Skip to main content

The new BlackBerry Motion does away with the KeyOne’s best feature

The water-resistant BlackBerry Motion is coming to Canada on November 10

Do you like BlackBerry phones with keyboards, like the KeyOne? Then the latest BlackBerry phone, called the BlackBerry Motion, may not appeal. It ignores the brand’s most beloved feature in favor of a full touchscreen. Rumors have spread about the Motion’s existence for weeks, having also been known as the Krypton, and the device was made official at an industry event in Dubai on October 9.

The BlackBerry Motion is very similar to the company’s flagship KeyOne, aside from the lack of a physical keyboard, making it a midrange smartphone. The screen measures 5.5-inches with some hefty bezels above and below it, despite some optimistic rumors suggesting the phone would have a bezel-less design. The screen’s resolution is 1,920 x 1,080 pixels, and it’s surrounded by an IP67 water- and dust-resistant body, with a soft-touch rear panel and an aluminum chassis.

BlackBerry Motion
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Inside is a Qualcomm Snapdragon 625 processor with 4GB of RAM and 32GB of storage space, along with a 4,000mAh battery. Qualcomm’s quick charge system operates on the phone, taking the battery from zero to 50 percent capacity in 40 minutes, according to BlackBerry’s information. There are two cameras: A 12-megapixel camera on the rear, and an 8-megapixel on the front. Finally, there is a fingerprint sensor in the Motion’s home button below the screen.

Recommended Videos

BlackBerry, and phone designer TCL, has been pushing the brand’s famed security features on all its previous releases, and the Motion is no different. A custom version of Android 7.1 is installed, with BlackBerry’s own technology to make it more secure. BlackBerry is promising monthly security updates, and an Android 8.0 Oreo update next year, although an exact date isn’t mentioned yet. The BlackBerry Locker feature is onboard, where data can be saved in a fingerprint or passcode-secured space on the device. BlackBerry has upgraded its Convenience Key feature, which now has switchable profiles for different environments, which are activated when the device gets a particular Wi-Fi connection, or a certain app is opened.

The BlackBerry Motion has a limited initial launch. It will be sold as a dual-SIM phone in the Middle East, where it’s priced at around $450. It’s will also soon be available in Canada on November 10 for $599 CAD, which is around $465. There’s no indication the phone will be sold in the U.S., but one rumor ahead of its announcement suggested it would make it to several networks eventually. Still, we’d question who will buy the Motion over the already available KeyOne, with its similar technical specification and physical keyboard.

Update: We’ve updated this post with information about the Motion’s Canadian launch.

Andy Boxall
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
BlackBerry rises from the grave: New 5G phone with a keyboard coming in 2021
BlackBerry Key2. Credits: BlackBerry official.

BlackBerry is the smartphone brand that steadfastly refuses to die. The presumed-dead name has been resurrected once again, this time by a new company called OnwardMobility. It will work with manufacturer FIH Mobile to create and sell a 5G BlackBerry Android phone with a physical keyboard, ready for a potential release in the U.S. and Europe during the first half of 2021.

You read that right: A new BlackBerry phone with a physical keyboard and 5G, running Google’s Android software, is coming next year. TCL Communications was the last company to produce BlackBerry smartphones. It did so under license from BlackBerry Ltd., which continues to provide mobile security services, but isn’t in the hardware business anymore. TCL let its license lapse in February 2020 when modern, Android-based BlackBerry phones became a thing of the past. Until now.

Read more
Cost-cutting strips Pixel 9a of the best Gemini AI features in Pixel 9
Person holds Pixel 9a in hand while sitting in a car.

The Pixel 9a has been officially revealed, and while it's an eye candy, there are some visible cutbacks over the more premium Pixel 9 and 9 Pro series phones. The other cutbacks we don't see include lower RAM than the Pixel 9 phones, which can limit the new mid-ranger's ability to run AI applications, despite running the same Tensor G4 chipset.

Google's decision to limit the RAM to 8GB, compared to the 12GB on the more premium Pixel 9 phones, sacrifices its ability to run certain AI tasks locally. ArsTechnica has reported that as a result of the cost-cutting, Pixel 9a runs an "extra extra small" or XXS variant -- instead of the "extra small" variant on Pixel 9 -- of the Gemini Nano 1.0 model that drives on-device AI functions.

Read more
Does the Google Pixel 9a come with a charger? Here’s what’s in the box
A woman holding a purple Google Pixel 9a.

After much speculation in recent months, the Google Pixel 9a has finally been announced. Google's Pixel A series is an excellent choice for those seeking a reliable Android smartphone at a lower price point, and the latest model follows this trend. While it is undeniably part of the Google Pixel 9 series, it has fewer features than its higher-end counterparts.

One question you might have when considering the Pixel 9a is whether it comes with a charger. We’ve got the answer
The Pixel 9a does not come with a charger.
The short answer is that the Pixel 9a does not have a charger. This has become common practice for most smartphones today, including other models in the Pixel 9 series, like the Pixel 9 Pro. While this may be disappointing, it's not surprising.

Read more