The dominant market share Android gained in the smart phone market, along with Apple iOS the most profitable, puts a squeeze on companies like BlackBerry (BBRY) and Microsoft (MSFT). While Microsoft seems to have given up on its Windows Phone 10, instead relying on sales of Office365 on mobile, BlackBerry is also embracing software over hardware. This positions DTEK60 in an awkward spot.DTEK60 is a fully-featured, secure, Android device that targets the higher tier mainstream market. DTEK50, a lower specification model, drew 50 times fewer mentions than DTEK60. That signals BlackBerry is on the right track.Source: https://www.tickertags.comPriced at just USD $499, the phone has a fingerprint sensor, a 3000 mAh battery, and support for extSD, which expands storage to up to 2TB on top of the 32GB. Android fans get the following: HUB (non-DTEK phones must pay a monthly subscriptionBlackBerry keyboard including swipe-to-delete, word flickingSecure bootloaderMonthly security updates, on average, and support for Nugget Android OSBlackBerry fans are still waiting for BBOS 10.3.3, which is just getting the security certifications before release. If they switch, they get higher security than other Androids with the DTEK60.BlackBerry is introducing the device as a bundle by including what consumers buy anyway: a rapid charger stand and a case. In a week or two, the bundling promo ends and consumers must pay the regular price.Shares of BlackBerry continue to underperform. The company will need to report decent DTEK50 sales, announce a successor to the BB Passport, the Android PRIV, and release a fourth keyboard-based Android. If that happens, the stock will bounce back.