Can you buy the new Blackberry? | BlackBerry launches Classic in last-ditch effort
NEW YORK (AP) — BlackBerry is returning to its roots with a new phone
that features a traditional keyboard at a time when rival Apple and
Android phones — and most smartphone customers — have embraced touch
screens.
With the Classic, BlackBerry is courting its core customer, the business user. The physical keyboard is something traditional BlackBerry users prefer because they find it easier than touch screens to type with. The company is also emphasizing battery life and security
With the Classic, BlackBerry is courting its core customer, the business user. The physical keyboard is something traditional BlackBerry users prefer because they find it easier than touch screens to type with. The company is also emphasizing battery life and security
BlackBerry
CEO John Chen introduces the company's new phone, the BlackBerry
Classic, during a news conference, Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2014, in New
York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
"A
lot of people say the Classic is aiming for loyal customers. And that
is true," CEO John Chen said at the gadget's launch event, tellingly
held in New York City's Financial District. But he also invited people
who haven't used a BlackBerry "especially people who are young," to try
the BlackBerry Classic.
Pioneered
in 1999 with the launch of the RIM 950, BlackBerry changed the culture
by allowing on-the-go business people to access email wirelessly.
Then
came a new generation of competing smartphones, and suddenly the
BlackBerry looked ancient. Apple showed that phones can handle much more
than email and phone calls. Blackberry was late in overhauling its
operating system to compete.
BlackBerry
CEO John Chen introduces the company's new phone, the BlackBerry
Classic, during a news conference, Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2014, in New
York. (AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews)
BlackBerry
now holds a small fraction of the U.S. smartphone market after
commanding a nearly 50 percent share as recently as 2009.
The
company is trying to stay relevant on making hardware even as it tries
to transform into an enterprise security and consumer software company.
Whether the Classic will sell enough to keep it in the hardware business
is unclear.
"It's
going to be a niche product based around enterprise, based around
security and pockets of the world where there is still strengths. The
future of this company is not the hardware," BGC analyst Colin Gillis
said.
The
BlackBerry Classic is available for sale starting Wednesday for $449 in
the U.S. and 499 Canadian dollars in Canada (95 000 NGN in Nigeria) through Amazon.com and
BlackBerry.com. It will come later to AT&T and Verizon.
BlackBerry
has been expanding its efforts to sell mobile-security software on its
rivals' smartphones and tablets to help counter the waning popularity of
its own devices.
And
on the hardware side, BlackBerry partnered with Foxconn, the Taiwanese
company that assembles products in vast factories in China. Foxconn,
known for its manufacturing contract work on Apple's iPhones and iPads,
jointly designs and manufactures most BlackBerry devices and manages
inventory of the devices in an agreement that offloads much of
BlackBerry's manufacturing costs. Foxconn is making the Classic for
BlackBerry.
Chen,
who took over as chief executive 13 months ago, has set a goal of
selling 10 million phones a year. In comparison, Apple sold 39.3 million
iPhones over three months in the third quarter.
Post a Comment