Tag: Blackberry
Next Google phone will be designed for business
Google executive and Android main-man Andy Rubin has discussed what to expect from Google's next handset, revealing the company plans a more business-orientated handset next. Unlike the HTC built Nexus One, this business orientated handset would likely feature a full…
Samsung to buy BlackBerry maker RIM predicts US money site
You have got to love 247wallstreet. The US financial blog has delivered some great predictions this year and is still banging on about Nokia buying Palm. Maybe one day. Anyhow it has surpassed itself this week with its top 12…
Orange App Store launched
Orange has officially launched their App Store today, available to over 1 million Orange customers. British and French customers are the first to get the service, providing roughly 5,000 apps, […]
Cheap iPhone apps you create yourself coming in 2010 from Tino
Users have to subscribe to the service, but at £100 for a one-off app creation and publication, it's a fair sight cheaper than the average £5,000 app development cost.
Must-have free Blackberry Storm 2 apps: Viigo, Windows Live Messenger and 7 Digital
3 Blackberry Storm 2 apps that wont burn a hole in your pocket.
T-Mobile ready the Blackberry Bold 9700 for UK customers
Key features are set to include a new optical track pad to ease navigation, a 3.2 Mega pixel camera with video recording, HSDPA and Wi-Fi internet, up to 32GB of expandable memory, and the ability to sync you phone with your iTunes account.
Spotify coming to the BlackBerry in early 2010
It would certainly be a good fit for BlackBerry which is spending a lot of time and money at the moment in broadening its app portfolio. It recently began offering MP3 download service 7digital and song identification app Shazam.
Blackberry watch to hit shops in February
Not made by RIM, the watch has instead been developed by the company Allerta who are based near the Blackberry makers in Waterloo, Canada.
BlackBerry Bold 9700 offers improved camera and battery life
In an event at its European R&D facility in Bochum Germany today, RIM finally took the wraps off the much rumoured new BlackBerry Bold. Billed as the Bold 9700, though we wonder if consumers might call it the Bold 2, the new device is smaller (109x60x14.1mm) and lighter (122g) than its predecessor and has undergone a few key cosmetic and technological changes.
In many ways the design of the handset is a more akin to the Blackberry Curve rather than the square-ish straight lines of the original Bold 9000. As well as being more curvaceous the 9700 is also slightly smaller, though the keyboard sand screen size aren't too different from its predecessor.
The major ergonomic change is the inclusion of the trackpad which first debuted on the Blackberry 8250. This is a swipe style feature which makes it much quicker to cycle between the applications in the interface.
One of the major criticisms of the original Bold was its poor battery life. RIM has not only addressed this but its representatives are making a major feature of the new Bold's battery life. The company claims that even with heavy usage it can run for three days without a recharge. Standby time is apparent y a very impressive 16 days and RIM claims that the MP3 player will run for 33 hours before it runs out of juice.
RIM has also improved the quality of the camera with the new model sporting a 3.2 mega pixel snapper with improved lighting sensitivity. Other facilities include 3G, Wi-Fi, storage from a bundled two Gigabyte card, 480×360 65k 2.44inch screen, a camcorder, GPS, Bluetooth, BlackBerry Messenger and access to the BlackBerry app store
Unlike the recently launched Storm 2, which is a Vodafone exclusive in the UK, the Bold 9700 will be available in November from most UK networks with Vodafone and T-Mobile lined up to receive it first.
Blackberry Bluetooth watch: First Look
The first pictures of a Blackberry Bluetooth watch have been revealed today. The timepiece has been floating around the rumour mill since the Summer, but these new renders suggest its release may be closer than first anticipated.