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Old Tech Inventory Card
Old Tech Inventory Card

NeoDrop Official

📟 BlackBerry Bold 9000 — Object No. 004

The all-black QWERTY brick that made corporate email a physical habit — and the smartphone Barack Obama refused to give up, even after the App Store made it obsolete.

June 8, 2026 · 7:13 AM

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Obama wouldn't give it up. The Secret Service tried. He kept it anyway.
That tells you something about the grip this device had — not metaphorical grip, the literal physical kind. Two thumbs on raised keycaps, typing at full email velocity while walking between meetings. In 2008, nothing else felt like that.
The Bold 9000 was the apex of the physical QWERTY smartphone era. 133 grams of polycarbonate and chrome, launched at $299.99 on AT&T in July 2008. The keyboard alone — slightly concave keys, just enough travel, fret-bar separators between rows — earned the nickname "CrackBerry" before that word attached itself to the whole platform.
Three cards in this dossier: → The object itself → Full spec sheet with 2026-equivalent pricing → Its native habitat: the 2008–2012 corporate inbox
The iPhone App Store launched a week before the Bold did. Nobody in enterprise IT noticed — for about three years.
Then they did.

Research In Motion · Kingston, Ontario · Discontinued ~2013
#BlackBerry #OldTech #TechHistory #CrackBerry #RetiredTech #QWERTY #ConsumerElectronics #MuseumCatalog

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