If you were doing business or wanted to seem cool in 2011, you had a BlackBerry. There was just something effortlessly cool about them in the same way that Walkmans, GameBoys and iPods hold nostalgia today.
No. In 2011, the cool thing to have was an iPhone.
Yes. According to my experience in my small corner of the world, around 2010, the cool people had iPhones, but when you wanted to do serious business, you still used a BlackBerry. Unfortunately, some easily-influenced executives often would prioritize looking cool and just let their I.T department figure out how they can get their work done, even though Apple had nothing that could compare to the BlackBerry Enterprise Server (BES).
On top of that, most consumers and gullible executives didn't see the hidden benefits of BES, because with Research In Motion's (RIM) push to enter the consumer market, all the marketing material out at the time focused on the comparatively impotent consumer offering, BlackBerry Internet Service (BIS), instead.
Trying to survive in the narrow-margins of the consumer market killed RIM. In 2011, you would get teased for having a BlackBerry if you didn't know how to stand up for yourself and articulate how no other mobile device had the level of magic* making everything work in the back end.
* BES ran on a dozen JAVA services which required arcane magic to work.
Keyboards exist. And computers with built-in keyboards. And phones. And phones with buttons on them. And mobile computers with keyboards on them. Keyboard on a phone? Totally new invention, let's patent it.
Entering text on a phone wasn't new. Doing it with thumbs wasn't new. Phones that were computers weren't new. But using specifically a qwerty keyboard on a phone, yes, that was novel.
I'm surprised there's a patent for the general concept which seems pretty obvious (as it did at the time) but I would've expected multiple patents involving the exact design and manufacturing process that made it practical.
My friend had a phone that turned landscape to use a built-in kbd in 2005 or so. I couldn't understand the appeal at the time. But I also didn't buy into sms before having a qwerty kbd on the first iPhone, so what did I know.
Yeah there is at the moment only unihertz with android11
Or a kickstarter is coming this/next month, mecha comet. But its a mobile linux pc, which has somehow the form factor of a mobile....
I will stick with a hardware keyboard phone for my life... I am old, and i am grumpy :)