RIM's BlackBerry Torch 9800, while selling as low as $99 on Amazon with a two-year AT&T contract, carries a bill of materials of $171.05, according to iSuppli - and that's before software and other costs to RIM.
The Research In Motion BlackBerry Torch 9800 carries a bill of materials estimated
at $171.05, according to an Aug. 17 report from market research firm iSuppli.
AT&T, the exclusive U.S. carrier of this newest BlackBerry smartphone,
currently offers the Torch for $199.99 with a two-year contract, while under
the same terms, online
retailer Amazon.com is offering it for half that-just $99.99.
The iSuppli Teardown Analysis team was complimentary about the Torch, while
finding little that was truly unique.
"On the outside, the Torch delivers a rich feature set, with three user
interfaces (UIs): a capacitive touch screen, an optical track pad and the first
slider QWERTY keyboard found in a BlackBerry," Andrew Rassweiler, iSuppli's
principal analyst and teardown services manager, said in a statement. "On
the inside, the Torch's electronic design heavily leverages subsystems used in
previous members of the BlackBerry smartphone line, specifically the Storm2 and
the Bold 9700 ..."
The Torch contains a GPS Integrated
Circuit (IC) from CSR-a new encounter for
iSuppli, which had never come across this chip in a product teardown before.
Otherwise, the Torch's radio frequency, power amplifier and power management
subsystems were "similar or virtually identical" to those in the
BlackBerry Bold 9700 and, in terms of specs and size, the Torch's display is
similar to that of the Storm2 9550.
"The Torch also bears some similarity to smartphones from other brands,"
stated the report. "Mechanically, it is comparable in complexity and cost
to [the] HTC Tilt 2. Likewise, the Torch
integrates [Texas Instruments'] WL1271x WLAN/BlueTooth IC, which can be found
in products including [Motorola's] Droid X and [Microsoft's] Kin 2."
Topping the Torch's BOM is its LCD and touch-screen display module, priced
at $34.85 and accounting for 20.4 percent of the phone's total. (To note,
iSuppli's estimated BOM is for hardware and manufacturing costs only-software,
licensing, royalties and whatever else are another story.) Right up behind the
display, at $34.25, is the memory subsystem: a 4GB NAND flash memory device, 8G
bit of NAND flash, a 4G-bit mobile double data rate (DDR)
SDRAM and a 4GB removable microSD card from SanDisk. And in third place, at
$23.35, are the Torch's mechanical/electromechanical bits, including the
printed circuit boards and the enclosure plastics and metals.
In heavily leveraging design elements from previous BlackBerry smartphones,
wrote iSuppli, "RIM has delivered a smartphone with an enhanced feature
set that largely matches those of the BlackBerry's chief competitors: the
iPhone and the Android-based handsets."
While
reviewers have called the Torch RIM's best BlackBerry to date, they've been
less inclined to describe the Torch as a true iPhone or Android competitor.
While the first BlackBerry to run the BlackBerry 6 operating system, as well as
the first to pair a QWERTY keypad with a touch display, consumers may be
reaching conclusions in line those of iSuppli-that while the Torch offers a few
glimmers of something new, in borrowing so heavily from pre-existing devices,
it's not the envelope-pusher many were hoping for.
According to analysts with RBC Capital
Markets and Stifel Nicolaus, RIM
sold 150,000 Torch handsets over its debut weekend. By contrast, Google
says it is currently shipping 200,000 Android-running handsets per day, and
Apple sold 1.7 million iPhone 4s during that device's opening weekend.
Michelle Maisto has been covering the enterprise mobility space for a decade, beginning with Knowledge Management, Field Force Automation and eCRM, and most recently as the editor-in-chief of Mobile Enterprise magazine. She earned an MFA in nonfiction writing from Columbia University, and in her spare time obsesses about food. Her first book, The Gastronomy of Marriage, if forthcoming from Random House in September 2009.