A report by the Guardian from RIM’s annual shareholder meeting doesn’t describe the new BlackBerry handsets in detail, but the flagship model will likely be RIM’s BlackBerry Bold 9900, which packs a 1.2 GHz single-core processor and the BlackBerry 7 operating system on a 2.8-inch, 640-by-480 resolution display (with QWERTY keyboard, of course).
Slapping those specs on a new phone has been difficult for RIM. The company had to delay its first BlackBerry 7 phones until at least August, missing the important back-to-school shopping season. Mike Lazaridis, RIM’s co-CEO, told shareholders that the delay was necessary to meet market expectations, and spoke of an “arms race” between phone makers. One analyst, Ehud Gelblum of Morgan Stanley, had previously said that RIM needed the extra time to port BlackBerry 7 to Qualcomm’s Snapdragon processors.
But by launching new phones in August or later, RIM is entering a fiercely competitive smartphone season. Google is rumored to be launching a new Nexus phone with an updated version of Android called Ice Cream Sandwich. Apple is expected to release the iPhone 5 along with its iOS 5 software. Microsoft is prepping a major Windows Phone overhaul with new hardware from Nokia and other vendors. Many of these phones will have features that the upcoming BlackBerry Bold lacks, such as front-facing cameras, dual-core processors and thriving app ecosystems.
Next year, however, RIM plans to launch phones with its QNX operating system, which debuted in the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet and is made for dual-core processors. That device needed a lot of work, but the OS itself has potential, and could be the fresh start that RIM needs (provided the company can get over internal politics). For now, the company just needs to stay afloat.
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