Chinese company TCL buys global rights to BlackBerry phone brand
BlackBerry has signed over (mostly) global rights
to use its branding on phones to Chinese manufacturer TCL. The news
follows an announcement by the Canadian company in September that it
would stop making its own phones and concentrate instead on services and software.
Under the terms of the agreement, TCL will “design,
manufacture, sell, and provide customer support for BlackBerry-branded
mobile devices,” while BlackBerry will chip in with the software and
services. The deal is being touted as “global,” but there are some
limitations: it won’t apply in Nepal, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, India, or
Indonesia. According to Bloomberg,
this is because Blackberry already has a licensing agreement in place
in Indonesia, and is currently working on another deal with an Indian
company. It’s also interesting to note that this isn’t TCL’s first
outing at the buying-defunct-smartphone-brands rodeo — it previously purchased Palm back in January this year (but never did anything with it).
The long and the short of it is that any new BlackBerry
phone you contemplate buying in the future won’t be made by BlackBerry.
But, this isn’t really news when you consider that the last two
BlackBerry phones that went on sale — the Android-powered DTEK50 and
DTEK60 — were also made by TCL using parts previously found in the
Alcatel Idol 4. In our review of the $300 DTEK50
we thought it was an acceptable-looking but ultimately unimpressive
device, outclassed by other Android phones in the same price range.
This latest bit of news is really just the continuation
of a familiar story for BlackBerry. In 2009, the company held 20 percent
of the global smartphone market; that’s now shrunk to a barely
perceptible 0.1 percent. As this deal suggests, the brand still holds a
certain appeal for some consumers (or name recognition at the very
minimum), but as a phonemaker, the company’s last rites were read long
ago.
The article was published on : theverge
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