Slashdot Mirror


Chinese Telecom Company Launches 'RedBerry'

Ubergrendle writes "The Globe&Mail is reporting that Chinese telecom company China Unicom Ltd. is launching a new wireless device unapologetically named 'Redberry'. This comes in the wake of an almost 2 year regulatory delay blocking the introduction of RIM's Blackberries to mainland China. Certainly this delay was convenient to China Unicom, if not deliberately staged to allow for domestic competition."

212 of 287 comments (clear)

  1. No Picture by Ecko7889 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    No picture in article (-1, Uninformative)

    --
    $sig$
    1. Re:No Picture by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 2, Informative

      I just thought the same and went hunting around.

      According to what I could find, the handset is the Daxian Cu928

      At least according to this older (November '05) article about the redberry.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:No Picture by Pieroxy · · Score: 2, Funny

      No picture in article

      One could guess it's like a Blackberry, but Red.

    3. Re:No Picture by kaptron · · Score: 3, Funny

      RedBerry 5 is aliiiive!

      Well that's how I pictured it, anyhow.

  2. Cheap competition by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    I guess the rise in wealth in China and India due to outsourcing is now going to bite us in the ass if this product is alot cheaper than the blackberry because its %100 made in China.

    1. Re:Cheap competition by horologium · · Score: 2, Insightful

      China was making products that were competitive with First-World versions long before the recent increases in the relative wealth of the inhabitants of Shanghai. (Almost none of which is attributed to outsourcing, the booming economy of China is a little more involved than that.) If a tiny proportion more of the people in India and China are now able to afford luxury items that increases the demand for such items for all manufacturers, including First-World ones. Manufacturers in China would be crazy to neglect the burgeoning local market for these sorts of toys, and if they can fulfil an international market for them, why wouldn't they?

    2. Re:Cheap competition by The+Snowman · · Score: 1

      I think it will bite us, the western world, in the ass. It is part of a larger scheme on the part of China not only to be relevant, but to be a dominant economic and technological force. They already know we rely on them for cheap manufacturing. They already know they fund the U.S.'s massive deficit. Where do you think we get money to make up the difference in our federal budget? A large portion comes from bonds sold to foreign nations, of which China is a big player. They are holding our leash. They can yank us around any time they want, but for now, we are more useful to them if we both cooperate.

      Notice that RedBerry is partially owned by the Chinese state, and while the article mentioned trademark cases, intellectual property "piracy" in China runs rampant under the nose of the government there. I doubt BlackBerry will have much of a choice but to accept this. Even when they enter the market there won't be much comptetition. Sure, they will sell some units and services, but really only so China can learn from it and make their RedBerry better. This is one piece of the puzzle. China does this with most products we export to them. Eventually they will catch up and even surpass our technological innovations, making the U.S. irrelevant and China the leader. It happened with Japan, it is sort of happening with Korea, and it will happen with China. The difference is, China is more isolationist. While all three of those countries use the U.S. for their own ends, China is the only one that, in the end, doesn't care what happens to us. Japan and Korea, at least, value us as a trade partner.

      This is just another part of the bleak side of globalization. Welcome to the new milennium!

      --
      24 beers in a case, 24 hours in a day. Coincidence? I think not!
    3. Re:Cheap competition by paeanblack · · Score: 1

      to be a dominant economic and technological force. They already know we rely on them for cheap manufacturing.

      Countries can't effectively be both. As the education and productivity of a workforce rises, so do labor costs. It won't be long until China is outsourcing labor-intensive manufacturing to the cheap labor pool of southeast Asia. After that, when Vietman/Laos/Cambodia/Malaysia/etc is no longer cost-effective, maybe Central Africa will get its chance at the 20th century.

    4. Re:Cheap competition by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

      As the education and productivity of a workforce rises, so do labor costs.

      Yes, because educated, competent valuable people eventually tire of working for peanuts. That has already happened to Japan, and to the U.S. decades earlier. I believe you are correct, but I see a problem in China's vast population. They have an pool of cheap labor that is nearly inexhaustible, and assuming that natural resources hold out long enough to bring the bulk of that population up to the standard of living enjoyed by the United States and Japan, we'll be in very big trouble. Hell, we're already in very big trouble.

      --
      The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
    5. Re:Cheap competition by WindBourne · · Score: 1

      The absolute worse part of this, is that the only way for the west to compete is to have access to cheap energy so that we can head towards automation. The problem is that for 20 years starting in 1980, we really did nothing. Worse, over the course of the last 5 years, we have made ourselves more dependant on oil and less on alternatives. Even the tax breaks and energy research over the last couple of years are pretty much geared towards Oil. That means, that we have to compete at one of the highest cost of oil and we have to depend on countries such as Iran, Venezuela, Nigeria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, and Russia. Iraq and S.A are both friendly to the USA, with Russia on a teeter-toter. If Bush decides to do something about Iran, our oil costs will jump. China has lock-in with Iran and Venezuela. Between China on one-side with a fake open market and Bush pushing USA to more oil, I suspect that we are in trouble much sooner, rather than later.

      --
      I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
    6. Re:Cheap competition by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Man! What cave are you living in?

      China has, and will continue to, keep labor costs artificially low because they are a dictatorship!

      Give my regards to Osama, dude!

    7. Re:Cheap competition by xTantrum · · Score: 1
      They have an pool of cheap labor that is nearly inexhaustible

      which is why the U.S. should relax their immigration policies.

      --
      $action = empty(PHP) ? backToC() : unset(PHP) ; "when the concrete cases are understood, the abstractions are readily
  3. Leave it to China by 42Penguins · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'm not sure whether to laugh or cry at the name "RedBerry." Does the "awakening dragon" suddenly have a sense of humor??
    It sounds like something a college kid would make up as a prank and try to sell.
    There's gotta be some marketing exec in Beijing reading the paper and going "ROFL" over this...

    1. Re:Leave it to China by Dr+Caleb · · Score: 1
      No, laugh. 'Redberries' are unripe 'Blackberries'.

      --
      "History doesn't repeat itself, but it does rhyme." Mark Twain
    2. Re:Leave it to China by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 3, Funny

      It sounds like something a college kid would make up as a prank and try to sell.

      Hmm, I think the kid would have called it Dingleberry...

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    3. Re:Leave it to China by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 5, Informative

      From one of the articles I read, the Redberry name is just a nickname for the "Uni Pushmail" software running on the phones.

      The first wave of Daxian CU-928 Pocket PC phones
      bundled with Uni PushMail software has started pouring into the market. Not
      to be outdone by the internationally renowned Blackberry, the Redberry, as
      Uni PushMail is nicknamed, flourishes in the Chinese telecom value-added
      service sector.


      see previous post for link to full article.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    4. Re:Leave it to China by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Where's the humor? "Red" appears in all kinds of Chinese product names, including Red Flag Linux. China may have become a capitalistic superpower, but officially, they're still a Marxist state.

    5. Re:Leave it to China by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 1

      >> Hmm, I think the kid would have called it Dingleberry...

      No, that's the Irish version.

    6. Re:Leave it to China by Firehed · · Score: 1, Funny

      Fine. I've got dibs on BlueBerry. Capitalization makes all the difference!

      --
      How are sites slashdotted when nobody reads TFAs?
    7. Re:Leave it to China by caffeination · · Score: 1
      No, they're just not ashamed in the least of this practice. More examples here, the best being Superheroic Man, Star Warrio, Best Food Burger, Polystation, and Cala Cala.

      Note that I distance myself from the overall racist theme of that blog.

    8. Re:Leave it to China by Flunitrazepam · · Score: 1

      RIM would take care of that

      --
      1) Your analysis is based on bad assumptions so your result is way off. 2) You're a sick bastard for fucking a horse.
    9. Re:Leave it to China by Da_Biz · · Score: 1

      I'm still waiting for RIM to sue China Unicom over the release of the CrankBerry, a name clearly infringing on far more ubiquitous name CrackBerry.

      Bring on the real trademark infringement fight!

    10. Re:Leave it to China by Amouth · · Score: 1

      "see previous post for link to full article."

      thats just cold man......

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    11. Re:Leave it to China by nuxx · · Score: 1

      Then they'd be infringing on my other domain.

      (Currently it is a catch-all wiki for a Honda audio system hardware hacking project which is just getting started.)

    12. Re:Leave it to China by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      My vote is for beriberi....

    13. Re:Leave it to China by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      Not really, I'd just posted a link to it a couple of minutes before within the comments of the same story.
      I don't like whoring links around at all the places at once.

      The comment I made is here.

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    14. Re:Leave it to China by PhraudulentOne · · Score: 1

      Or SchnozBerry

      These Schnozberries taste like schnozberries!

      --
      You create your own reality - Leave mine to me.
    15. Re:Leave it to China by Amouth · · Score: 1

      my bad....

      i jus figured you where doing a mean way of RTFA

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
  4. Why is blackberry so unique? by jimmyhat3939 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    What I don't understand is the pervasiveness of the Blackberry product for email. Email is an extremely simple application for a client to do, requiring just a simple TCP/IP stack and the ability to do either POP3 or IMAP. I believe that most cellphones now have some email capability built into them. Also, there exist plenty of WAP web-based email platforms out there.

    That leaves just the mini-keyboard interface as the big deal in the space. Personally, I'm not all that impressed by that as an input mechanism. But, if people like it, why isn't it copied all over the place? Is the concept of a little QWERTY keyboard seriously patented? Also, what about all those other ideas like having two letters assigned to each keyboard button and then having the phone sort it out based on what it thinks you're probably trying to type? Or something like a chording keyboard (though that would require learning)?

    So anyway, what's the big deal with Blackberry in particular. Why is this stuff so hard/interesting/compelling?

    --
    Free Conference Call -- No Spam, High Quality
    1. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Kadin2048 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I used to wonder the same thing. The closest I've ever heard to an explanation is that Blackberry's "product" is less the little handsets but the infrastructure that the cellular carriers use to provide email service. Apparently BB is very easy to deploy, and they have patents on some rather vague concepts regarding (don't quote me on this exactly) where the email is cached. I think the crux of it is that when a cell carrier deploys a BB system, they don't have to dick around with actually running the mailservers or anything else; it's a very holistic/'total package' type solution from their perspective.

      Now why somebody else doesn't just make a similar network and market it to the cell carriers, I'm not sure. That's where I'm betting the patents come in. But I think BB has sold itself to the cell carriers as being easier to implement and maintain than a roll-your-own solution, and their handsets and all-you-can-eat pricing (versus SMS) have gotten them a good userbase and the associated name recognition.

      If anyone can elaborate on exactly how the BB system works, I would be interested.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    2. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "Also, what about all those other ideas like having two letters assigned to each keyboard button and then having the phone sort it out based on what it thinks you're probably trying to type? Or something like a chording keyboard (though that would require learning)?"

      The only types of people I know with crackberries are attorneys, hedge fund managers and accountants that would have zero patience for learning a new way to type. They don't want to fiddle with T9 when most of the stuff they type is very specialized and wouldn't show up automatically. A mini-QWERTY kbd is quick and good enough for their needs.

    3. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by nvrrobx · · Score: 4, Informative

      From a users perspective, here's the reasons I was almost inseperable from my old RIM 950 (I'm pretty sure 950 was the model - this was prior to them becoming cell phones also):

      * Push email. I ran an agent on my Outlook at work and email appeared on my Blackberry, subject to the filtering rules I put in place. This is better than IMAP and POP3, I literally only saw emails I care about on the device. I'd much rather design my filters in an Outlook-like interface than on a small device.

      * The scroll wheel. It seems lame, but it's dead simple to navigate around the device with just your thumb.

      * Small, efficient keyboard. Writing email was simple. A lot easier than T9.

    4. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      The only types of people I know with crackberries are attorneys, hedge fund managers and accountants that would have zero patience for learning a new way to type.
      All of the management types where I work have corporate sponsored BBs so that everyone can keep in touch with them no matter where they are.
      IT is also perfectly willing to set up your personal BB so that the company can reach you anywhere as well. Of course, the company won't pay for grunt level BBs, but they will at least pay for the time for an IT guy to hook up Outlook to bug you at lunch.
      I can't see getting a BB myself. Why should I shell out money for a device and for communication costs, just so my company can bug me during lunch, evenings and weekends?

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    5. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Lord+Raze · · Score: 1
      Also, what about all those other ideas like having two letters assigned to each keyboard button and then having the phone sort it out based on what it thinks you're probably trying to type?

      I fix Blackberries for a living. The 7100 series already has that.

      --
      -- "Have you ever seen your own brain?"
    6. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Push email. I ran an agent on my Outlook at work and email appeared on my Blackberry, subject to the filtering rules I put in place. This is better than IMAP and POP3, I literally only saw emails I care about on the device. I'd much rather design my filters in an Outlook-like interface than on a small device.

      Most decent mail servers allow you to install filtering rules server-side, which is far superior to client-side filters, since the client never has to download the email in the first place. Exchange definitely does this, and products like Sieve can be installed for Unix-based servers.

      Push email is really the best point I see here, since the only other alternative I know of is IMAP IDLE mode, which requires a TCP connection to be maintained.

      * The scroll wheel. It seems lame, but it's dead simple to navigate around the device with just your thumb.

      * Small, efficient keyboard. Writing email was simple. A lot easier than T9.


      And as the GP rightly pointed out, both of these features are easily duplicated, unless patents get in the way. Which brings us right back to his original point. :)

    7. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by oGMo · · Score: 4, Insightful
      So anyway, what's the big deal with Blackberry in particular. Why is this stuff so hard/interesting/compelling?

      Don't look for a "killer feature", because there's not a specific killer feature. In fact, each of the Blackberry's features alone is pretty mediocre. This may be hard to understand, but it happens sometimes.

      The trick is that, taken as a whole, it has just the right amount of everything to make it a "killer device". Email works well enough. Web works well enough. Calendar is decent. Everything integrates with Exchange. The phone interface is really nice, and the address book is good and can do directory lookups. Companies can run their own internal servers and keep the devices behind the company firewall (big difference between general cell phones). The screen is big enough to read and the full keyboard (or half keyboard with uncannily good predictive text for the more phone-like models) is a must. Connectivity is constant wherever you have cell coverage. For a regular work day, this addresses just about everything.

      Finally, you can charge it, and it'll remain connected and on the data network at all times for days before you have to recharge it. And it charges over USB. It will even work offline (i.e. no cell/data network). I can't remember the last time I actually turned mine off, though I have turned off wireless to save battery or switched off work email.

      There are other neat features, as well, like the holster functionality. (Unlike any cell phone I've seen, when it's in the holster it will be silent/vibrate, and when it's out it will ring. Nice for never worrying if your phone will embarrass you in a meeting.)

      These features taken as a whole, without being loaded down by stuff like cameras and other useless trinkets, make it a very useful device. No, nothing is particularly outstanding. But it's the right combination of ingredients.

      --

      Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage

    8. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by brunes69 · · Score: 1

      Push email. I ran an agent on my Outlook at work and email appeared on my Blackberry, subject to the filtering rules I put in place. This is better than IMAP and POP3, I literally only saw emails I care about on the device. I'd much rather design my filters in an Outlook-like interface than on a small device.

      User, meet Procmail.

      Seriously - if you think you need blackberry technology to to server-side filtering then you haven't done much research.

    9. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1
      • The scroll wheel. It seems lame, but it's dead simple to navigate around the device with just your thumb.
      • Small, efficient keyboard. Writing email was simple. A lot easier than T9.
      And as the GP rightly pointed out, both of these features are easily duplicated, unless patents get in the way. Which brings us right back to his original point. :)
      Not really. The scroll wheel and UI implementation was notably stellar. Throwing a thumb wheel on your blackberry knockoff and making it do similar things to your email would really not suffice. The UI responsiveness on those old Blackberries is better than most desktop computers I've used, and the thumbwheel felt perfect. It would take a lot of work to make your knockoff really compete.

      That might have gone down the tubes with the color versions, but I thought it was notable a-way back when.
      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    10. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by master811 · · Score: 1

      Another reason is that it has better security features than say using a standard mobile/smart phone. Companies running a blackberry server have complete control over the email going to their employees blackberries and for instance - in the event one was stolen, the whole thing can be remotely wiped by an admin at the company to prevent private information being released etc. I know there are other features as well - but I think this is one of the most important ones.

    11. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      which requires a TCP connection to be maintained

      This is hardly an issue these days with GPRS and CDMA 1x EvDO very prevalent. I can maintain a TCP connection on my cellphone for days, including when travelling underground and having 3 minute no reception outages between stations.

    12. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by kimgkimg · · Score: 1

      Actually WirelessKnowledge had a competitor to Blackberry's service called Workstyle which ran on RIM devices which allowed you to host and control your wireless data replication behind your own firewall rather than relying on BB's data services. Too bad the company couldn't sustain itself because it had some solid engineering behind the product. The appeal of Workstyle was that it would not only support RIM, but locally cached push-to-phone, PPC, and Palm groupware (calendar, contacts, email) as well.

    13. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      For us (govt) it was the only choice

      3des end to end
      Only solution evaluted for Common Criteria
      We can wipe them from a central location when they (client) lose it

      We don't have any remote email except via CiscoVPN + Citrix or blackberry.

      The server can be a pita and sometimes we get a back batch of the handhelds but in general the units are pretty solid (our rep kept throwing his into the wall to demonstrate).

      The keyboard is pretty good for two-thumb typing once you get used to it

      Client doesn't have to do anything to sync it, either. Just charge it up, then it'll connect and download everything. Our security policy also gets applied once per hour or so IIRC - doesn't stop people from playing with them, but they soon get tired of repersonalising it every hour.

    14. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by moro_666 · · Score: 1

      oh ffs people, the world doesn't end where the english language ends. t9 could never ever be used for my homecountry language, because every word has 14 versions of it, all of the literally correct but used in different places, every verb has 6 versions of itself, again , all correct if used in correct places. now you can try to figure out how many overlappings this creates for the t9.

        there's no way in hell that a t9 could understand which one i exactly need and occasionally the match under the same 'key combos', so sure i could twiddle around with the t9 for a while to get the output, but it can never contain all the words i need and i'd be much faster off with a qwerty keyboard. (i just chose a 4 letter sequence off the keyboard and figured out the words "saju, paju, salu, saku, palu, raju, pakt, paku, salv etc....). with so many overlappings you can ignite your t9 with a box of matches and watch it turning into a cloud of smoke.

        and now try to imagine the chinese people using t9 ... or the arabs or even the russians. if you run out from latin character base, the t9 runs out on you.

        but i have to admit i'd never get a BB for the email & stuff, i'd rather get something that has some cpu power underneath too , probably an ipaq or alike that can also do voip calls an the (sk|h)ype. with international calls voip is the way to go and wifi hotspots combined with wifi/gms hybrid handhelds are a very sweet solution. and some of them have builtin qwerty's too. (and yes, they even support human email clients and normal html web intefraces, i think even running a vncviewer should be possible).

      from my point of view, black/red/-berry is extremely useless overpriced toy. for a few bucks more, you can get a machine that works like a real computer and that has 400 times the speed of the first machine that i read my emails on ...

      bury the berries.
      everything stated above is just my personal opinion, and i'm not expecting anyone to agree with me

      --

      I'd tell you the chances of this story being a dupe, but you wouldn't like it.
    15. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by RzUpAnmsCwrds · · Score: 1

      This is better than IMAP and POP3

      IMAP4 with IDLE support can be used to implement push-email, and you can set up filters on the server-side. Many providers, including fastmail.fm, provide a web-based interface to do it.

      If only there were a decent email client with IMAP IDLE support.

    16. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by kaligraphic · · Score: 1

      Blackberry isn't just email - it's a sturdy device (quality handset design), running a solid operating system, with a good interface that lets you do a lot of simple tasks one-handed, along with synchronised email, calendar, notes, task list, the ability to dial from contacts you establish on your desktop - and then there are the third-party apps like Berry411 and Google local for Blackberry, general web browsing, the ability to use some models for tethered data service - and that's just on the user side of things.

      For the IT department, it gives you the ability to enforce policy on the pda, integration with a Microsoft or Lotus mail systems, easy deployment of new units, a secure connection, and, most valuable of all, almost no hassle.

      Contrast that with the fact that the RedBerry looks to be a Windows-based system. Now, I'm not saying that this is inherently a minus, but just about every Windows phone I've worked with has... well... sucked. And I work at a cellular phone company, so I've seen a few.

      Now, if you're a home user, maybe email is all you need - but when you start doing everything that a Blackberry does, you start to realize that it's a lot more than just slapping smtp/pop/imap into a phone. Still, I think that the RedBerry could be quite useful for those home users who really don't need much more than that smtp/pop/imap and the mobile equivalent of pine.

      --
      You are standing in an open server west of a blue house, with a boarded front door. There is an Exchange mailbox here.
    17. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Hyperx_Man · · Score: 1

      The blackberry, or crackberry as my co-workers call it, is not just a scroll bar and nice keyboard. It's speed, efficiency, and ease of use. You can take the most high end treo with Microsoft OS and put it against a 2 year old blackberry, and I can write and receive emails much easier and faster. Things like scrolling through text and clicking on a phone number than you can call, search functionality that rivals MAC OSX, and over all form factor is just great. On top of that, throw GSM/GPRS service where this works around the world and executives are hooked. Another thing people forget is the ability to synch with contacts, calendar and to do lists wirelessly. So your secretary can enter an appointment for you and it shows up. Blackberry is so much more than email.

    18. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by kiatoa · · Score: 1

      Parent is right on the money. I use my blackberry all the time. I don't really think about it. There was very little to learn to get productive and the physical form factor really works. My holster is almost worn out (the blackberry has popped out a couple times) and the blackberry itself has taken quite the beating. I bicycle and if it buzzes I can check email without stopping - the thumb roller makes it possible. That last might make me deserve a moderation of "darwin award waiting to happen" :-)

      --
      90% of the wealth is in 2% of the pockets. Bummer to be in the majority.
    19. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by jamar0303 · · Score: 1

      To refute your point about Chinese, all my phones purchased in China, including CDMA handsets, so far have had T9 for the Chinese language based on pinyin. The pinyin is typed in, the T9 then gives a list of characters that might fit in the given sequence of keys.

      --
      OSx86 FTW
    20. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by ballwall · · Score: 1

      Forced security. IT departments can lock down all sorts of things (require passwords, software versions, etc). Addionally it's designed securely, with (afaik) end to end encryption. (At least that's how it's sold).

      For corporations/executives it's a much easier sell than "Well, if I lose my cell phone all my email is comprimised".

      The blackberry hardware wipes the storage after 10 unsuccessful login attempts.

      Plus it just works. It's a complete end to end package. Each provider's setup is generally the same, so it's provider neutral. No "install this version of this vpn software on this version of palm, or download this package for windows mobile 2005." A lot of the management is done server side so support issues are less of a problem.

      And wireless calendaring kicks ass.

    21. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by Tack · · Score: 1
      Push email. I ran an agent on my Outlook at work and email appeared on my Blackberry, subject to the filtering rules I put in place. This is better than IMAP and POP3, I literally only saw emails I care about on the device. I'd much rather design my filters in an Outlook-like interface than on a small device.
      User, meet Procmail.
      Procmail has an Outlook-like interface?
    22. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by salemnic · · Score: 1

      A lot of it is the security aspect - corporate servers with encrypted traffic is a good thing for most departments. I know (from being part of it) that there was a pretty big list of requirements that we had to allow full use of the BB - and they met them all.

      Don't know about the public sector stuff. Must just be the coolness factor.

      s

    23. Re:Why is blackberry so unique? by ecuador_gr · · Score: 1

      I am aware of at least one solution for a reduced QWERTY keyboard the EQ6 that does not use T9, but two different text entry methods (WordWise and LetterWise ) of which none is really word based (although the first looks like it is) and will let you enter anything easily (but actual english will work better). There are demos to check it out. Too bad it has not been picked up yet by a manufacturer.

  5. that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by vykor · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Hm. Is there a reason why the United States is just letting the Chinese practice their blatantly economic-nationalist trade policy, all the while sitting under the pretenses of free trade? How that particular "regulatory tangle" not constituting a barrier to free trade? Where are the retaliatory sanctions?

    1. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by jigjigga · · Score: 1

      there wont be any because "its good for business"... well it is for now. I dont understand it either. People are blind or they know things are going downhill and are making a fortune now and everyone else be damned.

    2. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by jaystrick · · Score: 1

      Dunno, i recall hearing that China owned something like 70% of the US debt (not sure on the number). I sure don't try to piss off my creditors either, not unless I really have to.

    3. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by BluedemonX · · Score: 2, Informative

      Interesting - I thought the Blackberry was made by a Canadian corporation.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    4. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by BluedemonX · · Score: 1

      It's a little different in this instance.

      Though yes, the Chinese are subsidising the American way of life....

      If I was to stop paying on debts, then I'd find big burly men coming to my house to take my stuff back, called repo men. There really isn't an international equivalent.

      As Pierre Elliott Trudeau said once, "you can't foreclose on a country."

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    5. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by TigerTime · · Score: 1

      retaliate? We can't put a tarriff on them. That would be too obvious. And the Chinese don't know what the word "invent" means, so it's not like we can delay their products so we can produce a competing device in the US.

    6. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by geobeck · · Score: 4, Funny
      Where are the retaliatory sanctions?

      The US has fired off a bunch of trade sanctions. Unfortunately, they've got terrible aim, so they all hit Canada instead.

      --
      Find environmentally and socially responsible products on http://buy-right.net
    7. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by rainman_bc · · Score: 4, Interesting

      If a country were to stop paying their debts, they would find themselves unable to borrow because of a loss of credibility.

      Would you borrow from a nation that isn't repaying their debts?

      Look, you're willing to accept money in lieu of your services because it has a fiat value. You can exchange that currency for goods or services in trade. That currency is only valuable because it is universally accepted. Ask someone who survived ww2 in Germany about currency confidence.

      Similarly with government bonds you purchase them on the promise your money will be returned, and while they have your money you earn interest. You are more than happy to buy tresury notes in the US because you know you'll get your money back. If there was ever any doubt, you'd be less inclined to give up your money in exchange for this interest bearing bond.

      Certainly you cannot foreclose, but the market in general can.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    8. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by grumpyman · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Talking about "sitting under the pretenses of free trade", Canada and US has actually signed something called free-trade agreement, yet Canada keep iron-fisted by the US government in so many fronts - softwood lumber, wheat, beef... For one moment if you think China is the only country practising 'blatantly economic-nationalist trade policy', think again.

    9. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by colganc · · Score: 1, Informative

      It's amazing how many people have lost sight of this. Many comments in the post have been swipes at the US, but like you said BlackBerry's are made by RIM; a Canadian corporation.

    10. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by copdk4 · · Score: 1

      one day we decide those chinese sons of ze bitches are going daaoowwwn..... booom.. end of ze world...

    11. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      Because the United States has been (is?) doing the same?

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    12. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by BluedemonX · · Score: 1

      If the USA doesn't repay its debts to China, then that's China's problem.

      It isn't as though NOBODY will lend to the US at that point - money to be made is money to be made.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    13. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by russ1337 · · Score: 1

      In that sense, China is on a level playing field. They have to compete to pay off American Government officials exactly the same as everyone else. (Tobacco companies, Drug companies, Oil disributers and Defence Industy).

    14. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      Well, they invented gunpowder. America seems to have a fondness for that.

      What would the US do if other countries refused to lend it any more money every year to balance the books? Doubt that would happen, either, but it'd make the last Wall Street crash look like a blip, and probably the 30s, too.

    15. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by joggle · · Score: 1
      That 70% figure is totaly bogus. They might own 70% of the foreign debt, but certainly not the total debt. See this page for some ballpark info (it's a bit dated, but still reasonably accurate). The total foreign debt was roughly 23% back in 1998. I know the total amount of foreign debt has doubled over the last few years, but the total deficit just about has as well so I think the percentage is only marginally higher than before.

      If you want to reduce the federal debt, you can always make a contribution! Come on, if we all chip in it will be gone in no time. If we each make a $30,000 contribution then will at least have payed off our share of the debt. No big deal, right?

    16. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by harmic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's strange... a country putting it's (and it's citizens) own interests before the ideals of a free market economy. In most western countries we are trying hard to live up to the "ideal" of a completely unregulated free market, where costs & profits dictate all corporate actions, with the predictable result that any possible opportunity to send work to a country with lower labour costs is taken advantage of. In the long run it is draining wealth from the western economies to the developing economies, with the owners of the corporate world skimming a healthy percentage off the top.

      China is taking the best of both worlds... they are only taking the parts of the market system that help them (ie. taking on outsourced work) but carefully controlling the reverse direction. Another example: their government has delayed introduction of WCDMA 3G mobile technologies so as to give local companies a chance to develop a competing standard, thus delaying the chance for established European and US equipment manufacturers to gain a foothold.

      If it weren't for the lack of personal freedoms afforded by the Chinese government you'd almost feel jealous of a population that has a government looking out for them like that.

    17. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by rainman_bc · · Score: 1


      If the USA doesn't repay its debts to China, then that's China's problem.

      It isn't as though NOBODY will lend to the US at that point - money to be made is money to be made.


      Problem is the risk just went up if the US defaulted. Sure, the US will still be able to borrow, but their cost of borrowing will be higher.

      Look at GMAC - GM's financing arm. Will you lend them your money at 4.5%? Hell no, but at 8%, you're probably thinking about it (especially if they sell of GMAC).

      Same holds true for the US. Today they can borrow at 4.5%. The market will not be so generous if they default on their bonds.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    18. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by BluedemonX · · Score: 1

      Well, that depends, sometimes it makes more sense to do so.

      If I could default on 75% of my debt for a slightly higher interest rate, at the same time not paying that debt, I could manage, especially if as part of that plan I rebuild my manufacturing base, and employ Americans for a change instead of Chinese.

      The question will be selling it to the internationsl community that this the alternative is the US becoming a protectorate of China, and yer on yer own if dictatorship or terrorism ever raises its ugly head.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    19. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by BluedemonX · · Score: 1

      Do keep in mind as well that even though the USA has promised to pay back certain monies, China's also under certain obligations to not rip people off, dump products in the US, etc.

      The way they're behaving, especially keeping their currency artifically low to suck all the money out of the first world (never mind using slave labor to make products) certainly goes against trade agreements as they stand.

      I would suggest that the argument would be made that it isn't a default in its normal sense but them finally getting wise to how the money siphon works.

      --

      --- Jump!! Fire!! Bullet time!! - Lego version of the Matrix
    20. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by cliveholloway · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh please. Like the US believes in free trade. EU steel trade tariffs? Farmers?

      The day a country doesn't use it's regulatory network to preserve its own trade is the day it gets pwned by every other damn country out there.

      --
      -- Trinity in high heels carrying a whip: The donimatrix - there is no spoonerism
    21. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by hey! · · Score: 1

      Hm. Is there a reason why the United States is just letting the Chinese practice their blatantly economic-nationalist trade policy, all the while sitting under the pretenses of free trade?

      Yes.

      They Chinese government is taking the money it makes from selling consumer goods to the US and investing it in our treasury, in effect financing our current government's deficit spending.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    22. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by ArghBlarg · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear! Oh, and the US has been covering up its own mad cow cases for years, pre-dating the Canadian cases. How's that for a nationalistic import policy?

      I wish the Canadian gov't would grow some berries and just threaten to rip up NAFTA. Beef, lumber, those are just the big two examples. A treaty is just a fancy contract, right? That's what you do when the other side violates the contract repeatedly and unapologetically. And we should charge them a fair market price for our water.

      --
      ERROR 144 - REBOOT ?
    23. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by DrDitto · · Score: 1

      Its pretty important to our national security that farms can stay afloat. What happens when WWIII breaks out and the rest of the world embargos the U.S.? Yup, without farms, we starve to death.

    24. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      I know you were just trying to be funny, but I just want to say that I don't have a share of the debt (or at least not a $30,000 one) for two reasons. First, in two consecutive elections, the guy I voted for, who actually should have won the election (the second time, he even had the popular vote) didn't become president. In both cases the result would likely have been either a reduction in the debt, or at the very least a much smaller increase. Second, the recent blooming of the national debt is the result of an illegal war being carried out by a megalomaniac. The whole thing is his debt, not mine. Personally, I support spending no money on oil, and spending money on alternative fuels, but as long as big oil sits in the big chair, that's never going to happen. (Admittedly, this ain't a lot different no matter who's in office. When big oil isn't in the chair, they're generally at least sitting behind it with a gun pressed into the padding in the back, business end forward.)

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    25. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by sgt_doom · · Score: 1

      Actually, 62% and growing, but why quibble over a few percentage points...

    26. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by SilverJets · · Score: 1

      Considering RIM is a Canadian company, why should the US care?

    27. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by vykor · · Score: 1

      Because the US is the economic hegemon in this era of globalization, just as Britain was in the 19th century. The hegemon is supposed to keep market conditions open for free trade and punish defectors from the scheme, because it's a classical Prisoner's Dilemma - unless somebody enforces the rules of the game, the incentive is to defect by doing exactly what China is doing.

      Canada is a player in the market, but it's not the hegemon, and it's not the Canadians' responsibility to enforce the rules of a free international market.

    28. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by dfjghsk · · Score: 1

      http://www.ustreas.gov/tic/mfh.txt

      China owns 12% of the foreign owned debt

      They own approximately the same amount as the U.K.

      Which is about 1/3 of the amount owned by Japan.
      Japan owns 30% of the foreign owned debt.

      --
      Help me take back Slashdot. When did 'News for Nerds' become 'FUD and Conspiracy Theories for Extremist Nutjobs'?
    29. Re:that doesn't seem very sporting of 'em by geirhe · · Score: 1
      Hm. Is there a reason why the United States is just letting the Chinese practice their blatantly economic-nationalist trade policy, all the while sitting under the pretenses of free trade? How that particular "regulatory tangle" not constituting a barrier to free trade? Where are the retaliatory sanctions?
      If you look a couple of years back, the US stepped all over a number of patents from just after the declaration of independence up through the industrial revolution. The US hasn't become a fanboy of patents until you guys became a developed country.

      Why shouldn't China do the same?

      If you don't like it, stop buying chinese goods.

  6. Why the fascination by IamGarageGuy+2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I know that China is the "new world" and all but for every company to fall all over themselves to deal with them is a bit rediculous. A country that prides itself in constraining all markets, destroying their populace and basically giving the middle finger to rest of the planet is put on a pedestal by the countries that should be invading them to free their people? As all the "free" countries fall all over themselves to sell and buy from a country that is as close to slave labour as we have presently. Maybe we should just forget about them for a while and they may go away, just like Soviet Russia. Before you mod me to hell, think about when you purchase your Walmart crap that is produced by children that don't make enough to feed themselves.

    --
    Stay tuned for new sig...
    1. Re:Why the fascination by fithmo · · Score: 4, Funny

      "A country that prides itself in constraining all markets, destroying their populace and basically giving the middle finger to rest of the planet is put on a pedestal by the countries that should be invading them to free their people?"

      HOW DARE YOU SAY THAT ABOUT AMERIC..... oh, you're talking about China? yeah, yeah, I agree!
      /me gives the middle finger to China

    2. Re:Why the fascination by theboogeyman · · Score: 1
      Before you mod me to hell, think about when you purchase your Walmart crap that is produced by children that don't make enough to feed themselves.
      Look, I am not disagreeing with you that China relies a lot on cheap labor for their manufacturing industry. However,you need to quit with the hyperbole and actually research the situation in China. The country has been self-sufficient in food for awhile now so while alot of people are still poor no children are dying of hunger. Food is extremely cheap in China and almost anyone can afford it. Also, manufacturing wages in the coastal provinces have been rising in the past decade. A lot of companies are now moving inland where wages are still low but this will change as well in the future. China will not be relying on cheap labor forever.
    3. Re:Why the fascination by aqfire · · Score: 1

      You're right, but all the American businesses are salivating over the prospect of selling their products to 1.3 billion people. Of course we don't ignore China even though we should. It's all dictated by the money!

    4. Re:Why the fascination by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      Many people in the rest of the world would say you are refering to the USA.

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    5. Re:Why the fascination by Josh+teh+Jenius · · Score: 1

      Circa 1865?

      But you're right...it could never happened again.

      --
      Math is math. Regular expression is regular expression. The tools are there. The future is now.
    6. Re:Why the fascination by EiZei · · Score: 1

      Slave market in the USA ?

      Outsourcing is the word.

  7. Odd choice for a product name by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 5, Funny

    For the life of me, I cannot fathom why a Chinese company would name their device after an American folk & blues musician that was popular in the early part of the 20th century. Pencils down.

    1. Re:Odd choice for a product name by Cobblepop · · Score: 2, Informative

      For all you culture-dense chaps:

      Leadbelly on Wikipedia.

    2. Re:Odd choice for a product name by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      I find it incredibly disturbing that I was modded as informative for the above post.

  8. The REDberry... by ZSpade · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "On the eve of its long-delayed China launch, BlackBerry is facing a sudden challenge from a cheaper Chinese rival called, unapologetically, RedBerry.

    Oh, that's not nice... China Unicom left no doubt that it is brazenly attempting to capitalize on BlackBerry's global fame.

    So they admit it!

    You know, maybe they're counting on Blackberry being too worn out with the courts to persue anything, and IANAL, but isn't this a pretty blatant rip-off? I wonder how long till we see Blackberry sues Redberry - Blueberry feels left out in the cold.

    --
    Go ahead and call me unreliable; reliable is just a synonym for predictable.
    1. Re:The REDberry... by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 1

      Sues them where? China's trademark laws are a little bit more lenient, particularly in cases of state owned companies.

      --
      by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
    2. Re:The REDberry... by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 1

      That assumes that the Chinese government would even allow such a suit. China has its own laws and they generally don't respect the "intellectual property" laws of the west.

    3. Re:The REDberry... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Which is really only fair considering, in it's early days, the US pulled the same tricks vis a vis British copyright law.

    4. Re:The REDberry... by ZSpade · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter what China's policies are if they try to sell it in the US, then they will be subject to US laws. (Of course only in regards to their sales in the US)

      --
      Go ahead and call me unreliable; reliable is just a synonym for predictable.
    5. Re:The REDberry... by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure, at least with this product, they have zero intention of selling it in the US.

    6. Re:The REDberry... by Akaihiryuu · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's true...in order to sell the product in the US, they would have to create a US subsidiary, which would be subject to US laws. However, from what I see here, this is a product intended to be sold in China. I don't think they have any intention of selling it outside China.

    7. Re:The REDberry... by russ1337 · · Score: 1

      they could just name it a different name, more removed from Blackberry (as it uses different technology anyway). I'd pay money to see them call the Chineese product sold in the US "Crackberry", then see RIM cry like a girl "hey! thats our name!..... [thinks] oh no thats right, we dont like that name, quick, we better trademark it anyway...

  9. In Ireland too! by Skadet · · Score: 3, Funny

    In other news, RIM has secured a contract for the Irish city of Dingle. The headline?

    DingleBerry is the new RIM job.

  10. Debt and China by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

    That doesn't quite make sense. If anything, the debt should make China more dependent on the US than the other way around, since they traded a whole lot of hard currency for some pieces of paper that are only worth anything because the US Treasury says so. If the US defaulted (not bloody likely, but speaking theoretically), they would be the ones left holding the bag. At that point it would become a question of what they'd do to make the US pay up -- they can't exactly send someone over to break our kneecaps.

    However, the GP's question is still valid: there are a lot of countries that pull the free-trade card when it comes to having access to US markets, but are still staunchly protectionist when it comes to their domestic markets and industries. China, even Japan is like this to a certain extent; even some of the Western European countries (I'm looking at you, France) have "non tariff barriers" to trade that are really protectionism clothed in various regulatory outfits.

    I suppose the US plays along because it's good for business to do so, at least in the short run. Whether building up the sort of trade and current-accounts deficit that we have is a good idea in the long run, I'm not so sure.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    1. Re:Debt and China by Abcd1234 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      there are a lot of countries that pull the free-trade card when it comes to having access to US markets, but are still staunchly protectionist when it comes to their domestic markets and industries.

      Wow, that's really funny. Many countries in free trade relationships with the US (like, say, Canada and Mexico), have the exact same complaint... about the US! Interesting how, when the tables turn, people suddenly get all uppity about free trade.

    2. Re:Debt and China by horologium · · Score: 1

      Selling lamb and sugar to the US is no picnic either; but I think all countries make some sort of effort to give a competitive advantage to their own industries. All these efforts get called different things that aren't always obvious, but they are pretty widespread.

    3. Re:Debt and China by convolvatron · · Score: 1

      perhaps the answer lies in the intent to borrow even more.

    4. Re:Debt and China by alexhs · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If the US defaulted (not bloody likely, but speaking theoretically), they would be the ones left holding the bag.

      If the US defaulted, I bet the most immediate impact would be that the dollar would immediately be worth nothing, like everything based on it like capitalization (huge crash in Wall Street...).

      --
      I have discovered a truly marvelous proof of killer sig, which this margin is too narrow to contain.
    5. Re:Debt and China by alienw · · Score: 1

      You don't seem to understand how the world economy operates. First, everything revolves around dollars. The US is in a unique position -- it can just print more dollars when it needs more cash. Of course, this ability requires someone to prop up those dollars. China is doing exactly that. If China stopped stockpiling dollars, the dollar would crash, and the US would no longer be able to afford to import things (like oil).

  11. How Typical! by abstractrude · · Score: 1, Interesting

    RedBerry, wow what a suprise. I love this communist scum, they keep blackberry out so their state controlled telecom company can introduce "MaoBerry" which is probably full of snooping tools. I bet the every email coming from a "MaoBerry" is processed by the government for improper use of the "MaoBerry" or RedBerry. But the guy earlier was right, where is the picture. I wonder if the battery door has a hammer and sickle?

    1. Re:How Typical! by monoqlith · · Score: 1

      Mod Parent (-1, McCarthyist)

    2. Re:How Typical! by abstractrude · · Score: 1

      China's economy is not communist, althought the government is. They have a communist party. They are a socialst country yes, but they are still under a communist party that controls the entire electorial process, oh and as we see here the telecommunications industry...im uniformed I know.

    3. Re:How Typical! by demonbug · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The parent is a bit of a troll, but according to the article part of the regulatory problem was that the Chinese government didn't like the strong encryption RIM uses for communications (suggesting that part of the reason for the delay was in fact that the government wanted to be able to snoop more easily). Of course, this came from an "Ontario government source", so it could just be speculation.

    4. Re:How Typical! by caffeination · · Score: 1

      Mod Parent (-1, Doesn't know what McCarthyism means)

    5. Re:How Typical! by systemic+chaos · · Score: 1

      Mod Parent (+5, Oh no you just didn't!)

    6. Re:How Typical! by RestartLater · · Score: 1

      Chinese economy is still centrally-controlled. However, it is relatively open along the coastal areas. The FTZ they got set up are fairly free. The government is simply called the communist party. In reality, they behave more along the lines of a dictatorship.

  12. How about "We take our ball and go home"? by Sir+Unimaginative · · Score: 3, Interesting
    After God-knows-how-many years of "most favoured nation" trade status, a freakishly large amount of production takes place in China; they also have a lot of our foreign debt.

    Now imagine either of two scenarios:

    1) China ceases production for the US market. (They could easily turn to produce for their own domestic market, and at not too dissimilar revenue levels.)
    2) China calls in our tab.

    Sleep tight.

    --
    The problem with your idea is that it makes sense.
    1. Re:How about "We take our ball and go home"? by russ1337 · · Score: 1

      most people over there [china] do not have enough money for electronic gizmos that nobody needs....

      Neither do people in America.... that is why the average household debt is $84,000 and most families average $8,000 on credit cards. Americans cant afford the gadgets they buy, they are just willing to spend someone elses money.

    2. Re:How about "We take our ball and go home"? by russ1337 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think they overlap. The average household debt includes all the money owed by each household to any financial institution (includes American companies). The national debt is how much money the county owes other countries ( or the world bank). Government spending doesnt run up household debt till they raise the taxes and you have to borrow off your bank to pay them.

  13. Or how about? by TACNailed · · Score: 2, Funny

    ElderBerry BlueBerry CommieBerry

    1. Re:Or how about? by icejai · · Score: 1

      Or HaleBerry...

    2. Re:Or how about? by Gryle · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting Chuck Berry and Frankenberry

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
  14. In Related News... by Stormy+Dragon · · Score: 2, Funny

    A Chinese company named RedTN has sued Redberry for violating one of its red patents.

  15. Bad karma? by seven+of+five · · Score: 1

    OK, so the Chinese, unwilling to develop a worthy competitor to RIM, simply rip it off in a state-controlled game play. Apparently also, they do not care how this reflects on them as a people, and figure there will be no negative long-term consequences in the business world.

  16. Berry Timely by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Interesting

    China probably waited for the BlackBerry/RTP patent lawsuit to settle. So BlackBerry (RIM) would have the least cash, and maybe the case would reduce the risk China's corporation would be blocked by patents. While BlackBerry and the problems of a single supplier make all the headlines. The last couple of weeks since the settlement is just enough time to unleash the hounds, but too short for the timing to be merely coincidental.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Berry Timely by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm going to guess you're a young European who thinks taking the train once in a while, about as far as millions of commuters here in NYC travel every day to/from work, makes you cosmopolitan. Because not only am I considerably older than your feeble guess, I've lived in foreign countries, lived in several American states (around the continent), travelled to dozens of countries (probably including yours) on every continent where people outnumber penguins. Preferably to ones where I don't speak the language, alone, so I can really get into the rhythm of life and experience the people beyond the illusions of language. BTW, guesses about my race say only that you are a racist.

      In real life, the American trademark/patent system certainly has quite a lot to do with Chinese industry, especially when the US government cares about the case. Even when it doesn't, such matters are determined in courts like WIPO, in which the US has quite a lot of power. And under which Chinese industry has quite a lot to lose: its global exports and purchasers of domestic labor, as well as any number of diplomatic, "humanitarian" and other investments.

      And in my post, I didn't say that China was specifically afraid of Canadian courts, or American courts. You said that. You don't even understand my post, you don't understand me, you don't understand international competition. The evidence is in your posts. Which also suggests that you have an ignorance fortified by resentment of America's actual power in the world - as well as Canada's: RIM is Canadian.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

  17. Let's all learn a lesson... by dteichman2 · · Score: 1

    Paris Hilton had a Blackberry. Her data was stolen "off of it" because the data is stored on telecom servers.

    Wouldn't the Redberry be a nice way to spy on people?

    --


    Silence is golden... and duct tape is silver.
    1. Re:Let's all learn a lesson... by dteichman2 · · Score: 1

      Uh oh... [ducks]

      --


      Silence is golden... and duct tape is silver.
    2. Re:Let's all learn a lesson... by catzpjz · · Score: 1

      That was a sidekick, u dufus. Paris' comment on the BlackBerry was it was too difficult for her to use and i wasn't surprised.

    3. Re:Let's all learn a lesson... by stormlead · · Score: 1

      Paris Hilton had a T-Mobile Sidekick, not a BlackBerry.

  18. They should have waited a few weeks... by sczimme · · Score: 1


    They should have waited a few weeks, then they could have called it the MayBerry. They could have launched the product as an homage to the town's peacekeeper.

    (I would have linked to his official site but the site blurb still mentions "upcoming performances". Whoops.)

    --
    I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
  19. So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by wigginz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    We export countless manufacturing jobs and import enough to make Chine one of the top five largest and richest economies, and this is how they treat the United States? I'm not even mentioning the devaluing of their currency and impact that has on our economy (actually I guess I just did). I think our administration (US) needs to take a hard look at China's obvious anti-competitive, and one sided global trade policies.

    --
    You may find my appearance and demeanor foolish, but it is you who plays the fool.
    1. Re:So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by TastyCakes · · Score: 1

      RIM is Canadian

    2. Re:So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by TastyCakes · · Score: 2, Informative

      Actually.. This is also happening to Canada.

    3. Re:So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by wigginz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hmm, you got me there. However the basis of my point is still valid, China's trade and economic policies are still anti-American (and apparently anti-Canadian and probably anti-every other country).

      --
      You may find my appearance and demeanor foolish, but it is you who plays the fool.
    4. Re:So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by wish+bot · · Score: 1
      We export countless manufacturing jobs and import enough to make the [United States] one of the top five largest and richest economies, and this is how they treat [Australia]? I'm not even mentioning the devaluing of their currency and impact that has on our economy (actually I guess I just did). I think our government [(Australia)] needs to take a hard look at the [US's] obvious anti-competitive, and one sided global trade policies.

      What goes around, comes around.

      --
      lemonade was a popular drink and it still is
    5. Re:So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by Monkeys!!! · · Score: 1

      I think our administration (US) needs to take a hard look at China's obvious anti-competitive, and one sided global trade policies.
      Getting America to a long hard look into a mirror would be easier and achieve more.

    6. Re:So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by vidarh · · Score: 1

      They've learned from the best when it comes to unfair trade practices - does that come as a surprise? The US has been at the forefront of economic protectionism and anti-competitive behaviour designed to give advantages to US companies for the last century at least.

    7. Re:So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by PhraudulentOne · · Score: 1

      Hahahaha

      China has MADE your Economy. Your standard of living would be nowhere without China. Break out that mirror and hold it infront of your government.

      If you would make stuff that the Chinese wants, then they might import more stuff from you. They are not nearly as much of a consumer country as the US of A. They don't want to import cheap PCs, badly made cars, little American flags, etc. They want to save money for the future. The USA wants to buy as much crap as it can consume and f*ck the future - spend now, worry later!. China makes the crap that you guys want. You don't make anything that China wants. See the problem?

      --
      You create your own reality - Leave mine to me.
    8. Re:So this is the thanks we get?!?!? by kaatochacha · · Score: 1

      I call bullshit. From a US standpoint, I remember when most products WEREN'T made in China,and if we went back to that we'd just have less "stuff", which we don't need anyway. TVs two sizes smaller, probably less cars, less constantly replaced gadgets... hey, this is starting to sound nice.It's not as if without China we'd all be living in caves writing on the walls.

  20. Trade Fair by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    Why isn't Bush slapping China with a WTO "unfree trade" suit? They've got our oil, and compete with us with artificially lowered Commie wages!

    Besides, we opened our trade with Chinese corporations to open their markets for our advanced technology, manufactured there with their artifically lowered Commie wages for their Commie consumers to spend on our products. That's not fair!

    --

    --
    make install -not war

    1. Re:Trade Fair by realmolo · · Score: 1

      China has cheap labor combined with advanced manufacturing facilities. Cheap labor = more profits, regardless of the product.

      Yeah, China's government is pure evil. But generally speaking, the CEO/stockholders of any given corporation really don't give a shit about human rights, or fair trade, or any of that stuff. Profits trump all of that. Actually, that's not true. PERSONAL WEALTH trumps all of that.

    2. Re:Trade Fair by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Talk to the Chinese in Shanghai sometime. They are PISSED at their government for not raising the value of the Yuan. Yes, your bitter but they are truely pissed thanks to the corruption that goes on in the CCP.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
    3. Re:Trade Fair by Assassin+bug · · Score: 1

      Dude, have you looked at the "made in ... " make label on just about anything lately. China makes most of the things we consume! You don't slap anyone who makes most of the things you like to use. And besides, not that I'm keeping a tally or defending China, but we pay our farmers pretty well to grow important plants. Is that fair?

    4. Re:Trade Fair by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I'd love to talk to those people in Shanghai. Those economics you mentioned are one reason economists in the 1990s forecast that China's central government would lose control of districts like Shanghai's which didn't want to "share the wealth" as much as the Communist Party demands. I'd like to hear from someone local, with their asses on the line, how they feel about those forecasts a decade later, when they're populated with real money.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    5. Re:Trade Fair by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      None of that crap is fair. That's why China gets to make so much of our stuff: they don't compete fairly. But the "slappers" are the American corporate owners and their political properties. They benefit as much from the unfairness as do the Chinese "Communists". But my short-term benefit in cheap manufacturing isn't worth the longterm destruction the unfair competition causes. So I want the trade to be made more fair - in my terms, and the terms of the hundreds of millions of Americans with whom I share an economy.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    6. Re:Trade Fair by Rebel_lord · · Score: 1

      Unfree and unfair trade? I like to think of this as comparative advantage. The next time you say unfair and not free ... think of Africa and how badly shafted it gets at the WTO and by the IMF. US getting shafted by China is like being poked compared to that.

    7. Re:Trade Fair by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      So? I respect Africans who try to stop getting screwed by the US and others. I'm American, and my priority is that my country not get screwed. There's always a bigger fish, so there's always a smaller fish. I'm not as interested in the fair-trade ideology (though I respect it) as I am in the results. There's no excuse for the US facing unfair competition. Especially when it's protected by so many rich Americans screwing the rest of us. And when it screws Chinese workers who stay poor under their own government's tyranny, it's really indefensible. So I attack it.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    8. Re:Trade Fair by Rebel_lord · · Score: 1

      So while it's relatively okay for US to shaft other countries because of evolutionary economics, it's terribly wrong for countries to bite back when it's tired of being shafted?

      Africans are poor largely because of the world's past governments exploiting it. It remains poor because of the "tyranny" of the world's governments including US's ... Just because it doesn't affect you, u respond with apathy (I don't care or I'm not interested). But if it's an american company being affected ... wait stop ... let's be patriotic and defend our nation economically. Stop the hypocrisy, and start being more ethical. Fair trade isn't asking you to change the world ... just your lifestyle. Buy fair trade products, learn more about development through NGOs, and write to your local politician.

    9. Re:Trade Fair by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

      I didn't say it was OK. I said exactly the opposite: "I respect Africans who try to stop getting screwed by the US and others.". And then I said that my priority was stopping the US, and me, getting screwed that way.

      My post was absolutely clear. You just can't understand it because you're viewing the world through your own personal dogma. Don't condescend to me about ethics and global trade when you're preaching without even reading my post.

      --

      --
      make install -not war

    10. Re:Trade Fair by PhraudulentOne · · Score: 1

      Yes, they do make almost everything "we" consume. It doesn't have to be that way though. Just stop shopping at Walmart, and start keeping more of the money in your country instead of shipping it all overseas in return for a consumer good. Get something for your investment.

      --
      You create your own reality - Leave mine to me.
    11. Re:Trade Fair by Assassin+bug · · Score: 1

      I don't shop at any X-marts. Still many of the products that make it into my home are not "made in the US". And besides, even if the label says "made in USA" I'm not entirely sure what that means anymore. My point is that most "fair trade" arguments don't carry much salt in my book because there is no such thing. I've never studied international trade formally, but I say that much trade is leveraged trade not "free trade". Probably trade has always been that way, it's just on a larger scale now. Example, in the US (using crops as an example again), we spend a lot of money to ensure that carnal bunt is kept out of our wheat supply because many countries do not have the disease and they want to keep it out of their country. That is fair. What is not fair is the fact that carnal bunt has no impact on the yield or quality of the grain. It's sort of like not allowing people into your country because they have bread mold on the bottom of their shoes. The disease is just used as a leverage point in trade relations. Trade is very tightly controlled by all governments in some fashion.

  21. Original Ideas.... by bozojoe · · Score: 1

    Is is just me or was the last original idea out of China over 500 years ago?

    --
    lick the cancle button (at least thats what our Chinese QA says)
    1. Re:Original Ideas.... by Y0tsuya · · Score: 2, Funny

      I dunno, that whole Cultural Revolution/Red Guard thing was pretty original idea. That's not to say things didn't go to hell in a handbasket. But what about hospitals staffed by people who don't know medicine, or school staffed by people who lacked enough skills to teach, who'd have though of that on a vast national scale? Oh, how about parading your parents in front of the whole village wearing dunce hats for "counter-revolutionary" activities while whipping themselves into a frenzy chanting quotes from the Little Red Book? Invented in China I think.

  22. Blackberry is canadian not american by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    Just to set the records straight, Blackberry/RIM is based out of Ontario, Canada NOT USA.

  23. Was it all competition? by SeaFox · · Score: 3, Funny

    This comes in the wake of an almost 2 year regulatory delay blocking the introduction of RIM's Blackberries to mainland China. Certainly this delay was convenient to China Unicom, if not deliberately staged to allow for domestic competition.

    You mispelled 'surveillance'.

  24. This Just In: Chinese Gov't Protects Local Biz! by Rimbo · · Score: 2, Insightful

    news at 11

  25. No copycat hardware by EmbeddedJanitor · · Score: 4, Informative
    RTFA. Redberry uses an existing cellphone as the device and does not require special Blackberry-style hardware. All this does is mail forwarding to an existing cell phone. All this is involved is a small incremental service cost. No need for the huge Blackberry costs.

    The branding copycatting charge is a bit thin. Most people should be easily able to tell the difference between the two. It's certainly less confusing than Lindows.

    --
    Engineering is the art of compromise.
  26. Lost in translation by Fahrvergnuugen · · Score: 1

    Redberry = Raspberry?

    You know, the "I fart in your general direction" sound?

    --
    Kiteboarding Gear Mention slashdot and get 10% off!
    1. Re:Lost in translation by gbobeck · · Score: 1

      Ok, the obligatoty entire Python quote...

      "I don't want to talk to you no more, you empty headed animal food trough wiper. I fart in your general direction. Your mother was a hamster and your father smelt of elderberries."

      --
      Navicula hydraulica plena anguilarum est. Omnes castelli tuus nostri sunt. Ed elli avea del cul fatto trombetta.
  27. Only one problem by dingbatdr · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you write anything on your device that says anything about Taiwan independence or
    Falun Gong, your phone tries to kill you.

    --
    The truth is an offense, but not a sin.------R. N. Marley
    1. Re:Only one problem by kadathseeker · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing that these phones will selectively emit higher doses of radiation depending on your conversation. Poisonous thoughts will poison the mind! Can you say thoughtcrime? Instant police, judge/jury, and excecutioner all in one.

      This reminds me of the Bastard Operator from Hell's assistant's voltmoddded Eastern European cattleprod that lacks some of the safety of Western devcices. Which of course is why it is so favored a tool by the PFY.

      --
      The 'Net is a waste of time, and that's exactly what's right about it. - William Gibson
  28. Just so tired... by Darth+Maul · · Score: 1


    I can hardly even bring myself to question things like this. Why do we still consider them a Most Favored Nation in trade status? All they do is steal our ideas and produce them with cheap, exploited labor. But the U.S. gov't refuses to do anything about it.

    Anymore you can pretty much take what *should* be done, then know that the U.S. gov't will not do it. Same with illegal immigration. What the heck is going on here? Why can't we just take a stand, cut off some Chinese products? Sure, everyone argues that we depend on their cheap products, but you know what? Maybe we should suck it up for a few years and get our OWN production back up. Everything is so short-term anymore. What about 10 years from now? What happens when the Chinese decouple their currency from the U.S. Dollar?

    --
    --- witty signature
    1. Re:Just so tired... by Forbman · · Score: 1

      You mean, cut off some chinese imports to stop illegal immigrants from coming up from Central America and Mexico into the US?

      Because the longest election cycle in the US is 6 years, and then, it's only partial, then the Senate's election cycle doesn't count, because at any time 1/3rd of the US Senate is really focused on getting reelected, rather than trying to maintain a longish view on where the US is going. The HORs are working on getting reelected almost from the getgo once they take their oaths in January, since they're only in for 2 yrs. And the President any more is focusing on reelection at least two years away from the election, if only because it wants to influence the mid-term HOR races in order to help gauge and bolster its election run 3 years later.

      10 year plan in the US? What that means in the US is passing legislation that is designed in part to hamstring the next president if the dominant party has a feeling it might lose the next presidential election.

    2. Re:Just so tired... by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      Maybe we should suck it up for a few years and get our OWN production back up. Everything is so short-term anymore.

      The problem with sucking things up is it means wearing a loss until you get sufficient momentum going. Your national debt is increasing at $2.5B per DAY. Guess who you owe 70% of that debt to? China. And if you stop borrowing from them or they stop lending to you, who are you planning to step in when your debt starts spiraling into the $3, $3.5B per day range?

    3. Re:Just so tired... by PhraudulentOne · · Score: 1

      Yup, so basically the USA is fucking over their kids. Everyday your making your kids work harder, but you don't care because you'll be dead before the shit really hits the fan. I am in total agreement with the Grandparent - let a few generations live some harder times in exchange for a brighter future - that's what our great grandparents, etc did. That's how the economy took off. The problems are many - I don't think the USA is capable of lowering its standard of living. Truely I don't. There are too many hardcore consumers, too much marketing, too many people who feel they need to have that new shiny thing. Like the Parent says, your debt is rising at an astonishing rate. If you don't stop now, it will get worse - but that's hard isn't it? Letting life get harder is actually easier to do, so you do it. Wait 50 yrs when your actually working for China. When China brings all its plants over to the USA and utilizes the USA cheap labour to pay back the debts that you and your children will owe.

      Yeah, a little dramatic, but I wouln't rule it out ;)

      --
      You create your own reality - Leave mine to me.
    4. Re:Just so tired... by Achromatic1978 · · Score: 1
      Oh, that's alright, then. So it's only $6,440 for every man, woman and child in the US, or $1,934,318,738,077 all up.

      Far, far better. Yeah.

  29. Interesting you should mention that ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/06095/679599-185.st m

    GM's Chinese partner is now competing against them. QED

    1. Re:Interesting you should mention that ... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Amusingly, the vehicle they're going to make isn't even their own design, it's a modified version of the Rover 75 (per the article). The difference from the typical Chinese MO is that they actually bought the design from Rover, who went bankrupt shortly thereafter (though the two are likely totally unrelated.)

      China is well-known for making perfect knockoffs of other countries' products. Perhaps the best example is that they made copies of a lot of US and UK machining equipment that were so faithful that they contained the same design flaws. Of course, the chinese copies are still inferior, because they are made with inferior materials.

      Regardless, this is the typical result of technology partnerships. For an example close to home and close to many of our hearts, Microsoft got involved with Sega just long enough to figure out how the console game market works, and built their own game console. I know Microsoft isn't exactly a name to hold up, but everyone does this. Palm Computing got their start by making the software for the Tandy/Casio/GRiD Zoomer/Z-PDA7000/GRiDPad 2390. Then they made their own PDA...

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Interesting you should mention that ... by fatmal · · Score: 1

      Worse than that.....

      Shanghai Automotive made a small car (forget the name) that was eerily familiar to GM staffers. GM went and bought one, and found that the floorpan had the same errors in it that the GM designers / engineers hadn't had time to get rid of!

      Taking your JV partner to court seems to be the done thing in China!

  30. China not really competitive by mollog · · Score: 1

    The remarks in the teaser that points to the article have a certain zenophobic tone to them. It has been a long standing tradition of nations to protect certain markets from competition. For examples, America, Inc. has been protecting the auto industry (tarrifs on trucks), farmers and ranchers, and other politically connected businesses from foreign competition. Why should we care if China protects some little segment?


    And the worry about being dominated by China or India is unfounded. China has some extremely serious problems facing them. And they know it, and they're taking steps to prepare. And India? Please. I wish them the best, but their culture handicaps them in a competitive market. We'll recover from the outsourcing, including the middle class, and we'll find them a congenial partner in the world economy.


    We have more problems dealing with Mexico than with China or India.

    --
    Best regards.
    1. Re:China not really competitive by kma100 · · Score: 1
      Can you clarify what you mean by this: "And India? Please. I wish them the best, but their culture handicaps them in a competitive market."?

      Thanks.

    2. Re:China not really competitive by kaligraphic · · Score: 1

      Simple - products that smell like curry right out of the box are less competitive.

      (well, unless they're supposed to smell like curry.)

      --
      You are standing in an open server west of a blue house, with a boarded front door. There is an Exchange mailbox here.
    3. Re:China not really competitive by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Man oh man...such lack of knowledge...I couldn't even guess where to begin to elucidate on the shortcomings of your description.


      But when China's domination becomes all too apparent - it won't be without the collusion of American, Euro and Japanese multinationals.



      'Nuff said. (Say, did you mean xenophobic??? Zenophobic is fear of Zen, as in Buddhist zen spirit.

    4. Re:China not really competitive by MC68000 · · Score: 1

      Actually, zenophobia is the fear of convergent sequences.

      --
      E = m c^3 Don't drink and derive E = m c^3
    5. Re:China not really competitive by umedia · · Score: 1
      "The remarks in the teaser that points to the article have a certain zenophobic tone to them. It has been a long standing tradition of nations to protect certain markets from competition. For examples, America, Inc. has been protecting the auto industry (tarrifs on trucks), farmers and ranchers, and other politically connected businesses from foreign competition. Why should we care if China protects some little segment?"

      Who cares really? Given the nature of the Chinese Government I strongly doubt this product was intended to compete with Blackberry. It was intended to supply a platform that they control the encryption and flow of data on. I'm sure Blackberry will never be a popular product in China nor will Redberry be popular for global business.

      --
      "Humans are considered to be primitive, the third smartest species on Earth"
    6. Re:China not really competitive by mollog · · Score: 1

      "Man oh man...such lack of knowledge...I couldn't even guess where to begin to elucidate on the shortcomings of your description.

      But when China's domination becomes all too apparent - it won't be without the collusion of American, Euro and Japanese multinationals."


      Since you didn't bother to ...elucidate..., I can't respond to that. But I can tell you what is plain to everybody else; China has a population problem and they're dealing with it as best they can. They have restricted families to having one child, and too often, that child is male.

      Project, if you will, fifteen years out to the future when the current parents age and the only child is the primary workforce - a huge drop in the working age population and a huge burden of aging parents. And extrapolate what the effect is of the combined result of too many men vs. women, and a rising middle-class (who have fewer children, and have them later in life) - a continuing collapse of the population.

      They have their hands full and our smartest move is to help them however we can.

      --
      Best regards.
    7. Re:China not really competitive by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      First of all, they must not be very concerned as so much of their money is going into armaments for war-footing. Secondly, if you bothered to check your history you would find that an imbalance of males to females frequently leads to war and acts of war. Thirdly, with so many multinationals (American, Euro & Japanese) having moved their operations over to China along with transferring their technology there, there is no concern that they need anyone's help - if America, presently a war-based economy, happens to pull out of Iraq (which is the most moral and civilized course), then the economy will most probably collapse!

      Your response illuminates your lack of knowledge and, unfortunately, not much else.

  31. Beginning to sound a bit like... by Sebastopol · · Score: 1

    ...Buckaroo Banzai:

    Wasn't every alien named "John berry?"

    --
    https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
    1. Re:Beginning to sound a bit like... by Gogo0 · · Score: 1

      Almost. They were all named John, but had different last names.

      Youre thinking of the good rasta-alien that helped the humans: John Smallberries.
      Another memorable one was John BigBootay. Funny stuff.

  32. Redberries by hackwrench · · Score: 1

    I thought Redberrys were raspberrys or... don't want to research red colored berries in the time to post this article, but there are others.

  33. other blatant chinese nationalistic takes by circletimessquare · · Score: 2, Funny

    on popular consumer electronics:

    iPod -> iMao

    XBox -> XBoxerRebellion

    Sony PlayStation Portable -> Lenovo CulturalRevolution Portable

    Canon PowerShot -> Canon GreatLeapForward

    etc.

    --
    intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
  34. No! Never eat the red ones! by Script+Cat · · Score: 1

    Serously, I'm sure you'll really have to watch what you say on these.
    Does anyone know if these will be controlled directly by the central government. I wonder if the Blackberry would provide any more or less privacy than these.

  35. RB vs. BB by E++99 · · Score: 1

    RB definitely has the price advantage, being only about $100, whereas BB will a be around $5,000 after taxes. However RB will still have trouble competing since
    1) It doesn't actually recieve the emails via r/f, rather to get your emails, you have to wait in line every morning, and then you're rationed to one email per day, and
    2) Their tech support stinks, in that shortly after you call them, you are taken to a rice farm where you are re-educated over the course of a year to love your RB unconditionally.
    Oh well, at least they're trying.

  36. Hard to take off in Asia by FRiC · · Score: 1

    BlackBerry is available where I live (SE Asia), but the handset costs more than US$600 since phones aren't subsidized by the operators here, and push mail is an additional cost added towards the cellular bill. Not to mention the handsets don't support Asian languages. BlackBerry isn't likely go get anywhere, even if available, a local solution is much more useful...

  37. Remember *Why* We Have a Trade Deficit by Hootenanny · · Score: 3, Informative

    In light of the understandable comments incited by the RedBerry, with the tune of "Commie bastards, ripping off our ideas and mass producing them," let's take a different look at our trade relations with China.

    A wise man once told me, "When a business deal is being made, the buyer is in control. The buyer brings $$$$ to the table. Nothing happens in a business deal unless $$$$ changes hands. Therefore, nothing will happen unless the buyer allows it to happen."

    To relate that to the China situation, the reason we have a trade deficit is because Americans, on an individual basis, want to buy cheap mass-produced goods. This is in stark contrast with Americans as a whole, who want our economy to be strong and trade deficits to lessen. (Both of these assertions are made on a generalized basis and may not hold true in all specific instances. But let it be sufficient to make my point.)

    To loosely paraphrase V in "V for Vendetta" - "to find the origin of your problems, you only need to look in the mirror." Remember this when buying Chinese imports at Walmart, or purchasing Lenovo laptops.

    Before modding me all to hell, realize that this is a classic problem of Nash game theory. We have a trade deficit with China because individual Americans have trouble simulaneously 1) buying what they want, and 2) doing what is best for the nation.

    This line of reasoning is tangential to the introduction of the "RedBerry", but necessary (I felt) in light of all of the economic nationalist posts that Slashdotters are furiously typing. 8)

    1. Re:Remember *Why* We Have a Trade Deficit by typical · · Score: 1

      In light of the understandable comments incited by the RedBerry, with the tune of "Commie bastards, ripping off our ideas and mass producing them," let's take a different look at our trade relations with China.

      I don't see why *we* would be upset about this at all. RIM might be cranky, yes. The people who get shafted are Chinese who aren't associated with the RedBerry, who are subsidizing the development of an alternative.

      --
      Any program relying on (nontrivial) preemptive multithreading will be buggy.
    2. Re:Remember *Why* We Have a Trade Deficit by maxume · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You are making an implicit assumption, one that isn't necessarily true. You are assuming that the US 'the nation' would be better off buying only american goods. Sure, the people who lose jobs experience a particulary nasty effect of the trade deficit, but the nation as a whole may be better off, we are getting more for our money(productivity).

      The huge trade deficit with China isn't a mystery. Labor there is drastically cheaper than it is here; any labor intensive product will be much cheaper to make in China. In "The Undercover Economist", Tim Hartford states that the cost of shipping something inside Los Angeles is greater than the cost of shipping it from China, so(if he's right) shipping costs aren't particularly relevant. If the United States did not collectively have good enough credit to maintain the deficit, the deficit would collapse. It is also a possibility that the calculation of the deficit is ignoring some american export and thus is too large.

      China would not(and will not) expend a great deal of effort keeping the United States propped up in style. The best evidence for the trade deficit not being a big issue(for the US or for China) is the existence of the trade deficit.

      As China's economy grows, one of two things will likely happen: the US will be fuxored, as no one will be able to afford the high price of Chinese goods or production will move back to the US. Buying goods that are produced as efficiently as possible usually isn't a bad thing, it frees up production for other things.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:Remember *Why* We Have a Trade Deficit by ablair · · Score: 1

      "In light of the understandable comments incited by the RedBerry, with the tune of "Commie bastards, ripping off our ideas and mass producing them," let's take a different look at our trade relations with China. [...] To relate that to the China situation, the reason we have a trade deficit is because Americans, on an individual basis, want to buy cheap mass-produced goods."

      But Canada has a trade surplus, not a deficit.

    4. Re:Remember *Why* We Have a Trade Deficit by MS-06FZ · · Score: 1

      A wise man once told me, "When a business deal is being made, the buyer is in control. The buyer brings $$$$ to the table. Nothing happens in a business deal unless $$$$ changes hands. Therefore, nothing will happen unless the buyer allows it to happen."

      Did the wise man actually say "dollar-sign dollar-sign dollar-sign dollar-sign" when he was telling you this?

      --
      ---GEC
      I'm but the humble pupil, seeking to snatch the scratchbuilt pebble from the master's fully articulated hand
  38. More lawsuits... by cl191 · · Score: 1

    Cool, now NTP has one more income source

  39. Re:Leave it to... Canada? by geobeck · · Score: 1

    In other news, a competing company based in Lake of the Woods, Ontario has released the RedGreenBerry. It's a cordless phone handset with a standard Windows keyboard duct taped to the back.

    If the women don't find you handsome, they should at least find you handy. Keep your stick on the ice.

    --
    Find environmentally and socially responsible products on http://buy-right.net
  40. Rock and a hard place by amightywind · · Score: 1

    Hm. Is there a reason why the United States is just letting the Chinese practice their blatantly economic-nationalist trade policy, all the while sitting under the pretenses of free trade?

    Because they make shit cheap and spend their profits on our treasury notes. Your home mortgage rate is 3% less than it might otherwise be. (Thanks fellas!). Having said that running a $200 billion trade deficit simply cannot be tolerated. The reds are gonna need to seriously revalue their currency or the US will slap a hefty tariff on them. Currency manipulation is a no no. If they revalue their currency a billion people will suddenly have a lot more money to spend. Not an easy situation if you are a commie control freak who wants to keep peasants from rioting.

    --
    an ill wind that blows no good
  41. Red color means loyal and patriotic by fleung · · Score: 1

    Red color means loyal and patriotic, so black color do not meet the market and also CHina worry about the hack/backdoor inside the blackberry.. More news on: http://www.chinatechnews.com/index.php?action=show &type=news&id=3776

  42. Re:Raspberry would have been better! by cyfer2000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Because raspberry only grows in northeastern area of China, it is NOT a well known fruit in China. I guess no more than 5 million Chinese known such a thing. So it won't be a good product name.

    --
    There is a spark in every single flame bait point.
  43. Re:Raspberry would have been better! by Jorkapp · · Score: 1

    Obligatory Spaceballs Quote:

    Dark Helmet: There's only one man who would dare give me the raspberry...
    * Pulls down Helmet mask
    Dark Helmet: LONE STAR...

    --
    Frink: Nice try floyd, but you were designed for scrubbing, and scrubbing is what you shall do.
  44. I hate to be an ass, but . . . by SlappyBastard · · Score: 1
    Buy a history book.

    America has had a special trade relationship with China since the beginning of the Republic.

    We are almost single-handedly responsible for China's place in the world today, as China's constant angel. We've bailed China out of European colonialism, Japanese imperialism, Soviet domination and inevitable communist stagnation.

    Why? Because America, since the late 1700s, has hung its hat on being the #1 partner to the world's largest market.

    Want some good reading on the subject? Dig up a book from the 80s called the Soong Dynasty. It is about the various decendants of Charlie Soong, a Chinese-American businessman, whose family had a finger in every pie in China during the Nationalist period (Soong's daughter, Mayling, married Chiang Kaishek, and his son was Chiang's finance minister).

    When you're done, you'll understand the length to which America will go to guarantee a permanent relationship with China.

    --
    I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
  45. Huckleberry... by neurocutie · · Score: 1
    "Redberry" is very good... The Chinese could have just as well called it the Huckleberry... as in "I'm your Huckleberry..." (c.f Doc Holliday) someones speculation:
    On and off I hear discussions in which people speculate on the exact origin and meaning is of the quaint idiom used by Doc Holliday in the movie "Tombstone." I've heard some wild suggestions, including "huckleberry" meaning "pall-bearer" suggesting "I'll bury you."
  46. Can someone explain this to me? by glwtta · · Score: 1
    (I scanned the comments and didn't see anyone who knows what they are talking about discuss this)

    This seems to be the one case for which trademarks were invented: not allowing one company to profit from the reputation of another (as opposed to the various abuses of the system, which is what usually makes the news here).

    So, is there no Berne-like treaty for trademarks? Are they country/region specific? Or is China Unicom just looking to stir up trouble?

    --
    sic transit gloria mundi
  47. China's government is communist, right? by davek · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why is this being treated with any surprise? The government of china is communist, and by definition that means a single group of party leaders control essentially every aspect of a citizen's life. It seems perfectly logical that they would conciously block the deployment of a foreign product until a domestic one is released to the market.

    The question becomes: why did they choose to be deceptive in their practices? I think its part of comnunist philosophy, that leaders have to deceive the public to a certain extent, because full knowledge of what's really going on is not benificial to progress or economic success. And if this is really the case, why can't this be part of the political conversation instead of how best to use military force?

    -dave

    --
    6th Street Radio @ddombrowsky
  48. Why do I care? by edbarbar · · Score: 1

    So blackberry is hurting because the Chinese protected their monopoly. So what. The US spends $420 Billion a year on military, the Canadians $13 billion a year.

    If Canadians want to benefit from the global market place made possible by the stabalizing force of the US, then start supporting us in our efforts in the middle east. Otherwise, I don't really care about the minor problem of loss of revenue by protectionist trade practices. Ha ha.

    --
    Ed Barbar, President and General Manager, Furnit USA
    1. Re:Why do I care? by cynic10508 · · Score: 1

      There was no Chinese monopoly. Blackberry would've introduced a new service, but the Chinese kept them from launching it until a domestic version came out first. It's a common theme in Chinese business. Like circumstantial evidence; one piece may mean nothing but when it happens to multiple companies then it gets fishy. It's all about the IP. I'm not sure how the military played into your post.

    2. Re:Why do I care? by edbarbar · · Score: 1

      Let's see. The US (read, me) spends oodles of money to stabalize the world economy and you don't see how that affects your cell phone price.

      Start by imagining Europe dominated by a person intent on global domination. Imagine if Pakistan and India were lobbing nukes at each other. Imagine if Taiwan were overrun by the communists, or perhaps if Asia were largely dominated by Japan.

      Now imagine how that would affect the cost of your cell phone.

      --
      Ed Barbar, President and General Manager, Furnit USA
  49. patents are hardly free trade by Julian+Morrison · · Score: 1

    Me, I'm a libertarian anarchist, which is to say about as utterly cold-blooded purist free-trader as it gets. And frankly, to me, the Chinese have the moral high ground.

    "How dare you make a product competing with our government granted monopoly" - is not the sentiment of a free trader.

    Of course now the EU will get in on the act, announce a product named "framboise", with the contract parceled out in a rigged open tender to a semi-nationalized French firm which just happens to have a bunch of EC bureaucrats owning shares...

  50. RTFA - The original handset is the Redberry by Talez · · Score: 1

    In the article it clearly states they're using the original handsets and not using a proprietary one.

  51. Batteries and Charging (and my BB features) by MyHair · · Score: 1

    My BB will go 2 days max on a full charge, and I don't use it as a phone much. Also, the USB charger sucks compared to the wall charger. If I use the USB charger overnight the BB won't last more than a day.

    I'm lukewarm on the BB. It was provided by work. My favorite features are the downloaded Texas Hold 'Em game and the web access from my toilet, airport gate or delayed aircraft parked on the taxiway for an hour or two.

    I'm not a big email fan, so having every email buzz me is more of a (necessary for work given how they've taken our pagers away and replaced certain notifications with email) annoyance. And while the shape is usable for web surfing (and Hold 'Em) it's a pain as a phone...I drop it a lot.

    On second thought, a somewhat earth-shattering feature is web access to my company's intranet from the BB. That saved my bacon once or twice and has been convenient a few times.

    1. Re:Batteries and Charging (and my BB features) by oGMo · · Score: 1
      This may depend on your unit; I have one of the phone-like ones from T-Mobile... no difference between wall charger or USB. However, unless I plug it into a Windows box (or presumably a linux box that's configured to provide sufficient power along the USB line for that device ID), it won't charge, or will barely charge and I'll get a warning.

      I can't say I'm more than lukewarm myself; it does its job, not spectacularly, but better than other phones I've had. That's not saying much, of course. It can in SSH, although it's slow and not really realistic for anything but emergency use. As for email, unless I'm expecting something or am on call, I just turn off the buzzer.

      Given your comment about phone usability, I would guess you don't have the 710x line... I haven't used one of the "big"/"oldstyle" blackberries. They look clunky and corporate. Never had a desire to get one until I saw the 7100s. The phone is still not outstanding, but it's pretty clear, has a decent speakerphone, and plays Final Fantasy midis uncannily well. (FF1 prelude makes a great, unannoying ringtone.)

      --

      Don't think of it as a flame---it's more like an argument that does 3d6 fire damage

  52. a little editing... by MyHair · · Score: 1

    I know that Wal-Mart is the "new world" and all but for every company to fall all over themselves to deal with them is a bit ridiculous. A company that prides itself in constraining all markets, destroying their populace and basically giving the middle finger to rest of the planet is put on a pedestal by the countries that should be invading them to free their people? As all the "free" countries fall all over themselves to sell and buy from a company that is as close to slave labour as we have presently. Maybe we should just forget about them for a while and they may go away, just like K-Mart. Before you mod me to hell, think about when you purchase your Chinese crap that is produced by children that don't make enough to feed themselves.

  53. Re:Why do we think the Chinese will play fair? by PhraudulentOne · · Score: 1

    Dude, they will let people compete fairly in their market when the feel like it (the USA is no better). It's not like the USA has to buy everything from China either. Your choosing to do it. If people would open up more factories and crank out consumer goods in the States, then you could buy these things locally. You don't have cheap labour because everyone in the USA thinks they deserve 2 cars and a huge house. If people would stop living beyond their means, make less money, and localize the economy, then China wouldn't have this hold over you. Because the USA is the largest consumer country in the world, and you won't make the stuff at home, every other country gets rich off of the USA. China is making you poor because you give them money for consumer goods that only last a few years - and you've been doing it for a long time. I assume that the Chinese won't want to buy a bunch of junk from you, so you'll have to come up with something China actually wants. You probably won't be selling them technology goods because, as you say, they can do it cheaper anyway. All it takes is a few generations of Americans to stop consuming so much junk, and to stop borrowing more money than they can pay back. The last 5 generations haven't done this - that's why your country is up to its dingleberry in debt.

    In the end, I don't know why you would expect China to play fair, as the USA doesn't play fair with anyone anyway.

    --
    You create your own reality - Leave mine to me.
  54. Bingely bingely beep! by somersault · · Score: 1

    I wonder if Pratchett holds the rights rights for the Gooseberry :D

    --
    which is totally what she said
  55. Industrial Sabotage? by karolgajewski · · Score: 1

    Is there any info on exactly how similar this product will be? Given that a number of parts of the Blackberry are probably made in China, it's not too much of a stretch to conceive of an exact replica, but only with a red case.

    If it is indeed exactly the same, this would mark the second time that a Chinese company used industrial sabotage to literally copy a product. The other time was back in the 70's when Chinese atomic energy officials visited Canada to see our SLOWPOKE reactor for five years in a row. The sixth year, they revealed to the world that they came up with their own. It was copied right down to the typo on the front panel. Atomic Energy of Canada Limited was none too happy.

    --
    - .k. -
  56. Red Berries by h4ck7h3p14n37 · · Score: 1

    Aren't red berries usually poisonous?

  57. Re:here it is by AoT · · Score: 1

    GP: in china, red means happy.

    P: thats also the color that is assocaited with communism.

    'Cuz communism means happy!

  58. Re:This Just In: Chinese Gov't Protects Local Biz! by Rimbo · · Score: 1

    Because then the WTO would call us on, say, the steel tariff, the sugar tariff, pressuring EU governments to drop the suit against Microsoft...