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Study Finds iPhone Twice As Reliable As BlackBerry

An anonymous reader writes "As reported at TechCrunch, 'The iPhone is twice as reliable as the BlackBerry after one year of ownership, a new study by SquareTrade finds. SquareTrade, which sells extra warranties for cell phones and other devices, looked at the failure rates of 15,000 phones covered under its plans. The malfunction rate for iPhones after one year is 5.6 percent, compared to 11.2 percent for the BlackBerry and 16.2 percent for the Treo.' The full report (pdf) can be found at the SquareTrade site."

12 of 301 comments (clear)

  1. Re:bias. by powerspike · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have to agree with this totaly. As a business user, if something goes wrong, i want it fixed asap, as it will affect my job in someway (this is a generic view on any device i use as a part of my workflow). As an indivual, I have a itouch, i have had several issues withit, but it still does what i want it to, so i haven't bothered to take it in for repairs yet, but it needs it (the case is coming apart - bad glue?). but you get the point. business users will raise issues alot faster then retail ones.

  2. Who protects a Blackberry? by NevDull · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have and carry both a Blackberry for work, and an iPhone because I wanted something that wasn't under the control of IT overlords. I'm sure that I'm not the only one who carries a Blackberry in the default plastic holster and drops it onto the floor at least once every few weeks... and it's got nothing to protect it from that dive. My iPhone, however, being my personal property, does get better care. It's usually in a case in a pocket, and only small portions of its surface are directly exposed... I'm not surprised that iPhones fail less. People take far better care of them.

  3. Re:bias. by catwh0re · · Score: 5, Informative
    actually, the apple consumers are usually very pedantic about their product and rightly so, the product is usually marketed as a premium item and costs a little more than the competitor.

    So far even minor issues found in the iphone have been turned into a maelstrom of users, fanboys and haters all cashing in their feedback. There are people actively petitioning the iPhone for the following: Canadian pricing, the autocorrection feature having a disable switch, iphone unlocking/drm, 3rd party application NDAs, iphone in china & other providers, chrome for iphone, mms, 802.1x NACS, etc etc.

    The blackberry is not getting anywhere near this much attention, petitions for the blackberry are aimed at the service providers disablement of a particular BB feature.

    However all this vocal activity is a good thing for apple, as it gives them ways they can improve their product.

  4. Re:OMGITSSOOOOOSHINY by darkmeridian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    My coworkers and I get our Blackberries through the firm, and you'd be surprised how many old-model Blackberries get dropped once the new models become available. "Only the partners have the new ones?" "Yeah. We're relying on attrition to wear down the associates' Blackberries." Next day. "I need a new Blackberry. I dropped mine."

    --
    A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
  5. Re:bias. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    the case is coming apart - bad glue?

    That's not broken. You're one of the lucky ones who got one with a user replaceable battery!

  6. Re:OMGITSSOOOOOSHINY by syousef · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Not to mention that most Blackberry users have devices paid for by their employer. The majority of iPhone users buy their own phones.

    Regardless of who bought it, which would you spend more time protecting? Your personal entertainment device that lets you listen to music etc. or the virtual servant bell which forces you to check your email regularly out of hours and which few people use for personal calls.

    --
    These posts express my own personal views, not those of my employer
  7. Twice as reliable? by sleeponthemic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The malfunction rate for iPhones after one year is 5.6 percent, compared to 11.2 percent for the BlackBerry

    To me that suggests the iphone is 94.4% reliable and the blackberry is 88.8% reliable. That's just me, though.

    --
    I record my sleeptalking
  8. Re:OMGITSSOOOOOSHINY by daBass · · Score: 5, Interesting

    While no denying your comment, I doubt many companies like yours would be using extra warranty services like this. I am sure SquareTrade's statistics only includes those insured by them - most likely individuals and small businesses.

    So the abuse by enterprise users likely does not come into these figures.

  9. Re:OMGITSSOOOOOSHINY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    My coworkers and I get our Blackberries through the firm, and you'd be surprised how many old-model Blackberries get dropped once the new models become available. "Only the partners have the new ones?" "Yeah. We're relying on attrition to wear down the associates' Blackberries." Next day. "I need a new Blackberry. I dropped mine."

    I had a horrible accident with a Blackberry and a prototype mass driver at the lab. When my supervisor offered to have it repaired I handed him a Dust Buster and pointed to a smudge on the wall.

  10. Re:OMGITSSOOOOOSHINY by amiga500 · · Score: 5, Funny

    An executive at my employer recently had to have his Blackberry replaced after his wife threw it against a wall while they were on vacation.

  11. Re:OMGITSSOOOOOSHINY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    With 3G Smartphones being so commonplace these days is Blackberry even relevent anymore?

    Yes. The Blackberry platform remains the best mobile data system by far. Strong encryption, fully audited, free dev kits, no restrictions on what you do with it, push email, strong control of the devices by central IT policy, and outstanding integration with Exchange, Notes or GroupWise. Even supports PGP or S/MIME email for additional paranoia.

    Unlike the iphone or googlephone, no one can remove apps from your blackberry (aside from your IT people).

    Now, you might not be interested in all these features, but nothing else comes close.

  12. Re:OMGITSSOOOOOSHINY by PCM2 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Regardless of who bought it, which would you spend more time protecting? Your personal entertainment device that lets you listen to music etc. or the virtual servant bell which forces you to check your email regularly out of hours and which few people use for personal calls.

    In all fairness, modern BlackBerry handsets do audio and video. Mine even has a 3.5mm headphone jack. Many also come equipped with cameras (although people who need to go places that don't allow cameras can get ones without). It's also good for surfing the Web, and although it comes equipped with a pretty decent mapping application, Google Maps is even better. As for personal calls, well, I really just don't enjoy being on the phone that much. But if I was somewhere away from home and I needed to make a phone call, I imagine pulling my BlackBerry out of my pocket, dialing a number, and holding it to my ear would be the simplest way to do it. Why wouldn't I?

    What's more, all modern BlackBerry handsets have an Auto On/Off feature. If you're really so concerned, have it switch itself off at 6pm and come back on in the morning.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!