RIM launches first flip Blackberry

RIM, maker of the Blackberry line of phones will for the first time offer a clamshell version of one of its handsets.

This move emphasises RIM's move into the consumer sector and the phone will offer video and music tools as well as a 2-megapixel camera with flash. A web browser and a QWERTY keyboard will also feature. It will not however offer the 3G speeds of the recent Blackberry Bold.

"Seventy per cent of the mobile phone users in the United States use a flip," RIM co-CEO Jim Balsillie said in an interview. "There's never been a smartphone or a BlackBerry option for that."

He added the new device is "extremely important" to capturing more retail users.

The new clamshell flip BlackBerry will be available around the world starting this autumn. In the US, T-Mobile will be the exclusive launch carrier. No pricing details were immediately available.

The first, candy-bar-shaped version of the Pearl was launched in September 2006 to rave reviews and strong sales. Its success was a key factor behind the Waterloo, Ontario-based company's ability to deliver banner results throughout the rest of that year and in 2007.

The Pearl also enabled RIM to broaden its market beyond its mainstay of executives, lawyers, politicians and other professionals who use the BlackBerry to send work e-mail securely.

RIM has more than 16 million subscribers. It says that "non-enterprise" customers - the company's term for small and medium businesses and consumers - now represent more than 40 per cent of that total.

The drive for retail consumers has put the company in more direct competition with hardware makers such as Apple and its iPhone, as well as Motorola and Nokia. Balsillie has repeatedly dismissed competitive concerns and they have yet to translate into lower sales.

Despite that, RIM's shares have lost a third of their value since setting a year high of $148.13 (84.15) on the Nasdaq in June. On Tuesday, they closed at $99.30 (56.41) amid macroeconomic concerns and broad stock market declines.

Asked whether the market should expect RIM to launch additional BlackBerry models before the end of the calendar year, Balsillie replied: "We're far from done."