News Source: International Business Times
| about 1 year ago
Michael Walkley cut his handset estimate for 2008 to 1.23 billion units from 1.25 billion and said he now expects unit sales to decline 5.4 percent to 1.17 billion units in 2009...Walkley's adjustment comes a few days after Nokia Corp., the world's...
News Source: The Columbus Dispatch
| about 1 year ago
Verizon's Tom Hillman shows Greg Hafeman, from left, Andrew Stone, David Bell and David Willet the new BlackBerry Storm at a hotel in Dublin. BlackBerry-makers plan to take the iPhone market by, well, Storm. The new BlackBerry Storm, with its...
News Source: Telegraph India
| about 1 year ago
The BlackBerry Storm combines a phone and high- speed web browser with mobile email on the go. Its the first BlackBerry to use a touchscreen interface instead of the more familiar Qwerty keyboard. The entire screen is mounted on a mechanism known...
News Source: The independent
| about 1 year ago
With business aficionados Blackberry having just released their new Storm model, and Apple's iPhone a firmly established competitor, T Mobile's G1 may seem the weaker option in the crowded field of touchscreen smart phones. Or at least it would do,...
News Source: Guardian Unlimited
| about 1 year ago
The BlackBerry has been making its presence felt in the consumer market since the arrival of the Pearl a few years back, but today sees the UK launch of what is likely to be its most popular consumer device to date — the Storm.
News Source: CNN
| about 1 year ago
As the first snow of the season dusts the Research in Motion campus next to the University of Waterloo, an hour southwest of Toronto, Mike Lazaridis polishes a tiny BlackBerry screen, places it on the table, and sends it whipping foosball-style...
News Source: Uinta County News
| about 1 year ago
The BlackBerry Storm offers many of the features found on Apple's iPhone. It has up to 16GB of storage, built-in satnav and mapping software and a 3.25in touchscreen. The device also has a 3.2-megapixel camera, compared to the iPhone's two-megapixel.
News Source: The Beacon Herald
| about 1 year ago
co-CEO Jim Balsillie doesn't expect businesses and consumers to abandon their BlackBerrys in a weaker economy but acknowledges times are turbulent. "This is a more intensive time than I have ever known," he said Thursday at an RBC Capital Markets...