BlackBerry Maker RIM Testing Tablet, Touch-Screen Smartphone, Report Says
RIM's BlackBerry smartphone lineup may soon be joined by a large-screen tablet device and a touch-screen smartphone with a slide-out keypad, according the Wall Street Journal. Reportedly, a RIM tablet could arrive by the end of 2010.
BlackBerry maker Research In Motion may be
joining the ranks of manufacturers bringing tablet-style devices to market following
the success of the Apple iPad.
RIM is said to be at work on a tablet that would serve as a companion device to
its popular smartphones, the Wall Street
Journal reported June 14, citing "people familiar with RIM's
plans."
The RIM tablet would reportedly connect to cellular networks through a
BlackBerry handset, and could hit stores in time for the holiday shopping
season.
While a tablet could be a nice addition to RIM's BlackBerry portfolio, analyst
Ken Hyers with Technology Business Research told eWEEK that "much will depend
on the ability of the new BlackBerry 6 OS to provide a engaging experience. The
Storm touch screen was not terribly exciting, but the new OS promises to be
much nicer, incorporating features like swipe and pinch-to-zoom. A larger
tablet, with the ability to link to key enterprise productivity apps, could be
a very useful accessory for the business traveler."
RIM is also said to be testing a "touch-screen smartphone with a slide-out
keyboard," the Journal added, again citing unnamed sources. Like the iPhone
and competing smartphones that have followed it, the newest BlackBerry handset
would use a multitouch-like technology, enabling users to swipe through screens
with their fingers and adjust image sizes by making pinching and expanding
motions.
In the United
States,
BlackBerry handsets are the best-selling smartphones. According to a March
report from ComScore, 42.7
million Americans currently use smartphones, of which 43 percent are RIM
handsets, while 25.1 percent are from Apple.
Worldwide, RIM is outsold only by handset giant Nokia, which following slips in
recent quarters showed a strong first quarter of 2010-a success attributed to the
inclusion of touch screens in 50 percent of its smartphone lineup.
While RIM's BlackBerry handsets have been described as the "gold standard"
of mobile devices for the enterprise, more
than half of RIM's sales are now to consumers, who now face the temptation
of Apple's
upcoming iPhone 4, as well as a swelling number of Android-running
smartphones, including the popular Motorola Droid and the HTC
Evo 4G, which can access 3G and 4G networks.
The tablet market has also quickly grown beyond Apple's iPad, with Dell
introducing the 5-inch Streak, Hewlett-Packard
reportedly planning launches of both Microsoft- and WebOS-powered
tablets, Asus
introducing two Eee Pad tablets, Sony saying it's considering building one,
and Verizon and Google confirming they have a tablet in the works.
As for a new RIM smartphone that can compete in this busy marketplace, the
combination of a keyboard and touch screen might be just what it takes.
"RIM has been fairly staid in its BlackBerry phone design over the years,
and while I think the design has appealed to its business customers, new form factors
are helping other vendors gain share," Hyers said. "I think it's high
time that RIM [extends] touch beyond the Storm platform to other devices, but I
believe a full QWERTY keyboard is necessary for its heavily e-mail-focused
customers. A slide-out keyboard in addition to a touch screen offers the best
of both worlds."









