Playbook OS 2.0 Released
Alt-kun writes "On February 21st, The Blackberry Playbook finally received its long-promised overhaul. Called Playbook OS 2.0, this major upgrade provides native email and calendaring apps, limited support for Android applications (the developer has to repackage the app for the Playbook), and a bunch of other features. There are some fairly positive initial reviews, although one can no doubt expect a lot of too-little-too-late naysaying from various quarters as well. The Globe and Mail article also contains this somewhat interesting note: '...until RIM began deep discounting ... the device languished way behind rivals such as the iPad in terms of market share. One recent report by Toronto-based Solutions Research Group, however, pegs RIM's share of the tablet market at around 15 per cent, a big jump after discounting over the holiday buying season.'"
ZDNet has some screenshots of the new features, and El Reg has a piece on an interesting bit of the new software.
10 and a half months after release, the Blackberry Playbook finally doesn't suck.
Much.
I must alert all playbook owners......owner.....I wonder if Jim even still has it.....
The fact that the Playbook didn't have native email (without tethering to a Blackberry phone) from the start speaks enormously about what's wrong with RIM (or RIM's management, to be precise). The guys in charge thought "this will increase phone sales since people will want email." Not only is that idiotic reasoning considering all the tablet competition, it's a shitty attitude to have towards your customers.
Make people WANT to buy RIM phones, not have to.
too bad that their OS is not OpenSource and Linux-based.
I would like to point out that I only stopped to read this cuz I've misread "Playboy OS 2.0"
I got the Playbook yesterday and love it already. Bridge works great and the UI is very well thought out. There are some features that even to the iPad. When you type in a password field, the keyboard adds a number row to the top for example. That being said what are some good apps? I am using Lemma for my twitter client. Any other little gems?
You could, you know, right your own:
https://bdsc.webapps.blackberry.com/html5/api
BOOM! Native Email Application! YOUR MOVE APPLE!
I've never heard this one before, thank you so much for this.
One recent report by Toronto-based Solutions Research Group, however, pegs RIM's share of the tablet market at around 15 per cent
No bloody way. I'd love to see some actual data on this.
One recent report by Toronto-based Solutions Research Group, however, pegs RIM's share of the tablet market at around 15 per cent, a big jump after discounting over the holiday buying season.
That's 15 per cent of the Canadian tablet market. One would figure they're doing much worse outside Canada.
Haven't all other BlackBerry devices for the last nine years had native email? Kind of a glaring omission in version 1.0 of the PlayBook.
But oh well, I'm sure the few Canadians who got a good deal on them will be happy.
Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
Happy - the playbook now recognizes MKV movie files Con - The have very few codecs for it so most of my stuff doesn't play correctly! And I REALLY want my subtitles (I'm an anime geek, so sue me!)
Practice Static Safety - Hack Naked
I picked up a playbook earlier this month, and am loving it [*ducks*].
But seriously, I had planned on getting a kindle fire for a cheap and light web-browsing, pass-the-time gaming, and music and movies for the kids. Then the playbooks went on sale and for the same price I got twice the memory (1GB RAM vs 512MB and 16GB SSD vs 8GB) plus font and back cameras.
Admittedly the apps aren't there for many people, but there are enough for me. Also, the browser is as good or better than many android tablets I've tried (with exception of Hulu which I can't get to work). I figure the number of apps will grow, but I'm stuck with the hardware (I use stuff until it's beyond repair, so I plan on 5yrs or so) for me it's a better investment.
If you were a true anime geek you would learn Japanese. Please turn in your Anime Geek Member Card.
Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
Convert to proper MP4 container with AAC audio and plain text track subtitles.
It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
Copernicus heliocentric theory upsets the vatican RIM finds email at center of its world!
The various iPad app devs don't want you to know that.
I'm an iOS app developer. I don't care, at all, about what anyone does or does not know about the Playbook.
I mean, you'd have to be an idiot not to know that any device with a browser can reach a web interface for mail - just as you'd have to be an idiot to think that's at all an acceptable solution for daily email use.
In the end, here's what you utterly fail to understand - I am not just an iOS developer, I am a MOBILE developer. Any mobile developer can, with a little adjustment, pretty easily move to another platform. I have half an eye out on WP7 to see if it gains traction for instance. Because I make money doing mobile development, that makes me MORE platform agnostic because I can and will simply program for the platform that I feel I can get the most return on. Currently that is iOS but the computer industry teaches if (if we are willing to learn) that nothing is forever.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
I have the 64Gig playbook and I've been playing with the new OS. Here is my opinion.
RIM still has a lot of work to do. Their device still needs a lot of polish to just be on par with the iPad. Then they need to provide some earth-shattering software to make it worth buying.
One critical failure they have is that they do not have software "showing off" their hardware. Rumors have it that the Playbook has a GPS, compass etc. I have no way of knowing that. They have an impressive spreadsheet and word-processor. It doesn't matter because most tablets are consumption devices. They need to have a very good pdf reader. What they included is barely passable.
They need to improve their music player. I could rant all day about this but here are a few points. You can't upload by album. You can't list by album. You can play music on external bluetooth speakers.
I'm seething now. Let me stop
This is a corporate or academic feature, but some of us work, you know, for companies or academia.
From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
Account description: sandm
I don't know much about the market in Canada, I know that often it's much like the U.S., sometimes more limited since many foreign vendors are just thinking about coming to the U.S. and haven't even considered Canada yet. This creates obvious lack of choice issues. But based on the pathetic sales of the Playbook and the enormous sales of other devices, it still seems strange. I would say that they had to limit their demographic further somehow. Like sticking strictly to people who actually consider a tie appropriate to wear in public (I mean other than to weddings and funerals). Maybe by going to a church of some type, even then that sounds weird since most of the guys I know who actually go to church use iPhones anyway since it's easier to listen to sports games on them while the tiny bluetooth earbud is hidden under their fluffy hair (and you thought the fluffy hair on men at church was just a weird jesus crispy thing... no it really has a purpose). Or maybe they camped outside of a Blackberry store and found that 85% of the tablet owners who came out were just trying to connect their blackberry to their iPad.
It just seems to me that it would be very hard in general to find 150 playbook users out of a genuinely randomly picked 1000 tablet owners. Of course, maybe a better statistic would be to compare active users as opposed to simply owners. Maybe at the low price they offered it, tons of people who had owned a Blackberry figured WTF? and gave it a shot before realizing they should have just saved up for the Samsung or the iPad.
I currently have 3 iPads in my house. Got one as a gift from my boss. Wife got one as a gift from her boss. Daughter won one in a "click here to win an iPad" thing. Would have never spent money on them, especially after using one for a year. It's pretty bloody useless. I do also have a Kindle (I think it works) and I have a Samsung Series 7 Slate. The Slate I packed up tonight, brought it downtown and met my nephew there and was teaching him C++ development using Visual Studio 2010 on it. When I needed a scratch pad, I switched to the PaintPlay app and just scribbled using my stylus on it. That's a tablet that actually does something useful. It's a damn shame the Windows 8 ARM tablet is going to suck so bad. I mean, don't get me wrong, it's cute and stuff that it'll look like the x86 version, but it won't run anything other than the same shit you find on every other tablet. When I look at the Playbook (including the new version I looked at online) I still can't figure out what form of utility value it offers AT ALL.
I was all for Canada in the beginning, but in OS1.0 I understood the security stuff meant no single app, nor of course any user, could tweak with the information flux 'system wide' to stripe ads for instance -- this would have to be integrated straight into a browser.
Anyone around having checked that in the v2.0 browser?
Herve S.