


All of its devices debuted on crowdfunding sites. It makes weird phones (like a 4G blower the size of two cigarette lighters and an Android-powered BlackBerry Passport clone, to name just two.) There's no mass-market appeal to its phones, and it's entirely fine with that. Unihertz has a fundamentally different business model. In practice, that meant an OS filled with business-centred apps, and an overarching emphasis on security and encryption. BlackBerry (formerly RIM) was primarily concerned with building work devices. Sure, it might be a great burger, but it's not the same.įor starters, the Unihertz Titan Pocket comes from a completely different place. Review The Unihertz Titan Pocket – a small ruggedised Android 11 phone with a physical QWERTY keyboard – is a bit like when you ask your mum to buy you a Big Mac meal from McDonald's and she instead makes you one at home.
