BlackBerry-maker RIM unveils prototype
TORONTO — Research In Motion’s new chief executive unveiled a newly-designed BlackBerry smartphone prototype powered by a re-imagined operating system — the very software the company has pinned its future on.
Thorsten Heins, who took the CEO job in January, on Tuesday revealed features of the BlackBerry 10 operating system running on a prototype device at the company’s BlackBerry World conference in Orlando. He provided no update on the software’s launch date.
Heins, who is trying to rally developers to make applications for the new operating system, promised that each developer at the conference will go home with the prototype BlackBerry. In a speech that was broadcast on the company’s BlackBerry World website, Heins stressed that the device is not the finished product.
“We’re taking our time to make sure we get this right,” Heins said.
The once-iconic company has had difficulty competing with flashier, consumer-oriented phones such as Apple’s iPhone and models that run Google’s Android software. Investors were not impressed. RIM’s stock closed down 82 cents, or 5.7 percent, to $13.48.
Heins made his first major speech since replacing longtime chiefs Jim Balsillie and Mike Lazaridis in January. Lazaridis announced a month earlier that the often-delayed operating system would be delayed again until later this year.
Analysts say RIM’s future depends on the new BlackBerry 10 software platform, although many say it may be too late.
“I’m very, very confident we will be there later this year with an exciting product. Make no mistake, this is not the final device, this is not the final hardware,” Heins said. “But it’s a very, very important milestone for us.”
The prototype BlackBerry has a touchscreen, but no physical keyboard like most BlackBerry models. One of the new features is a modified touchscreen keypad that will allow users to select full words with a single key stroke.
RIM has had limited success trying to enter consumer markets in recent years, particularly with high-end devices that sport touch screens popular with consumers. Touch-screen BlackBerrys that lack physical keyboards have largely flopped. BlackBerrys also lag iPhones and Android phones when it comes to the number of third-party applications they can run.
The Canadian company has long dominated the corporate smartphone market. Its BlackBerrys are known for their security and reliability
But RIM faces threats from the “bring your own device” movement, in which employees bring their personal iPhones or Android devices to work instead of relying on BlackBerrys issued by their employers.

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