October 21, 2009 4:00 AM PDT

RIM BlackBerry Bold 9700 announced; T-Mobile and AT&T bound

by Bonnie Cha
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RIM BlackBerry Bold 9700

RIM BlackBerry Bold 9700

(Credit: RIM)

This post was updated on October 21 at 8:30 a.m. PDT with official pricing from AT&T and T-Mobile.

On Wednesday, Research In Motion unveiled its newest smartphone, the RIM BlackBerry Bold 9700. It will replace the original BlackBerry Bold 9000, which debuted in November 2008, and offers a sleeker design, double the Flash memory, and updated features.

The most noticeable difference is the smartphone's size. The Bold now measures 4.29 inches tall by 2.36 inches wide by 0.56 inch thick and weighs 4.3 ounces compared with the original Bold's 4.48 inches high by 2.6 inches wide by 0.59 inch deep and 4.8 ounces. It's comparable in size to the RIM BlackBerry Tour 9630, and in fact, the two share the same 2.44-inch HVGA (480x360) display and have similar 35-key QWERTY keyboards.

However, the BlackBerry Bold 9700 replaces the trackball navigator with the touch-sensitive trackpad, which was first introduced on the RIM BlackBerry Curve 8520. For those who fear change, you should rest easy knowing that we found transition from trackball to trackpad to be quite smooth, since the latter is extremely responsive.

The Bold 9700 is equipped with a 3.5mm headphone jack and features a slightly revamped leatherette back. Overall, RIM is hoping the sleeker design will appeal to both men and women, since the BlackBerry Bold skewed a bit more to the masculine side.

The BlackBerry Bold 9700 offers more than cosmetic changes, however. The smartphone is equipped with a next-generation 624MHz processor and has double the Flash memory at 256MB (expandable up to 32GB via the microSD slot). Like the recently announced BlackBerry Storm 2, the Bold will run BlackBerry OS 5.0, which brings such improvements as threaded text messaging and a faster browser and BlackBerry Maps application. The camera has also been upgraded from 2 megapixels to 3.2 megapixels.

The Bold 9700 is a quad-band GSM phone that also integrated Wi-Fi with UMA support, Bluetooth, GPS/A-GPS, and 3G support (UMTS/HSDPA 800/850/1900/2100; UMTS/HSDPA 900/1700/2100). Given the supported bands, we know you're already thinking about possible carriers and availability, so here's the dish.

RIM expects the BlackBerry Bold 9700 to be available from carriers worldwide starting in November, including AT&T and T-Mobile. AT&T said the smartphone will ship in the coming weeks for $199.99 with a two-year contract and after a mail-in rebate. T-Mobile's version will also cost $199.99 with a two-year service agreement and be available in time for the holidays; and yes, the Bold 9700 will support Wi-Fi calling. We hope we'll get review units soon, so we can let you know whether it'll make a nice little holiday treat or not.

The following products mentioned are available.

On Sale Now: $99.99 - $479.99
View the latest prices for RIM BlackBerry Bold 9700 (AT&T)

On Sale Now: $199.99
View the latest prices for RIM BlackBerry Bold 9700 (T-Mobile)

Bonnie Cha is a senior editor for CNET, covering smartphones and GPS. When she's not testing the latest gadgets, you can find her chasing after her crazy lab or surfing in the chilly waters of Northern California. E-mail Bonnie.
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by blessedbuy October 21, 2009 5:36 AM PDT
Great looking phone and features. Any chance of it being offered by Verizon?
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by esierra1 October 21, 2009 11:46 AM PDT
It seems like a nice phone, no the answer is propably... No :-D
by jtstockton October 21, 2009 6:00 AM PDT
Official AT&T Press Release:
http://www.att.com/gen/press-room?pid=4800&cdvn=news&newsarticleid=27289
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by Mr. Dee October 21, 2009 7:30 AM PDT
My brother recently got the old version from his Company for work purposes the other day. I like it, but the keys are hard to type on. The keys on the 9700 looks more thumb ready.
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by carbine68 October 21, 2009 8:19 AM PDT
I am so sick of blackberry creating the same device over and over again. Is it me or should they just make one great phone that does what all of them do?
Reply to this comment
by Paul_Christie October 21, 2009 11:09 AM PDT
@carbine68
"I am so sick of blackberry creating the same device over and over again"

Sir, I hope you don't have an iPhone. If you do, then you've contradicted your own statement.
by iroq321 October 21, 2009 2:26 PM PDT
if it ain't broke, don't fix it!
by esierra1 October 21, 2009 5:06 PM PDT
Different carriers, different users, different models. I don't see what the big deal is... Maybe Apple should only make one computer model, the 1Mac, how does that sound?
by carbine68 October 22, 2009 10:03 AM PDT
No i don't own an iphone, they all look the same and do the same thing but yet the new phone that just came out is two to three hundred bucks more expensive than the last. I thing this rings true for the whole industry. Something needs to change, technology is draining to keep up with, but it is exciting. So yeah, business is business at the end of the day and people have to make money.
by make_or_break October 23, 2009 10:44 AM PDT
@carbine68,
Why shouldn't RIM do what they're doing? Every, and I mean EVERY, company that markets to consumers makes updates and upgrades to their product line, whether it's cell phones or automobiles or just about anything in between. Plus product planners don't have crystal balls; they don't always know what features are 'must haves' and, in order to keep costs reasonable, leave features and/or functions off their initial releases. Just because someone is an early adopter doesn't mean that they MUST have the latest and greatest with each refresh of a given product, whether it's an iPhone or BlackBerry. It's only the fanboys that are stupid enough to be willing to want to trap themselves in this cycle; everyone else just buys one, enjoys it for what it is and lives with it until the mandatory contract expires.
by tw1975 October 21, 2009 8:59 AM PDT
4 hours later ya'll finally post something else??? Come on people, it's still a workday!!!!!

: |
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by jiaroe October 21, 2009 11:36 AM PDT
does anyone know if the 5.0 software will be available for the old Bold (ATT 9000) ?
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by iroq321 October 21, 2009 2:26 PM PDT
i am hoping that with the release of this and the storm2, both of which are running 5.0, relase of 5.0 will soon follow for all other devices such as bold, tour, curve, etc.
by jakemochas October 21, 2009 5:16 PM PDT
i am running it just google it... its leaked everywhere... its 3x faster than 4.6 or .7 and it doesn't crash... the UI is a little sloppy and unfinished but its like the windows 7 of blackberry
by Galen20K October 21, 2009 7:15 PM PDT
I love Android but I also Love Blackberry and love UMA even MORE than either one of them combined. This is definitely a Possibility, I just hope the browser isn't Whack.
Reply to this comment
by bet2007 October 22, 2009 8:46 AM PDT
That phone looks identical to the Tour. It has the same camera as the tour, all of the buttons and screen look like the tour. The tour is running 4.1 so thats different, but other than that. Its a Tour.
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