All designs (excluding screen images) are the sole property of and are copyrighted to Guy Bridges of DigitalHomeBoy.ca. Mentions and usages of actual companies, company logos, and products have been used respectively for the single purpose of conceptual design. I am in no way endorsed, sponsored, affiliated with or otherwise authorised by Research In Motion Ltd. (RIM) or with any of the companies mentioned throughout.
THIS IS A CONCEPT DESIGN. THIS IS NOT A REAL PHONE!
Please read the full description before commenting here or on Twitter @digitalhomeboy
Thanks for checking out the BlackBerry TK Discovery {concept}.This is Love! ^DHB
Say hello to the BlackBerry TK Discovery. Re.Discover the Smartphone. A BlackBerry 10 Dream Concept.
When thinking BlackBerry today there is only one thing that comes to mind – well for me anyways – BlackBerry 10, from device to it’s new OS. What will both look like already? During BlackBerry World and Jam in early May this year attendees and blog reading followers like myself got to see snippets of a dev-stage OS10 to come. Seemingly still in its early stages it did give us a glimpse to the direction RIM is heading and I must say it is a great direction indeed. Since the World and Jam event numerous leaked documents have appeared and while being taken with a grain of salt it does go on to tell us somewhat more of what to possibly expect.
Like the millions watching from a far, I’m still wondering what the heck is RIM going to put out to the crowding competitive market. Will it look good and work like we all want it to? Rather than sit on my butt, speculate, and wonder, I decided to take another approach to a BlackBerry 10 mobile concept. From previews, samples, and leaks I have come up with my own version of the BlackBerry OS10 fitted on my latest TK design series, the TK Discovery.
Despite already knowing to date that the device design and manufacturing have been completed it doesn’t mean that designers or dreamers like myself can’t dream a little and put forth our visual thoughts. Who knows, maybe it may influence or be accepted in the near future and RIM just turns around and hires me! (fingers crossed)
Interesting article (as always) from Al Sacco (@ASacco) from CIO – Mobile WorkHorse “If Only RIM’s New BlackBerrys Looked Like This…” Click here - Definitely worth reading!
While I have fancied and sported a number of devices from BlackBerry to others I have never quite been satisfied with a mobile and its experience until getting the BlackBerry Bold 9900. Though its 2.8″ screen felt like a setback to the competing mobile space its keyboard had me at hello. To answer this in April I announced the design of the BlackBerry TK Victory (also known as TK2 Victory) {concept} with a sizable 3.5″ screen that kept the amazing keyboard of the 9900. I brought the height to 119mm and kept the same width of 66mm. With the mobile market moving at its rapid pace a 3.5″ screen with keyboard will have its limitations in a demanding and competitive market and to the progress of a great OS experience as well as to application development. Apple’s iPhone has been sporting the 3.5″ screen since ’07, but they too have been rumoured to have increased to a 4″ screen to answer to competition.
So in response to a case where bigger might be better, I decided to design a full touchscreen device that uses the same innovation found in the BlackBerry PlayBook. The PlayBook is awesome, especially its size, but every which way I tried it just does not fit in my pants pocket. I wanted to bring that kind of experience and more with me all the time (and please don’t comment that I could do so with the BlackBerry 10 Dev Alpha).
Using the same gesturing innovation brought a lot to the table on a whole. This meant a new approach to interacting and navigation. This meant that we could have a device with no front-facing buttons that would receive the wear and tear or touch-sensitive keys (haptic) that are so sensitive to the touch. This meant that when we wipe the surface there won’t be dirt trapping grooves. This means the end of pocket and butt dialling.
On deciding a size that would appeal to the many I measured 131mm to be the ideal height with the favoured 66mm width that houses a 4.3″ curved Corning Gorilla Glass 2 screen bringing a beautiful smooth aesthetic look and hold while giving the whole edge-to-edge display experience. With a depth of 9.1mm it’s thin, but not as thin to the un-welcomed 8.5mm approach of the TK Victory.
Included on the TK Discovery, a single Power/Lock button located top center with the bottom housing the dual speakers, 3.5 jack, the microUSB and microHDMI port with the right side home to the Volume. The removal of the Play/Pause button was removed as the majority of interaction would be done on the screen.
The “Wonder Material” as Graphene has been nicked-named is a composite of Graphite with properties being applied to a number of applications from water proofing (superhydropolic), rust protection, silicon replacement, batteries from electrical cars to ships back down to a small radios to even Nuclear Power (Nuclear Power has positive side to it). While Graphene continues it’s studies under the microscope in China to Manchester I believe it could play a major role in our daily lives from the products we rely on to get us through the day. To learn more about Graphene, here’s the Wiki on it!
Interestingly enough, the tech blog Engadget has been on top of it to some degree. Here’s some interesting articles: Engadget – Graphene
Already knowing that the homescreen will have the similar home tiles it didn’t make too much sense to attempt to change it as it looks great and works for the most part. I did however make the tiles smaller for widget add-ons. I didn’t see the need to have four large tiles so making it smaller could make room for two more with the widgets going to another screen.
Through our brief sampled views I have heard many ask how will users access the rest of the apps. I couldn’t imagine all apps having a tile so with the elimination of buttons and haptic keys I think a virtual control bar with soft keys works best. Like the PlayBook, when in an app, you would slide-up from the bottom to minimise and access other applications. As with the same form of interaction in doing so brings immediate access to the control bar. Call access is always present with the BB Menu icon now accessing Applications, with the 6 square icon giving you access to 12 customisable Convenience applications.
In maturing the look for the better I have only made some minor changes. All Accounts function brings all accounts to be viewed under one window. Selecting an account gives a user better control and filtering options to see messages from a particular account rather than opening up Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn for an example to see all your messages independently. To the bottom the bar presents the most common used mail functions and changes accordingly to what account you are in. So in using Twitter for an example, the bar would change to Compose, Reply, Reply All, Retweet, and Quote Tweet with Menu options that will allow more. The Cascades flow didn’t makes sense to change as it is a highly anticipated built-in feature I am eager to [ab]use.
If you are guessing who those names are I’ll make it easy for you. Here’s the Wiki on them!
Wikipedia
| Dieter Rams | James Dyson |
|---|---|
| Thorsten Heins | Jacob Jensen |
| Neil Poulton | Jonathan Ive |
| Naoto Fukasawa | Marcel Wanders |
| Sydney Jay Mead | Steve Jobs |
BlackBerry Messenger or BBM…some of us swear by it because it it just that good. Correction – it’s awesome! In the revamped look it continues on the darker tone look again giving it a matured and clean feel. Some leaked reports also indicated the darker tone may save battery, I personally just prefer the dark look. It now includes Video Chat!
[Text : Even the amateur will feel like a professional. Combining the 12-megapixel resolution and a lens with a f/2.1 aperture will mean the world to you when those moments are captured. Featuring a custom-fitted crystal optics lends with a 5x zoom, an illuminating LED flash sensor, auto-focus, stabilisation + motion blur, colour correction, focus detection, and the new Scalados Timeline lens that let's you take control.]
After thought…
On a side note: it sucks that John A again beat me to posting a render/concept of BlackBerry 10. You will notice some similarities as we both are clearly on the same creative wavelength to our design, wants, and needs. I’d say he did a bang up job except I will disagree on those hard edges. Though I do fancy the military vibe it gives off! Motorola who? Check out the original post from CrackBerry
What is Graphene? Click here for some 101
In short, Graphene is an allotrope of carbon. It is one atom thick and forms a densely packed two-dimensional honeycomb look – think of chicken wire mesh, at the atomic level. Graphene is essentially an isolated plane of graphite and many sheets of graphene stacked together form crystalline or flake graphite. Interestingly, if you stack 3 million sheets of graphene on top of each other it would yield a crystal of graphite only 1 millimeter thick. Graphene is ~200 times stronger than steel – so much so that a sheet of graphene as thin as plastic wrap could hold up an elephant.
Along with its powerful state of flexibility, strength, and durability the Graphene application also wields with it superhydropolic water resistance properties. A tight fixture on build not only avoids that mischievous and unwanted pocket-lint, but full protection from dust and the immersion of water from 15cm to 1m making this BlackBerry the first IP-67 certified. (click here for the IP chart).
On a general note, a touch screen based phone will look like many as only so much can be done and it will be said that it looks like this and that mobile (i.e. iPhone, go ahead…I’m prepared for the comments).
Availability
| Announced | July 2012 |
| Status | Coming soon in the near future |
| Features Overview |
| • World Phone • Dual-band GSM/CDMA | HSDPA & HSUPA | LTE | Network Support • Phone | Video Calling • Voice Dial | Voice Memo • Email | BBM | Organiser (Calendar, Memo, Task) • Predictive text input | Text messaging | Instant messaging • Browser | Adobe Flash 10.X support (Update: Flash 11.X+) | HTML 5 • Weather application integration • Social Networking integration • BlackBerry App World | Google Play integration • Front-facing and Rear cameras | Skype • HD Cameras & HD Video recording • Bluetooth v4.0 • Wi-Fi 802.11g/n | Wi-Fi 802.11ac | Wi-Fi Media controller • BlackBerry Wireless Media Server integration • Hotspot Notification • DLNA Certified® with auto-synchronisation • Tethered modem support • GPS with A-GPS Support • Digital compass with GPS software calibration • NFC Built-in | ISIS software | IrisAccess Platform | HID Global software • e-Wallet functionality • Media: Pictures | Music Player | Video Player • Swipe navigational control • Universal Search functionality • Security and encryption software government certified • Remote locate/lock/wipe with BlackBerry Protect • Passcode protection • 2x Proximity sensor for auto turn-off • Single key device Lock/Power • 32GB Samsung Flash memory with sharing & partitioning encryption • Expandable memory (Up to 64GB microSDHC) • Memory Management Software built-in |
Dimensions & Weight
| Length | 5.15 in /131 mm |
| Width | 2.60 in / 66 mm |
| Depth | 0.36 in / 9.1 mm |
| Weight | 4.23 oz / 120 grams (with battery) |
Wireless Networks & Data
| 2G Network | GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 CDMA 800 / 1900 |
|
| 3G Network | HSDPA 850 / 900 / 1900 / 2100 HSPDA 900 / 2100 CDMA2000. 1xEV-DO |
|
| 4G Network | LTE 800 / 1800 / 2600 | |
| GPRS | Class 33 | |
| EDGE | Class 33 | |
| Speed | HSDPA, 45 Mbps; HSUPA, 8 Mbps | |
| WLAN | Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n Wi-Fi Direct 802.11ac 5GHz dual-band 802.11n/ac Wi-Fi Wi-Fi Calling (Carrier-dependent) Wi-Fi (Auto-Spot) Hotspot + Notification Alert Wi-Fi Media controller WPA / WPA2 Personal and Enterprise DLNA Certified® Cisco CCX certified Support for UMA (Carrier-dependent) |
|
| Bluetooth | Bluetooth® v4.1 + HS (AMP full support) Bluetooth® Stereo Audio (A2DP/AVCRP), DUN Mono/Stereo Headset, Hands free, Phone Book Access Profile (PBAP) and Serial Port Profile |
Operating System
| Version | BlackBerry 10 |
| Features | New homescreen changes, tile application access, widgets, multiple screens, vertical scrolling with elastic effect, control bar, swipe interactivity from top, sides, and bottom, new layout, smarter UI, simpler UX, cascade animations, swipe menus, more user customisations, virtual and programmable keys, tighter application integration, memory management |
CPU
| Series | Tegra 3 (Kal-El) Kal-El series |
| Processor | NVIDIA Tegra 3 Quad-core 2.2GHz Kal-El ARM Cortex MPCore with vSMP |
| Features | 230 GPU with hyper-graphics acceleration for UI, browsers, games and navigation 26 nm HPM with asynchronous symmetric multiprocessing (aSMP) to run each CPU core at its own independent clock and voltage (based on workload) Integrated Icera Multi-mode quad-core baseband chipset with full support for 4G/3G WWAN interfaces, including LTE, CDMA, GSM and UMTS Integrated Connectivity with WLAN, GPS, Bluetooth 5x CPU Performance 80% Lower power consumption |
Display
| Type | Corning® Gorilla® Glass 2 TFT Capacitive touchscreen LCD, 16M colours |
| Size | 4.3″ High-resolution HQVGA 1280 x 720 pixels (~360 ppi pixel density) |
| Features | Nanosys LED backlighting enhancement, oleophobic coating, multi-touch input method |
| Sensors | Proximity sensor for auto turn-off Accelerometer with lock three-axis Gyro compass barometer |
| Message Alerts | Within notifications bar, scalable message window live on screen, font size & choice (user selectable) |
Data Input, Dedicated & Navigation
| Input | Corning® Lotus® Glass TFT Capacitive touchscreen LCD Volume/Rocker keys Lock/Power Key |
| Lock | Lock: Press once to lock/sleep |
| Power | Power: Press and hold for 2 sec. a) Restart b) Power Off c) Full Power Off d) Airplane Mode |
| Features | Intuitive long and short menus options Swipe Select navigational control Customisable home navigation control Multiple screens custimisation option Software-based Phone key Software-based Convenience key |
Notifications & Ringtones
| LED | Front: 2 LED indicators (customisable) Rear: BlackBerry logo: Illuminates when face down |
| Alert types | Vibrate, tone; MP3, WAV ringtones |
| Profile | Profile Setting Notifications (customisable) 50 Pre-loaded business and 50 themed Polyphonic ringtones Audio format for ringtones: MIDI, MP3, M4A, WMA, AMR-NB, AAC-LC/AAC+/eAAC+ |
Sound: Voice Input & Output
| Input | Active noise cancellation with dedicated microphone Integrated Hands-free Speakerphone Hands-free headset capable Bluetooth headset capable Wi-fi Calling Support (Carrier-dependent) |
| Output | Dual speaker (relocated to the side of device) Standard 3.5mm stereo headset capable |
| Misc | Rating for hearing aid: M3/T3 |
Media PlayerFormat Support
| Audio Support | MIDI, MP3, M4A, WMA, AMR-NB, AAC-LC/AAC+/eAAC+ |
| Video Support | MPEG4 Part 2 Simple Profile (MP4), H.263, AVI, MOV, WMV, 3Gp |
Camera & Video Recording
| Primary | 12 MP (4000 x 3000 pixels), Carl Zeiss Crystal optics, Optical sensor, autofocus, dual LED Xenon Illuminating flash (user configurable to one) |
| Secondary | Camera 1: 8 MP (3264×2448 pixels – Options to change to 3 & 5 MP), Carl Zeiss optics, autofocus Camera 2: Measures distance and ambiance |
| Features | (Primary) 1.2” sensor size, ND filter, up to 5x loseless digital zoom, autofocus, touch-select focus face and smile detection, image stabilisation + motion blur reduction, colour correction, Timeline lens |
| Video | Primary: 1080p HD @30fps, 5x loseless digital zoom, dual LED Xenon light, video stabilization, simultaneous HD video and image recording Secondary: 720p QVGA@24fps video recording |
Battery
| Battery | Standard battery, 1950 mAh Lithium-Ion |
| Stand-by | ~372 h (2G) / Up to 610 h (3G) |
| Talk time | ~10 h (2G) / Up to 8 h 30 min (3G) |
| Music playback | Up to 45 hours (continuous) |
| SAR US | 0.57 W/kg (head), 0.86 W/kg (body) |
| SAR EU | 0.37 W/kg (head), 0.87 W/kg (body) |
Credits:
Research in Motion – BlackBerry name and logo
Rogers – Rogers Wireless Canada (name of carrier)
DC – Superman and Batman logo and character names Lois Lane and Smallville
Scalado
Ashley Greene photos
RapidBerry.net
Evernote
Wallpapers: Credit to the respective creatives Source: CrispMeMag











There was some error an some comments were accidentally erased. Here are the comments I recovered.
From: Liew fook Chuan
very perfect smart phone
From: Marcin
I want this ! Impressive, perfect!
From: Bart Schuck
Just a humble question: I don’t understand what drives these concept designs. I’ve been reading concept-phones.com for years now. Is there really a future development of these? Are designers commissioned by manufacturers to develop these? Or are they pipe dreams of someone that has wonderful artistic talent but there really is no future for these? If concept designers are not commissioned, do they at least send their ideas to the respective manufacturers? It just seems like a lot of work if it will never be more than just an idea.
From: DigitalHomeBoy in response to Bart Schuck
Hey Bart,
Thanks for writing in! (and of course checking out the TK Discovery)
Great question though I will speak for myself and not the community. For me it would be passion. I have a passion for design in products and fashion (updating the site to reflect some work). I have had plenty of phones and there has always been this seemingly lack of attention to detail. For the example: The BlackBerry Bold 9900 is great, but the microUSB is on the side making it difficult to charge and talk, it has a 2.8″ screen, and it is spacious above the screen and below the keyboard. I have taken it apart and such space is wasted meaning a 3.0″ screen could have been with the relocation of the microUSB port! For fashion, guys clothing is boring for the most part. I could never find a jacket that has wow’d me so I have set out to design my own (seems realistic enough). It could however be the conservative nature of Canadian retailers.
Is there a future for these concepts? I would say yes. Innovative minds alike are always looking to stretch the normality of what is readily available today. If we limit our imaginations to believing that there is nothing more past the horizon there will be nothing to strive for. If we look only for today then we can’t prepare for tomorrow. I personally am not commissioned, but I have been told that people at RIM have seen my concepts. The TK Victory alone had 347K hits globally in 4 days so I’m pretty sure something may come of that in the near future. Hell, it’s apparently being sold online by a number of fraudulent sites from Indonesia, Malaysia, China, to the UAE. If my concept designs inspire others to put forth their visual thoughts that is all the better. I would consider it a small dent in the world.
Maybe some are pipe dreams as you call it maybe some are seen more than that to the designer(s). My concepts can be seen as such, however I don’t just see them as dreams as they are designed in realistic manner and not so far ahead in a Blade Runner universe, but that these are really simple designs that could really be produced (aside from under development materials like Graphene). I’m hoping (with fingers crossed) that RIM reaches out and says “Hey, come aboard” or something to that effect. Why RIM? The BlackBerry in general has given me the best overall experience and I know after this transition period RIM will shine again.
Sure it really is a lot of work. I did cardboard cutouts and clay models for both the TK Victory and TK Discovery just to determine suitable measurements and overall design. I have two full sketchbooks of rough sketches that when flipped through one would see the progressive layering of designs to completion. If it stays as an idea no doubt the feeling sucks, but I’m sure with some positive thinking in place one design might just slip through the crack!
You are to be commended on your design. I saw some of the comments and feedback on CB. The doubters really seem to lack some imagination. Hopefully RIM will see your passion and bring you on board, even as just a consultant. Keep up the great work.
Ahhh, BruvvaPete, I was hoping you would reach out and comment on the website! I have to say a huge thank you to you for warding off those unimaginative commenters. If major decisions on the mobile front where left to some of those people we’d be still be using Motorola’s MicroTAC 650 and that’s a big no thank you from me, lol. I do all this to get RIM’s attention, but alas I’m nothing more than a considered fanboy. I would love to help give them (RIM) direction on spicing up some sexiness for their devices. I’ll keep my fingers crossed. Thanks again for writing in it’s really appreciated!
admins http://www.digitalhomeboy.ca how much it costs to create such a site as your?
[LINK REMOVED]
Most beautiful concepts I’ve ever seen! SUPER!!!!
Hey Seimur, thanks a lot for the great comment and checking out the concept. I have been told it looks very close to what the next BlackBerry will look like. I seemed to have missed one minor detail.
Great post.
Sweet. Now let’s get the word out to RIM and make this a reality. I’m not looking for a payoff, I just want the phone I designed more badly than anyone here.
Hi, i believe that i saw you visited my weblog thus i got here to return the prefer?.I’m attempting to in finding issues to enhance my site!I suppose its ok to make use of a few of your ideas!!
love your work.blackberry should take you seriously.i would love to startout with such talent,i am not pulling your leg.i am not yet out of the woodworks yet but pleeeaaassse do reply in the email so as to know more of my project.i do not know if you are an apple hater but if you are this is for you.
Great concepts.. I have never been a BB fan, having used Android (Samsung Galaxy, HTC Dezire HD in past) & Bada (have Wave 3 at present). I’d definitely buy this as my first BB if RIM decides to go ahead… I’m a fan already…. Cheers!!!
Thanks for writing in. This is somewhat the direction I was hoping for RIM to go in, but recent leaked photos say that it may look like they have taken a safer route…maybe too safe in terms of a fresh design as I was truly hoping for. If RIM said, “hey can we use this design or parts of”, I would be surely for it. (Just as long as they ask first.) I have another design coming out if you are a qwerty fan, the TK Justice.
What do you think of the latest L series digitalhomeboy? Do you think that’s the final hardware? I hope not. I was hoping it would be along the lines of your design…
Thanks so much for reaching out. Sometimes I wonder if the concepts I have done have fallen to blind eyes so it’s always great to hear back from the community.
I have no insider knowledge and what I say here remains is of my words from what I have seen and followed from RIM.
The L-Series leaked device doesn’t look to be the most aesthetically pleasing, but it is a nice change from the typical BlackBerry design we have come to know. The focus seems to be in the OS and not so much the hardware. The OS is what will dictate their success with the market and future market and the handset could always see new iteration’s. I personally have said and truly believe that function and beauty should have the same ending result within the same product so I was disappointed that the hardware team at RIM didn’t come up with something that to say the least screamed fashionably acceptable.
This may very well be the final hardware. I would be surprised if RIM put a sizable effort to create a false device body to hand out to carriers for testing after investing so much into creating Dev Alpha units A&B.
If it is the final device so be it. Do I wish I was brought on to help design the next BlackBerry 10? Hell Yeah, but who knows what RIM has up their sleeves so I won’t rule them out on current decisions being made.