Research In Motion continued its attempts to woe app developers, as the BlackBerry maker seeks to shore up support for its trouble brand.
CEO Thorsten Heins kicked off RIM’s BlackBerry Jam Americas developer event with a keynote that blended an early look at some features of RIM’s upcoming BlackBerry 10, coupled with promises of a strong future ahead, and assurances that the wireless carriers are on board.
He even offered up a few digs at Apple.
“Don’t worry,” Heins told the crowd to applause, “even with our sleeker, lighter BlackBerry 10 designs, you can actually continue to use your existing standard microSD and HDMI BlackBerry power connectors, so we all can save some money.”
The reference was to the Apple Lightning port on the iPhone 5, which requires anyone with an older Apple accessory to buy a $29 (£18) adapter.
Of course, Heins’ task since becoming CEO in January has been no laughing matter. The company’s revenues and global market share continue to plummet as Apple and Samsung gain dominance – though Heins shared that over the last quarter the company has gained 2 million new subscribers. It has been widely reported that RIM will have to sell off portions of the company or be bought outright. Though neither option is likely before the arrival of the company’s hopeful cure-all – the BlackBerry 10 platform.
“We are laying the ground work for a fundamental change that is not about isolation” – or i-solation, as Heins’ pronunciation suggested, in another swipe at Apple that wasn’t lost on the audience – “but conversation.”
“It’s about engaging with the world around you and not shutting it out,” Heins continued. “We are laying the groundwork for a fundamental change in how people communicate, collaborate and work with each other. BlackBerry 10 is a platform that helps people achieve goals. … We are convinced that BlackBerry 10 will shape the next 10 years as profoundly and positively as BlackBerry shaped the last 10 years.”
Vivek Bhardwaj, head of software at RIM, joined Heins on stage to demonstrate new features of the platform, including the Hub, a single area “where everything is that matters to you,” and Flow, a way of moving between applications and information with the gesture of a single thumb.
Bhardwaj also showed off the ease with which, in BlackBerry Messenger, predicative typing understands that a user is moving between languages. The software learns a user’s habits and grammar and with no provocation understood the language shift and offered appropriate word suggestions in the various languages.
The new BlackBerry 10 phones, said Heins, will also feature fantastic keyboards, a great camera experience and “a killer-fast browser experience” better than one on a desktop.
Before consumers can get excited about BlackBerry’s new smartphones and platform, the wireless carriers need to be, and Heins insisted they are.
“The carriers support BlackBerry 10,” Heins told the crowd, whose livelihoods generally depend on happy users. “They have said that it’s beyond their expectations. They have said that it’s a spectacular user experience. They have said it’s incredible. They have said it’s different and better. And they are already expressing their commitment to BlackBerry 10.”
Heins added that RIM was holding back a few surprises for launch and promised more news and innovations to come.
“We are fighting!” he told the developers. “Join us.”
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