A US government agency will give Research in Motion’s new smartphone a second look after announcing last month it was dumping the BlackBerry and supplying its workforce with iPhones instead.
Waterloo, Ontario-based RIM said in a statement the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency would test-run the new BlackBerry 10 smartphones in early 2013.
The agency “has been a valued BlackBerry customer for years, and our commitment to Government agencies has influenced the development of the BlackBerry 10 platform,” RIM Senior Vice-President, Scott Totzke, said in a statement.
“Along with providing workers with secure access to behind-the-firewall confidential information, BlackBerry 10 can help organisations fully leverage the potential of mobile technology to offer new services, improve service delivery and increase organisational productivity.”
RIM has been traditionally dominant in US government agencies largely due to its enhanced security, but has been losing ground to Apple and to smartphones using the Google-backed Android system with new safeguards.
The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency was just the latest in a string of big Government clients that switched to competitors’ phones.
Earlier this year, the Pentagon ended its exclusive deal with RIM to supply its vast workforce with BlackBerry smartphones.
The National Transportation Safety Board announced in November it was also turning to the iPhone 5.
RIM is set to unveil its new BlackBerry 10 smartphones, aimed at better competing with Apple and others, on January 30.