Z10 on AT&T
– via Bloomberg –.
According to two sources familiar with th plan, the BlackBerry Z10 will launch via AT&T on March 22nd. That is exactly one week after the launch date mentioned in the previous rumor. That speculation had AT&T as the first carrier in the country to launch the first BlackBerry 10 device. With this new date, we are unsure if AT&T or T-Mobile will get the honor of debuting the device in the U.S. Last month, T-Mobile said that because the device was more stable than expected, it could launch the model two weeks earlier than first thought which signified a release around the middle of this month. The carrier had earlier stated that it wanted to be the mobile operator to first bring the phone to the market in the U.S.
The all-touch BlackBerry Z10 is now available in 21 countries with none of them as important as the United States where the Canadian manufacturer has traditionally been able to generate 20% of its sales. While there is a question about just how strong sales of the device have been, there should be no doubt how the Z10 does in the U.S. After both AT&T and T-Mobile launch the BlackBerry Z10, Verizon will release the phone at the end of the month. There is some speculation that Big Red will be offering an exclusive version of the phone in white.
Sprint will not be offering the BlackBerry Z10, but will offer the QWERTY keyboard equipped BlackBerry Q10 which should come to the U.S. in May or June. The three other stateside carriers will also offer the Q10, which is a more traditional looking ‘Berry with that fantastic physical keyboard. The reason for the delay in the launch of the BlackBerry Z10 in the U.S. has to do with the more stringent testing requirements that U.S. carriers have.


Saturday March 9th
What a crazy time in my life. As a Junior in High-School I never imagined being in recording studios, working with some of the DJ’s and artists that I was fortunate enough to work with so early on in my “career.” I never thought I’d be getting paid to come into a club and play vinyl. I was only making $250/night, but at 3 nights each week at 16/17 years old? I was in heaven! I left my retail job to focus on DJ’ing and building a name for myself.
In 2000 I was flying high! I linked up with great people in the music industry: Harve Pierre (Bad Boy), Rene Mclean (RPM), Hen-Roc (Bad Boy), Al Lao (Sony), Ed Banacia (Sony), Jeff Diones (Tommy Boy), Rich aka DJ Riddler (MCA (yeah MCA)), Fred Tessier (Sony), Dave Albertson (MCA), Jimmy Parilla (aka Borcua Jimmmy at RCA), Shawn Prez (pretty sure Prez was at Arista at the time)… but my biggest help came from John Rosenfelder (Def Jam) & Nathan Sheard (Epic) who basically introduced my to EVERYONE that I needed to know. All I knew about “servicing” was from DJ AP. I said sh** record companies give you vinyl before it goes in stores to play? By change Harve Pierre walked into 1 of my club nights and told me to play the acetate pressing of “Black Rob Whoa.” It all snowballed from there. Meetings at labels to pick up vinyl, invites to artist studio sessions, label dinners, concerts… Damn I was in Heaven.
With the help of my manager at the time: Nathan Sheard & DJ Irie vouching for me, I landed my biggest gig at the time… DJ’ing and MC’ing at the Nets games. By this time I was a “Tech.Nition,” had won awards from magazines, DJ conventions, and even got to do some cool things for tv. The club gigs were great and we were making a killing. I had a steady weekly radio show that aired on a few terrestrial stations and life was great. I shared my success with everyone that showed me love in the past… Game tickets, passes, credentials to come with me on the sound stage, whatever I could. I was still able to travel for HIN Shows, and club gigs around the country. I got whatever music I wanted, was awarded plaques for the music I broke at the games and on air. I was still in college so at that station (WRNU), I was the music director. I decided to start a record pool also to leverage my relationships with labels and hook up people that couldn’t get serviced at a cost that wasn’t ridiculous (c’mon seriously, $300/month for 50 pieces of vinyl that have 3 hits out of the lot?). I spoke at conventions, interviewed a few more times for local television shows, and decided to just push to graduate college (one of the smartest decisions).
At the end of the 2005 NBA season, my contract with the Nets had ended. On the morning of my graduation day, I got the notice that the team wouldn’t be exercising their option to renew (how’s that one for you? 1 of the biggest days of your life, and you lose one of your biggest contracts). Later on that summer I finished up my syndicated radio and then was let go from that as well. Since I wasn’t with the team anymore, we couldn’t charge the prices that I was asking at the clubs. Bookings started to drop off, and since I wasn’t with a team or on radio, those label reps that I thought were friends (not the ones that I shouted out), stopped calling. Losing radio back before the digital age was like being the black sheep of the family. You get bumped off of radio lists and the product doesn’t come as often or even at all… unless you call and email and harass just to get a damn record to play at a club…
I wanted to take my life and my career into my own hands.
– Via Yahoo Sports – 