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RIM to launch WiFi-enabled BlackBerry

RIM to launch WiFi-enabled BlackBerry

By:  Nancy Gohring  On: 24 May 2007 For: IDG News Service (Seattle Bureau) Creator

Research In Motion expects to start selling a BlackBerry with both cellular and Wi-Fi wireless capabilities, CEO Jim Balsillie said earlier this week. The converged BlackBerry, he said, should come out "in the back half of this year."

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Research In Motion Ltd. expects to start selling a BlackBerry with both cellular and Wi-Fi wireless capabilities, the company's CEO said Wednesday.

Speaking at the JP Morgan Technology Conference on Wednesday, RIM's co-CEO Jim Balsillie said such a converged BlackBerry should come out "in the back half of this year."

RIM is behind its competitors in developing devices with both cellular and Wi-Fi.

Motorola Inc. and Nokia Corp. were both selling phones with Wi-Fi and cellular aimed at business users last year. RIM had recently hinted at forthcoming converged phones but until Thursday, they hadn't said when they would ship.

"Wi-Fi was overhyped," Balsillie said. "I was not a big believer in it for the first two or three years because it was hyped as something that would subsume everything, that you would get rid of your cell phone. We feel it's complimentary of a cell phone."

The BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES) that companies use to deliver corporate e-mail to BlackBerry users already supports roaming for customers that may travel between multiple operators so the BES would treat Wi-Fi networks just like additional cellular networks, he said. That capability enables the handoff of data connections and voice calls between Wi-Fi and cellular networks as customers move.

In addition, the BES "presupposes the airlink is insecure," and so encrypts all voice and data transmissions using either technology, he said. The BES already supports Wi-Fi connections because the BlackBerry 7270 has Wi-Fi.

Many mobile operators, particularly those that aren't related to a landline service provider, have resisted fixed mobile convergence (FMC) because they can lose revenue by transferring calls from their cellular networks to a potential opponent's Wi-Fi network. But Balsillie said the operators are open to it.

"Most of the carriers I've dealt with are supportive of FMC," he said.

Also, he's finding that an increasing number of operators have both cellular and fixed-line networks and those companies are looking for strategic ways to leverage both assets. Services like FMC can allow those operators to offer a value added service rather than simply offering a single bill.

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Nancy Gohring Nancy Gohring Nancy Gohring is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in mo... more

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