Research in Motion Ltd., the maker of the ubiquitous BlackBerry, last week finally announced an arrival date for its much ballyhooed PlayBook tablet: April 19.
More exciting still was the announcement that, thanks to built-in emulation software, the PlayBook will be able to run applications based on Android, the extremely popular smart-phone system.
This is exciting because now, rather than a device limited to running only the 25,000 applications developed for the BlackBerry App World universe, the PlayBook also will be able to run more than 200,000 Android applications.
Three PlayBook models will be available, including 16GB ($499), 32GB ($599) and 64GB ($699) versions.
While the PlayBook lacks its own embedded 3G or 4G radio — it will have to be tethered to a BlackBerry phone for carrier data coverage — all three models will have built-in Wi-Fi.
That lack of built-in carrier connectivity is one of the major differentiators between the PlayBook and its established competitors, which include the wildly popular high-end iPad models, as well as the iPad 2 and the Samsung Galaxy Tab, which, although less popular than the Apple products, still has been bought by more than a million people.
While detractors point to the requirement of a connected BlackBerry as a serious drawback, along with the PlayBook's smaller screen size (7 inches versus the iPad's 9.7 inches), RIM points to the installed base of corporate users with BlackBerrys as a major plus.
According to RIM, there are more than 250,000 installations of its BlackBerry Enterprise Server, which in turn manages millions of individual BlackBerry users at companies throughout the world and makes rolling out a new device such as the PlayBook a piece of cake.
Pre-orders are being accepted online and at Best Buy stores in the U.S. and Canada (see the "Take #1 online, links to stores etc." link below).
See the
Investment News.com/technology blog for more in-depth coverage.
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