No Keyboards on New Blackberry 10 OS Phones

The first BlackBerry device running Research In Motion Ltd’s new operating software will not have a physical keyboard, only a touch-screen one.

The BlackBerry 10 software will be offered on devices with physical keyboards in the future, but RIM spokeswomen Rebecca Freiburger declined to say when. RIM is expected to start selling BlackBerry 10 touch-screen devices this year.

Many corporate users have stuck with the BlackBerry solely because of its physical keyboard, given a perception that it’s harder to type emails on a touch screen. The BlackBerry 10 system has already been delayed about a year, and with additional delays to get a physical keyboard, those people may not be willing to wait any longer, especially as the iPhone makes greater in-roads in corporate settings. Those users may simply get the new iPhone expected this fall.

Colin Gillis, an analyst with BGC Financial, called it puzzling that RIM isn’t leading with its strength by releasing a keyboard BlackBerry first.

“The physical keyboard is the most dominant item that separates out Research In Motion from its competitors,” Gillis said. “If you are not playing to your historical strengths you may find it more difficult to get traction.”

But Jefferies analyst Peter Misek said BlackBerry 10 is all about touch and closing the gap with Apple, so people should not be surprised that the initial model will have only a touch screen.

“They are going to build a BlackBerry device with a keyboard, but it’s just going to take longer,” Misek said. “Maybe it will come a month or two after, but frankly it might be already too late.”

RIM’s future is far from certain as its flagship devices rapidly lose market share to flashier phones. With more than $2 billion in cash, bankruptcy seems unlikely in the near term. But RIM’s U.S. share of the smartphone market fell sharply from 44 percent in 2009 to 10 percent in 2011 according to market researcher NPD Group.

RIM also said on Wednesday that it has started laying off employees as part of a restructuring plan aimed at saving about $1 billion this year.

 

Prateek Panda

Prateek is the Founder of TheTechPanda. He's passionate about technology startups and entrepreneurship and enjoys speaking to new founders every day. Prateek has also been consistently regarded as one of the top marketing experts in the region.

Recent Posts

Ness Digital Engineering names Sudip Singh CEO to drive next phase of AI-led enterprise growth

Ness Digital Engineering, a global provider of intelligent data and software engineering services, today announced…

1 hour ago

AI Launches: Fintech, Chatbot, Crypto & Voice AI

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent launches in the superfast field of Artificial…

9 hours ago

Adani Commits US$ 100 B to Sovereign AI Infrastructure

The Adani Group announced one of the world’s largest integrated energy-compute commitments, a direct investment…

1 day ago

Generative AI in eKYC: The next phase of fraud prevention & compliance automation

As digital financial services continuously grow across India, the demand for faster onboarding and stronger…

1 day ago

New tech on the block: Logistics, Crypto, Finance, Cybersecurity & Agtech

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent tech launches. Logistics: India’s first corrosion-resistant stainless…

1 day ago

NeevCloud Partners with Agnikul Cosmos to Launch India’s First Indigenous AI Data Centre in Space

Launching India’s Sovereign AI Compute Network in Orbit Before the End of 2026 Reimagining sovereign…

2 days ago