Slashdot Mirror


Email And Cell Phone In One From RIM

ericmc42 writes: "Research in Motion anounced a new Blackberry this morning, and it has a GSM cell phone in it! It looks great! Email, PIM, Phone all in one. The best part about it is that the email still uses the same packet switched network that all other Blackberrys use. This means the email connection is 'always on' and the battery life should be good. Also interesting is that it runs Java 2 as its operating system."

5 of 186 comments (clear)

  1. Handspring Treo? by Stigmata669 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Maybe I am wrong, but dosn't the Treo provide all of these features, and the benifit of a widly adopted OS with programs and a computer sync feature? It seems to me to miss alot of the features of the Treo, and not provide a whole lot in return. Save money, maybe, but you still have to cary your palm around.

    --
    Yawn.
  2. Looks great? by nakhla · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Hmmm...Maybe it's just me, but I don't think it looks that great. I think it looks like crap. As far as PDA/phone combos go, I think that this model from Samsung looks great. Plus, it's got the useable size and shape necessary for both PDA and phone use, unlike the new blackberry.

  3. Java on BlackBerry :( by dmorin · · Score: 3, Interesting
    I have a Blackberry. I let work give me one primarily because I wanted to write Java apps for it. They have a Java environment (which is beta or prerelease or some such), and they have documentation which says "And in order to move your java apps to the blackberry you need such-n-such version of the application loader." To date I cannot determine if this app loader exists. Every attempt I've made to look into it results in the same -- "Run it in the simulator." But until I can actually put a Java app on the device, the fact that it's built on Java or not is useless.

    Somebody tell me I've missed something obvious!

  4. GPRS and always-on by g.a.g · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Yes, the thingy uses GPRS, but have you seen what it costs to get the service? At least here in DK, it's a subscription of 300 DKr/quarter (ca €40), plus a not-so-nominal fee per kb. It racks up quite fast.

    I just got myself an Ericsson T68, but without getting the GPRS service - I'm just not out of reach of a real internet connection often enough for it to be viable. Keep in mind that you always can use the normal internet my phone company offers: you can get the odd email on the phone even with 9.6kbps!

    Just my 0.02kB...

    --
    Hurricane Application Group, Dept of Meteorology Control, Ministry of Proactive Defense
  5. Danger's Hiptop? by mshomphe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I think Danger's new product, the hiptop, is much cooler.

    --
    She sat at the window watching the evening invade the avenue.