Blackberry PlayBook

RIM today announced its iPad knock-off, the Blackberry Playbook. However, unlike the Apple entry, this one appears to target businesses for some reason.

Perfect for either large organizations or an “army of one”, the BlackBerry PlayBook is designed to give users what they want, including uncompromised web browsing, true multitasking and high performance multimedia, while also providing advanced security features, out-of-the-box enterprise support and a breakthrough development platform for IT departments and developers. The incredibly powerful and innovative BlackBerry PlayBook is truly a game-changing product in the growing tablet marketplace.

The Tablet You'll Want to Take Everywhere
This beautifully designed and incredibly powerful tablet is ultra portable, ultra thin and super convenient for both work and play. Measuring less than half an inch thick and weighing less than a pound, the BlackBerry PlayBook features a vivid 7” high resolution display that looks and feels great in your hand. With such a unique mix of utility, performance and portability, you’ll want to take it everywhere.

The New Benchmark in Tablet Performance
At its heart, the BlackBerry PlayBook is a multitasking powerhouse. Its groundbreaking performance is jointly fueled by a 1 GHz dual-core processor and the new BlackBerry Tablet OS which supports true symmetric multiprocessing. Together, the abundant processing power and highly sophisticated OS enable the BlackBerry PlayBook to provide users with true multitasking and a highly-responsive and fluid touch screen experience for apps and content services.

Uncompromised Web Browsing
With support for Adobe® Flash® Player 10.1, Adobe® Mobile AIR® and HTML-5, the BlackBerry PlayBook provides customers with an uncompromised, high-fidelity web experience and offers them the ability to enjoy all of the sites, games and media on the web. For more than a decade, the mobile industry has worked to bridge the gap between the “real web” and mobile devices through various apps and technologies and, in fact, a significant number of mobile apps today still simply serve as a proxy for web content that already exists on the web. The BlackBerry PlayBook closes that gap and brings the real, full web experience to mobile users while also opening new and more exciting opportunities for developers and content publishers.

High Performance Multimedia
The BlackBerry PlayBook features premium multimedia features to support high-quality mobile experiences. It includes dual HD cameras for video capture and video conferencing that can both record HD video at the same time, and an HDMI-out port for presenting one's creations on external displays. The BlackBerry PlayBook also offers rich stereo sound and a media player that rivals the best in the industry.

BlackBerry Integration
For those BlackBerry PlayBook users who carry a BlackBerry smartphone*, it will also be possible to pair their tablet and smartphone using a secure Bluetooth® connection. This means they can opt to use the larger tablet display to seamlessly and securely view any of the email, BBM™, calendar, tasks, documents and other content that resides on (or is accessible through) their smartphone. They can also use their tablet and smartphone interchangeably without worrying about syncing or duplicating data. This secure integration of BlackBerry tablets and smartphones is a particularly useful feature for those business users who want to leave their laptop behind.

Enterprise Ready
Thanks to the seamless and secure Bluetooth pairing experience and the highly secure underlying OS architecture, the BlackBerry PlayBook is enterprise ready and compatible (out-of-the-box) with BlackBerry® Enterprise Server. When connected over Bluetooth, the smartphone content is viewable on the tablet, but the content actually remains stored on the BlackBerry smartphone and is only temporarily cached on the tablet (and subject to IT policy controls). With this approach to information security, IT departments can deploy the BlackBerry PlayBook to employees out-of-the-box without worrying about all the security and manageability issues that arise when corporate data is stored on yet another device.

On the good news front, it's the right size--7 inches rather than the too-large 12 9.7-inch screen on the iPad. It appears to support all the right standards.

It won't be out until early 2011, however. Eh.

Discuss this Article 8

Ocean
on Sep 27, 2010
"true multitasking" Does it run the apps that the Blackberry runs or is it a new OS? Without apps ... it's probably DOA.
daveinla
on Sep 27, 2010
The specs look great as well as the design. However I find 7" to be too small for a tablet. Heck the iPad screen size is just comfortable for a landscape keyboard for typing. Let alone film viewing or web-browsing. Curious about battery life also with a dual core cpu running in such a small enclosure.
mcnaugha
on Sep 27, 2010
The iPad has a 9.7-inch screen. No way near 12 inches. lol.
Waethorn
on Sep 27, 2010
"unlike the Apple entry, this one appears to target businesses for some reason" Targeted towards those business travel driving simulations, no less (take a look at the first page). RIM is the wrong company to release one of these devices.
daveinla
on Sep 27, 2010
It runs probably a Linux variant develop by QNX (bought by RIM at the beginning of this year), which is a company specialized in developing OS for specific devices and sensitives devices.
Ikon819
on Sep 28, 2010
If RIM makes this as secure as the BB there will definitely be a buisiness market for it. Given the recent demands of some countries (including new rumblings from the USA), however, it may be difficult for them to sell it. What company will want to commit to a product they won't be allowed to use?
Dipsh t Admin
on Sep 28, 2010
"this one appears to target businesses for some reason." Given that RIM's competency is in the enterprise, this is not surprising at all. The story on this tablet isn't written yet, but the ability to sideload apps and be controlled by a BES server will make this very appealing to the enterprise market. And it looks like it has enough interest for consumers too. This of course is another mobile OS, but it would appear that the current BB OS is on its way to sunset, and will be replaced by this OS in the future for the rest of their smartphone lineup.
Ikon819
on Sep 28, 2010
Can't believe I forgot about QNX. If the Playbook really is based on QNX, that's great news. QNX is a well-established, really solid, real-time OS.

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