PlayBook OS 2.0 finally brings the core strength of email and messaging to RIM’s tablet.
RIM’s BlackBerry PlayBook tablet hasn’t been getting any respect, but this may soon change once BlackBerry OS 2.0 is made available.
The once promising yet much maligned slate has been ridiculed for lacking BBM (BlackBerry Messenger), native email and calendar applications.
It has been heavily discounted, dangled in front of developers as bait, and 400 of them were recently given away by Ellen DeGeneres as party favours for her live audience.
The long awaited software update does bring a slew of improvements to the PlayBook and introduces some features that should have been present a year ago when the device first launched.
PlayBook owners will finally get a native e-mail application, a Personal Information Manager app as well as a contacts app. These are business critical apps for RIM’s core users and available on most competing tablets.
PlayBook OS 2.0 also brings improved BlackBerry Bridge connectivity that will allow recent BlackBerry smartphones to be used as remote controls for the tablet for the playing back of media such as video, slideshows and presentations.
Focus is on Apps
During a demo at last month’s CES (Consumer Electronics Show), Jonathan Wong, Senior Product Manager for RIM, showed me some off the new apps.
The most impressive was Citrix Receiver, which allowed the PlayBook to run Windows applications such as PowerPoint, Office or Outlook.
Also demoed was the Android App Player that should be able to run many Google Android applications on the PlayBook and expand the library of apps for the tablet.
The once promising yet much maligned slate has been ridiculed for lacking BBM (BlackBerry Messenger), native email and calendar applications.
It has been heavily discounted, dangled in front of developers as bait, and 400 of them were recently given away by Ellen DeGeneres as party favours for her live audience.
The long awaited software update does bring a slew of improvements to the PlayBook and introduces some features that should have been present a year ago when the device first launched.
PlayBook owners will finally get a native e-mail application, a Personal Information Manager app as well as a contacts app. These are business critical apps for RIM’s core users and available on most competing tablets.
PlayBook OS 2.0 also brings improved BlackBerry Bridge connectivity that will allow recent BlackBerry smartphones to be used as remote controls for the tablet for the playing back of media such as video, slideshows and presentations.
Focus is on Apps
During a demo at last month’s CES (Consumer Electronics Show), Jonathan Wong, Senior Product Manager for RIM, showed me some off the new apps.
The most impressive was Citrix Receiver, which allowed the PlayBook to run Windows applications such as PowerPoint, Office or Outlook.
Also demoed was the Android App Player that should be able to run many Google Android applications on the PlayBook and expand the library of apps for the tablet.
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