BlackBerry Torch launched, UAE-RIM issue escalates
Tuesday, August 3, 2010 at 11:00AM
Gadjo Cardenas Sevilla in 9800, BlackBerry Torch, Breaking news, Events and Launches, First Looks, Kuwait, News, Public service, RIM, T-Mobile, UAE, censorship, privacy

BlackBerry's sliding smartphone, the 9800 AKA "BlackBerry Torch," has been launched after an earlier leake on the AT&T' s website. This new model features a 5 megapixel cam with flash, full QWERTY on a portrait slide, 802.11n support and the spanking new BlackBerry 6 OS boasting a new WebKit (i.e. faster) browser, a social feed stream reader, an iPod like media player, a universal search function and multi-touch gesture support.Video and details follow after the break.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

RIM has been in the news lately for a number of reasons. It has maintained to challenge Apple's popular iPhone in the smartphone space starting with a series of BlackBerry 6 enabled smartphones of which the BlackBerry Torch is the first. 

RIM's co-CEO, Jim Balsillie announced  that the new OS update will be "a quantum leap over anything that's out there." BlackBerry devices have maintained their popularity specially with business users, however the larger market of consumers seeking smartphone solutions is currently up for grabs and dominated by Apple's iPhone and to a certain extent various Google Android smartphone devices.  RIM knows it needs to offer innovation, better applications and a flashier interface to entice smartphone buyers from younger markets.

RIM has also been in the news since the UAE (United Arab Emirates). Last week, the UAE government said BlackBerry devices in their country were violating  security and social standards by allowing users to communicate without being monitored by local authorities. The issue here is that RIM stores BlackBerry from UAE and Saudi Arabia in overseas servers which puts the data out of the jurisdiction of these countries and out of their control and access.

This issue quickly escalated when the government ordered state telecom carriers to disable some BlackBerry services - such as e-mail and the BlackBerry messenger - if RIM did not comply.

It seems that  U.S. State department and the Canadian government have weighed in on the matter, siding with RIM. However the UAE maintains that it is asking for nothing more than the kind of access RIM regularly gives other governments, including the U.S. 

Back to the BlackBerry Torch, no indication of when it will be sold in Canada or which of the carriers will get it it first.  It seems RIM's releases are based on market size and the US is apparently larger than Canada's. The full specs of the Blackberry Torch are as follows.

BlackBerry Torch Smartphone Features

Via: MarketWire

 

Article originally appeared on Reviews, News and Opinion with a Canadian Perspective (https://www.canadianreviewer.com/).
See website for complete article licensing information.