Samsung and BlackBerry Announce Strategic Partnership

Samsung and BlackBerry announced a strategic partnership. The deal will bring the Canadian company’s highly praised mobile security solutions to the Korean giant’s lineup of Android devices.

The end result of the partnership between the two companies will be available in early 2015. It will merge BlackBerry’s BES12 cross-platform EMM solution and Samsung’s KNOX into a single security suite for Galaxy smartphones and tablets.

Samsung KNOX and BES12 will offer complete separation of business and personal data. The upcoming security suite will also provide enhancements that address some of the Android-specific security issues.

The deal is a win for both parties. It will instantly make Samsung a major player on the enterprise market. BlackBerry on the other hand, will surely welcome the fresh stream of cash to its business.

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BlackBerry unveiled the Z10 and Q10, first BB10 smartphones !

Research In Motion, or RIM, has long been associated with BlackBerry, but now the company has finally taken the plunge and dropped the RIM name altogether adopting BlackBerry as the name of the company.

That means there is no longer RIM and instead everything will now be under the BlackBerry umbrella.

RIM (well, BlackBerry now) has opened a new chapter in the history of its platform with the release of its first to BB10 OS devices, the BlackBerry Z10 and Q10.The new OS is centered around touch gestures, even the Q10, which has a hardware QWERTY.

The BlackBerry Z10, however, joins the ranks of the touch-only army with a 4.2” WXGA screen (1,280 x 768, 356ppi pixel density). A dual-core Krait CPU at 1.5GHz has been enlisted to run the new OS and there’s 2 gigs of RAM to make sure there’s room for multitasking, which plays a huge part of the new experience.

The company also made sure the Z10 is capable in terms of multimedia with an 8MP main camera that has TimeShift (Scalado-powered tech) and shoots 1080p video and an HDMI port. The phone packs 16GB of storage and you can throw in a microSD card (up to 32GB) to expand it.

On the connectivity side, there’s LTE (market dependent), Wi-Fi a/b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0 and NFC.

The Z10 boasts an advanced touchscreen keyboard, which should completely make up for the lack of hardware keyboard.

And if you still need a physical keyboard, the BlackBerry Q10 is the one you should be looking for. The smartphone keeps the trademark hardware QWERTY keyboard. It has a touchscreen too – it’s a bit unorthodox, a 3.1″ square AMOLED screen with 720 x 720 resolution and 330ppi pixel density.

BlackBerry Q10 is announced for all you QWERTY keyboard lovers, powered by BlackBerry 10

The BlackBerry Q10 has a stainless steel frame and an “edge-to-edge” glass on the front. The chipset of the Q10 is the same as the one on the Z10.

The BlackBerry Z10 will launch in UK first (tomorrow!) from all the major carriers and retailers, with a choice between getting it on contract or pre-paid. It goes to Canada on February 5 for $150 (with three-year contract). US consumers will have to wait until March though. Then they’d be able to snag it for $200 from AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile and Sprint(with a two-year contract).

The BlackBerry Q10 is expected to hit carriers globally in April.