On July 19 Research in Motion (RIM) announced BlackBerry 8820, the first Wi-Fi enabled version of its handheld device. This thin model sports dual-mode operation, both cellular and Wi-Fi, along with a full keyboard, voice and data functionality and an enhanced media player.
As the dust settled we caught up with Kevin Oerton, RIM’s director of Wi-Fi product management, to talk about RIM’s vision and strategy for BlackBerry’s Wi-Fi enabled future.
Q: Why now? What market forces make this the right time to introduce a Wi-Fi enabled BlackBerry?
A: Carriers are recognizing that Wi-Fi-based VoIP is complimentary to cellular networks. It provides customers with a means to extend coverage in locations that would otherwise be difficult and expensive to reach with cellular alone.
At the same time, enterprise Wi-Fi infrastructure has improved and matured in terms of QoS, security, scalability, and manageability. Wi-Fi chipsets for handsets have also become smaller, less expensive, and more power efficient. Many of the barriers we've seen in the past are now gone.
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