Week in smartphones: BlackBerry gets Bolder; Verizon invades iPhone territory

October 23, 2009, 11:30 AM —  Network World — 

Here's a roundup of a wild week in smartphone news as reported by Network World, IDG News Service and sister site publications. Apple, Nokia, Research in Motion, Verizon, AT&T and others all got in on the action.

BlackBerry Bold 9700 makes its debut 

RIM confirmed one of its worst-kept secrets this week in formally announcing the BlackBerry Bold 9700, a business-oriented mobile device set to be available from AT&T and T-Mobile in November. The Bold 9700 is a more compact version of the 9000 model, with some interesting additions, such as support for VoIP over Wi-Fi, that may have special appeal for business users. (Take a first look at it in this slideshow.)

Nokia slaps Apple with patent lawsuit over iPhone

Nokia is suing Apple for infringing on 10 patents for technologies used in the iPhone, including wireless data, speed encoding and decoding and encryption. The patents in question, according to a Nokia press release, "relate to technologies fundamental to making devices, which are compatible with one or more of the GSM, UMTS (3G WCDMA) and wireless LAN standards.

Slideshow: Smartphones for the holidays  

Verizon fires shot across iPhone's bow with Droid smartphone  

Verizon issued a direct challenge to the iPhone with the launch of its advertising campaign for the Motorola Droid, the carrier's first smartphone based on Google's open source Android platform. The first ad for the device popped up on Oct. 17 and highlighted some of the iPhone's shortcomings, such as its lack of a non-touchscreen keyboard, its 3.2 megapixel camera, its inability to run simultaneous applications and its closed platform. The ad claims that for everything the iPhone doesn't do, "Droid does."

Chip could make smartphones faster and cooler  

Arm Holdings introduced a faster and more energy efficient processor for smartphones and other devices that should give Intel's Atom chip a run for its money, according to a Computerworld report.

Windows Mobile 7 gets a little closer  

Though Microsoft's Windows Mobile 6.5 has only just been officially released, newer builds of the operating system are popping up in what are called cooked, modified or hacked ROMs for smartphones. Together, they're being unofficially dubbed version "6.5.1." and seen as a preview of an early 2010 Windows Mobile update, and even a harbinger of Version 7, due later that year.

Microsoft issues Sidekick data recovery tool  

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Sidekick: The Good News & the Bad News
Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
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