss from continuing operations before income taxes, loss from continuing operations and diluted loss per share from continuing operations to adjusted loss from continuing operations before income taxes, adjusted loss from continuing operations and adjusted diluted loss per share from continuing operations:

(United States dollars, in millions except per share data)


For the three months ended
----------------------------------------
CORE
As Reported: GAAP Charges(1) Adjusted
------------ ------------ --------

Loss from continuing operations
before income taxes $ (164) $ 26 $ (138)

Loss from continuing operations (84) 17 (67)

Diluted loss per share from
continuing operations $ (0.16) $ 0.03 $ (0.13)
======== ======== =======

-- Adjusted loss from continuing operations and diluted
loss per share from continuing operations include
the $72 million (approximately $50 million after tax
or $0.10 per share) impact on service revenue recognition
of the Venezuela foreign currency restrictions noted
above.

Note: Adjusted loss from continuing operations before tax, adjusted loss from continuing operations and adjusted diluted loss per share from continuing operations do not have a standardized meaning prescribed by GAAP and thus are not comparable to similarly titled measures presented by other issuers. The Company believes that the presentation of adjusted loss from continuing operations before taxes, adjusted loss from continuing operations and adjusted diluted loss per share from continuing operations enables the Company and its shareholders to better assess the Company's operating results relative to its operating results in prior periods and improves the comparability of the information presented. Investors should consider these non-GAAP measures in the context of the Company's GAAP results.

(1) As part of the Company's ongoing effort to streamline its operations and increase efficiency, the Company commenced the CORE program in March 2012. During the first quarter of fiscal 2014, the Company incurred approximately $26 million in total pre-tax charges related to the CORE program. Substantially all of the pre-tax charges are related to one-time employee termination benefits and facilities costs. During the first quarter of fiscal 2014, charges of approximately $10 million were included in research and development and charges of approximately $16 million were included in selling, marketing, and administration expenses.


View the original article here

Sunday, October 13, 2013

BlackBerry releases Secure Work Space for iOS and Android (video)

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Blackberry releases Secure Work Space for iOS and Android

Paranoid corporate types living in fear of bring-your-own-device employees can soon relax: BlackBerry has just launched its Secure Work Space app, right on schedule. It'll allow organizations to manage and secure Google and Apple devices through BlackBerry Enterprise Service (BES) 10, which forms the mobile backbone of many a company's internal network. By using it, personnel without BlackBerry devices like the Z10 or Q10 will gain a way to check their company's calendars, email and organizers without fear of snooping. At the same time, IT types will be able to securely see, manage and update all Android and Apple devices network-wide. For its part, the Waterloo outfit should gain another source of revenue through the software (which consists of a suite of apps and BES 10.1 update), even with companies that haven't invested in its devices. For more info about the software or to grab a trial, check the source.

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Thursday, September 19, 2013

BlackBerry Q5 to make early debut in the UAE tomorrow

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Earlier than expected (and a little pricier than we'd hoped), the BlackBerry Q5 will go on sale tomorrow in the UAE. We know that its radios are primed for AT&T 3G and while the build might not rival the flagship BB10 device, it's another option for those who can't relinquish the tactile joys of a physical keyboard. It will launch priced at 1,499 AED (just above $400), which nets you BlackBerry's latest OS spread across a 3.1-inch touchscreen with the aforementioned keyboard nestled below. Interested in hopping on a red-eye flight for the third device since the company's name change? Then we'd recommend reacquainting yourself with our first impressions.

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Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Facebook update for BlackBerry 10 brings photo album controls

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Facebook update for BlackBerry 10 brings photo album control, tweaked timeline

BlackBerry 10 users haven't had much control over their Facebook photo uploads -- a big problem when they're trying to organize their pictures later on. Thankfully, they can be a little more restrained as of the Facebook 10.2 update. The revision lets socialites both create albums on-device and upload directly to particular albums. After the fact, they can tag existing shots and toggle just which images they see. If you're the sort whose Q10 or Z10 doubles as a primary camera, you'll want to grab the update at the source link.

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Wednesday, July 31, 2013

This week on gdgt: BlackBerry Q10, Cord-cutting, Dell XPS 18 All-in-One

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Each week, our friends at gdgt go through the latest gadgets and score them to help you decide which ones to buy. Here are some of their most recent picks. Want more? Visit gdgt anytime to catch up on the latest, and subscribe to gdgt's newsletter to get a weekly roundup in your inbox.

This week on gdgt

DNP This week on gdgt BlackBerry Q10, Cordcutting, Dell XPS 18 AllinOne

BlackBerry Q10

Diehard BlackBerry users who can't get along without a QWERTY keyboard will appreciate the Q10, which brings the platform into the modern smartphone era. However, the device is unlikely to win over any converts from Android, iOS, or even Windows Phone.
Read reviews and more

DNP This week on gdgt BlackBerry Q10, Cordcutting, Dell XPS 18 AllinOneCould you drop your home Internet service?

In this week's featured gdgt discussion, we discuss cord-cutting of a different kind: While you might associate the topic with ditching cable TV in favor of streaming, more people are actually dropping their home broadband service in favor of mobile data, public hotspots, and mooching off of friends or relatives. Could you do it? Would you?

DNP This week on gdgt BlackBerry Q10, Cordcutting, Dell XPS 18 AllinOne

Dell XPS 18 All-in-One

Dell's XPS 18 manages to take desktop computing and give it a portable twist -- without making sacrifices. The XPS 18 is a unique approach to the all-in-one, as Dell uses a tablet in place of a monitor to make the whole system more portable. Dell has been successful in the desktop all-in-one market before, and they keep up that tradition even in the iconoclastic XPS 18.
Buy from $999
Read reviews and more

DNP This week on gdgt BlackBerry Q10, Cordcutting, Dell XPS 18 AllinOne

Sony Bluetooth Wireless Mobile Speaker (SRS-BTV5)

Even at its price, the small and portable Sony SRS-BTV5 gets drowned out in a sea of affordable wireless speakers. At this price point Sony needed to really hit it out of the park to make the SRS-BTV5 stand out, but they swung and missed. For $30 more you can get Logitech's Mobile Boombox, which is just as small with better sound, or pick up the Phoenix from Beacon Audio; while its sound is comparable to the BTV5, it's also $20 cheaper.
Buy from $69
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Tuesday, May 28, 2013

What to Expect at BlackBerry Live 2013

Blackberry-10-signs Cmac By Christina Warren2013-05-13 19:09:32 UTC

Google isn't the only company holding a mobile developer conference this week. BlackBerry's annual BlackBerry Live conference kicks off Tuesday in Orlando.

It's been a big year for BlackBerry. In the last four months the company has changed its name, released its first BlackBerry 10 smartphone (the BlackBerry Z10) and rolled out its first QWERTY BlackBerry 10 device, the BlackBerry Q10.

While the verdict is still out as to whether BlackBerry is truly "back" — and if it can realistically compete against the iOS and Android juggernauts — the company is certainly going into the conference in a better position than it did last year.

So what can we expect to see from BlackBerry at BlackBerry Live? These are our predictions.

The BlackBerry Q10 shipped with BlackBerry 10.1, the first point-release update to the BB10 platform. The update brought support for the Q10's screen size, as well as some enhancements to notifications, access to older email and support for promo codes in BlackBerry World.

Developer versions of BlackBerry 10.1 also indicate that HDR options for the camera and other usability improvements.

For some users, the biggest feature of BlackBerry 10.1 might just be the ability to install Skype from BlackBerry World on the device. BlackBerry Q10 owners can already download the app and users running leaked versions of BB 10.1 are reporting success at installing the app.

At BlackBerry Live, we expect the company to announce a date for BlackBerry 10.1 for the Z10. When actual users get the update will depend on how carriers want to roll out the update, but hopefully it will be sooner rather than later.

During BlackBerry's last quarterly earnings call, CEO Thorsten Heins commented that a lower-priced BlackBerry 10 device aimed at emerging markets — where BlackBerry is still a leading smartphone brand — was in the works for a 2013 release.

Images and specs of this device, which is rumored to be called the BlackBerry R10, leaked earlier this month. The device purportedly has the same screen size and resolution of the Q10, but has a smaller amount of internal storage and could have a slower processor.

The device also looks much more like the BlackBerry Curve line of phones (in other words, cheap), rather than stately and sophisticated like the BlackBerry Q10.

Perhaps BlackBerry will unveil the phone and explain more about its targeted market strategy — and price points — at BlackBerry Live.

Last year, BlackBerry (then known as Research In Motion), promised that BlackBerry PlayBook owners would get updated to BlackBerry 10.

During the BlackBerry Z10 launch, the company again reiterated that BlackBerry 10 would come to the PlayBook, but gave no concrete time frame.

Although the PlayBook OS is similar to BB10 (both are based on QNX), the platforms are different. This is problematic for developers that want to build apps for both platforms — and for users that want to use the same app on more than one device. BlackBerry 10 also adds improvements to the PlayBook 2.0's email, web browser and Android app support.

Despite Thorsten Heins's dismissive remarks about the future of tablets — as well as the company's previous statements that it doesn't plan to be in the tablet market unless it can make money (something it acknowledges it doesn't know how to do) — we expect the company to at least offer an updated timeline of BB10 availability for the PlayBook.

Apps are the lifeblood of the current smartphone market. A platform quite literally lives and dies based on the quality — and yes, quantity — of its app ecosystem.

While BlackBerry boasts that it has more apps at launch than any other smartphone in history — the truth is, most of those apps aren't very good. There are also lots of missing top-tier apps, including Spotify, Netflix, Hulu Plus, Snapchat, Pandora, Candy Crush Saga and of course, Instagram.

BlackBerry was able to deliver Skype for the platform and it even convinced WhatsApp to come back — but if it wants the next generation of app developers to target the platform — it needs to prove that the big players are there.

BlackBerry Live would be the perfect time to prove to developers — and to the world — that BlackBerry 10 has the support of the big players, or at least some of them.

I'll be at BlackBerry Live, covering the news and announcements from the floor. Feel free to tweet me your questions (or find me if you happen to be at the show) and let me know what you want to see.

What do you think of BlackBerry's chances in the current smartphone marketplace? Can the company still compete or is it too far gone?

What do you want to see and hear from the company at BlackBerry Live? Let us know in the comments.

Image by Pete Pachal, Mashable

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

BlackBerry software chief on updates and BB10 for healthcare and financial services

BlackBerry software chief on updates and BB10 for healthcare and financial services data = {blogUrl: "www.engadget.com",v: 315};when = {jquery: lab.scriptBs("jquery"),plugins: lab.scriptBs("plugins"),eng: lab.scriptBs("eng")}; var s265prop9 = ('20574599' !== '') ? 'bsd:20574599' : ''; var postID = '20574599'; var modalMNo = '93319229', modalVideoMNo = '93320648', modalGalleryMNo = '93304207'; when.eng("eng.omni.init", {pfxID:"weg",pageName:document.title,server:"acp-ld39.websys.aol.com",channel:"us.engadget", s_account: "aolwbengadget,aolsvc", short_url: "",pageType:"",linkInternalFilters:"javascript:,",prop1:"article",prop2:"cellphones",prop9:s265prop9,prop12:document.location,prop17:"",prop18:"",prop19:"",prop20:"", prop22:"michael-gorman", prop54:"blogsmith",mmxgo: true }); adSendTerms('1')adSetMOAT('1');adSetAdURL('/_uac/adpagem.html');lab._script("http://o.aolcdn.com/os/ads/adhesion/js/adhads-min.js").wait(function(){var floatingAd = new AdhesiveAd("10000057",{hideOnSwipe:true});}); onBreak({980: function () { adSetType("F");htmlAdWH("93319229", "LB", "LB"); adSetType("");}}); EngadgetMenu NewsReviews Features Galleries VideosEventsPodcasts Engadget ShowTopics Buyers Guides Sagas Store HD Mobile Alt Announcements Cameras Cellphones Desktops Displays Gaming GPS Handhelds Home Entertainment Household Internet Laptops Meta Misc Networking Peripherals Podcasts Robots Portable Audio/Video Science Software Storage Tablets Transportation Wearables Wireless Acer Amazon AMD Apple ASUS AT&T Blackberry Canon Dell Facebook Google HP HTC Intel Lenovo LG Microsoft Nikon Nintendo Nokia NVIDIA Samsung Sony Sprint T-Mobile Verizon About UsSubscribeLike Engadget@engadgettip uswhen.eng("eng.nav.init")when.eng("eng.tips.init") onBreak({980: function () {htmlAdWH("93308280", "215", "35",'AJAX','ajaxsponsor');}});BlackBerry software chief on updates and BB10 for healthcare and financial services MobileBypostedMay 17th, 2013 at 8:53 PM 0

BlackBerry software chief on BB10 software updates and a focus on healthcare and financial services

During BlackBerry Live this week we got to speak with Vivek Bhardwaj, BlackBerry's Head of Software, about the future of BB10. In light of the the platform's first major software update rolling out to its devices, we asked about the plans for future releases. Bhardwaj told us that the plan is for them to come at a regular cadence of one major code update per year, with other, incremental updates for specific devices sprinkled in as needed. A particular focus is to do so while delivering devs fully realized hardware and to avoid fragmentation in the code base -- making it easier to create BB10 apps.

While he wouldn't dish details about features coming to BB10 in those updates, Bhardwaj did explain that he's working on making BB10 a platform particularly suited for use not only in cars, but also in the healthcare and financial services industries. That focus is a part of the mobile computing ethos espoused by CEO Thorsten Heins meant to have BB10 devices be users' personal, portable computing terminal that is simply plugged into a screen -- whether it's a desktop monitor, a car or somewhere else -- that delivers a uniform experience. When asked whether those screens would include TVs, Bhardwaj didn't rule it out, but he did say that home experiences weren't a priority because it's a crowded space and BB10 "is all about getting things done." As a result, the number one focus is building out a compelling automotive platform, with healthcare and financial services coming in a close second. So, folks thinking BB10 was BlackBerry betting on consumers instead of the enterprise, think again. The more things change, the more they seem to stay the same -- at least when the folks in Waterloo are involved.

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Sunday, May 19, 2013

The After Math: Google I/O 2013, BlackBerry Live and Nokia's Lumia 925

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The After Math Google IO 2013, BlackBerry World and Oh No Not Another Windows Phone

A new Lumia phone from Nokia, this year's Google I/O and BlackBerry Live -- yep, it was a pretty hectic week for us, but also a good seven days for tech news. Even if Google didn't have any truly new hardware for us, it's started up its own on-demand music service, gave us more details on Google Glass, redesigned its Maps and, well, it was a very long keynote. Join us after the break for a numerical breakdown of that and the rest of the week's big news.

Per-month pricing for Google Music All Access: $9.99Per-month pricing for Spotify Premium: $9.99Time spent liveblogging the Google I/O 2013 keynote: 3 hours 43 minutesLength of Peter Jackson's The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey: 2 hours 49 minutesBattery remaining on our Google Glass unit by the end of the keynote: 17 percentNumber of times Google CEO Larry Page said the word "sad" during his keynote appearance: 9Price of a 16GB "stock Android" Samsung Galaxy S 4: $649Price of last year's LG Nexus 4 (16GB): $349YouTube's monthly subscription fee for new pilot channels: $0.99Current Sesame Street channel subscribers on YouTube: 600,464One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, 10, 11: 12

Amount Google earned from ads on PSY's "Gangnam Style" video: $8 millionNumber of Android device activations to date: 900 millionApps installed from Google Play: 48 billionApps downloaded from Apple's App Store: 50 billionEstimated number of Nokia phones (feature and smart) sold last year: 336 millionPrice of the Nokia Lumia 925: 469 euros / $605Price of the Nokia Asha 501: $99Screen size (in inches) of the Asha 501: 3Screen size (in inches) of the new QWERTY BlackBerry Q5: 3.1BlackBerry's smartphone market share, according to IDC: 2.9 percentTablets sold by ASUS in Q1 2013: 3 millionTablets sold by BlackBerry in Q1 2013: 370,000Years left for the tablet market, according to BlackBerry CEO Thorsten Heins: 5 when.eng("eng.perm.init")

Saturday, May 4, 2013

BlackBerry Q10 Is for Keyboard Lovers Only

Blackberry-q-10-4-of-16Pete Pachal2013-04-24 03:00:04 UTC

Are keyboard phones still relevant? For BlackBerry, a company that practically invented the QWERTY phone, the answer could prove pivotal to its future. You can see how much BlackBerry understands that when you pick up the Q10, the first phone with a physical keyboard to run BlackBerry 10.

Put simply, the BlackBerry Q10 is the best keyboard phone you can buy today

Put simply, the BlackBerry Q10 is the best keyboard phone you can buy today. It's a gorgeous piece of hardware with state-of-the-art smartphone technology, which the keyboard interacts with in some very useful ways. QWERTY keyboard fans will really enjoy the Q10 — even more since it ships with BlackBerry 10.1, the latest software.

Others, however, won't see much value in it. After using the BlackBerry Q10, it's clearer than ever to me why BlackBerry didn't debut its new operating system with its signature form factor, instead opting to have the touchscreen Z10 carry the banner of BlackBerry 10. For anyone used to the full-screen experience of the iPhone or most Android flagships, you'll question why valuable screen space is being taken up by... ugh... buttons.

You'll also be slowed down. After years of typing on touchscreens, I'm at the point where my fingers bounce effortlessly from onscreen key to onscreen key. The Q10, however, had me pausing ever-so-slightly after every key press to... I don't know why. Involuntarily thinking about the tactile response? Whatever the reason, I was a typing tortoise on the Q10.

Still, I acknowledge there's a significant number of people — probably still using BlackBerrys — who feel the opposite about keyboard phones, and the Q10 is meant for them. It's also meant to represent consistency at BlackBerry. Yes, the company has changed its name; yes, it's embraced touchscreens; yes, the entire leadership is different, but it still makes a phone that looks and feels... well, like a BlackBerry.

Check that. The Q10 looks like a classic BlackBerry, but it's far more pleasurable to use. Older QWERTY BlackBerry phones were great examples of industrial design but became a frustrating experience when you tried to use them to run apps, surf the web or play a casual game — basically almost anything a modern smartphone does. The Q10 is beautiful, but it's got the brains to back up its good looks.

At 4.9 ounces, the phone is lighter than you expect

At 4.9 ounces, the phone is lighter than you expect. When you pick it up, it feels almost warm — not because the processor is heating things up (a reality with most phones these days), but because of the glass-weave backside and the PVD-treated stainless steel edge. The design feels more "high end" than plastic and less cold than metal or glass, not to mention it bestows a good grip.

The Q10's square-shaped screen measures 3.1 inches diagonal with 720 x 720 resolution, giving it a pixel density of 328 pixels per inch (ppi), or roughly the same as the iPhone 5. The screen is an AMOLED display, BlackBerry's first, though I didn't find its brightness or contrast to be that impressive. It's certainly a capable screen, but an iPhone 4S is more eye-popping at maximum brightness. So was the Z10.

On the inside, the Q10 packs a dual-core 1.5GHz processor; 2GB of RAM; 16GB of storage (which you can augment with a microSD card); radios for dual-band Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0 and near-field communication; and 4G LTE connectivity — basically, the exact same capabilities as the Z10. It's good to see BlackBerry didn't scrimp... this phone is as much a flagship as its full-screen brother.

BlackBerry has a lot of experience making keyboard phones, and it shows in the Q10. I thought the last QWERTY phone the company made, the Bold 9900, had an superbly designed keyboard, but the Q10 takes it to a new level. The keys are slightly larger, and the curve is gone.

The steel trim between the rows of keys is slightly thicker, giving your thumbs a little more room to move, making accidental key presses less likely. The trim also extends beyond over the edges — a design choice BlackBerry borrowed from high-end furniture — which has the effect of make the keyboard feel a bit more "open" than previous generations.

BlackBerry Q10 keyboard

With a physical keyboard, you lose one of the marquee features of BlackBerry 10, its predictive typing, where you swipe up from onscreen keys to type whole words. I'm fine with losing it — I was never a huge fan of the trick anyway, which requires a lot of practice to really use effectively.

In place of swiping, Q10 users get a bonus feature: keyboard shortcuts

In place of swiping, Q10 users get a bonus feature: keyboard shortcuts. Suddenly have the urge to tweet something? Pull out your Q10 and just start typing the word "tweet," followed by whatever wisdom suddenly struck you. Hit "post" and your message goes right to Twitter without ever needing to launch the app.

Twitter isn't alone in getting the shortcut treatment. You can type "fb" for a Facebook status update, "li" for LinkedIn, "text" for SMS, and a few others. Being able to call up specific app functions from the homescreen is an überconvenient tool, and BlackBerry says it's opening up the ability to developers. Evernote, theoretically, could use "en" to create a new note. Handy.

Of course, within apps, there are plenty of other shortcuts (spacebar to scroll down in the Browser, for example) — pages of them, in fact. Most of these have existed for a long time, and are sure to satisfy the keyboard crowd. They take reminding and practice to use effectively, but they're great to have.

If the point of the keyboard is to speed things up, it's through shortcuts rather than actual typing — at least in my case. To measure how much the Q10's QWERTY keyboard handicapped me, I raced myself typing out "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dogs," twice in a row on three phones: the Q10, the large-screen HTC One and my personal iPhone 4S (the latter two in portrait mode).

Both sentences had to be typed correctly, so the test also took into account autocorrection and ease of backspacing/editing. On the Q10, it took me 43.2 seconds to get it done. I fared 38.2 seconds on the HTC One, and I positively flew on my iPhone, at 31.4 seconds.

The iPhone obviously had home-field advantage, but I didn't expect it to be so dominant. The HTC One might have fared better were it not for the way Android autocorrects, which I find unfamiliar. Still, both touchscreen phones schooled the Q10. Even with practice, I doubt I'd be a faster typist on it — typing on screens is simply less frictional, literally and figuratively.

The Q10 is the first device to run BlackBerry 10.1, which refines the experience of the mobile OS. The company says owners of the Z10 will get the update in the coming weeks.

The changes are incremental, but some of them matter a lot. You can now sync multiple Google Calendars through the Calendar app. If you have a Google Apps account, you may need to re-input your account info a few times to sync Gmail, Calendars and Contacts, but it definitely works.

One of the things I criticized BlackBerry 10 for was how different it is from other mobile OSes. Without a home button, some new users will be at sea without a tutorial. Well, now that tutorial exists. The first time you boot the device, the Q10 shows you how to gesture, where the Hub is, and things like that. It's pretty basic, but needed. Here's a sample instruction:

BB10 Tutorial

The camera is the same 8-megapixel model found in the Z10, complete with time-shifting goodness for eliminating those weird-face moments. With 10.1, it has a setting for capturing normal photos as well as HDR (high dynamic range) pics simultaneously; you previously had to save as one or the other.

A Q10 camera oddity: The pictures default to square aspect ratio

A Q10 camera oddity: The pictures default to square aspect ratio. That sort of makes sense, since the screen is square, although I find it an odd choice for a device whose platform — infamously — doesn't have Instagram. Of course, you can change the ratio anytime you want.

BlackBerry 10.1 also brings back the ability to get extreme in your alert customizations. Want to have a specific ringtone when your girlfriend calls? Or turn off the flashing LED for certain work colleagues? Now you can.

Finally, the "zoom in" effect when selecting text is a slightly better, more effective at targeting and easier to drag around.

Sadly, none of the refinements in BB10.1 can magically populate BlackBerry's app catalog. They're doing okay — there are 100,000 apps in BlackBerry World now — but "okay" isn't going to get them Netflix or Vine. It remains to be seen whether BlackBerry 10 will ever attract enough developer interest to really thrive, but easy porting of Android apps (which can sometimes have a less-than-optimal experience) seems to be helping a little.

When I reviewed the Z10, I didn't get a chance to try BlackBerry Balance, the way BlackBerry 10 lets you create a "workspace" on the device that's separate from your personal apps and content. This time BlackBerry set me up with a test account to check out the feature.

Balance does a great job of keeping work and personal apart, although sometimes it behaves in unexpected ways. After you set up, you can unlock your workspace by sliding down from your home screen and entering a password. Once you do so, the screen's background changes and presents a different set of apps.

BlackBerry Balance

Any work email accounts will now be visible in the Hub. Interestingly, your personal accounts are still there, too, just with your work emails mixed in. When the workspace is locked, you'll still get alerts about incoming mail, but they won't be visible until you enter your password.

I found a couple of quirks about how Balance works a little weird. Balance lets you keep your workspace unlocked while still in "personal" mode, so you can read emails without switching over entirely. However, that leads to odd things happening: screen captures I was taking in this mode were saved to the workspace side, so they weren't visible in the Pictures folder.

Despite some minor confusion, Balance makes a lot of sense. I'd like to see some of the workspace security applied to the personal side of things — it would be nice to be able to exclude certain personal Hub accounts from the work side — but for the most part it's well thought out.

Battery life is excellent. It's not nearly as good as BlackBerry's old Curve models, which were amazing at sipping power, but the smaller screen, along with some good development choices (the background of the Calendar app is black, for example), keep the Q10 running beyond a full day of normal use.

The Q10 BlackBerry lent us was for AT&T's network, and call quality was fine. Voices didn't sound as clear as on, say, the HTC One on Sprint, but the difference was slight. Until HD Voice becomes more common, call quality on most phones will likely remain unremarkable. As ironic as it sounds, you don't buy a phone today for how well it makes calls.

You do buy a phone because of the platform and overall power, and on that score the Q10 has all the trappings of a state-of-the-art smartphone. It has a robust processor and can connect to fast networks, it has an excellent camera, and it's a marvelous piece of design.

And then there's that keyboard. I began reviewing the Q10 hoping I'd conclude that, powered by BlackBerry 10 software, it's what the classic BlackBerry phone was always meant to be. But now that I've used it, the presence of the QWERTY keyboard feels like a redundant throwback than an signature feature.

That's not to say there isn't a sizable, if shrinking audience for this phone

That's not to say there isn't a sizable, if shrinking audience for this phone, or that BlackBerry hasn't done a great job in modernizing the keyboard phone in a compact form factor. If QWERTY phones are your bag, the Q10 will do you much better than, say, the Droid 4.

So the Q10 scores a victory, but it's a pyrrhic one. As good as many of the features of the Q10 are, it's not a phone I could recommend to anyone but the diehard few who were already lining up for it. BlackBerry has done the best it can to stay true to its QWERTY past in the Q10, but in today's world, where all displays are rapidly evolving into touchscreens, the physical keyboard is really just a waste of space.

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