
At today’s BlackBerry developer’s event, RIM announced its iPad beater: the PlayBook. The 7-inch, 9.7mm thick tablet outputs at 1080p, has eReader functionality and features its own BlackBerry Tablet OS.
The guts sound pretty good so far as well: a 1GHz dual-core CPU, 1GB RAM and a front and rear facing camera both with full HD. It’ll run flash 10.1 with hardware acceleration, supports HTML5 and has both HDMI and USB ports. The display is a very nice 1024×600 multitouch display. And key for the business types: it’ll connect with BlackBerry enterprise servers out of the box.
It’s not just for worker drones, though; RIM’s touting the tablet’s gaming abilities – there’ll be OpenGL support – as well as a full browsing experience. There are some treats here for developers as well: in-app payments, a BlackBerry advertising service and Adobe Air for app creation.
SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA—(Marketwire – 09/27/10) – BlackBerry DEVCON 2010 -
Research In Motion (RIM) (NASDAQ:RIMM – News)(TSX:RIM – News) today redefined the possibilities for mobile computing with the unveiling of its new professional-grade BlackBerry® PlayBook™ tablet and BlackBerry® Tablet OS.
Perfect for either large organizations or an “army of one”, the BlackBerry PlayBook is designed to give users what they want, including uncompromised web browsing, true multitasking and high performance multimedia, while also providing advanced security features, out-of-the-box enterprise support and a breakthrough development platform for IT departments and developers. The incredibly powerful and innovative BlackBerry PlayBook is truly a game-changing product in the growing tablet marketplace.
“RIM set out to engineer the best professional-grade tablet in the industry with cutting-edge hardware features and one of the world’s most robust and flexible operating systems,” said Mike Lazaridis, President and Co-CEO at Research In Motion. “The BlackBerry PlayBook solidly hits the mark with industry leading power, true multitasking, uncompromised web browsing and high performance multimedia.”
The Tablet You’ll Want to Take Everywhere
This beautifully designed and incredibly powerful tablet is ultra portable, ultra thin and super convenient for both work and play. Measuring less than half an inch thick and weighing less than a pound, the BlackBerry PlayBook features a vivid 7″ high resolution display that looks and feels great in your hand. With such a unique mix of utility, performance and portability, you’ll want to take it everywhere.
The New Benchmark in Tablet Performance
At its heart, the BlackBerry PlayBook is a multitasking powerhouse. Its groundbreaking performance is jointly fueled by a 1 GHz dual-core processor and the new BlackBerry Tablet OS which supports true symmetric multiprocessing. Together, the abundant processing power and highly sophisticated OS enable the BlackBerry PlayBook to provide users with true multitasking and a highly-responsive and fluid touch screen experience for apps and content services.
Uncompromised Web Browsing
With support for Adobe® Flash® Player 10.1, Adobe® Mobile AIR® and HTML-5, the BlackBerry PlayBook provides customers with an uncompromised, high-fidelity web experience and offers them the ability to enjoy all of the sites, games and media on the web. For more than a decade, the mobile industry has worked to bridge the gap between the “real web” and mobile devices through various apps and technologies and, in fact, a significant number of mobile apps today still simply serve as a proxy for web content that already exists on the web. The BlackBerry PlayBook closes that gap and brings the real, full web experience to mobile users while also opening new and more exciting opportunities for developers and content publishers.
High Performance Multimedia
The BlackBerry PlayBook features premium multimedia features to support high-quality mobile experiences. It includes dual HD cameras for video capture and video conferencing that can both record HD video at the same time, and an HDMI-out port for presenting one’s creations on external displays. The BlackBerry PlayBook also offers rich stereo sound and a media player that rivals the best in the industry.
BlackBerry Integration
For those BlackBerry PlayBook users who carry a BlackBerry smartphone(i), it will also be possible to pair their tablet and smartphone using a secure Bluetooth® connection. This means they can opt to use the larger tablet display to seamlessly and securely view any of the email, BBM™, calendar, tasks, documents and other content that resides on (or is accessible through) their smartphone. They can also use their tablet and smartphone interchangeably without worrying about syncing or duplicating data. This secure integration of BlackBerry tablets and smartphones is a particularly useful feature for those business users who want to leave their laptop behind.
Enterprise Ready
Thanks to the seamless and secure Bluetooth pairing experience and the highly secure underlying OS architecture, the BlackBerry PlayBook is enterprise ready and compatible (out-of-the-box) with BlackBerry® Enterprise Server. When connected over Bluetooth, the smartphone content is viewable on the tablet, but the content actually remains stored on the BlackBerry smartphone and is only temporarily cached on the tablet (and subject to IT policy controls). With this approach to information security, IT departments can deploy the BlackBerry PlayBook to employees out-of-the-box without worrying about all the security and manageability issues that arise when corporate data is stored on yet another device.
QNX Neutrino Reliability
The BlackBerry Tablet OS is built upon the QNX® Neutrino® microkernel architecture, one of the most reliable, secure and robust operating system architectures in the world. Neutrino has been field hardened for years and is being used to support mission-critical applications in everything from planes, trains and automobiles to medical equipment and the largest core routers that run the Internet. The new BlackBerry Tablet OS leverages and builds upon the many proven strengths of this QNX Neutrino architecture to support a professional grade tablet experience and to redefine the possibilities for mobile computing.
An OS Built for Developers
The Neutrino based microkernel architecture in the BlackBerry Tablet OS delivers exceptional performance, high scalability, Common Criteria EAL 4+ security, and support for industry standard tools that are already familiar to hundreds of thousands of developers. The OS is fully POSIX compliant enabling easy portability of C-based code, supports Open GL for 2D and 3D graphics intensive applications like gaming, and will run applications built in Adobe Mobile AIR as well as the new BlackBerry® WebWorks™ app platform announced today (which will allow apps to be written to run on BlackBerry PlayBook tablets as well as BlackBerry smartphones with BlackBerry® 6). The BlackBerry Tablet OS will also support Java enabling developers to easily bring their existing BlackBerry 6 Java applications to the BlackBerry Tablet OS environment.
Key features and specifications of the BlackBerry PlayBook include:
— 7″ LCD, 1024 x 600, WSVGA, capacitive touch screen with full multi-touch
and gesture support
— BlackBerry Tablet OS with support for symmetric multiprocessing
— 1 GHz dual-core processor
— 1 GB RAM
— Dual HD cameras (3 MP front facing, 5 MP rear facing), supports 1080p HD
video recording
— Video playback: 1080p HD Video, H.264, MPEG, DivX, WMV
— Audio playback: MP3, AAC, WMA
— HDMI video output
— Wi-Fi – 802.11 a/b/g/n
— Bluetooth 2.1 + EDR
— Connectors: microHDMI, microUSB, charging contacts
— Open, flexible application platform with support for WebKit/HTML-5,
Adobe Flash Player 10.1, Adobe Mobile AIR, Adobe Reader, POSIX, OpenGL,
Java
— Ultra thin and portable:
— Measures 5.1″x7.6″x0.4″ (130mm x 193mm x 10mm)
— Weighs less than a pound (approximately 0.9 lb or 400g)
— Additional features and specifications of the BlackBerry PlayBook will
be shared on or before the date this product is launched in retail
outlets.
— RIM intends to also offer 3G and 4G models in the future.Availability
The BlackBerry PlayBook is expected to be available in retail outlets and other channels in the United States in early 2011 with rollouts in other international markets beginning in (calendar) Q2.
RIM will begin working with developers and select corporate customers next month to begin development and early testing efforts.
The BlackBerry Tablet OS SDK is planned for release in the coming weeks and developers can register for early access at www.blackberry.com/developers/tabletos.
For more information, visit www.blackberry.com/playbook.



















Tom Tucker
Tuesday, September 28, 2010 at 10:54 AMIt’s funny how people forget the iPad took 5 years to develop and is the cause of the iPhone.
Apple was designing an iPad when they realised they can make a phone out of it.
The PlayBook sounds like it has been created to purely challenge the iPad.
After 3 years of iPhone, it also seems that you can only really compete with iPhone if you ‘innovate’ not copy.
I will watch this with keen business interest.
Wayne
Tuesday, September 28, 2010 at 11:30 AMTom, I am sure it is challenge to iPad but it’s not only about competing, but providing alternatives to stubborn monopolists. I am sure BB are going to push Flash support as a key feature and while Apple rightly or wrongly stubbornly refuses to support Flash, Blackberry has obviously chosen to be more inclusive and not shut out major market players. It takes competition to get the best out of products and may just be a wake-up call for Apple. I am not saying they don’t make great products, they do but they are not perfect. I have an iPad but I will still a Playbook when they come out. Good luck to them, I think there is a lot more to come from Blackberry….
Wok
Tuesday, September 28, 2010 at 1:38 PMNo Flash on iPad is BS.
Simon Reidy
Tuesday, September 28, 2010 at 3:44 PMWhat? If you’re talking about “frash”, for one thing you have to be jailbroken, and for another it barely works with the most basic of flash animation and is useless for flash video and games. What’s the point?
I really don’t care about flash, but to suggest the iPad has it is nonsense.
Andrew Kelly
Thursday, February 10, 2011 at 5:27 PMAhh…Simon, he never suggested that iPad has flash.
He clearly said “No flash on iPad is BS”
For the moron, that means he thinks that the fact that there is no flash on the iPad is bullshit.
Try reading the post with some sort of intelligence before you abuse him.
Peter Simpson
Wednesday, September 29, 2010 at 12:49 PMLet us know when it gets Plants Vs. Zombies and I’ll be first in line!
Aries
Thursday, October 28, 2010 at 12:19 PMthe only one weakness of playbook is this thing does not have 3G/HSDPA modem built-in like ipad and galaxy tab. Seems RIM does not want the people not to buy their cellphones with playbook release. But, this playbook is very promising. I will consider it to buy if they sell in Jakarta. I believe the playbook will change a lot tablet wars..!
Don
Thursday, January 20, 2011 at 9:49 AMwaiting expectantly for the Australian release. which will occur When????