According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, Research In Motion plans
to debut its tablet next week with a brand new operating system.

http://goo.gl/ac2T

RIM's BlackPad, BlackBerries To Use New OS

According to a report from the Wall Street Journal, Research In Motion plans
to debut its tablet next week with a brand new operating system.

By Eric Zeman,  InformationWeek
<http://www.informationweek.com/;jsessionid=TO5ZKTVW14R45QE1GHPSKHWATMY32JVN>
Sept. 22, 2010
URL:
http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=227500418
</story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=227500418>

Earlier this year, BusinessWeek claimed to have inside information about
RIM's "BlackPad" tablet computing device. Tuesday's report from the Wall
Street 
Journal<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704129204575506160515163820.html>
appears
to confirm many of the details previously offered by BusinessWeek.

At RIM's developer conference, scheduled for the week of September 26, the
smartphone maker will introduce its tablet device, which will have a
seven-inch display as well as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. The Journal notes that
the BlackPad (not the official name, by the way) will not have its own
cellular data radio, as do the iPad and Samsung Galaxy Tab devices. It can
connect to the Internet via Wi-Fi, or by tethering to a BlackBerry device.
An interesting limitation, but one that makes sense, I suppose.

Other details suggest the device will have two cameras, might have chips
from Marvell, and will be available during the fourth quarter. The Journal
believes Qaunta is manufacturing the device, which has confirmed that it is
building a tablet computer for one of its clients.

More important than the hardware and connection capabilities, however, is
the operating system.

According to the Journal, the BlackPad will not run RIM's new smartphone OS,
BlackBerry 6. Instead, it will use a brand new operating system developed by
QNX Software. QNX Software makes user interfaces and operating systems for a
wide range of devices and form factors. RIM purchased QNX earlier this year.

Those familiar with QNX's operating system called it "a worthy competitor"
to Apple's iOS and Android's Google operating systems. Those two systems are
exactly the ones RIM needs to beat if it wants the BlackPad to be a success.

Beyond the BlackPad, the Journal's sources indicate that RIM will eventually
transition its BlackBerry smartphones from BlackBerry 6 to whatever this new
platform is. That's huge and leads to all sorts of questions.

Is RIM abandoning BlackBerry 6? Will it offer devices with both OSes? Will
the new OS resemble the old one at all? How will RIM's legendary enterprise
features be handled by the new operating system?

Hopefully RIM will answer these and more during its developer conference.
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