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MWC 2017: Welcome Aboard, BlackBerry KEYOne!

  • February 25, 2017
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The new BlackBerry has a physical keyboard and will arrive in April
The KEYone is the first new BlackBerry since TCL licensed the brand

 The new BlackBerry KEYone smartphone, unveiled Saturday, is the first smartphone to carry the brand that doesn’t come from BlackBerry.

It will go on sale globally in April, said Nicolas Zibell, CEO of TCL Communication, the phone’s manufacturer and licensee of the brand, at a launch event in Barcelona on the eve of Mobile World Congress.

Like the BlackBerries of old, the KEYone has a physical keyboard with raised keys. A neat twist is that it also acts as a touchpad of sorts, and each letter can be used as a shortcut, with a short or long keypress, for 52 shortcuts in all.

“Imagine, F for Facebook or U for Uber,” said Logan Bell, senior product manager for BlackBerry Mobile.

With BlackBerry the company focused tightly on the enterprise since CEO John Chen took over, TCL is hoping to use the KEYone to reposition the smartphone brand as something not just for the enterprise, but also enterprising consumers.

“It’s designed for more than just enterprises: It’s for professional consumers, achievers, people looking for something different” 

merc 11 onwhiteTCL

TCL’s BlackBerry KeyOne smartphone

The phone has a monster battery — 3505 mAh, the largest ever in a BlackBerry smartphone — and a fast-charging mode TCL calls Boost that puts the phone into a power-saving mode while it charges.

Behind that name is Qualcomm’s QuickCharge 3.0, said Pete Lancia, a Qualcomm Vice President.

The KEYone runs Android 7.1 (Nougat) and has a custom interface including BlackBerry Hub, which pulls messages from email, texting and social media accounts into a single inbox.

TCL and BlackBerry have tweaked the stock Android code to make it more secure, and added a special security dashboard, DTEK, which allows users to check what security permissions each app has requested, said Alex Thurber, a BlackBerry Senior Vice President and General Manager of BlackBerry Mobility Solutions.

“We’re committed, with TCL, to bring out monthly security updates,” said Thurber. “It allows individuals to be as private as they want to be with their information and their smartphone.”

Inside, the KEYone has a SnapDragon 625 processor, an Adreno 506 graphics chip, and an X9 LTE modem from Qualcomm, an 8 megapixel front camera and a Sony IMX378 camera sensor powering the 12 megapixel autofocus rear camera.

Outside, it has a 4.5-inch, 1620×1080 pixel display covered with Corning Gorilla Glass 4 above the keyboard, and a rubberized non-slip back.

It will sell globally from April, Zibell said, for under €599, US$549 or £499.

This article was originally written by Peter Sayer for IDG. 

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Launched in 1967 internationally, ComputerWorld is the oldest tech magazine/media property in the world. In Pakistan, ComputerWorld was launched in 1995. Initially providing news to IT executives only, once CIO Pakistan, its sister brand from the same family, was launched and took over the enterprise reporting domain in Pakistan, CWPK has emerged as a holistic technology media platform reporting everything tech in the country. It remains the oldest continuous IT publishing brand in the country and in 2025 is set to turn 30 years old, which will be its biggest benchmark and a legacy it hopes to continue for years to come. CWPK is part of the SPIN/IDG Wakhan media umbrella.
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