Since the introduction of the first model at the beginning of the new millennium, BlackBerry has become an instant favorite among business users. The Qwerty keyboard, which spans the entire bottom half of the phone, was perfect for online e-mail communication, making typing much easier and faster.
The IFA 2018 conference, which will take place between August 31 and September 5 in Berlin, Germany, can be described as the largest technology show in the world alongside CES. Many giants are already eagerly waiting to present their innovations.
BlackBerry introduced the Key2, the successor to the KeyOne model. Despite the fact that the new phone is very similar to its predecessor, it also differs from the latter in some features.
Remember the slightly larger phones with the computer keyboard on the bottom half, which used to cause a lot of headaches for the slightly larger fingers? Not so long ago, BlackBerry carried the flag among phones, but now that is no longer the case, but they are still looking for their place under the sun with innovative solutions. With the new BlackBerry Motion model, they will undoubtedly make sure that we will not forget them so quickly.
After China's TCL bought the BlackBerry brand last year, the dust settled and we heard nothing more about this story. Well, now we have finally learned that the new BlackBerry is coming to the market next month, the first under the new umbrella and with quite a few innovations.
We've buried the BlackBerry as many times as there were before the actual death of Fidel Castro. But BlackBerry does not give up, it continues to look for its place under the sun (now the Chinese electronics manufacturer TCL is trying its luck with it). His latest attempt is the BlackBerry KeyOne smartphone, which stands out from the competition with a physical keyboard. The aluminum phone is designed to be operated with one hand, because BlackBerry's philosophy is that if you have to put down a cup of coffee to use your phone, there's something wrong with it.
2016 was a fateful year for many technologies. Quite a few high-profile technologies that have marked our lives in one way or another have landed on the dustbin of history.
BlackBerry doesn't give up. Its latest effort is the 135-gram BlackBerry DTEK50 business smartphone (147 x 72.5 x 7.4 mm), which the Canadian company says is the world's most secure smartphone in terms of data protection. It was developed together with Siemens.
While the BlackBerry brand is slowly but steadily sinking like Venice, it is trying to save itself with the BlackBerry Venice smartphone, which is the first BlackBerry that does not have its own operating system but Google's Android OS, and the special feature is a sinking case that hides the physical keyboard. Is classic looks and Android the combination that will save this sinking Canadian company?
With some of the busiest months in the smartphone / mobile world behind us and the new year just around the corner, it's only fitting that we take a look at the smartphone lineup and find out the best smartphones of 2015. Because even though phones, not every choice is smart. In our editorial office, we have therefore diligently followed the developments in the field of mobile telephony over the years, and here is a selection of the best, consisting of old acquaintances (read brands) and newcomers.
Boeing, the manufacturer of passenger planes, is also entering the world of smartphones, revealing that it will work with BlackBerry on the development of its Black phone. They are said to use their BlackBerry Enterprise Service (BES) 12 platform, and the main feature of the phone will be high security standards. Namely, data and communication will be encrypted with Boeing's PureSecure technology, and physical intervention will trigger self-destruction.
BlackBerry put itself on the world map years ago (if you count in technology years) when it introduced a phone with a physical keyboard that allowed you to send and receive emails. It was a concept of the business world, but over the years it lost its status more and more, as plastic qwerty keyboards were replaced by touch screens. Now he wants to return to the path of old glory with the BlackBerry Classic smartphone, with which he is also returning to his roots.