Archive for the ‘BlackBerry’ Category

RIM readies itself for launch of its PlayBook

Friday, April 1st, 2011
RIM positions PlayBook to capture market share from its Apple and Android tablet rivals from the consumer market, even as it opens up for Android app compatibility and ramps up on building its own ecosystem of PlayBook specific apps.

Research In Motion (RIM) whose BlackBerry smartphone was a hit with corporate customers, is also targeting developers of consumer applications, including games and magazines.

The 7-inch tablet will be preloaded with applications such as Tetris – my favourite game on an Apple Macintosh during my college days, and the Kobo e-book reader.

An online version of Pro Football Weekly magazine will also be available for sports aficionados.

The display was superb and performance lightning fastThe PlayBook goes on sale in the US on April 19 and will feature a new operating system, a dual-core processor, and the capability to play applications for Google’s Android platform.

I had the chance to play with a beta release version of the PlayBook when it was first brought to Singapore three weeks ago and the display not only looked great, the processor was lightning fast, multi-tasking 8-10 CPU/graphics-intensive apps without showing any latency.

Although RIM has not been as successful as Apple or Google in attracting independent developers to write consumer apps for the BlackBerry, it is trying to rectify this with the PlayBook.

Hugo Miller from Bloomberg quoted Travis Boatman, senior vice president at Electronic Arts as being impressed with the PlayBook.

“It’s one of the fastest devices out there … You take a good software environment and great hardware, you’ve got a device that designers and developers can create great content on.”

The Redwood City, California-based company will release “Tetris” and “Need for Speed Undercover,” a car racing game, on the PlayBook.

Research In Motion launches the PlayBook on April 19RIM will be opening the PlayBook to Android apps to provide customers a wider choice of apps. There are more than 150,000 apps in the Android Market, compared with more than 25,000 in BlackBerry App World and more than 350,000 in Apple’s App Store.

“We are absolutely targeting the consumer, personal apps market as much if not more because there is such a vast market out there,” Tyler Lessard, head of RIM’s developer relations told Bloomberg in an interview.

Polar Mobile, a Toronto-based developer of apps for magazines including Time, GQ and Sports Illustrated, is building over 100 PlayBook apps including Pro Football Weekly, that will be ready in July, said Polar CEO Kunal Gupta.

Like other newcomers to the tablet scene, the PlayBook will be hoping to chip away at the market share of Apple, the market leader who has enjoyed little competition since the launch of its iPad in April 2010.

Analysts estimate that Apple has shipped more than 15 million iPads so far, and sold about 500,000 of the newly launched iPad 2, over its March 11 debut weekend.

RIM’s First-Quarter forecasts behind estimates

Friday, March 25th, 2011

Research In Motion (RIM), maker of BlackBerry smartphones, has forecast first-quarter revenues and profits that fail to meet analysts’ estimates. Its launch of new models like the Torch has failed to stop a slide in its market share.

The average of analysts’ estimates were compiled by Bloomberg for comparison. Below are the key numbers:

First Quarter Forecast RIM Analysts average estimate
Profit per share $1.47 – $1.55 $1.66
Revenue $5.2 – 5.6 billion $5.65 billion
Gross Margin (% sales after production costs) 41.5% 42.7%
BlackBerrys shipped (4th Qtr) 14.9 million 15 million

In the meantime, Bloomberg quotes Pierre Ferragu from Sanford C. Bernstein & Co as saying that “The company’s sales in the high end have been shrinking for the last 12 months, even if the launch of the Torch has slowed down the trend in the last two quarters.”

Although RIM has traditionally been the darling of large corporations because of its secure messaging, it has seen customers adopting rival devices.

Hugo Miller of Bloomberg reports that JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America and Citigroup are some of the banks that has begun testing iPhones and Android devices late last year, according to at least three people familiar with the trials.

The table below summarises how RIM’s share of worldwide smartphone sales has slipped from a year earlier, compared to its rivals.

Worldwide smartphone marketshare RIM Apple Android
4th Qtr 2010 14% 16% < 11%
4th Qtr 2009 20% 16% 16%

RIM PlayBook debuts in US on April 19

RIM will be launching the PlayBook in the US on April 19, while the company is already taking orders.The company revealed that the tablet would be able to play apps from Google’s Android.

The PlayBook will strive to chip at the huge market share that Apple has enjoyed with its iPad and iPad2.

The iPad has has a full year’s headstart over the PlayBook and has sold over 15 million units so far. Apple also claims that 65 percent of Fortune 100 companies are testing or deploying the iPad, including Procter & Gamble.

This is the same market sector that RIM targets.