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BlackBerry takes on iPhone

This photo provided by Research in Motion Ltd., shows the company's new touch-screen phone, the Storm. With the new model being announced Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2008 the Storm, RIM is for the first time giving up the physical keypad in favor of a large screen, just like the one on Apple's iPhone.

This photo provided by Research in Motion Ltd., shows the company's new touch-screen phone, the Storm. With the new model being announced Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2008 the Storm, RIM is for the first time giving up the physical keypad in favor of a large screen, just like the one on Apple's iPhone.

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NEW YORK -- Research in Motion Ltd., maker of the BlackBerry, is taking on Apple Inc. with a touch-screen phone that puts a new twist on the technology.

RIM is known for its e-mail-oriented phones with large keypads. With the new model announced Wednesday, the Storm, RIM is for the first time giving up the physical keypad in favor of a large screen, just like the one on Apple's iPhone.

But RIM has listened to users who find the iPhone's glass screen awkward to type on because its virtual buttons provide no tactile feedback. The Storm's whole screen is backed by springs, and when pressed, it gives under the finger.

The long-rumored Storm will be available from Verizon Wireless in the U.S. and from Vodafone Group PLC overseas before the holidays, the companies said. No price has been disclosed yet.

In an unusual twist, the phone will work both on Verizon Wireless' network and on Vodafone's, even though they use incompatible technologies. Like a few other Verizon Wireless handsets before it, the Storm will be equipped with radios to handle both networks, making international roaming a possibility. The iPhone, carried by AT&T Inc. in the U.S., can already roam internationally.

The addition of a touch-screen phone to the BlackBerry lineup, the mainstay of e-mail-addicted executives and managers, is a testament to the effect of the iPhone. RIM's share of the U.S. smart-phone market has stayed above 50 percent, but the iPhone has clearly helped expand that market.

Over the last year, technology buyers at large corporations have found their employees demanding a touch-screen phone, said Mike Lanman, chief marketing officer of Verizon Wireless.

"Everybody eventually leaves work ... and becomes a person," Lanman said.

The iPhone's facility with Web browsing and movie playing are big reasons for its appeal. The Storm will initially lack an equivalent of Apple's iTunes movie store, though shorter clips will be available through Verizon Wireless' VCast service.

As a Web browser, the Storm more closely emulates the desktop experience than the iPhone does. That's because the screen can distinguish between light touches and firm presses. A light touch can move around a cursor, while a firm press activates a link, much like moving a mouse cursor has a different effect from clicking a mouse button, said Mike Lazaridis, RIM's co-chief executive.

Verizon Wireless is the last of the four national U.S. brands to unveil a flagship touch-screen model. AT&T has the iPhone, Sprint Nextel Corp. sells the Samsung Instinct, and T-Mobile USA just announced the G1, the first phone to run Google Inc.'s software. Verizon Wireless does have other touch-screen phones in its lineup, but none that it has promoted with as much vigor as other carriers have.

Comments

Posted by BuffTime on October 8, 2008 at 9:17 a.m. (Suggest removal)

I'm a little tired of these new phones picking one provider per country. It only makes sense for that provider. In Europe (prior to the iPhone) you shopped phones independently of providers (everyone uses GSM there). Yes, you still get discounts from providers if you buy a phone through them with a plan, but you could have any phone on any network.

iPhone is cool, but I have no desire to have AT&T as a provider. This new Blackberry looks cool too, but I have even less interest in having Verizon as a provider. If I were a RIM shareholder I would be much more excited if they had released this phone independent of network provider. They would sell a lot more of them then. Companies (most of RIM's clients use them for work) do not change providers/networks willy nilly just because a new phone is only offered on one of them. Strategy-wise, this is not the best move for RIM.

Posted by Ralphie2 on October 8, 2008 at 9:48 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Remember when John McCain claimed to have invented the BlackBerry? What a doofus!

Posted by dax5000 on October 8, 2008 at 10:25 a.m. (Suggest removal)

yeah, this is not frontpage news, how about reminding us about our evaporating retirement savings please?

Posted by Ralphie2 on October 8, 2008 at 11:08 a.m. (Suggest removal)

What do you mean evaporating retirement savings? John McCain just told me "the fundamentals of our economy are strong"!

Posted by marlboroman on October 8, 2008 at 4:06 p.m. (Suggest removal)

There are plenty of people already doing good business modding iphones to allow you access to whatever carrier you wish. Like, duh...

On another note, the abacus is seeing a strong challenge from something known as a "sliderule."

Posted by FrictionSoul on October 9, 2008 at 5:56 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Everytime I look into the Blackberry I find out it requires the blackberry server and I always gets the impression that I have to belong to some big corporation that has that server installed and knows how to operate and maintain it.

If this is the case, how is having a touch screen blackberry going to change anything?

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