RIM officially announced BlackBerry Curve 3G, will support BlackBerry 6

General

We can’t really call this one a shocker, considering Rogers has had this handset up on their website for over a week (oh, and we have one), but RIM has officially announced the BlackBerry Curve 3G; formally known as the Curve 9300. The device has the classic Curve keyboard and form factor, and adds Wi-Fi and 3G to the stale familiar mix. The only real surprise in the press release is that the device, with 256 MB of RAM, will be “BlackBerry 6 ready.” Hit the jump for the full press release.

[Via CrackBerry]

RIM Introduces the New BlackBerry Curve 3G Smartphone

New addition to the globally popular BlackBerry Curve series is fast, easy-to-use, richly-featured and BlackBerry 6 ready

WATERLOO, ONTARIO–(Marketwire – Aug. 9, 2010) – Research In Motion (RIM) (NASDAQ:RIMM)(TSX:RIM) today announced the new BlackBerry(R) Curve(TM) 3G, an exciting addition to the globally popular BlackBerry Curve series of smartphones. Designed to provide the growing mass of smartphone purchasers with a distinctly powerful, approachable and affordable choice, the BlackBerry Curve 3G supports high-speed 3G (HSDPA) networks around the world and gives users the exceptional communications features they need to accomplish more than ever, when they’re at home, at work and everywhere in-between.

“The majority of people in the worldwide mobile phone market have yet to buy their first smartphone and the BlackBerry Curve 3G is designed to provide an extremely attractive and accessible choice that will help convince many of them to make the leap,” said Mike Lazaridis, President and Co-CEO at Research In Motion. “The new BlackBerry Curve 3G is a perfect choice for happily busy people who are looking for a user-friendly 3G smartphone to help them make the most of their day and to stay connected with their friends, family and co-workers.”

The BlackBerry Curve 3G smartphone features a comfortable full-QWERTY keyboard for fast, accurate typing, optical trackpad for fluid navigation, built-in GPS and Wi-Fi(R), as well as dedicated media keys, so music lovers can easily access their tunes while on the go. The new smartphone also features a camera that can record video and a microSD/SDHC slot that supports up to 32 GB memory cards for media storage. Support for 3G networks makes browsing faster, streaming music smoother, and gives users the ability to talk on the phone while they browse the web, instant message with BlackBerry(R) Messenger (BBM(TM)) or share their location with friends on popular social networking sites.

The BlackBerry Curve 3G ships with BlackBerry 5 and is BlackBerry 6 ready. BlackBerry 6 is a new operating system for BlackBerry(R) smartphones that was announced last week. It retains the trusted features that distinguish the BlackBerry brand while delivering a fresh and engaging experience that is both powerful and easy to use. BlackBerry 6 is expected to be available for the BlackBerry Curve 3G, subject to carrier certifications, in the coming months.

The new BlackBerry Curve 3G smartphone (model 9300) will be available from various carriers and distribution partners around the world beginning in August. Check with local carriers for details about availability and pricing.

For more information about the new BlackBerry Curve 3G smartphone visit http://www.blackberry.com/curve3G. For more information about BlackBerry 6, visit http://www.blackberry.com/6.

19 Comments
  • BB_LOVER

    1st Post!

    • http://www.bbin.in Shahzoor Ali

      Wonderful

      follow me then @BB_IN

  • tech junkie for life

    and for a few pennys more the OS6 ready 9700…I still dont get why you would cheap yourself on a handset when for just a little more you can have much better. If you can afford the contract and data plan how is $50 breaking the bank. Always thought the same with the 8500 series.

  • MSF

    yawn!

    RIM needs to do something innovative, and fast.

    wait, RIM & innovative may be an oxymoron.

  • Sam Tom

    this begs the question if the 85xx series gets the OS6 update i dont see why not its identical in specs compared to teh 8530 its only the 8520 that slightly differs with the lack of GPS support however im guessing the 85xx will get it OR they will just offer the 9300 for warranty exchanges just like they did for the Tour uses up to the 9650 users atleast for a short while just my opinion

  • http://www.bsharitt.com Brandom Sharitt

    My wife loves here BB Curve for what ever reason, and I thought about upgrading her to this once it comes to T-Mo, but was hesitant since I didn’t think it’d be OS6 ready. Now I may have to get her one, though I’ve been slowly talking her into an Android phone.

  • joeldf

    “The only real surprise in the press release is that the device, with 256 MB of RAM, will be “BlackBerry 6 ready.””

    Why is that a surprise. RIM already made the official statement that the Pearl 3G will get OS 6 and it too only has 256 MB of ram.

    Apparently, Verizon’s problem with OS 6 on the Storm 2 is something else that we don’t know about and not about (or not only about) ram.

  • CrownRoyal

    256MB? Unbelievable…what the extra $10 or so to make it 512MB will cause RIM to loose millions?

    I guess RIM is happy with slipping into being a mid-tier hardware provider. With RIM giving up on upgrading the Storm series OS and their weak hardware offerings of late…I’m moving on and ordered my Droid X.

    RIM is looking more like Palm everyday.

    • zukidrvr

      RIM only builds what the carriers ask for. Apparently this is exactly what T-Mobile asked for and thinks there is a significant market for. Not every model needs to be a Veyron.

  • George

    It looks like RIM has given up with trying to compete with Apple, Motorola, HTC, and Samsung at the high-end. Perhaps they don’t have the engineering talent to develop cutting edge phones or don’t want to take the risk of spending a lot on R&D to do so. It looks like RIM’s strategy is to compete on price. Obviously they are positioning themselves to deliver low-cost handsets that they can sell for $49 and buy-one-get-one-free deals. Perhaps they are eying the feature phone market and feel that they can get people to buy a BlackBerry instead of a feature phone.

    • iMiiTH

      You do know they have high end phones… the curve line aren’t their only phones.

      • Free2Faith

        Their best phone is comparable to the G1. Which came out in 2008. It’s going for $199 on a market with the iPhone 4, EVO 4G, and Droid phones going for about the same price. I’d say it’s quite overpriced in comparison to these devices.

  • Walter Feder-Cohen

    Does this mean people with 8520/30 Curves could get OS 6 since the specs are the same.

  • Max

    RIM is for people stuck in the parachute pants era. Meanwhile, Iphone set to launch on VZW in January see CNN

  • http://www.directorycellphones.com/ Alex Sam

    It sounds very good that BlackBerry Curve 3G or BlackBerry Curve 9300 will be available in market with RIM. This will bring happiness to the faces of consumers. Black Berry is popular for its awesome executive handsets. This handset can be first choice for anyone.

  • RICK JAMES

    OMG! Another BLACKberry. Enough RIM. Just Stop.

  • Verizon Guy

    I can confirm that the Verizon version will have more than 256MB of RAM, and that it’s faster than a BlackBerry Tour (and has WiFi to boot.)

  • ohmy

    bodes well for 9700 users!
    lets hope its not too sluggish!

    • zukidrvr

      Same memory, same processor as 9700. Cost reduced design. Simpler camera. Added GPS. This is RIM’s value line, not top of the line.

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