Monday, August 8, 2011

BlackBerry Curve 9360 can have a Mobile Hotspot, but how about the rest?

Chris Velasco — mobile enthusiast and writer who studied English and marketing at Rutgers University. Once upon a time he was a News intern for MobileCrunch, and between them, he worked in wireless sales at best buy. After graduation, he returned to the new TechCrunch for mobile as a full-time writer. He counts the advertising works, musical theater ... ? Read More

BlackBerryCurve9360PackingWifiHotspot

Recently discovered the BlackBerry Curve has proved to be a little surprising 9360 equipment. Not only did it (thankfully) to get rid of chintzy chrome-ish issues its latest iteration, IntoMobile reports that he also packages more competitive hardware configuration (Hi NFC!) and little feature hidden in settings that don't seem to have popped up on any other OS device 7 recently: mobile hotspot.

During the 9360, (affectionately known as "Apollo") is an updates for BlackBerry owner, budget conscious it adds a bit of confusion on the mobile hotspot.

As I have said, recent practical excursions with other new BlackBerry models does not have any signs of support mobile hotspot. Funny given BlackBerry bold 9900 was widely reported to have function months ago, only to disappear in future releases. Strangely, also do not make new Blackberry torches reference support hotspot, which is a odd, since it must be on a more prestigious device.

Two possibilities come to mind. It's quite possible that pictured the curve is the old Assembly, which saves the function, and the photo currently just made it in the wild. The other is that mobile hotspot will enable the carrier solution, there are some clients get it and others do not. No one seems plausible, but the broader question of why RIM is now so coy about this whole thing?

For a company with such a pronounced emphasis on trying to remain relevant and meet the needs of their new business client base seems totally strange that they fail to mention the great mobility option for road warriors and travelers alike. There was no reason not to mention it, considering all the FRAMES you want to do is add a token to the technical product specification. A little clarity from rim, go ahead can greatly for the right customers.


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