Recently revealed that the BlackBerry Curve 9360 is proving to be surprisingly little material. Not only (hopefully) get rid of the chrome-ish presumptuous highlights of the latest version, which also reports IntoMobile hardware packages more competitive aa (NFC hello!) And a somewhat hidden feature in the configuration that not appear to have arisen in any other device OS 7 mobile hotspot recently.
While 9360 (affectionately known as "Apollo") is a major update for the budget-conscious owner BlackBerry, this development adds a bit of confusion on the issue mobile hotspot.
As I mentioned, in recent hands on tour with other BlackBerry models shown no new evidence to support mobile hotspot. Funny, was given the BlackBerry Bold 9900 based largely reported months ago, only to disappear in later versions. Curiously, the new Blackberry flashlights also do not mention the support hotspot, which is weird because it's supposed to be the most prestigious unit.
Two possibilities come to mind. And 'quite possible that the curve image is on an old building that retains the property, and the image is only now did the nature. Another is that the level of the mobile operator hotspots inclusion in the decision that customers would receive it and others do not. One of the two seems plausible, but the biggest problem is the reason RIM is so coy about this all?
Society, so much focus on trying to stay relevant to their needs and strengthen their customer base, it seems rather odd that not to mention a good option for movement of road warriors and travelers. There is no reason to omit it, taking into account all the RIM would have to do is add a bullet is a data sheet. A bit 'of clarity on the RIM can go a long way to the right customers.
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