Blackberry
has launched a distinctive handset featuring a square screen and a keyboard
that offers both physical keys and touch-enabled gesture controls.
It
said work-focused users in particular should benefit from the Blackberry
Passport's innovations.
Sales
of the company's handsets - which are powered by its own operating system -
have been in decline.
Analysts
said the new device should appeal to existing Blackberry owners but might
struggle to win over others.
The
Canadian company's chief operating officer said the handset's release was part
of a broader turnaround strategy led by John Chen, who became chief executive
in November.
"You're
going to see us be very focused," Marty Beard told the BBC.
"Potentially,
in the past we got a little too broad a little too aggressively.
Passport
and iPhone The Passport's unusually wide screen makes it possible to
see the
full width of documents in larger type than in rivals
"Our
target segment is more enterprise-focused. It's the power professional. It's
someone who wants to be productive.
"Those
users tend to be in regulated industries like banking or healthcare or
government. We know those segments really well - in a way it's getting back to
the Blackberry roots."
Push and swipe
The
Passport got its name because its dimensions resemble a thick version of the
travel document.
It
has a 4.5in (11.4cm) touchscreen with a resolution of 453 pixels per inch -
higher than Apple's iPhone 6 Plus, but lower than Samsung's Galaxy Note 4.
Blackberry
suggests documents are easier to edit because of the extra width provided by
having a square screen, even if it is less suited for watching video.
The
keyboard buttons are also touch-sensitive. This allows gesture-based shortcuts
that were previously restricted to Blackberry's all-screen devices.
For
example, swiping a finger quickly leftwards along the keys deletes the previous
word, while sliding a thumb along them more slowly moves the cursor in the same
direction.
In
addition, users can select from three anticipated words - shown near the bottom
of the screen - by flicking upwards beneath the desired one. This saves having
to type the text in full.
"In
some cases it takes a while to learn it, because even if you're familiar with a
Blackberry it's a little bit different because it's that combination of
physical plus virtual," acknowledged Mr Beard.
"So
there may be that learning curve in the beginning, but it's well worth it, and
once people learn it they are flying."
One
expert who has tested the handset supported the claim.
"It
certainly made me respond more eloquently to emails rather than just triaging
them with a 'Yes, no, I'll call you back or see you later'," said Shaun
Collins, founder of the telecoms consultancy CCS Insight.
"However,
it's going to divide opinion - it gives you the Blackberry experience on
steroids. But for a broader audience it will be a curiosity."
The
phone is being sold at an "introductory rate" of $599/£529/649 euros.
Sales slump
Blackberry's
own figures indicate it sold about 1.6 million smartphones over the three
months to June.
That
compares poorly with the 6.8 million handsets it sold in the same quarter in
2013, and 13.2 million over the corresponding period in 2011.
Blackberry
Passport The Blackberry Passport can run both Blackberry 10 and Android apps
Its
fortunes contrast with the wider smartphone market, which has expanded.
Having
pioneered the sector, the company now accounts for only 1% of sales in the UK,
according to research firm Kantar Worldpanel.
Even
so, one company watcher said Blackberry still had appeal to certain
organisations, even if they had not purchased its other recent releases in
large numbers.
"The
key markets it holds are financial services and security-oriented
industries," said Martin Bradley from Strategy Analytics.
"Blackberry
continues to offer the most secure end-to-end communications architecture in
the mobile market, and its devices provide business users with that
reassurance."
Voice commands
Other
features introduced by the handset and its new operating system - Blackberry 10
OS 10.3 - include:
·
Access to the Amazon Appstore - the phone can
run the 240,000 Android apps it contains. But the store lacks some popular
products, including photo-sharing network Instagram, and newly released games,
such as Fifa 15, both found on Google Play
·
Blackberry Blend - this allows certain tasks
on the phone to be controlled by a wi-fi-connected PC or tablet that does not
store the data involved, letting users take advantage of bigger screens when
available
·
Blackberry Assistant - a facility that
recognises voice commands and speaks back in English, French, German, Spanish
and Italian
·
A 3,450 mAh battery - this is bigger than
most of its rivals, and allows the Passport to promise up to 25 hours of mixed
use
Blackberry
Blend Blackberry Blend allows the phone to be controlled by a larger connected
device
The
company has also added a new, tougher level of encryption to messages sent via
its BBM messaging app to protect them from eavesdropping and manipulation.
"We've
already got a lead - we're not going to sit on our laurels," said Mr
Beard.
He
added that Blackberry also intended to add encryption to voice calls made
between its devices in the future but it was "still to be decided" if
this function would come to the Passport.
BBC
Business
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