Tuesday, 30 August 2011

Rogers will carrier the Samsung Galaxy S II LTE Smartphone



Rogers made 2 big announcements today in Toronto.

• LTE will be launched in Toronto on September 28, 2011
• Rogers will carrier the Samsung Galaxy S II LTE Smartphone


LTE is a next generation technology that will enable unparalleled connectivity, giving customers a mobile broadband experience similar to what they currently experience at home and at work. This next-generation mobile speed will create a better experience for customers using highly-interactive applications like multi-player gaming and rich multi-media communications. It will deliver more usage capacity, which means more users can simultaneously access the network at top speeds without affecting overall network performance.

This year, Rogers will have LTE devices capable of maximum theoretical download speeds of up to 100 Mbps. Today, devices are capable of downloading up to 75 Mbps and Ottawa LTE customers are experiencing typical download speeds ranging from 12 Mbps to 25 Mbps. These speeds are significantly faster than those Canadians experience on any other wireless network. As device selection evolves, maximum theoretical download speeds on the Rogers network will increase to up to 150 Mbps.
"This is an example of how we continue to bring the world's best and newest innovations to our customers and Canadians to be first to enjoy a faster and superior mobile experience with any one of our LTE devices," said John Boynton. "Rogers' LTE network and devices will redefine the way we work, play and communicate."
Starting today, Rogers customers in Toronto and Ottawa can reserve a selection of LTE wireless devices through the new Rogers Reservation System at www.rogers.com/lte.
Rogers was the first Canadian carrier to start conducting technical trials last fall, followed by the commitment to a multiyear deployment that began with Canada's first LTE launch in Ottawa in July 2011. Rogers LTE will expand to Montreal and Vancouver this fall.

Rogers Press Release





Monday, 29 August 2011

2011 Rogers Technology Showcase


Sep 16, 2011 | Vancouver
Vancouver Convention Centre, East Ballroom ABC
Time : 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.

Register today at www.rogerstechshowcase.com with Garth McFadden as your Roger representative.

Don't miss this opportunity to experience a wide range of wireless, mobile and machine-to-machine technologies for business. This exclusive event showcases advanced products and solutions from innovative technology providers, powered by the Rogers network.
• » Meet with innovative technology companies from across the country
• » Learn how to integrate wireless technologies that will give your business a competitive edge
• » Grow your network and your business

Come & talk directly with:
Research in Motion
Apple
Samsung
Hewlett-Packard Canada
Sonim
Panasonic
Cisco Systems

See many solution providers in:
Fleet Management
Asset Tracking
Lone Worker
Field Service Automation
Health Monitoring
Wireless Networking
Mobile Device Management


Tuesday, 23 August 2011

Blackberry Curve 9360, just in time for Back To School



Today RogerBuzz, one Rogers Wireless twitter account tweeted:
Good news! The new @Blackberry Curve 9360 will be available from Rogers just in time for the back to school season’
This will be the 4th Blackberry that Rogers has released over the past month. This new Blackberry Curve 9360 is thin, stylish & affordable.
Rogers has recently discontinued the Blackberry Curve 8520 & the Bold 9780.


Thursday, 18 August 2011

BlackBerry® Torch™ 9810 smartphone | Rogers Launch Details


YES WE HAVE STOCK!! | $199 on a 3 yr Voice & Data plan
The Blackberry Torch 9810 improves upon the successful Torch 9800 by adding the new Blackberry 7 operating system plus a faster processor and download speeds.  The new Torch 9810 will replace the current Torch 9800 in Rogers’ smartphone lineup.
Key Selling Point
Experience BlackBerry® 7: the next generation BlackBerry OS. Packed with powerful new features and innovative apps, it delivers the smoothest and fastest BlackBerry experience to date. 
Additional Features & Benefits
  1. Full slide-out QWERTY keypad
  2. 14.4Mbps 4G download speeds
  3. 1.2GHz Processor for improved speed and performance
  4. 5MP Camera with HD video capture
  5. Built-in Wi-Fi

Wednesday, 17 August 2011

Blackberry on Sale Today for 59 Cents.


On a day when the new Blackberry Bold 9900s & Torch 9810s are being snapped up by the early adopters, Canada Post recognizes the Blackberry as a Canadian Innovation.  With a ‘Waterloo ON 2011.08.17’ Day of Issue cancelation on its first day cover, the new series of 4 Canadian Innovations go on sale today as a booklet of 8. This booklet of eight domestic ($0.59) stamps features four iconic "Made in Canada" leaps of science and creativity. In this philatelic series, the Blackberry is depicted alongside 3 other great Canadian Innovations, being the electric oven, the cardiac pacemaker & the electric wheelchair
From the Canada Post website…. While smart phones and other communications devices, as well as technologies such as push email and mobile apps, are commonplace now, they were nearly the stuff of science fiction in 1999, when Research in Motion (RIM) founders Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie introduced the now iconic BlackBerry®. Their invention freed information workers from their desks and changed the way the world communicates. Subsequent versions and continuous innovation have kept RIM and its BlackBerry device a front runner in the massive smart phone market.
As a side note, this new series of stamps was designed by the same firm, Q30 Design Inc., that designed the ‘Ted Rogers Sr. Plugging in the Radio’ stamp which was part on the Millennium collection issued early in the year 2000. Rogers Wireless has also been a great supporter of Blackberry, being its first Canadian carrier & fourth in the world. Long live the Blackberry…. spoken like a true RIM shareholder.


Thursday, 11 August 2011

BlackBerry® Bold™ 9900 smartphone | Rogers Launch Details



YES WE HAVE STOCK!! | $199 on a 3 yr Voice & Data plan


The thinnest-ever,BlackBerry® Bold™ 9900 smartphone is beautifully built to combine the iconic BlackBerry® QWERTY keyboard with a brilliant, 24-bit high-res touch screen and precision-based optical trackpad. Purposeful design details meet functionality, as you benefit from the new powerful BlackBerry® 7 OS; enjoy fluid touch screen navigation with proprietary Liquid Graphics™ technology, 40% faster browsing with the most powerful engine to date in a BlackBerry smartphone, and so much more. The distinctive BlackBerry Bold 9900 delivers incredible performance and effortless style – in one slim device.


Key Feature
Iconic QWERTY keyboard and high-res full touch screen – all in the thinnest BlackBerry Bold form factor yet


Additional Features & Benefits
2.8" capacitive touch display – 640x480 pixel resolution – 287 dpi
Full, wide QWERTY keyboard with optical navigation trackpad
BlackBerry® 7 OS
1.2 GHz Processor
5.0MP camera with flash
720p HD video recording capability
8GB internal memory, expandable up to 32GB
Dual band WiFI
GPS

Wednesday, 10 August 2011

BGR is reporting RIM’s 1st QNX Blackberry, the Colt, is set to be released in Q1 2012

Jonathan S. Geller’s Aug 8th article posted on the popular tech website BGR indicates how important timing is in the Super Phone race. Do we release early with compromises or do we wait & release the no compromise version of the Super Phone? According to Jonathan, RIM will go early with their first Blackberry ever to use Microsoft ActiveSync to connect to the Microsoft Exchange Server instead of the (BES) BlackBerry Enterprise Server.  The other suspected compromise is the Colt will be released with a single core processor.
This is not the 1st time the RIM has launched a compromised product early. The 1st generation Playbook was launch without 3G wireless access or the ability to directly connect to the Microsoft Exchange Server with BES.

Apparently RIM is working on a QNX BES version, so let’s hope it will be ready the next generation Playbook & the Colt.

Tuesday, 9 August 2011

BlackBerry OS7 Smoother, faster, better.

Liquid Graphics
Liquid Graphics is the new graphics processing technology that delivers instant response times, smoother rendering, and fluid animations across the board. on touch enabled devices, you’ll see faster, more precise inputs, and an image that sticks to your fingertips as it flows across the screen.

Fast BlackBerry
The browser with BlackBerry® 7 is the fastest, most powerful browser found in a BlackBerry® smartphone to date. With page loads of up to 40% faster than BlackBerry® 6, you get seamless panning and zooming, and better web-based video and gaming.

Voice-activated universal search
With speech-to-text translation, you can now search for files, emails, contacts, music, and more—all without typing a thing.

HD video recording & pictures
Leave your digital camera behind, and start recording HD videos and take crisp pictures—anywhere you go. 1 outstanding multimedia functions and full HD 720p video recording capabilities. once you’ve finished recording or taking pictures, you can upload right to Facebook® or sync to your BlackBerry® PlayBook™ tablet with BlackBerry® Desktop Software.

BlackBerry ® Messenger (BBM™ 6)
Chat with your friends anywhere, anytime, any way you want, with BBM™. Every time you send a message, you’ll know when it’s read (they’ll know you know, too). now, BBM features are built right into many of your favourite apps, so you can share or chat with your BBM friends while you’re in the app. new book you’ve been reading on your device? Share it. Checking sports scores? Get the trash-talk started without leaving your sports app.

Social Feeds 2.0
With social feeds on your BlackBerry smartphone, stay up to date with your social networks and receive the latest news and information from your favorite blogs and websites.

BlackBerry App World™ 3.0
Explore the sleek new BlackBerry App World storefront: a world of inspiration awaits you. Discover incredible apps that give you easy access to all the information you want or need, and find new ways to amplify your productivity.

Augmented Reality
Augmented Reality is the exciting new way to interact and socialize with the world around you.1 use Augmented Reality to see if your BBM™ friends are nearby and what their statuses are. read reviews on the restaurants you just passed by, or get the story behind an interesting landmark. share all of this information with your BBM friends with a few clicks.

Near Field Communication (NFC)
Near Field Communication (NFC) lets you simply tap to connect.
1 With NFC technology built right in, you can get information and link up with other NFC-enabled devices or authentic BlackBerry® accessories—all with a single tap.

Docs To Go® Premium
Out of the box, you’ve got the tools for ultimate productivity. Documents To Go® is a free, mobile document suite that lets you create and edit Microsoft® Word™, Excel™, and PowerPoint™ docs, and view PDF docs anywhere, anytime.

BlackBerry® Protect
BlackBerry® Protect is a free application with select BlackBerry service plans, designed to keep your PIM information secure if your BlackBerry® device goes missing.1 You don’t have to worry about losing personal information data, calendar, contacts, tasks, and memos. Just log in to the BlackBerry® Protect website and you can lock, locate, or wipe your device from wherever you are.* You can also choose to have your crucial data backed up wirelessly, and automatically, as often as you choose (daily, weekly, or monthly).
® Browser


Monday, 8 August 2011

3 reasons why Google could acquire RIM.


3 reasons why Google could acquire RIM (The following commentary comes from an independent investor or market observer as part of TheStreet's guest contributor program, which is separate from the company's news coverage.)

Anton Wahlman, Contributor, Friday August 5, 2011

NEW YORK -- In recent weeks, I think the probability of Google acquiring Research In Motion has gone from almost 0% to somewhere in the ballpark of 50%, and I believe there are three dominant reasons why.
Before I get into my three arguments, I need to mention two things:

1. I have absolutely no knowledge that Google and RIM are even talking to each other. I often meet with people from Google and RIM, and on the occasions that I have brought up my theory, these people have given me feedback to the effect that I am probably crazy and that they would eat their own hat if it would ever happen.

2. I have to give full credit to Kevin Michaluk, founder and CEO of the outstanding Crackberry.com blog, who published this article on July 4, awakening my thoughts to the serious idea of Google acquiring RIM.
My initial reaction to the idea was to dismiss it largely based on the antitrust argument. Google needs another Department of Justice investigation just like Obama needs another increase in the unemployment rate. This argument remains valid in principle, but it is mitigated by the relative increase in importance of the other factors. RIM recently fell below $24, is expected to make $5.50 in earnings this year and has $3 billion in cash, making it a very easy buy for Google, even if you assume a monster 100%-plus premium.

The market's recent fall may also cause the feds to pull back their attack dogs in order to allow corporate America to engage in their constitutional right to pursue economic freedom, including merging.
If the feds are going to approve AT&T's $39 billion acquisition of T-Mobile USA, how could they in good conscience block a smaller deal to acquire a company which the pundits are telling us is falling off a cliff?
Here are the three most powerful reasons Google should acquire RIM, right now:

1. Platform convergence
On Sept. 28, 2010, I published an article suggesting that RIM's PlayBook tablet will be running Android apps. This theory of mine was subsequently confirmed by RIM in March 2011, and it will be extended to the QNX-based BlackBerry smartphones some time in "early" 2012, however RIM defines the term "early." RIM looks to launch its Android app compatibility on the PlayBook soon, probably within the next month or two, although delays have been a recent RIM standard practice.

How does RIM do it? In 2010, RIM selected the Texas Instruments OMAP 4400 series chip to be the CPU foundation for its proprietary QNX operating system. On top of this, developers are able to very easily re-purpose their Android apps to run over QNX. Given how easy this is to do, it would be reasonable to believe that the hundreds of thousands of Android apps will run on BlackBerry within months from now.

Here is where is gets extra interesting from Google's standpoint: Based on numerous media reports in recent months, we can now conclude that Google has anointed the same CPU family -- the Texas Instruments OMAP 4400 series -- to be the reference chassis platform for Android 4.0, aka "Ice Cream Sandwich" or ICS. This goes not only for tablets, but also for the much-more-important smartphones, constituting the vast majority of Android's 550,000 daily activations. ICS 4.0 looks to launch on a small number of initial devices some time around Thanksgiving this year.
Folks, starting by the end of 2011, Android and BlackBerry will be on the same platform, and running the same apps. If this does not get your alarm bells go off, what will?
Yes, this will not gel completely until early 2012, but initial devices from the Google/Android side of equation are scheduled to hit the market by December 2011. You could have understood 50% of this if you had read the Sept. 28, 2010 article, but it will be a lot harder to ignore this within the next six months.
The market certainly hasn't given RIM credit for this. Why shouldn't Google strike before the market wakes up to the significance of this convergence?
For all intents and purposes, despite all other differences, RIM is joining the Android ecosystem in the epic battle against Apple, Microsoft and eventually Google's own Chrome OS. As they said during the Cold War, "There is no such thing as coincidence...."

2. NFC and Security
Two of the next smartphone frontiers are NFC (Near-Field Communications) and security, and they are often related. Google has launched its NFC initiative with the Nexus S smartphone, working with retail payments in Portland, San Francisco and New York. This is a huge effort, taking Google into competition with GroupOn and touching on the payments/banking world.
While the NFC opportunity is gigantic -- witness the transaction volumes enjoyed by VISA, MasterCard, AmEx and the banking system -- it is also an area where security is paramount. Google claims to have resolved any security issues, and surely they have done a lot.
But worries remain. The NFC link itself may have been secured, but if the underlying OS platform has to be 100% trusted. One emerging problem with Android is a consequence of its openness, and that is the emergence of various viruses and other security breaches, including keyloggers and other forms of spyware. NFC may be safe for now, but what if malware takes control of the entire platform?

One key thing that BlackBerry brings to the Android party is a trusted new QNX OS platform that can do a better job than Android in securing against such platform security threats. QNX runs power plants and numerous widgets in the US Department of Defense, among other things.
Some of the most prominent premium car brands put QNX to run automobile systems. The BlackBerry PlayBook recently became the first tablet to obtain the U.S. government's critical FIPS-140 security certification, which can be a requirement for deployment.
What is the bottom line here? Without QNX and BlackBerry's trusted (but closed) platform, Google's ambitions in NFC and related commerce may be for naught. It may have to cede this to Apple's much more secure iOS platform, which may not be as secure as QNX, but sure is more meaningfully secure than Android.

Adding insult to injury, despite Microsoft's horrific security reputation for Windows PC, it has what appears to be an OS in the same class as Apple's iOS for the smartphones: Windows Phone. Google has all the other pieces to win this game, but the weak link is Android's sub-par security. In relation to Google's commerce opportunity that can easily be measured in the many hundreds of billions of dollars, RIM's ex-cash market cap of $10 billion pales.

3. Those patent wars
Recently having flown into focus, several actors including Microsoft, Apple and Oracle have asserted their considerable patent portfolios against Google and/or its Android licensees. I am not remotely qualified to judge the validity of these numerous highly complex claims. What seems clear, however, is that Google may have an increasing appetite for beefing up in this arms race.
For example, IDCC ran up materially a couple of weeks ago based on rumors that Google and Apple may be interested in acquiring said company. Numbers that have been thrown around in the press have been up to $5 billion, or half of RIM's enterprise value.
Everyone knows that Motorola Mobility, Nokia, Broadcom and Qualcomm have some of the largest patent portfolios in the business. That said, RIM also has a respectable patent portfolio, and most people know that RIM has spent considerable amounts over the last decade to develop its own stacks. MMI and Nokia are scraping near the break-even level, while RIM remains hugely profitable, however, so Google would be able to pay a far bigger premium for RIM than any of those other companies.
With RIM's enterprise value near $10 billion, and other patent portfolios going for approximately $5 billion, it would appear RIM is trading at an even more amazing bargain price than first meets the eye.
Conclusion: Who else would join a bidding war?
I don't think the U.S. government -- even more so than the Canadian -- would allow RIM to be sold to the Chinese, or most any other non-North American company. It's just so sensitive to our national security.
So apart from Google, this leaves only a few companies as potential suitors, in order: HP, Dell, Microsoft and Motorola. Of those, HP has the muscle, Dell has sufficient muscle, Microsoft is highly unpredictable, and Motorola would have to make it more like a merger of equals. I don't think any one of them are as ready right now as Google from a motivation and financial standpoint combined, although they are all possible and should by no means be ruled out.

The platform convergence, NFC, security and patents all point to Google, in my opinion.

Friday, 5 August 2011

Will Rogers Wireless be carrying the new Samsung Tab 10.1?

This is the question my customers have been asking me. Although there’s nothing official from Rogers, there is compelling speculation that they will be carrying Samsung’s new controversial Tab soon.
It looks like the popular Mobile Syrup mobile news website has the inside scoop.
This is the Tab that brought Samsung & Apple head to head before judges in several countries around the world. Apple successfully convinced a court in Australia to block the sale of the Samsung Tab 10.1.
As your Rogers Wireless corporate rep, please know that I will be keeping tabs on this story.

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

Rogers re-launches the 6GB data plan for $30 MSF


IT'S BACK!!!

The $30 / 6 GB Data Plan
* Must be added to a voice plan
* Available with a 3-year term only
* Tethering included
* GRRF applies and is not included in monthly service fee above
* LIMITED TIME OFFER

Tuesday, 2 August 2011

Are you iPhone 5 waiting?


Presume, assumption, un-official, speculation, rumor, gossip ……. are all associated with iPhone 5. Forget celebrities, the paparazzi need to get us a pic & the lowdown on the new iPhone.  The ‘I’m good I’ll wait’ is in for those who need a new phone. So much so that Rogers announced last week a $50* mail in rebate for those who are willing to upgrade now to the iPhone 4.
CNET.COM http://t.co/rNpt9eP is reporting
‘With pent-up demand for the iPhone 5, the new phone could double Apple's market share’
Ok…..HOLD THE PHONE!!! What do we know for sure…for a fact.

We know that we don’t know anything. We know that Apple loves launching new stuff with a big bang & flash (actually not flash & for good reason)… let’s go with pizzazz. The only fact that I can give you is:

You will wait for The Announcement,
then you will wait for the Launch Date,
then you will wait for the Stock.

So hurry up & wait you good little Apple-ite … then enjoy your new iPhone when you get it in 2012.   

Still want to wait?… ‘Fine By Me’!! If not, call me, because the price on an upgrade to the iPhone 4, just dropped by $50*!

*for consumer upgrades only.