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RIM's PlayBook hits the shelves in US and Canada

RIM's PlayBook hits the shelves in US and Canada

The stakes could not be higher for the Canadian company, whose BlackBerry smartphone once reigned supreme but has struggled to compete since Apple's iPhone.

Research In Motion's PlayBook, the long-awaited response to Apple's iPad, goes on sale in the United States and Canada on Tuesday in a launch the company desperately hopes will win the hearts and minds of consumers.

The stakes could not be higher for the Canadian company, whose BlackBerry smartphone once reigned supreme but has struggled to compete since Apple's iPhone and a slew of devices running Google's Android entered the fray.

The launch has not been helped by reviews, which have panned the WiFi-only tablet computer for lacking RIM's trademark email and organizer applications.

Some 20,000 stores across the United States and Canada will stock the PlayBook at launch, and it will also be sold directly to enterprises.

Some say it is unfair to even stack the contenders up against the iPad, which single-handedly made the tablet market a reality last April. Apple sold almost 15 million iPads in 2010; RIM is expected to move 3 million PlayBooks in a similar window in 2011.

But analysts say RIM's Playbook should stay in the hunt, even if it gets off to a slow start as it overhauls its creaky platform with the QNX operating system it acquired last year.

Gartner, a research outfit focused on technology, estimates one in 10 touchscreen devices sold in 2015, or some 30 million, will be powered by QNX, which will likely also find its way onto its smartphones in the next 12 months.

That would place it third behind Apple at almost half the market and Android at just under 40 per cent, leaving little room for Hewlett-Packard's soon-to-launch WebOS tablet and completely ignoring a possible Windows tablet platform.

RIM made its name among a white-collar crowd when mobile email was a novelty and has been slow to broaden its appeal.

And in its current setup, the PlayBook's prime audiences are the 60 million-odd active BlackBerry users worldwide and corporate IT managers who appreciate the reliance on a BlackBerry for access to corporate data. RIM expects large businesses to buy shipments in "the tens of thousands."

Without a cellular connection, carriers such as Verizon are unlikely to get too excited as they stand to gain little from selling a tablet without a data plan, although the cost savings may attract consumers.

- With inputs from Agencies

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Published on: Apr 19, 2011, 1:19 PM IST
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