Tuesday, 23 April 2013

BlackBerry Z10 release in Australia before US

 

The BlackBerry Z10 is making its way into different countries, the UK already has it and Indonesia has just received it and now we can reveal that the BlackBerry Z10 release in Australia will be before the US.

Not so long ago we gave you the latest news about the ‘The BlackBerry Experience Event’ kicking of in New York on March 21 at 7PM EDT, those that live in the US will be happy to learn that the Z10 will be available on both AT&T and Verizon with a release date of March 28th, pricing is expected to be around $199.

Those of you that live in Australia will be very happy to know that you will be getting the BlackBerry Z10 before the US from March 25th and 26th. The BlackBerry Z10 in Australia will be available from retailers such as Fone Zone, Harvey Norman and JB Hi-Fi; it will also be available with fantastic price plans from carriers such as Telstra and Optus.

Optus from March 25th and Telstra on the 26th, if you are looking to get your hands on the 1.5 Ghz dual core processor smartphone featuring 16GB of internal storage, 2GB of RAM with expandable memory please keep the dates above in your diary.

The operating system provides multitasking and supports specialized input devices that have been adopted by BlackBerry Ltd. for use in its handhelds, particularly the trackwheel, trackball, and most recently, the trackpad and touchscreen.


 BlackBerry Z10 release in Australia before US 

The BlackBerry platform is perhaps best known for its native support for corporate email, through MIDP 1.0 and, more recently, a subset of MIDP 2.0, which allows complete wireless activation and synchronization with Microsoft Exchange, Lotus Domino, or Novell GroupWise email, calendar, tasks, notes, and contacts, when used with BlackBerry Enterprise Server. The operating system also supports WAP 1.2.

Updates to the operating system may be automatically available from wireless carriers that support the BlackBerry over the air software loading (OTASL) service.Third-party developers can write software using the available BlackBerry API classes, although applications that make use of certain functionality must be digitally signed.

Research from June 2011 indicates that approximately 45% of mobile developers were using the platform at the time of publication.BlackBerry OS was discontinued after the release of BlackBerry 10.

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