BlackBerry has been in trouble for a while already, and its best solution to get it out of its slump is decidedly low-tech. In an interview with
Re/Code this week, BlackBerry CEO John Chen said that the struggling smartphone company’s plan to turn things around is centered on what made them popular in the first place: hardware keyboards.
Chen says the main market for BlackBerry, at least in places like the U.S., is as a tool for businesses, particularly those in heavily regulated markets such as the financial industry. BlackBerry isn’t going to win by competing for the latest games and apps, but instead needs to focus on being the best at getting work done.
In the age of touchscreens, are hardware keyboards relevant anymore? Writer Rani Molla from GigaOm spoke to T-Mobile’s senior user experience manager, David Winkler, who believes the reason people want hardware keyboards is merely because they’ve just been around longer:
He refers to research he and his team have conducted at T-Mobile when deciding which keyboards the provider should use. After having people who use physical keyboards try out a series of touchscreen keyboards, many said they would convert; they just hadn’t realized how easy it would be. “A lot of it just helps that they were forced to try [touchscreen keyboards],” he said. “They wouldn’t have done it on their own.”
The Verge’s Sean Hollister suggests that the
decline of physical keyboards is a forced one. But will this mean we still want hardware keyboards?
For the past several years, buying a smartphone with a QWERTY keyboard has meant settling for less than the latest and greatest technology on the market. When my Droid 4 launched in February 2012, it had already been completely outspecced [sic] and outclassed by devices with better screens. Arguably, there hasn't been a top-tier smartphone with a physical keyboard since the Samsung Epic 4G set a new high bar for Android devices in August, 2010.
It's either BlackBerry sees a plan that will work that we don't, or that they're just banking on something that's bound to fail. What do you think?
[Image: Flickr user
Santiago Atienza]