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BlackBerry unveils an Android-powered phone with security features

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BlackBerry unveils an Android-powered phone with security features
By Ian Austen
Published: November 3, 2015
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Phone called PRIV will sell for $700, starting Friday, with AT&T being the only American wireless carrier.

OTTAWA: While Apple’s iPhone first undermined BlackBerry’s position as the leading maker of smartphones, phones using Google’s Android operating system finally relegated it to also-ran status.

On Monday, after years of marketing that dismissed Android and iPhones as unfit for serious minded business users, BlackBerry raised a white flag and introduced a phone called PRIV that announces it is “powered by Android” when it is switched on.

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Unlike the introduction of the BlackBerry 10 operating system and phones in 2013, the launch of the PRIV will not be a pivotal moment for the company. John S Chen, who became chairman and chief executive after BlackBerry 10 fizzled, has made it clear that the company’s future is now based on selling software and services to corporations and governments.

But after a series of disappointments with BlackBerry 10 models, the PRIV may play a role in determining if BlackBerry continues to make phones in the future.

“I wouldn’t say it’s going to disappear overnight,” James Moar, an analyst with Juniper Research, a mobile phone research company based in Britain, said of BlackBerry’s phone business. “BlackBerry has that security brand image more than anyone else.”

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Marty Beard, BlackBerry’s chief operating officer, said in an interview that while BlackBerry will promote what he described as unique security advantages offered by the PRIV, he acknowledged that its choice of operating systems is intended to overcome the BlackBerry 10’s greatest shortcoming: its relatively small number of apps and, in some cases, their quality.

“We know that the number one complaint of a BlackBerry user is apps,” Beard said. While using Android resolves that problem, the downside, he said, was that “Android had that reputation for not being secure.”

Samsung, the dominant force in Android phones, tried to overcome that problem with a security system for corporate users known as Knox. BlackBerry was among the many companies Samsung partnered with on the project.

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But Christian Kane, an analyst with Forrester Research, said Knox did not overcome Android security doubts at many businesses and governments. As a result, he said, no Android phone maker has firmly established itself with that segment of the market, leaving an opening for BlackBerry.

“I’m kind of cautiously optimistic about it,” Kane said of the PRIV.

Like all recent BlackBerry phones, regardless of their operating system, getting the maximum in security out of the PRIV involves having the device be connected to an employers’ server, which is running BlackBerry management and security software.

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But Beard said the new phone included several hardware and software security improvements and additions that benefited all users and distinguish it from other Android phones.

Somewhat confusingly, BlackBerry will also continue to sell BlackBerry 10 phones. Beard said that is because some corporations and government users, presumably law enforcement agencies, have “very high-end security needs” which the Android phones cannot meet. While the company will continue to update that operating system, it is unclear if new phones based around it will be introduced.

Ramon Llamas, an analyst with IDC, said BlackBerry 10 will probably linger as there are many corporations and governments that “just want BlackBerry to be BlackBerry.”

The fall of Blackberry

When the first BlackBerry 10 phones appeared, the company was criticized for replacing its signature physical keyboards with a touch screen. The PRIV splits that difference with a 5.43 inch touchscreen, which is curved at the edges, as well a slide-out BlackBerry keyboard as an option to type texts and numbers. (The surface of that keyboard is also touch sensitive.) Unlike earlier slide-out keyboards, Kane said the PRIV’s lightness and thinness means that it isn’t top heavy when using the keyboard.

The phone will sell for $700. AT&T will be the only American wireless carrier offering the PRIV when it goes on sale on Friday. BlackBerry is also selling the phone online.

Widespread success for the PRIV will only come if BlackBerry can gain interest from a broad range of consumers, rather than the company’s comparatively small base of corporate and government users.

Kane said the phone’s higher than usual quality of design and construction may help with that, though that approach has not made HTC’s flagship Android phone, the HTC One, a runaway success.

Less clear is if the PRIV’s claims of better privacy and security will find an audience outside of corporate and government information technology departments.

“Individuals don’t care about security but they do care about privacy,” said Kane. “As much as they care about it, are they willing to pay for it?”

This article originally appeared on the New York Times, a partner of The Express Tribune.
 
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Last efforts to revive Blackberry.
 
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BlackBerry and Google have combined the most secure mobile platform with the most flexible application ecosystem to create a device that will revolutionize the way you look at smartphones. BlackBerry has applied its world-renowned security model to Android
 
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and this is prolly the new look:tongue: it looks disgustingly funny!:oops:

blackberry_passport_redesigned_at%26t_official.jpg
 
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This the LAMEST company I've ever seen. A decade after it became clear that touch screen keyboards are the way to go these jokers still retain button keyboards because that's what people remembered them for,

and this is prolly the new look:tongue: it looks disgustingly funny!:oops:

blackberry_passport_redesigned_at%26t_official.jpg

Just why the f*ck are they sticking with those buttons man? this is painful to watch.
 
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This the LAMEST company I've ever seen. A decade after it became clear that touch screen keyboards are the way to go these jokers still retain button keyboards because that's what people remembered them for,



Just why the f*ck are they sticking with those buttons man? this is painful to watch.
Touch screen is not suitable for content generation but only for content consumption !!
 
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Touch screen is not suitable for content generation but only for content consumption !!

yeah but the fact that sticking to the buttons did not result in increased share (but incredibly reduced share and unit sales) should have shown them that the market they were targeting was limited and shrinking right?
 
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yeah but the fact that sticking to the buttons did not result in increased share (but incredibly reduced share and unit sales) should have shown them that the market they were targeting was limited and shrinking right?
BlackBerry is button phobic. They won't make anything without their buttons even if it meant their own demise. Having said that i used to like BlackBerry 3 - 4 years ago.
 
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"RIM" Research in Motion .......... Struggling to survive at last resort .......It should be search in motion.
 
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yeah but the fact that sticking to the buttons did not result in increased share (but incredibly reduced share and unit sales) should have shown them that the market they were targeting was limited and shrinking right?

The image you quoted is not of the device in question. I assume whoever posted that picture had no idea what they were talking about. The device in question has a sliding keyboard, meaning you can use it full touch screen if you wish. Some people still like using the keyboard and this gives them the option to use the iconic blackberry keyboard.
 
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