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Black Sheep Blackberry Blackballed By Business

Hugh Pickens writes "Nicole Perlroth writes that the BlackBerry, once proudly carried by the high-powered and the elite, has become a magnet for mockery and derision from those with iPhones and the latest Android phones. as Research in Motion clings to less than 5 percent of the smartphone market — down from a dominating 50 percent just three years ago. One of the first steps Marissa Mayer took as Yahoo's newly appointed chief executive to remake the company's stodgy image was to trade in employees' BlackBerrys for iPhones and Androids and although BlackBerrys may still linger in Washington, Wall Street and the legal profession, in Silicon Valley they are as rare as a necktie. BlackBerry outcasts say that, increasingly, they suffer from shame and public humiliation as they watch their counterparts mingle on social networking apps that are not available to them, take higher-resolution photos, and effortlessly navigate streets — and the Internet — with better GPS and faster browsing."

349 comments

  1. So fucking what? by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Stupid people like to tease me for liking Star Trek and the Misfits. Fuck them, it's what *I* like that matters to me. If you switch phones because your old one isn't cool enough, you're a dipshit and deserved the mockery you were getting in the first place.

    --
    My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    1. Re:So fucking what? by arcite · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No kidding. A BB is a BUSINESS tool. If you want a no nonsense device with a physical keyboard and superior email and message handling, a BB is still the best.

    2. Re:So fucking what? by FreakyGeeky · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This thinking is exactly why RIM is in trouble. "But we do business email best! We'll always have a market!"

    3. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Indeed.

      Of all the things a person can be mocked for.. their choice in smart phone.. really!

      Either way, article missed the core reason. RIM created an identity as a "business" phone, which is inherently uncool. They were good at this. What they apparently didn't count on (and hindsight is always 20/20) was their business customers having "cool" phones for home use.. and seeing their blackberry as their "boring work phone". Only a matter of time before one says "why the hell can't I just use my iphone for work too" .. and here we are!

    4. Re:So fucking what? by jbolden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You should read the article. It was attacking the functionality of the BB as a business tool as well: mapping, not having all the messaging features, and client's having a low opinion of it. I don't think things are really that bad for BB but this is the NYTimes, so you can't just blow the article off.

    5. Re:So fucking what? by jbolden · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which incidentally is exactly why Microsoft is so worried about Android and iOS becoming the consumer standard for desktop / laptop. That is why their Win8 strategy makes sense, they don't want to be in RIM's position in 2022.

    6. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the trackball.

    7. Re:So fucking what? by tuppe666 · · Score: 3, Funny

      Stupid people like to tease me for liking Star Trek and the Misfits. Fuck them, it's what *I* like that matters to me. If you switch phones because your old one isn't cool enough, you're a dipshit and deserved the mockery you were getting in the first place.

      Fitting in is important, although liking Star Trek which is pretty mainstream getting you teased is really surprising. I think perhaps you shouldn't cosplay all the time.

    8. Re:So fucking what? by alen · · Score: 1

      iPhone email is way ahead of blackberry now. Has been for a few years

      Buggy BES servers are hated by IT

    9. Re:So fucking what? by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Whether or not the software is better, until an iPhone comes with a hardware keyboard, nuts to them!

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    10. Re:So fucking what? by Karellen · · Score: 1

      Maybe once the market share gets low enough, these asshats can just don some thick-rimmed glasses and claim to be hipsters using thier BBs ironically.

      *eyeroll*

      --
      Why doesn't the gene pool have a life guard?
    11. Re:So fucking what? by DThorne · · Score: 2

      You really think it means nothing that a CEO of a major corporation(and countless other CEOs and business leaders) do something like this? I know, not to you personally, obviously, but this is how trends and perceptions are started and propagated. The story is about how screwed RIM is, and I think this is a valid thing for them to be worried about. Sure, RIM might possibly survive as a hardcore business technology if they get their act together and focus on that rather than poorly attempting to be 'cool', but just because you're disdainful of 'shallow' features like social media(which for many businesses is increasingly critical) and whipping out your phone and showing a client an awesome new game/learning tool/organization tool and impressing the hell out of them, and also loosening up the atmosphere to boot, doesn't mean others do too. It's less about shame and more about staying current.

    12. Re:So fucking what? by tuppe666 · · Score: 1

      Which incidentally is exactly why Microsoft is so worried about Android and iOS becoming the consumer standard for desktop / laptop. That is why their Win8 strategy makes sense, they don't want to be in RIM's position in 2022.

      They should wish to be in RIM's position. Microsoft Phone OS is not looking healthy and from Q3 Nokia Financial Statements...the main supplier of Phones its all bad news, and they deserve it.

    13. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      just because it's the NYT doesn't make it informative,
      reliable or anything else. isn't this the same place that
      mocks correlation == causation?

    14. Re:So fucking what? by Tridus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Other phones are *better* business tools, if you're in a business that has more to it then just email and IM. There's quite a lot of business that falls into that category.

      We're looking at giving field staff phones when they do their ice jam monitoring during the winter/spring, because it lets them have maps of their routes, take photos of the jam, and submit it all from the field. We're not considering Blackberries for this task, because they're so far behind current phones that they're just not up to the task.

      Have a business where you can use apps to look at client data, market data, or any other kind of data? BB is a bad phone for it.

      Sorry folks, but "we do email best!" doesn't cut it anymore.

      --
      -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    15. Re:So fucking what? by Tridus · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's position happens to include a pretty strong desktop PC business, I'm pretty sure their position is better then RIM's right now.

      --
      -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    16. Re:So fucking what? by datapharmer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      amen. We finally got our last user off blackberry this month and shut down the BES the next day. Good riddance to a piece of bloated crapware!

      --
      Get a web developer
    17. Re:So fucking what? by Lumpy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But they dont. Android and iPhone utterly crush the BB in "business email".

      the BB is an exercise in frustration with email. android Jelly Bean's email client is a dream compared to the BB. Oh and it works great with our company exchange server, no nasty useless poorly written BB server in the back office that everyone hated to deal with.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    18. Re:So fucking what? by MightyYar · · Score: 2

      Star Trek? I get that. It's campy, but you can have fun with that.

      The Misfits... pffft... What I want to know is, what planet are Nickleback fans from? Go to the Nickleback Facebook page and see which of your "friends" actually clicked on the Like button - it is very highly correlated with the douche-bags on your Friends list.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    19. Re:So fucking what? by Sarten-X · · Score: 4, Informative

      To be fair, they will always have a market. It'll just be an extremely limited market of companies whose people need to be mobile and not using phones, yet still able to send and receive urgent messages. One example I know of offhand is Disney's theme parks, where supervisors carry Blackberry devices only for emergency emails while they're out in public. The supervisors can't waste time playing games, yet they can still call 911 and stay up-to-date on the status of the resort. The Blackberry devices look professional and do exactly what's needed, and nothing more.

      --
      You do not have a moral or legal right to do absolutely anything you want.
    20. Re:So fucking what? by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Agreed, he walks around dressed as Captian Kirk and wears a misfits skullcap. It would not be so bad but he refuses to talk normal and is constantly asking for scotty to beam him up...

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    21. Re:So fucking what? by tuppe666 · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's position happens to include a pretty strong desktop PC business, I'm pretty sure their position is better then RIM's right now.

      You do know this Article is about about Phones...and Coolness. I think your post is more off-topic than I have ever seen one.

    22. Re:So fucking what? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      The post was an analogy, what's happening to RIM on phone is what could be happening in a decade to Microsoft on PC. As far as sales I think RIM is about 3:1 over Microsoft.

    23. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or a Palm.

    24. Re:So fucking what? by LaminatorX · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      They're just jealous cus you ain't no goddamn sonofabitch.

    25. Re:So fucking what? by tuppe666 · · Score: 1

      Star Trek? I get that. It's campy, but you can have fun with that.

      The Misfits... pffft... What I want to know is, what planet are Nickleback fans from? Go to the Nickleback Facebook page and see which of your "friends" actually clicked on the Like button - it is very highly correlated with the douche-bags on your Friends list.

      The irony of your comment its the same elitist crap as is make out in the article...and you fell for it. Seriously in today's world Nickleback come across as talented musicians. Why would ANYONE hate them unless they were told to. I don't own or like their music, but I recognise that I am repeatedly told that I should dislike them. The sad fact is I see more people with posts like yours than "I saw this really great band you should check them out" and there is outside the charts an awful lot of talent.

    26. Re:So fucking what? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      so...

      what does ice jam taste like?

      (relax, i'm joking, but it would be interesting to know what kind of work this is: ice floes on the great lakes/ some river somewhere? what is this work place, army corp of engineers?)

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    27. Re:So fucking what? by JDG1980 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Which incidentally is exactly why Microsoft is so worried about Android and iOS becoming the consumer standard for desktop / laptop. That is why their Win8 strategy makes sense, they don't want to be in RIM's position in 2022.

      Bad analogy. RIM didn't have the advantage of massive legacy lock-in. The reason people use Windows isn't that it is better than Linux or OSX in some platonic sense; it's because Windows runs everything they have, and the other desktop OSes don't. The fact that just about everyone in the business world is trained on Windows (and usually not on Linux or OSX) also helps.

      Microsoft's position is a lot more secure than RIM's, and their Windows 8 strategy is actually a threat to that position because it alienates their core demographics.

    28. Re:So fucking what? by FreonTrip · · Score: 1
    29. Re:So fucking what? by QuantumRiff · · Score: 2

      Maybe on the client side.. But having to build and maintain a server just for you phones to talk to your exchange server is a bit silly. Everyone else has moved to activesync. Encryption, forced security poicies, etc. (which BES has too, and used to be its strengths) but is now built into exchange, zarafa, gmail (and their apps hosted email) and other email servers.

      Not to mention that weird "all your data goes to our servers in Canada first" thing.

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    30. Re:So fucking what? by OverkillTASF · · Score: 1

      As someone who recently moved to the latest and greatest flagship Android phone, I can say... Android lacks a lot of what makes the Blackberry great. Anyone who actually uses their phone for email will really miss that fantastic keyboard. And now when I'm on call I have to wake up for every high severity email because the "best" email app, "Good", doesn't support any rules/filters like the Blackberry had built in. This Samsung phone is way more phone, but the Blackberry worked harder, and I miss it.

    31. Re:So fucking what? by Reverand+Dave · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Seconded, that's exactly what we did. Actually we shut that POS down right after I set up the exchange client for the last user. I think it was less than an hour after we got him switched over. BES was/is a nightmare.

      --
      I got here through a series of tubes
    32. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple's mapping software is ahead of BB's? Wow, BB's must be awful!

    33. Re:So fucking what? by LordLimecat · · Score: 5, Informative

      But they dont. Android and iPhone utterly crush the BB in "business email".

      Absolute nonsense. Lets do a comparison. And btw, Im sure ill get called a shill for this, but I post it because Im absolutely furious that I traded my bold 9650 for a Motorola Admiral, which might be the worst business phone ever despite having 2.3.7 android and a full qwerty keyboard.

      Setup
      Blackberry, the IT staff does their magic (basically, just auths a user's email address and generates a code). The user enters their email address, and a one time code. Thats it. Blackberry email is activated. Never have to worry about password changes, or SSL certs. Never have to worry about whether DNS name or email server changes (a refresh of the BES services will fix that immediately).
      ActiveSync: User needs all sorts of stupid info: mail server address, mailbox name (some phones), mail password (a problem for some users who honestly dont know it), whether to use SSL, what parts of the mailbox to sync, retention period, etc. Also, it uses SSL, so if the cert is selfsigned or expired, have fun getting the phone to work. Also, will stop syncing when users password changes. Also, will stop syncing if you ever need to migrate email servers or change DNS name.

      Usage
      Blackberry: Has qwerty shortcuts for basically everything, so basically anything can be done one-handed. Recognizes phone numbers AND extensions in basically any context for rapid dialing. Hardware buttons for answering phone.
      Android: Wants you to use touch for EVERYTHING (even if qwerty keyboard is present), which means 2-handed use. Has basically no keyboard shortcuts (for compose, reply, etc). Has problems with some extensions depending on vendor (my admiral can only recognize extensions with ###-###-####; ### format, which absolutely noone uses). Software buttons for answering phone-- which means input lag can cause you to miss your call (has happened several times to me).

      Security
      Blackberry: Uses per-device AES encryption. Devices support full storage and memory encryption. Only way to compromise a device is to get into that device, or else compromise the BES itself.
      Android: Uses ActiveSync, which means SSL. Simply getting a CA to sign you a bogus cert for mail.targetcompany.com and doing some DNS poisoning is sufficient to perform a MITM on any and all phones for that organization. Bonus points when you go and check out what entities are on the trusted root authority list on all of those androids you deployed.

      There are areas that Blackberry fails, I understand that; but in its core competencies Android is a poor replacement for Blackberry. Its problem is that it has accepted the mantra "touch input good, physical bad", which is great from a consumer media content but terrible from a "lets be productive" standpoint.

    34. Re:So fucking what? by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      BB is an exercise in frustration with email.

      Could you provide examples? Nothing is perfect but this statement flies in the face of over 10 years of industry use.

      it works great with our company exchange server, no nasty useless poorly configured BB server in the back office that everyone hated to deal with.

      Complex systems are complex. Novel Netware could do things 20 years ago that Active Directory can't do to this day but AD is simpler to use. I hated dealing with the Netware interface but lamented it's demise once I realized the things that were lost.

      And when your company has a mandatory 30/60/90 day password policy what happens when you change your password? Your account get's locked, reset, locked again, reset, locked again until you realize you forgot to go in and change your password on every iOS/Android device that pulls email from Activesync. I get calls regularly from the SAME PEOPLE every 60 days here since we started allowing iOS devices. Support cost has increased despite our "Allowed but not supported" policy. Activesync actually goes down more often than RIM's infrastructure ever has and Apple and Microsoft can't identify why.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    35. Re:So fucking what? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Oh, a "business tool", that sounds so professional

      Business email may have a few different requirements (security and all that), but functionally it really isn't all that different from private email. Perhaps that is why people expect their phones to handle both kinds of email in the same manner. BB does this, but apparently other smartphones do a better job. At my client's office, managers have a corporate BB but can also get their business email and calendar on their iPhone or Android. Most of them have ditched the BB as a result, and keep in mind that these aren't your most geeky users; their primary use for their phone is making calls, checking appointments, and reading email.

      I am seeing the same trend in other areas of IT as well: what's on the consumer market is often far better than what we're using in business... and there really are few good reasons why we shouldn't have the same stuff in business either.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    36. Re:So fucking what? by DrXym · · Score: 1

      I have a Playbook running 2.1 (the latest firmware) and while the native email client is quite good I wouldn't rate it any better than GMail's client, or even GMail's web interface for that matter.

    37. Re:So fucking what? by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      Google maps on my blackberry worked just fine. Im really not sure what their issue was. Its honestly more infuriating on my Android because it doesnt have keyboard shortcuts for next/previous turn -- only touch screen controls-- which makes it kind of hard/dangerous to use while driving. And actually my old blackberry retained a lock better since they also used tower triangulation. My android tends to lose its lock sometimes, unless I stick it on my dashboard.

      As for messaging, they mentioned social networking. Oh boo hoo, how will business proceeed without facebook? Blackberry absolutely crushes android in email messaging and anyone who says otherwise either has odd definitions of usability, or else has never used a blackberry.

      Like any other news organization, NYTimes occasionally makes boneheadd statements. Blackberries are still the best device from an IT standpoint; whether the users like them or not SHOULD be irrelevant, because their job isnt to like their business phone, its to do business.

    38. Re:So fucking what? by DrXym · · Score: 1

      To clarify I'm talking of the native GMail client on Android - there isn't one for the Playbook. The web interface runs on the Playbook though and is actually quite slick.

    39. Re:So fucking what? by rubikscubejunkie · · Score: 2

      BB may have a poor interface, but its security controls are second to none.

    40. Re:So fucking what? by na1led · · Score: 1

      If it makes you feel better, there is still 1 employee at my company using a BB phone.

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    41. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Re-read jbolden's post, or did you somehow manage to miss the words "desktop / laptop". Are you a /. editor by chance?

    42. Re:So fucking what? by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      The reason people use Windows isn't that it is better than Linux or OSX in some platonic sense; it's because Windows runs everything they have, and the other desktop OSes don't.

      By your own reasoning RIM is in a better position for mobile handsets since BB 10 (which I realize has been delayed several times) will run Android and possibly iOS apps as well as native apps. Windows RT and Windows Phone 8 can't even run legacy Windows apps.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    43. Re:So fucking what? by alen · · Score: 1

      most people don't care about the hardware keyboard and the one on blackberries is too small anyway

      for us big hand people the iphone keyboard has a landscape mode

    44. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right. Research In Motion has nobody to blame for their current situation except the senior management team's hubris. The attitude persists despite a change in the top management team. And the worst part is the lazy attitude of every manager from C-level executive to team leads within the organization.

    45. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      ActiveSync: User needs all sorts of stupid info: mail server address, mailbox name (some phones), mail password (a problem for some users who honestly dont know it), whether to use SSL, what parts of the mailbox to sync, retention period, etc. Also, it uses SSL, so if the cert is selfsigned or expired, have fun getting the phone to work. Also, will stop syncing when users password changes. Also, will stop syncing if you ever need to migrate email servers or change DNS name.

      But BlackBerry 10 will be using ActiveSync instead of traditional BlackBerry push-notification. Bye-bye to BlackBerry Enterprise Server as we know it as it is replaced by BlackBerry Mobile Fusion.

    46. Re:So fucking what? by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 1

      If you want a no nonsense device with a physical keyboard and superior email and message handling, a BB is still the best.

      Exactly right.

      I switched from a corporate BlackBerry to a corporate iPhone five months ago. The browsing and apps are superior as is seamless access to content, but man do I miss that tactile keyboard. "You'll get used to it fast" was the standard mantra. Well, four months on and many hundreds of emails later and I'm still not used to it - My productivity is way down.

      Maybe it's because I'm a Gen-Xer and I hate typing "were U at?" in emails, but I wish my iPhone and my BlackBerry had gone away for a dirty weekend and I'd wound up with the offspring.

    47. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Buggy BES servers are hated by IT

      BlackBerry Enterprise Server is only hated by the click-and-drool "administrators" whom companies choose to employ these days because they are a dime a dozen. I supported BlackBerry Enterprise Server in various sized organizations for 2 years and enjoyed the experience.

    48. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had a Blackberry Curve 8520 which I thought the keyboard was waaaay to small for texting. I always found myself grabbing a pencil so I could type something out. The only reason I used it was because it was free from the company. I just purchased my first iPhone for personal use, I couldn't be happier with it.

    49. Re:So fucking what? by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I thought it was obvious that my comment contained some irony, but such is the nature of typed speech.

      Anyway, Nickleback may or may not be talented individual musicians, but collectively they represent something like an embodiment of all that is wrong with the cookie cutter music industry. You end up with awesome stuff like this clip where they play two songs at the same time. Yes, those are two different songs. Same chord progression, same tempo, mostly the same rhythm, and only a slight difference in melody. Even if the songs weren't exactly the same song, my impulse is always to turn the radio station when this stuff comes on. I didn't even know I was turning off Nickleback so consistently until someone laughed and said, "I guess you don't like Nickleback..." That's how I learned who they were.

      Anyway, if you enjoy it, good for you. But you are probably a douche-bag ;p Fortunately for you, you are in good company - there are certainly a lot of Nickleback fans, as they have sold 50 million records. Most of them at the northern Jersey shore, though in at a close second is the Long Island market.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    50. Re:So fucking what? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 4, Informative

      Setup
      ...
      ActiveSync: User needs all sorts of stupid info: mail server address, mailbox name (some phones), mail password (a problem for some users who honestly dont know it), whether to use SSL, what parts of the mailbox to sync, retention period, etc. Also, it uses SSL, so if the cert is selfsigned or expired, have fun getting the phone to work. Also, will stop syncing when users password changes. Also, will stop syncing if you ever need to migrate email servers or change DNS name.

      Sounds like you need to update your OS. I have both Android and iOS mobile devices and they are able to automatically configure themselves with the exchange server. It even tries to find the exchange server based on your email address. Besides this is a one-time configuration issue and not enough to complain about.

      Security
      Blackberry: Uses per-device AES encryption. Devices support full storage and memory encryption. Only way to compromise a device is to get into that device, or else compromise the BES itself. Android: Uses ActiveSync, which means SSL. Simply getting a CA to sign you a bogus cert for mail.targetcompany.com and doing some DNS poisoning is sufficient to perform a MITM on any and all phones for that organization. Bonus points when you go and check out what entities are on the trusted root authority list on all of those androids you deployed.

      Blackberry has its share of exploits. One was demonstrated at Pwn2Own which exploited the browser of a BB Torch 9800. This exploit could be used to install Flexispy. There was also a talk at DefCon 2006 where the BB could be exploited to get access to the internal LAN of the corporation.

      My point being that don't be so smug about the security of your device. There are exploits out there.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    51. Re:So fucking what? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      The business market cut their development budgets after 2001 and they have stagnated on the desktop experience. This is precisely the reason the minis and mainframes lost the enterprise desktop in the 1990s because of the stagnation in the business sector relative to the incredibly active consumer sector of the 80s and early 90s.

    52. Re:So fucking what? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      And when your company has a mandatory 30/60/90 day password policy what happens when you change your password? Your account get's locked, reset, locked again, reset, locked again until you realize you forgot to go in and change your password on every iOS/Android device that pulls email from Activesync. I get calls regularly from the SAME PEOPLE every 60 days here since we started allowing iOS devices. Support cost has increased despite our "Allowed but not supported" policy. Activesync actually goes down more often than RIM's infrastructure ever has and Apple and Microsoft can't identify why.

      Sounds like a benefit. There is a reason to behind mandatory password resets.

      If users have so many mobile devices that they couldn't find the time to update the password then maybe they need to prune the number of devices down. Also, forcing people to change the password on the devices that they actually use has a benefit of disabling the email clients on devices that they don't. This prevents eavesdropping from roommates or family members, since just because you can check your work email on every mobile device you have laying around your house doesn't mean it's a good idea.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    53. Re:So fucking what? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      I highly doubt BB10 will be able to run iOS apps. They would need the entire Cocoa stack to do that. Remember iOS apps are written in Objective C they make all sorts of low level calls routinely.

    54. Re:So fucking what? by iamgnat · · Score: 1

      Funny how replying to a post mentioning the Misfits with a quote from one of their songs gets you modded Offtopic.

      Him being a 'sonofabitch' entirely depends on if it's the original music or the rotting remains Jerry continues to push around. If it's the later, then I'll be happy to mock him publicly.

      Now I have to go dig out my albums. It's been far too long since I've listened to 20 Eyes or Mommy...

    55. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, that didn't matter as much as they think it did. Blackberry was used, BECAUSE it was a smartphone, because it was businessperson's toy. You want to impress your clients, then you pull out your smartphone and read your latest report on it.

      Functionality is great, sure, but aspect just as much. They don't buy Armani or whatever expensive suits only because they're comfortable, they buy them, because the price tag, the message it sends.

      Thinking of how fast trends change, perhaps you should keep your old phones, in a few years, they'll look very exotic.

    56. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is this rated as insightful?

      It's someone's opinion without even a simple example. My opinion is the opposite and I've used BB, ICS and iOS for email. Can I have a +5 too? Thanks.

    57. Re:So fucking what? by Octorian · · Score: 1

      Except BlackBerry actually has pretty good Facebook and Twitter support. (and there's a decent 3rd party Google+ app) The only main one missing is Linkedin, and they used to have that. (But like many mobile projects, it got abandoned shortly after it was released and promoted.)

      Where it fails, is the "Whoopdie do! We just invented a startup last week to leech off FB and do something stupid! We even have an iPhone app!" market.

    58. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From what you replied to:

      "Which incidentally is exactly why Microsoft is so worried about Android and iOS becoming the consumer standard for desktop / laptop."

      Notice those last two words say desktop/laptop and not PHONES.

    59. Re:So fucking what? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Mandatory password resets might have a place, but they are overdone. You have a password that you have set up which is secure and easy to remember, and then you have to change it every month or two, eventually you give up trying to make one that is hard to crack and you go with easy to remember. That or you start writing them down on pieces of paper or saving them in places that could be a lot more easily compromised. Both of those situations are much less secure than keeping a good password for 6 months to a year.

      I know there are regulations out there that make passwords for certain key applications have to be changed every 180 days, but doing it more than that is just counter-productive. People are more likely to create good passwords if you have a good campaign to tell them what they need to have as passwords, and then you don't make them keep having to go through the process over and over again.

      If you think introducing inconvenience into your security policies is a great way to maintain security, your probably going to find yourself critically sabotaged by your own users who have lost all sympathy for what you are trying to do.

    60. Re:So fucking what? by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      You know what I like the best about the BlackBerry's email handling system? When my coworkers all get emails on their iPhones and Galaxy phones, they have to scroll through like ten different apps and all their notifications and then they finally get to the new email message. With my Blackberry, I just click on it from the main messages app and then i can
      --- TRUNCATED ---

    61. Re:So fucking what? by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 0

      but this is the NYTimes, so you can't just blow the article off.

      Why not? This story was in the NYT so there is no reason to believe that the author actually talked to any of the people he quoted in the article.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    62. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >and I hate typing "were U at?
      Then don't. Nothing about Android or iPhone require typing like a pithed frog.

    63. Re:So fucking what? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      I've never managed a BES, but I will tell you, if your experience with a server becomes a matter of dick measuring pride, then the server interface and operation is crap. Tell me why BES could not be pleasing for the "click and drool" crowd if they wanted it to be? They used to be leaders in this sphere, it's not like they couldn't afford a little innovation and bug fixing to make the server actually simple to administer even for the tech plebeians. We're not talking about rocket science here, it's a business server.

    64. Re:So fucking what? by yog · · Score: 2

      I agree. Blackberries are good handsets. No longer state of the art, and they can't play Temple Run (as far as I know :), but I have found them to be superior to Android phones when it comes to doing the basics like making phone calls, taking simple notes, and the like. They're closer to the Palm Pilot PDA approach than are touch-screen smartphones, and they are just made for doing simple PDA tasks very quickly and effortlessly. And it's worth noting that they had NFC in their handsets a couple of years before it became common with Android, and Apple still doesn't offer it (my company writes NFC apps, so we're painfully aware of these things).

      We have a bunch of really dated old Blackberries in the lab at work, and I think I'm going to just take one and get it out at the next meeting with vendors, just to see how they react. Actually, a friend pulled out her Nokia candy-bar phone last night at a club, and it just brought back warm memories. You could drop the things and abuse them, and they just worked. Easy peasy. Try handing an elderly relative your Android phone to make a call. I generally just dial the number for them, simpler than explaining how to "bring up the phone app and tap on the left tab" etc.

      --
      it's = "it is"; its = possessive. E.g., it's flapping its wings.
    65. Re:So fucking what? by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 2

      Yup, those Blackberry guys are tools! Not cool at all like us with our iPhones, Androids, or my Windows phone. Right guys? We are all cooler than Blackberry, haha, I look down on you from my cool Windows phone, right guys? *We* are cool!

      --
      (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
    66. Re:So fucking what? by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      The problem with Nickelback is that they have one really, really good song that they just keep recording over and over again, except with a new title.

      Really, they do have a decent sound, but I was done with them after they released their first single. The fact that they are still around making money says a lot about how good that one song is, and how much a lot of people don't really care if they keep hearing it.

    67. Re:So fucking what? by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1

      Stupid people like to tease me for liking Star Trek and the Misfits. Fuck them, it's what *I* like that matters to me. If you switch phones because your old one isn't cool enough, you're a dipshit and deserved the mockery you were getting in the first place.

      If switching phones because the old one isn't cool enough is wrong, 50 million apple fanboys don't want to be right.

    68. Re:So fucking what? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      I can type in complete sentences rapidly on an iPhone. You just have to trust autocorrect and type quickly...

      but if you really really cannot ket by without a physical keyboard - get one.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    69. Re:So fucking what? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Assuming they havent gutted the keyboard-centric OS, there will still be reasons to use it-- just not security ones.

    70. Re:So fucking what? by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1

      But they don't. Android and iPhone utterly crush the BB in "business email".

      the BB is an exercise in frustration with email. android Jelly Bean's email client is a dream compared to the BB. Oh and it works great with our company exchange server, no nasty useless poorly written BB server in the back office that everyone hated to deal with.

      I disagree. I had blackberry devices for many years, and I'm now on my second android phone. I really like the android phone, but MOST of the benefits of it vs the blackberry are not specifically business related. The blackberry was significantly superior for email to anything I've used so far on android. For me, the biggest benefit from a business perspective is wireless tethering on the android.

    71. Re:So fucking what? by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      Besides this is a one-time configuration issue and not enough to complain about.

      ....Unless you need to migrate one user to a different exchange server at a different DNS address.

      Everyone here is right that there are ways of dealing with how finicky ActiveSync is, but it is more finicky than BES. It needs to know where the server is, what mailbox to use, what your mailbox password is, and it needs a valid cert. If ANY of that EVER chances, good by syncing.

      BES needs none of that. Once its connected, its connected. Justify it all you want, BES is simply less finicky.

    72. Re:So fucking what? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      I agree that the mandatory password resets tend to be abused but that is a policy issue not a technical one.

      I especially loath the password resets that not only happen once a month but prevent you from creating a password that is what the program deems too similar to the last 24 password you've used.

      However when done appropriately (like all things) the system works quite well.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    73. Re:So fucking what? by ottothecow · · Score: 1
      That seems like a poorly configured setup somewhere. We have mandatory password changes here and my account never gets locked when my phone doesn't yet have the new password. My phone pops up some notice along the lines of "Password Error: Please verify whether you have the correct password or if it has been recently changed".

      Maybe it is an iOS problem (my corporate email goes through the Touchdown activesync client on my android phone) but locked accounts from not simultaneously changing the password on every device seems like a problem. What happens if you get the mandatory change at 9AM when you get to the office but your tablet is sitting at home retrying every 10 minutes.

      --
      Bottles.
    74. Re:So fucking what? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 2

      Everyone here is right that there are ways of dealing with how finicky ActiveSync is, but it is more finicky than BES. It needs to know where the server is, what mailbox to use, what your mailbox password is, and it needs a valid cert. If ANY of that EVER chances, good by syncing.

      Is this a bad thing or an inconvenient thing? Having a mobile device that is always able to connect despite any configuration change on the server may be convenient but not necessarily a good thing. If the server certificate ever changes then as a user I'd like to be notified.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    75. Re:So fucking what? by Jesus_666 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Maybe it's because I'm a Gen-Xer and I hate typing "were U at?" in emails, but I wish my iPhone and my BlackBerry had gone away for a dirty weekend and I'd wound up with the offspring.

      Congratulations! Your wish has been granted and you are now the proud owner of a touch-only Blackberry!

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
    76. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What do you mean the keyboard is to small, I have large hands and the keyboard on my torch is just fine. I have used to touch keyboard on the iphone and I hate it.

      As to the rest fine if you would rather use the iPhone or an Android device, I AM HAPPY WITH MY BB, at work I dont need social media apps, I can use that after work. As to the 5% market share, that is in the USA only. Have fun with you toys.

    77. Re:So fucking what? by Tridus · · Score: 2

      It's along a river, for government. In a nutshell people have a part of the river they can go along and from up on a bridge or at a safe distance from the riverbank, look out at the ice at pre-determined locations to see what's going on. The current method has things being written down, photos taken, then sent in when they get home or to a computer somewhere.

      If we can have a phone app that lets people submit directly from the field, it's both easier for the users and much more timely for the flood forecasters and emergency response folks that benefit from knowing ASAP if an ice jam is forming.

      --
      -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    78. Re:So fucking what? by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that weird "all your data goes to our servers in Canada first" thing.

      Maybe it'd help if you think of it as "all your data goes to our servers in a-country-that-respects-privacy first"

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    79. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > bb is still the best

      yes. tell it to their market share

    80. Re:So fucking what? by circletimessquare · · Score: 1

      mod parent up

      --
      intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
    81. Re:So fucking what? by ArhcAngel · · Score: 1

      Exactly...With Activesync you can connect as many devices as you can get your hands on. With a BES only devices that have been activated can connect.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    82. Re:So fucking what? by MaWeiTao · · Score: 1

      Nokia's sales have been poor because everyone is waiting for the new Lumia's. And regardless, the Nokia isn't the only phone running Windows Phone 8. It's coming out on HTC, Samsung and LG. There have been rumors that Microsoft will be developing their own phone and let's not forget Surface.

      Things are looking pretty good to me.

    83. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You're drinking somebody's Kool Aid if you honestly believe that. I had been a BB user for years and switched to an Android phone earlier this year. While it blows BB devices away in most all things, it utterly *fails* to have a decent email client.

      After trying a bunch of 3rd party clients (including k-9 mail, ProfilMail, aquamail , even dinked around with using gmail instead), I was surprised to find some of the basic features the BB client enjoyed (like filtering by subject/address/etc) were absent from most of them. Others had such a ridiculous interface I forgot I was using an android phone.

      I'm using Maildroid now, which is the best one I've found so far. It does most all I require, but it is a paid app, unless you don't mind advertising in your email client. If there's one thing Android needs to improve on, is a solid default email client.

    84. Re:So fucking what? by slyg4m3r · · Score: 1

      And when your company has a mandatory 30/60/90 day password policy what happens when you change your password? Your account get's locked, reset, locked again, reset, locked again until you realize you forgot to go in and change your password on every iOS/Android device that pulls email from Activesync.

      I'm not sure about Android, but in iOS, when an exchange password no longer works, there is a pop-up asking for the updated password. You can either ignore it or enter the new password. If you ignore, it doesn't try to use the old password again, so AFAIK, it wouldn't result in account getting locked out. I'm taking about a managed device though, YMMV.

    85. Re:So fucking what? by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      market share is not always an indicator of the best product eg. Microsoft Windows

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    86. Re:So fucking what? by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      thank goodness for that, i don't want to pay $1000 for a big red dot on my BB

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    87. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Combination of a Playbook and a Blackberry

      Likely works allot better than an Android Phone and an Android Tablet.

      Too many moronic choices made by Google.

      (e.g Motorola Bluetooth Keyboard works pretty much fine on the Playbook but the way Android deals with keymaps is totally screwed.)

      Its in the AOSP even but they haven't mapped alt properly. You cannot use escape because it is mapped to back (What a stupid idea).

    88. Re:So fucking what? by ami.one · · Score: 1

      I have been trying to ditch BB since a year but neither my Nexus S nor iPhone4 are able to read mails with restricted forwarding (i get at least 3-4 every day) and even the encrypted/signed mails took me some time to get going (upload lotus notes private key).This issue may not be there on Exchange, but then its probably not possible to restrict forwarding etc at all on exchange/outlook like on Lotus

      And its not possible to type on ANY touchscreen without looking at it all the time, with a BB you can steal a few glances every 4-5 seconds and keep typing !

      But even bigger reason for me is that with a BB there's no temptation of wasting time with trying out a thousand apps & updating the OS ROMs etc. So its BB for work and Android/iOS for play for me. I use the Nexus for browsing sometimes while on the move for complex sites which won't open on BB (like some banks/trading sites etc)

    89. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whether or not the software is better, until an iPhone comes with a hardware keyboard, nuts to them!

      It's only a matter of time before there are no phones with hardware keyboards.

    90. Re:So fucking what? by badpool · · Score: 1

      Yup. Anyone mocking another's technology doesn't deserve to have their opinion on technology taken seriously. It may come as a strange and wonderful surprise to some, but different humans like different things.

    91. Re:So fucking what? by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      Listen to their lyrics. It's beat-off material for creepy 50-year-olds whose wives left them at 25 and now spend their time picking up at bars, 16-year-olds who think that's what everyone who has sex acts like, and the 40-year-old moms who didn't leave their manchild husbands.

      The music aside, which I personally think is shit but if you like it more power to ya, the (incredibly trite) lyrics are just glorification of terrible, gross behavior. If you've managed to never hear them, count yourself lucky, but they're prevalent enough (still!) that you'd generally have to go out of your way not to hear them at least at some point in your life.

      As for "hey check out obscure band X", there's sites for that. I probably hate your bands, just like you'd probably hate mine, that's fine, but it's why recommending music to random people who don't share your musical tastes is usually pointless. The difference is, anyone who is not ear-bitingly-mad can agree that Nickleback is awful, and yet there's still people out there who listen to them.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    92. Re:So fucking what? by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      ....Unless you need to migrate one user to a different exchange server at a different DNS address.

      Which is also rare enough to where you don't really have to worry about it.

    93. Re:So fucking what? by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      And its not possible to type on ANY touchscreen without looking at it all the time, with a BB you can steal a few glances every 4-5 seconds and keep typing !

      So what? Is it a bad thing to be paying attention to what you're doing?

    94. Re:So fucking what? by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      I had a Blackberry with Verizon for about a month a few years ago, before I got rid of it. Google Maps didn't work, mainly because the piece of shit was locked down by Verizon, so the only way I could get navigation was to pay them extra money.

    95. Re:So fucking what? by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Did anyone ever force you to do that to start with?

    96. Re:So fucking what? by acoustix · · Score: 1

      Also, three words: Out Of Office.

      You can't set out of office from Active Sync devices, unless you buy an extra app. I get calls from iOS users that forget to set their OoO replies before they leave the office. All of our BlackBerry users can change it with the native mail client.

      --
      "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
    97. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      45% market share loss in 3 years not that bad? You must be a CEO.

    98. Re:So fucking what? by QuantumRiff · · Score: 1

      I was thinking more like "we have a large single point of failure" like when all BB services worldwide were down for hours a year or two ago :)

      If only they had a "Network of networks" that they could send data to, route to the correct endpoint, and that could survive outages...

      --

      What are we going to do tonight Brain?
    99. Re:So fucking what? by ski9826 · · Score: 1

      Sounds like you need to update your OS. I have both Android and iOS mobile devices and they are able to automatically configure themselves with the exchange server. It even tries to find the exchange server based on your email address. Besides this is a one-time configuration issue and not enough to complain about.

      Unless your organization uses a cloud exchange service such as Office 365 - it does not discover this automatically, and you have to change your user name and mail server address. This is NOT a 1-time deal usually. Users sometimes have to delete/re-add their email account from the phone. Or do a hard reset to fix other issues on the phone. And if they are not techy, they will need to be walked through this every time. Can be frustrating

      Blackberry has its share of exploits. One was demonstrated at Pwn2Own which exploited the browser of a BB Torch 9800. This exploit could be used to install Flexispy. There was also a talk at DefCon 2006 where the BB could be exploited to get access to the internal LAN of the corporation.

      My point being that don't be so smug about the security of your device. There are exploits out there.

      Agree with you there, there are exploits for just about everything. But the organization will usually be best-served by making their devices as secure as possible, and the per-device AES encryption is pretty good

    100. Re:So fucking what? by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that weird "all your data goes to our servers in Canada first" thing.

      Ironically, that makes it more secure/private than if that server were run in the US due to Canada's stronger privacy laws. There are a number of non-US companies in Canada and Europe that refuse to host content on US-based servers for exactly the same reasons.

      Obviously, in reality the US or Canadian governments can probably still get data if they wanted it badly enough, through political back channels or direct hacking, but it's still more difficult regardless, legally and technically.

    101. Re:So fucking what? by vakuona · · Score: 1

      It's amazing how much iPhone buyers are accused of this. And some of hte intellectual gymnastics that must be performed to prove this are actually impressive.

      Apple brings out an iPhone 3G, then a basically identical 3GS a year later. Oh, Apple fans are going to be so disappointed because the new one is so much like the old one. They will buy it anyway.

      Apple brings out iPhone 4. Apple fanboys are going to be all over that bad boy because they love to be seen with the latest and greatest.

      Apple brings out the iPhone 4S. Oh, Apple fans are going to be so disappointed because the new one is so much like the old one. They will buy it anyway.

      Apple brings out the iPhone 5. Apple fanboys are going to be all over that bad boy because they love to be seen with the latest and greatest.

      Fact is most iPhone sales are made to new buyers, or those upgrading at the end of their contracts.

    102. Re:So fucking what? by kelemvor4 · · Score: 1

      Fact is most iPhone sales are made to new buyers, or those upgrading at the end of their contracts.

      Lol. Most of ANY kind of phone sales (prepaid excluded) are made this way. Most people can't afford to shell out $600+ for a phone every year so people generally have to wait for the contract to be ready. There's nothing unique about this to iPhone. If that wasn't the case, I'd probably replace my phone every few months!

    103. Re:So fucking what? by Dog-Cow · · Score: 1

      RIM gives access to India. Do you really think they would refuse access for the US?

    104. Re:So fucking what? by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Huh? Who lost 45% market share? What are you talking about?

    105. Re:So fucking what? by bertomatic · · Score: 1

      You think they Crush BB? Really? BB reads the GAL, live, no need to add/sinc contacts, as everyone in the org is already there. Public folders anyone? Home grown corporate apps, only BB can do this, everyone else requires "app store submission". BB hits the internal network, so opening intranet sites, SharePoint, etc, does not work on anything but BB. Remote wipe, easy as pie, user got a new BB, gen and send a new pin, easy as pie. Virtual Private encrypted and optimized network, yep, that's BB only. Android is a nightmare, some work some don't, others need TouchDown or something similar. Who knows who is reading all your corp data with crap like that. BB owns the corporate space, all the rest are limited to active sync capabilities. Can you say "android hack" or "android virus"? yep! You do know Google and Apple read all your communications to target you with ads right? BB don't do that!. BB is a tool, all else are toys.

    106. Re:So fucking what? by plaincorgi · · Score: 1

      Activesync can be set to quarantine any devices before they work.

    107. Re:So fucking what? by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      They're terrible because they are pretty cavalier in saying that they don't make good music, they write their songs deliberatly to have mass market appeal. Instead of writing music for the sake of writing music as artists. They aren't artists. They are assembly line musicians who leave their work devoid of any craftmanship. That's why they are deplorable.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    108. Re:So fucking what? by Nexzus · · Score: 1

      On Android you can. Could on my Desire HD. Can on my S3.

      As a matter fact, BES used to have an issue with setting Out of Office.

      I'm no fanboy. I do miss the physical keyboard and long battery life of my BB Curve. The phone was just getting long in the tooth.

      --
      Karma: Can only be portioned out by the Cosmos.
    109. Re:So fucking what? by OhHellWithIt · · Score: 1

      That's a shame. I got a Verizon Blackberry just about two years ago, and Google Maps has been flawless. Really, about the only things I hate about my Blackberry are that its web browsing takes me back to the days when I was using dial-up Internet service and there is no wifi tethering in the BB OS version I have (6.0). Shame on Verizon for losing a customer by locking down the device. (They're on thin ice with me.)

      --
      "Who controls the past controls the future. Who controls the present controls the past." -- George Orwell
    110. Re:So fucking what? by FreakyGeeky · · Score: 1

      > BB reads the GAL, live, no need to add/sinc contacts, as everyone in the org is already there

      So does iOS.

      > SharePoint, etc, does not work on anything but BB

      I can use SharePoint on my iPad.

      > Remote wipe, easy as pie

      Easy as pie on iOS too!

      > Virtual Private encrypted and optimized network, yep, that's BB only

      And the man-in-the-middle "attack" of having your communications go through RIM is BB only, too. Why would I want a dependency on some third-party for my e-mail?

      Ignorant troll is ignorant.

    111. Re:So fucking what? by DontBlameCanada · · Score: 1

      Don't blame Blackberry for that, blame friggin Verizon. Verizon likes to put the screws to phone providers asking for all kinds of stuff that benefit their bottom line, not make the product useful to the purchaser.

    112. Re:So fucking what? by lennier · · Score: 1

      Not to mention that weird "all your data goes to our servers in Canada first" thing.

      Maybe it'd help if you think of it as "all your data goes to our servers in a-country-that-respects-privacy first"

      Or as "all your data goes to our servers in a country that has traditionally had very strong links with US-UK secret intelligence".

      Yes, it worries me too. Theoretically, the BES server and the Blackberry device encrypt everything before sending it to Canada. Theoretically. But we can't audit the devices because, closed source everybody! And that's an awful lot of high-impact corporate emails in one company's hands, and it's not like there's no precedent for tinfoil-hat thinking in this business. I'd feel a lot safer if the data just went out to the wide open Internet like it's supposed to, where at least the NSA would have to intercept the raw packets at the peering points and not have it all neatly laid out for them with metadata intact.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    113. Re:So fucking what? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      BES doesnt use certificates, it uses per-device keys.

      No, I cannot think of a good reason to be using end-user devices as my server monitoring system.

    114. Re:So fucking what? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Im having to worry about it on a current project and its a gigantic hassle. If they had been using blackberries we wouldnt have to deal with it.

    115. Re:So fucking what? by slew · · Score: 1

      ...they will always have a market...

      That may be true, but can the company that produces these products survive with a small sliver of a market like that? I'm sure that argument was made by many companies (e.g., say Kodak, Blockbuster, AOL, Altavista, Godrej & Boyce, Newsweek, ...). They really need to figure out a new game plan, though. At some point, they won't have enough revenue/capital to do their own development anymore and they'll just be buying phones from other companies, writing a captive BBAPP and pasting their label on them and selling them.

      Perhaps there is an outside chance they can survive as a niche player even if they don't figure out a new game plan like the last remaining buggy whip manufacturer. However, survival like that means just like the Westfield Whip Company, they'll just be catering to the rich and sentimental audience, not making something that is deployed to Disney's theme parks (unless they open up a noughties-land)... I think the better bet is for them to figure out a new game plan...

    116. Re:So fucking what? by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      What do I think? I think the whole "hosted in Canada" as if it were a downside is BS specifically because of this. A US-based server is no better and in fact is worse for protecting any private or proprietary communication.

      If an American says they wont use a BB because Canadian intel services might have their hooks into the BB system and could spy on them, I'll laugh in their face--not because its impossible, but because they're less worried that the US government doesn't already have eyes on them by the time Canada intelligence takes it to that level.

    117. Re:So fucking what? by XB-70 · · Score: 1

      Great point. I used my 7280 BB for nearly eight (8) years and it was great! In this throw-away world, getting a well-built, solid workhorse is far better than dumping product because it's not new enough. If RIM wants to REALLY move forward, they need to build their units with TWO (2) sim card slots so that users can handle work AND personal calls with separate billings. What accounting dept. would not like that feature? The other thing that they need to do is to keep refining the O/S so that aging phones run FASTER, not slower. Keeping updates coming would be really beneficial to their image. As we know from Ubuntu boot time research (for example), it CAN be done.

      --
      *** Don't be dull.***
    118. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not off topic you fucking dickwad. Microsoft is trying to use their desktop stranglehold to gain a better foothold in the phone market by having a unified interface.

    119. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually correlation has ABSOLUTELY NO value in predicting causation. If that were the case, then everyone on earth would be a criminal because all criminals breathe air, a 100% correlation. If you don't know a damn thing about statistics please don't talk about them - you let everyone know what an idiot you are.

    120. Re:So fucking what? by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      Android: I type in my E-mail address, k-9 mail downloads my settings from my mail server automatically and sets everything up properly. I get proper TLS encrypted SMTP and IMAP to/from my server with push support. Get your facts straight.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    121. Re:So fucking what? by ami.one · · Score: 1

      So what? Is it a bad thing to be paying attention to what you're doing?

      That's your argument ? Going by that logic, resistive screens should be even better for you - you have to press each key Twice. So double the attention !

      Not REQUIRING more attention simply means its EASIER & SIMPLER to use. When you want you can pay attention to whatever you feel like.

    122. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well i have both an Android powered HTC and my BB which one gets the most use and it aint the HTC the BB beats the living crap outta the HTC , Dont get me wrong the HTC is a nice phone it works welll but for Ease of use the BB nails the rest to the floor the proper keyboard it may be small it is a dream to use whereas the touch job on the Android is shall we say hit and miss at best ( that follows across to the iPhone junk boxes as well)

      Give me a BB any day ..
       

    123. Re:So fucking what? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      no nasty useless poorly written BB server in the back office that everyone hated to deal with.

      Business users of phones don't have to deal with the BB server in the back office, that is the job of IT. Unless you think that businesses should be run to suit the philosophy and personal preferences of IT staff, that is a totally irrelevant criticism.

      If the phones and email work well and robustly for the users, that is what matters, not how elegantly coded the fucking server software is.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    124. Re:So fucking what? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      No, I cannot think of a good reason to be using end-user devices as my server monitoring system.

      You're not monitoring a server. You are verifying that you are talking to the correct server.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    125. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      mod parent up

      What a surprise—more authoritarianism from mr.icanttype.

      You got to read Tridus's comments (which you apparently found interesting). Why isn't that sufficient to satisfy you?

    126. Re:So fucking what? by sjames · · Score: 1

      Nonsense, a BB was a bit of colorful plumage that was supposed to bring recognition of prestige and authority. Just like high back chairs and an office with a window and a door. It's usefulness as a business tool was always strictly secondary.

    127. Re:So fucking what? by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      I've got to disagree, at least for my personal use. I make far more errors using a virtual keyboard than a BB keyboard. I also can't use a virtual keyboard unless I'm looking at it.

    128. Re:So fucking what? by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Most businesses don't use RIM's BES servers. They use their own. The key sharing only affects individual users.

    129. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was the last person who wanted to give up her bberry, but it failed me fur the last time 2 months ago! Every 3-4 months it would stop delivering my emails and ask for a password reset, which I didn't know, never knew. I'd go into the Sprint store for a long reset and the bberry rep would give me the password which ultimately would not be the correct password the next time it stopped sending emails! Don't even think about trying to reach bberry alone outside of an authorized phone carrier. Other than that, the slow Internet load, not seeing pics in email I really loved my bberry Tour. Now, here's what I HATE about this iPhone: cut copy paste, wtf? It's the worse, you can't copy a text/pic from certain websites, just crazy! It takes forever to type/text with this too close keyboard making up its own words even with the T9 turned off. Trying to zero in on specific text minus a curser is ridiculous! But, here I am. The bells/whistles apps/screen clarity are fine, but the basics are overlooked. In bberry there was a field for home phone, mobile phone and "Office" phone, why isn't that an option on iPhone? Maybe it is, but it's not readily available when I open contacts do I drop office numbers in notes. Apple is do busy trying to be heavenly bound that they've forgotten to be any earthly good! Missing my bberry but not the hassles - hating iPhone thoughtlessness ...stuck in between!

    130. Re:So fucking what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is why I have a BlackBerry AND and Android with me all the time. The BlackBerry is my phone and email device, while the Android is my Internet and GPS device.

  2. Grow a pair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    honestly, if you "suffer from shame and public humiliation" because of your phone, you need to grow a spine

    1. Re:Grow a pair by tuppe666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      honestly, if you "suffer from shame and public humiliation" because of your phone, you need to grow a spine

      A phone is not just a phone...It hasn't been for a long time. Apple would be out of business if that was true. Phones are Jewellery and have been for a long time. The other side of the coin is why shouldn't I have a nice phone, that I'm proud of and can show off. I worked for it!

    2. Re:Grow a pair by Radres · · Score: 1

      ...and you continue to work for it as the phone plan costs $100/mo.

    3. Re:Grow a pair by Tridus · · Score: 1

      Or maybe just get a phone that lets you do everything you want to do.

      RIM phones are nowhere near as capable as the competition, and until fanboys get that through their heads the company is going nowhere.

      --
      -- "So they told me that using the download page to download something was not something they anticipated." - Bill Gates
    4. Re:Grow a pair by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to defend wasting that kind of money, because I have a $30/month plan. But do you really think an executive is sweating $100/month? That's like 1/7 of a BMW payment and 1/40 of a McMansion payment. You can hardly get a decent bottle of wine with dinner for that.

      (the wine bit was sarcasm)

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    5. Re:Grow a pair by serviscope_minor · · Score: 1

      Grow a pair... spine

      Well, yes. If you grow a pair of spines, you will look like a badass Dr Octopus and no one would dare mock you for your phone.

      --
      SJW n. One who posts facts.
    6. Re:Grow a pair by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Executives get shit that most workers don't. Sure, they won't sweat it for themselves, but they will be more than happy to ax that for dozens or hundreds of users. Just as long as they personally get to keep whatever their favorite phone is, of course.

    7. Re:Grow a pair by rahvin112 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If you are "proud" of a phone or for that matter anything you purchased then you are a dumb ass. Maybe when you get a little older you will realize that being proud of some physical object you purchased on the open market is a sign of douchebaggery. Real adults are "proud" of their children and accomplishments both personal (helping someone in need) and professional (achieving a difficult business goal), not some trinket.

    8. Re:Grow a pair by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      Get a better plan. Mine's $55/mo with 250 pooled daytime minutes (unlimited evening/weekend) and 6 GB of data. Texting at this level is a little lacking at only 250 outgoing, but iMessage helps keep it under the limit.

      Other than long distance and favourite 5 or 10 options, how do average business or even regular users regularly pay $100+ a month on a cell phone plan?

    9. Re:Grow a pair by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      I worked for it!

      By which you mean the company paid for it!

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    10. Re:Grow a pair by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Phones are Jewellery and have been for a long time.

      I'm neither gay nor a woman. I don't wear jewelry.

      The other side of the coin is why shouldn't I have a nice phone, that I'm proud of and can show off. I worked for it!

      That's a sad commentary on your character. If you have to flaunt your wealth to inflate your ego, there's something terribly wrong with you.

    11. Re:Grow a pair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Real adults don't care what you, or anyone else thinks. I'm an adult at 33 years old. I don't care about trinkets, or children (I have none, nor want any), nor do I care about business advancements. I am proud that I did a sub 3.0 hour marathon a couple weeks ago, though.

      Different folks, etc.

    12. Re:Grow a pair by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His point is you can't be proud of exchanging money for goods because any retard can do that. If you designed the phone, sure, but if not there's nothing to be proud about. Being proud of something you bought makes even less sense than being proud of your nationality or race.

  3. 2 B || !2 B by roman_mir · · Score: 1, Funny

    Brought 2 U by letter B.

  4. Ugh. by MachineShedFred · · Score: 4, Funny

    The annoying alliteration in the headline makes me need to acquire an avalanche of aspirin.

    --
    Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    1. Re:Ugh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually that's consonation. Alliteration is if all the words start with the same vowel.

    2. Re:Ugh. by alex67500 · · Score: 1

      Not according to everyone...
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alliteration

    3. Re:Ugh. by jimicus · · Score: 1

      No, that's assonance you're thinking of.

    4. Re:Ugh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      your asinine assonance is as annoying as the consistently confounding consonance of TFHeadline

    5. Re:Ugh. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      s/headline/article apogee

  5. RIM Fan here by alphax45 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I use a Blackberry (Bold 9900) by choice. A few reasons:

    - I love the keyboard!
    - Unified inbox; everything is in one spot.
    - Different modes; EG: when I go to bed I have a mode called "bedtime" that only alerts me if something important from someone important comes in.
    - Contact based alerts. So during the day when I'm at work my phone will only "ring" if it's my mom (she has cancer, so lay off) or my wife (only calls if it's important, sends a text otherwise).
    - Canadian company. Home country pride :)

    Yes there is a lack of apps and yes, the Java based OS does sometimes show me the lovely hourglass but for me, it works.

    As for other phones, I have looked but not willing to move at this time. I am very excited for BB10 and hope it will allow RIM to mount some kind of comeback.

    I have never been randomly made fun of for my phone. Sure friends and co-workers will sometimes poke fun; but it's people I know.

    Finally; it's just a phone people - there are bigger things in life to worry about.

    --
    K Man
    1. Re:RIM Fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      I have all of those features on my iPhone except for the keyboard which I don't want anyway and it's not Canadian but GO AMERICA! BALD EAGLES! FREEEDOM!

    2. Re:RIM Fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As rare as neckties... I hate neckties, I don't wear them, but that doesn't mean they're rare, or going away in certain parts of the business world.

    3. Re:RIM Fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have all of those features on my iPhone except for the keyboard which I don't want anyway and it's not Canadian but GO AMERICA! BALD EAGLES! FREEEDOM!

      freedom on iphone? america? you mean china made?

    4. Re:RIM Fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are many other little things a BB does that make them far superior to iPhones and Androids. A few examples that made my life easier when I still had a BB:

      - Opening and responding to Outlook meeting requests.
      - Ability to set a default reminder time for all calendar events.
      - Forwarding attachments without actually downloading them.
      - Seemless synching with Outlook.

      Let's be honest, most people look at their phones as toys so they don't even understand how useful the BB is at the little things that matter in a business environment. I too am looking forward to seeing what they come up with when the BB10 comes out.

    5. Re:RIM Fan here by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      My first-generation iPhone still works (mostly). If I want a reaction, I just swap the SIM into it and bust that thing out.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    6. Re:RIM Fan here by Xacid · · Score: 1

      I've got an Android, had the Nokia E71x, and also have a Blackberry Bold 9900. Hands down the 9900 is my favorite phone out of the bunch, the E71x being my second favorite - the major difference is that the E71x doesn't have a touch screen.

      For me I don't need some pop culture device with a ton of apps. I primarily need a phone that works as a phone and secondary one that can receive email. The main app I use is Pandora which is on there. Also, "How to Tie a Tie" comes in handy when you're like me and tie them once and forget it.

      Just because some scenesters think my phone sucks despite never using it doesn't affect me. It does what I need it to do. I don't need an icon.

    7. Re:RIM Fan here by mbourgon · · Score: 1

      Honestly curious: how do you have multiple profiles ( I have one when on-call, one when I'm in the movies, one when off-call...and just using the 'silent' switch isn't enough), and device-level email filters? That's been the dealbreaker for me (plus the fact that the iphone mail tone wasn't enough to wake me), but if there's options, I'd love to know.

      --
      "Sometimes a woman is a kind of religion, she can save your soul & set you free from all your sins" - Bad Examples
    8. Re:RIM Fan here by na1led · · Score: 1

      I still like to play around with my Commodore 64, but purely for nostalgia reasons.

      --
      -- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
    9. Re:RIM Fan here by pauljlucas · · Score: 1

      - Unified inbox; everything is in one spot.
      - Different modes; EG: when I go to bed I have a mode called "bedtime" that only alerts me if something important from someone important comes in.
      - Contact based alerts. So during the day when I'm at work my phone will only "ring" if it's my mom (she has cancer, so lay off) or my wife (only calls if it's important, sends a text otherwise).

      iOS has all of that. So it really comes down to the fact that you prefer a physical keyboard.

      --
      If you reply, do so only to what I explicitly wrote. If I didn't write it, don't assume or infer it.
    10. Re:RIM Fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not everyone is a canadian, eh.

    11. Re:RIM Fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm currently using a Galaxy S3, after changing from a BB Torch 9800 (and have used various flavours of iPhone in the past).

      Email/exchange integration was just hands down better on the BB, activesync client on the other phones are ok for what they do, but don't cover things like notes and tasks, just basic email/calendar/contacts - really annoying when you've been using notes etc for a long time, and now get told you need to start using a different 3rd party app for that, or an application installed on your desktop pc to sync from outlook... because that's really smooth...

      And definitely +1 on the different modes. My 15 year old nokia can do that, but apparently it's beyond a Galaxy S3 (and the iPhone was great for not being able to customise the way in which it notifies of new email messages - although I believe that's fixed now in newer versions - a great recipe for sleeping through email alerts when on call).

      The newer smartphones seem to be centered around text messaging as the message format of choice rather than email.

      Kinda sad that the only real advantage they have going for them is the games... because thats exactly what is needed on a corporate handset.

    12. Re:RIM Fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can do all of that with Android + Tasker ;)

    13. Re:RIM Fan here by steviesteveo12 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, more than anything else that seems to pigeonhole the writer.

    14. Re:RIM Fan here by hey! · · Score: 1

      I like neckties. I don't see what the big deal some people have with them is, other than they're a bit old school. Men who think ties are uncomfortable just need to get a properly sized shirt. I suspect a lot of men these days only have one suit that's been sitting int he closet for years and doesn't fit them -- if it ever did. Of course you hate getting dressed in something like that, it'd be like putting on a straight jacket.

      In general formal business attire is comfortable, it should feel as close to being in your pajamas as possible. A properly fitted suit looks good on anyone, unlike business casual which works for some but makes others look like slobs. Remember MacWorld '97 where Gil Amelio and Steve Jobs both wore collarless shirts (Source: The Register,Oct 6, 2011)? Jobs looked OK, albeit a bit parson-ish. Amelio looked like an understudy for Clarence, from *It's a Wonderful Life*.

      Formal business attire seems foreign to a lot of guys these days, almost a piece of lost lore like shaving with a straight razor. But it's more user-friendly than it looks. The secret is to find a menswear store you like and let them take care of you. Then go back every year or two for a new suit so you always have something that fits. If you never wear suits and you know you're going to need one for an upcoming event, three weeks before you need it try on that old suit. If it's not perfectly comfortable, go straight to the menswear store.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    15. Re:RIM Fan here by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think it is the products fault. You don't need to defend the product. As someone living in Waterloo with a lot of friends working at RIM. The place was mismanaged even at their peak. Hopefully the new CEO has cleaned house and will be able to rebuild the company and actually have the product line develop and move forward instead of just superficial new products. They have simply been left int the dust by the competition with regard to feature set.

  6. WTF is this world coming to by Chrisq · · Score: 5, Insightful

    WTF is this world coming to if someone can be "shamed and humiliated" because of what type of phone they have?

    1. Re:WTF is this world coming to by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      WTF is this world coming to if someone can be "shamed and humiliated" because of what type of phone they have?

      The need to define a hierarchy based on shame and humiliation(and if that fails, good, wholesome, violence) appears to be older than humanity, if research on our adorable monkey colleagues is anything to go by). The precise means are historically contingent and practically irrelevant, so long as something is available.

    2. Re:WTF is this world coming to by jbolden · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yeah kids never made fun of other kids because of their clothes or bike.

    3. Re:WTF is this world coming to by OzPeter · · Score: 2

      WTF is this world coming to if someone can be "shamed and humiliated" because of what type of phone they have?

      I got laughed at the other day because I still use a 5 year old Razr flip phone. But it works for me and as I am pretty well always in front of a computer I rarely need any smart phone apps. Plus my yearly phone bill is probably only 2 months worth of a hipsters' data plan.

      --
      I am Slashdot. Are you Slashdot as well?
    4. Re:WTF is this world coming to by Chrisq · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah kids never made fun of other kids because of their clothes or bike.

      If this were kids in the playground I'd agree. This is talking about representatives of major companies though!

    5. Re:WTF is this world coming to by tgd · · Score: 3, Interesting

      WTF is this world coming to if someone can be "shamed and humiliated" because of what type of phone they have?

      People were shamed and humiliated by the sneakers they wore in the 80's.

      Shame and humiliation over points of differentiation between people has been going on as long as there's been people.

      Hell, most life does it. You wouldn't get natural selection if you didn't have one life form looking down on others for one thing or another. "Oh, your feathers aren't poofy enough, you must be a lousy father!"

    6. Re:WTF is this world coming to by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      So, just as mean and feral; but without the excuse of youthful stupidity...

    7. Re:WTF is this world coming to by jbolden · · Score: 2

      Where you think those kids end up 15 years later?

    8. Re:WTF is this world coming to by strength_of_10_men · · Score: 1

      Believe it or not, this is true. It's like high school all over again.

      I was talking with a friend of mine about phones (I have a dumb phone) and mentioned that it seemed people were dismissive of my choice to keep the phone I had. Noting that I was too old to care about such things anymore, I mused that having the latest smartphone does not automatically make you cool. To which she replied "Yes it does!".

      I was amused until I realized she was serious. This is from a professional engineer.

      RIM and MS are screwed.

    9. Re:WTF is this world coming to by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      If it's an Obama Phone, you should be shamed and humiliated.

      On the other hand the Mitt phone would just tell you what you want to hear, regardless of reality

    10. Re:WTF is this world coming to by jythie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Meh, just look at slashdot or any other geek culture.. particular groups within it shame and humiliate people for failing to use what everyone else uses. You see it with iPhones and 'droids, OSX and Windows and Linux, Scotch and Wine and Beer,.. humans are social animals that like to push people for conformity around whatever the group uses to differentiate it from other groups. The symbols themselves are irrelevant and arbitrary.

      While one might be tempted to blame some specific group like 'hipsters', it is a pretty pervasive behavior that pretty much every subculture is guilty of.

    11. Re:WTF is this world coming to by gman003 · · Score: 4, Funny

      ( ) )

      Your parentheses are mismatched; your argument is invalid.

    12. Re:WTF is this world coming to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's an Obama Phone, you should be shamed and humiliated.

      On the other hand the Mitt phone would just tell you what you want to hear, regardless of reality

      I think someone should sue whoever is making the Mitt phone for ripping off the design of the Hooker phone.

    13. Re:WTF is this world coming to by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      Yeah kids never made fun of other kids because of their clothes or bike.

      So because kids will be kids (judgmental and inconsiderate until they learn or are taught better) that excuses adults?

    14. Re:WTF is this world coming to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's an Obama Phone, you should be shamed and humiliated.

      On the other hand the Mitt phone would just tell you what you want to hear, regardless of reality

      I think someone should sue whoever is making the Mitt phone for ripping off the design of the Hooker phone.

      Both try to seduce you, but if you give in you will feel bad about it in the morning

    15. Re:WTF is this world coming to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I could go for a scotch, wine, and beer right now... Mmm.... scotch, wine, and beer....

    16. Re:WTF is this world coming to by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      I see no substantial differences between those groups.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    17. Re:WTF is this world coming to by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      Yeah kids never made fun of other kids because of their clothes or bike.

      If this were kids in the playground I'd agree. This is talking about representatives of major companies though!

      Have you seen some of our elected representatives and politicians recently? Kindergarteners are better behaved and more mature than that.

    18. Re:WTF is this world coming to by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      WTF is this world coming to if someone can be "shamed and humiliated" because of what type of phone they have?

      A world where the dominant religion is the worship of money.

    19. Re:WTF is this world coming to by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      If this were kids in the playground I'd agree. This is talking about representatives of major companies though!

      Some people never grow up.
      What's surprising is how many find themselves in high ranking positions because of it.

  7. First World Problems... by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Can we agree that anybody who experiences "public shame and humiliation" about their cell phone should be reassigned to some ghastly corner of nowhere where they can feel 'public shame and humiliation' over how many goats they own? And, of course, anybody inflicting public shame and humiliation over cellphones should be reassigned to be one of the goats in said ghastly corner of the world?

    1. Re:First World Problems... by erroneus · · Score: 2

      Reminds me of when the Motorola RAZR came out. It was a revolution in terms of size and general look and feel. It was a kind of slick that no one has ever seen before and I wanted one badly!

      Well... I never got one... time went by, I had whatever it was I had at different times... my life is no better or worse for not having had that phone.

      I've got Galaxy S2 now and have been eyeing the S3... but you know? I'm starting to rethink that too. Perhaps the Google Nexus would be better for me. With all this advertised processor power and stuff, I find myself wondering why I need it. My Angry birds games play just fine... they played fine on my Galaxy S too.

      I guess I don't need the newest whatever.

      But you know who should feel shame and humiliation? iPhone users. They have no idea what they are giving up and their iThing is just like everyone else's iThing. Hardly 'Thinking Different' when everyone is doing it.

    2. Re:First World Problems... by tuppe666 · · Score: 1

      Can we agree that anybody who experiences "public shame and humiliation" about their cell phone should be reassigned to some ghastly corner of nowhere where they can feel 'public shame and humiliation' over how many goats they own? And, of course, anybody inflicting public shame and humiliation over cellphones should be reassigned to be one of the goats in said ghastly corner of the world?

      Or we could say. Not every problem should not be compared to poor survival rates of infants in the third world, or the lack of clean water. In fact I'm a little tired of this tasteless pop comment appearing everywhere.

    3. Re:First World Problems... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Reminds me of when the Motorola RAZR came out. It was a revolution in terms of size and general look and feel. It was a kind of slick that no one has ever seen before and I wanted one badly!

      Well... I never got one... time went by, I had whatever it was I had at different times... my life is no better or worse for not having had that phone.

      Unless you had ended up with one of the later ones, your life is probably better for not owning it. The early ones had incredibly poor radio reception. And let's face it, that particular software stack was canned crap. I spent quite a bit of time hacking triplets and RAZRs up and it was a big waste of it.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:First World Problems... by tgd · · Score: 1

      Can we agree that anybody who experiences "public shame and humiliation" about their cell phone should be reassigned to some ghastly corner of nowhere where they can feel 'public shame and humiliation' over how many goats they own? And, of course, anybody inflicting public shame and humiliation over cellphones should be reassigned to be one of the goats in said ghastly corner of the world?

      Cell phone penetration is as high, or higher, in the 3rd world as the first world -- because much of those countries never had hard line infrastructure.

      And, clearly based on RIM's sales numbers, people in the 3rd world don't want them either.

    5. Re:First World Problems... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But you know who should feel shame and humiliation? iPhone users. They have no idea what they are giving up and their iThing is just like everyone else's iThing. Hardly 'Thinking Different' when everyone is doing it.

      Care to inform some of us what iPhone users are giving up before you drown in your own self righteous smug superiority.

      'Think Different' hasn't been used in years by the way

    6. Re:First World Problems... by erroneus · · Score: 1

      Ever hook an iPhone to a computer without iTunes and try to move data between the device and the computer?

      Also, app freedom is a cost of doing business with Apple.

    7. Re:First World Problems... by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Also, app freedom is a cost of doing business with Apple.

      Not for a business that would be using BES. They just get the enterprise SDK and deploy whatever they want.

      As for not using iTunes. Lots of applications move data to and from iPhone. If employees need to do this you just deploy anyone of dozens if not hundreds of options.

    8. Re:First World Problems... by tnk1 · · Score: 2

      Depends. It's hard to tell how opportunity costs are figured in. You may never need a iPhone. On the other hand, it does have functionality that certain older phones do not. That may be useless to you until you figure out what you might use it for, and then, it might become irreplaceable. Also, the ability to join a large group using a popular device may mean that you gain positive network effects. There are good reasons that being popular is so... popular.

      If you're an Amish farmer, you can get along pretty well without a car and may never be unhappy. That doesn't mean cars have no advantages, even to the Amish (although indirectly).

    9. Re:First World Problems... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a goat owner you insensitive clod!

    10. Re:First World Problems... by hey! · · Score: 1

      Well, it all boils down to insecurity, doesn't it? And it may be justified.

      I've spent decades now in the working world, and there's always been a certain group of desperate people eager to show they're up-to-date by buying into the flavor-of-the-month. You don't have to actually buy the flavor-of-the-month to know what that flavor is, nor to create the next flavor-of-the-month. People who think you have to buy the flavor-of-the-month as soon as it comes out are hobbyists. They may also be pros, but it is their hobbyist impulse that makes them drink the kool-aid.

      Anybody who's serious about mobile development is bound to have a drawer full of fairly current devices somewhere. What he carries is what serves his needs. I'd been working with various smartphones for some time before I began carrying one. That's because I made telephony an absolute priority. I began carrying a Palm Treo 650 back in 2005 -- not because it was a quantum leap in smartphone technology, but because the carriers upgraded their networks near my house and I no longer had to worry about choosing the phone with the best reception.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  8. Not that great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "watch their counterparts mingle on social networking apps that are not available to them, take higher-resolution photos, and effortlessly navigate streets — and the Internet — with better GPS and faster browsing...." ... and with lower battery life and more fragility.

  9. Really? by carcomp · · Score: 1

    A title with the word black in it 3 times, and also all the words except 1 start with B. On top of that, its an article about people embarrassed of a phone they own? Huh? Whats stopping them from getting a different phone? Who gets embarrassed by a phone? Also don't give me that plan crap. You can get out of plans. Whats stopping these embarrassed people from sticking the SIM card in an unlocked phone bought from someone who needs some quick cash on Craigslist. Wait, its a business phone and you have to use it? Correct me if i'm wrong, unless you are in marketing, you aren't going to get judged by other business people by your phone. I still use an old 3GS with a pay as you go plan and WIFI for internet because it just works.. Seriously people! Get creative. It just pisses me off how people do not do anything anymore for fear of breaking a rule that may or may not exist. Sorry. Feeling ranty this morning.

    1. Re:Really? by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Actually, since marketing affects so many other departments, being seen with a blackberry is currently a way to become an instant pariah.

      If I was hiring for example, your out-of-date and out-of-touch phone would be a hindrance to me hiring you and force you to answer more questions than the next guy.

    2. Re:Really? by sa666_666 · · Score: 1

      Not sure if you're being serious or not, but if so, no wonder the the current business world is so screwed up. It seems to be just a childish high-school popularity contest all over again. And IME, many business-people are the most childish, vindictive people I've ever met.

    3. Re:Really? by dmacleod808 · · Score: 1

      In what interview should I be playing with my phone, or have any reason for you to see my phone? I leave my phone in the car during an interview.

      --
      There Can Be Only One...
    4. Re:Really? by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Its nice to see that the type of phone a person has reflects on their ability to do their jobs. I figured most jobs would be supplying phones if they mattered that much.

      I have a hacked Driod phone. It is a model or two behind the current phones on the market but does more then most the current models. Whats that say about my job skills or employment prospects?

      hmm.. I wonder if the type of car I drive would be a hindrance, what abut the color of my girlfriends hair?

    5. Re:Really? by carcomp · · Score: 1

      I guess I still just don't get it. I was hired because I was the only person who brought a portfolio of previous work. I also don't display my phone like some sort of trophy. I do believe I left it in my car for the duration of the interview. As an aside: One of the hindrances to upgrading / getting a newer model cell phone is price. I don't like paying a lot of money for things that I don't think should cost as much as they do. I also don't sign up for time-length service plans / leases. I buy things outright. My "things" are paid for up front. Its just a personal preference. That means I drive a 10 year old car (There's the car analogy tie in thingy), or have an old but albeit good phone. I have a 62" widescreen rear projection TV that recently got new horizontal and vertical convergence ICs. I just don't need to have new things to be happy. That's why I have a family.

    6. Re:Really? by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      I'm not as bad as most, and I'll probably just be blunt and ask you why you have a blackberry instead of... well just about anything. If the answer is satisfactory then I'm good, and anything from "I'm frugal and my contract isn't up yet" to "My previous work used BBE and this was just easier" is acceptable.

      I'd seriously have less problems with someone carrying a dumb cell than a blackberry right now.

      The thing in the tech world is you always have to be either ahead of the game or at the very least up with the times. A blackberry in your pocket is a sign that you are not in either of those categories. Its also a sign that you're a bit anti-social which will make it more difficult for you to meld with the existing staff.

      Its not an absolute, but it is a sign, and will be interpreted as such.

    7. Re:Really? by Ironhandx · · Score: 1

      Your approach is the best one.

      He was mentioning in the situation of you actually DID bring your phone in to the interview with you. It is a sign that you are behind the times, which in the tech industry is a big no-no to have on display in an interview.

    8. Re:Really? by Marcika · · Score: 1

      Dude, the people with BBs are the most social people I've met. Whether it's email or facebook messenger or BBM or WhatsApp, the unified messaging interface and the fast typing is the sole reason to use them... If "ahead of the game" means the same iDevice as your grandma - well, let's just say you are welcome to your hires.

  10. What they need to be is a software provider by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The writing's on the wall for Blackberry's hardware. They need to take a hard look how they can make money from other platforms.

    And what they have (and the one thing that's still keeping their hardware barely afloat) is their e-mail infrastructure. They store info on the device securely. They push it securely. There's a reason law firms still love them, and it's that they allow distributed e-mail to be secure on the device. They allow corporate IT to set policies on this. They do this really well.

    They need to start bundling this technology up and selling it to corporations to use on other devices.

    Will it kill their hardware? Probably - the fact that Blackberry has this better than anyone else is the one thing that's still propping up their hardware. But if they DON'T do it, they'll be too late to that market, and other people will have snapped up the real estate (for example, Good. http://www1.good.com/. No, I'm not affiliated) And at that point, all that will be left is to shut down the company and sell the IP to a patent troll.

  11. How stupid by saihung · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    What a content-free mess of an article that was. First, there's very little that iPhone or Android users can do that BB users can't do. What major functions are missing? "Social networking apps"? Like what? Which ones?

    Second, if your main reason for wanting to switch phones is because people make fun of you, then it's highly likely that NONE of you actually know how to use your damned devices. My 6 year old Nokia can do most of the things that an iPhone can do.

    1. Re:How stupid by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

      Blackberry doesn't have Grindr. That's a very important social app for some people (not me!).

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  12. Tired of Apple advertisments. by tuppe666 · · Score: 0

    Seriously Apples market share has dropped for a second quarter. Its not been the cool phone sing the Galaxy III...and never was for the youth however the media try and spin it. Ironically Blackberry had the youth market.

    Seriously iPhone fever....hiding your blackberry behind your iPad. All these cool(sick) people not wanting a blackberry.

    I'm so pleased the days of Apples dominance is gone.

    1. Re:Tired of Apple advertisments. by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Huh. Latest comscore numbers:

      May 2012: 31.9%
      Aug 2012: 34.3%

      And that BTW is during the low sales period before the 5 came out. How is that dropping share?
      http://www.engadget.com/2012/10/02/comscore-iphone-moved-up-to-34-percent-us-share-in-august/

  13. it never ends by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...Proving once again that the nerds who got beaten up in high school are no better than the jocks who beat them up.

    Mockery and derision? Shame and public humiliation? Grow up.

  14. It all depends which Star Trek by SmallFurryCreature · · Score: 5, Funny

    Whether you deserve mockery depends on which Star Trek you like:

    1. Star Trek: The Original Series. My man!
    2. Star Trek: The Next Generation. My gay man!
    3. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. My girl, very inclusive of them to make a Star Trek for the soap opera crowd.
    4. Star Trek: Voyager. Go away kid
    5. Enterprise DIE!
    6. Star Trek: The rape movie Your death will be a public holiday.

    Same with old phones, the first people to use a real useful smartphone were the Nokia communicator users. Then for the people who found that to hard to use, the blackberry was invented.

    Then the iPhone came along for those who didn't have any real use for them apart from playing flavor of the day games. How many slicing games does a platform need anyway?

    But at least your not a windows phone user.

    There is always a pecking order and always someone at the bottom. Windows phone users and Enterprise watchers are the equivalent of the dead half cannibalized chicken at your local factory farm. McNuggets.

    Queue this post being modded down by a future McNugget.

    --

    MMO Quests are like orgasms:

    You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.

    1. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      But at least your not a windows phone user.

      you're

      Queue this post being modded down by a future McNugget.

      Cue

    2. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by Scutter · · Score: 5, Funny

      I am a HUGE Star Trek nerd, but I always got grossed out when that dude's dad cut his hand off at the end of the second movie.

      --

      "Tell me doctor, with all of your defenses, are there any provisions for an attack by killer bees?"
    3. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fifth movie.

    4. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you sure you're not thinking of Star Wars?

    5. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      damn time travel, why couldn't mcfly kill jarjar? I mean he was right there!

    6. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No. It's the second... there are only three movies.

    7. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by sidthegeek · · Score: 1

      *whoooosh*

    8. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by DaTrueDave · · Score: 1

      There is always a pecking order and always someone at the bottom. Windows phone users and Enterprise watchers are the equivalent of the dead half cannibalized chicken at your local factory farm. McNuggets.

      Obligatory xkcd: https://xkcd.com/1095/

    9. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by lennier · · Score: 1

      I am a HUGE Star Trek nerd, but I always got grossed out when that dude's dad cut his hand off at the end of the second movie.

      You only think you're kidding. The way Into Darkness is shaping up, it probably will end with Sulu swordfighting Spock's dad in a carbonite chamber in a Borg Cube while Cylon Empress Janeway activates the Hand of Omega.

      The Ewoks come at night. Mostly.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    10. Re:It all depends which Star Trek by formfeed · · Score: 1

      I am a HUGE Star Trek nerd, but I always got grossed out when that dude's dad cut his hand off at the end of the second movie.

      That must be you then.

  15. Why iPhone for business? by foniksonik · · Score: 1

    Exchange support is fantastic.

    Meeting alerts rock, calendar is big and easy to manage.

    Multiple email account support, unified or separate.

    Video conference and Skype support. Webex support.

    Games. Sometimes you just need a few minutes of downtime.

    If you *need* to take notes, bring a laptop or a pen and paper. Any phone keyboard is deficient

    --
    A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
    1. Re:Why iPhone for business? by volxdragon · · Score: 1

      Multiple email account support, unified or separate.



      This is half-assed IMHO. I've used an iPhone for several years now and still one of my biggest pet peeves is the single signature block that is global to all email accounts (this is a PITA if your work requires some standard boilerplate garbage that must be on every email but you really don't want that crap on your personal emails as well). They finally did do one thing right and break up / allow assignment of the outgoing SMTP servers on a per account basis (tied to accounts) so you don't route your personal email via work, but even that took a while. If they would just make ALL of the settings PER ACCOUNT instead of having some global, then life would be much better...
    2. Re:Why iPhone for business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just FYI, iOS 6 supports per-account email signatures. Go to Settings > Mail, Contacts, Calendars > Signature and change the setting from All Accounts to Per Account.

    3. Re:Why iPhone for business? by 6332J1N · · Score: 2

      iPhone has per-account sigs.

      --
      Never underestimate the power of very stupid people in very large numbers.
    4. Re:Why iPhone for business? by volxdragon · · Score: 1

      Um, where??!? The only 'Signature' option I see on mine is at the top level Accounts screen (between the Increase Quote Level and Default Account options), there are no Signature options in the per-account area...

    5. Re:Why iPhone for business? by volxdragon · · Score: 1

      Nevermind, I see they expanded under that option....that didn't use to be there, when did it show up?

    6. Re:Why iPhone for business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      iOS 6

    7. Re:Why iPhone for business? by quacking+duck · · Score: 1

      <quote><p>Multiple email account support, unified or separate.</p></quote>

      This is half-assed IMHO.

      At least the iPhone *lets* you have multiple email account support. A few months ago I tried linking a current, up-to-date Blackberry Bold to a second Exchange server (going through a merger, so needed to send and receive separately on both domains' email systems). Could not be done via built-in software. Ended up installing a paid app that AFAIK used ActiveSync to get and send email from the second Exchange server.

      On the iPhone? Told it the server address, username and password, and it auto-configured and connected to the Exchange server in less than a minute.

      I can appreciate the security reasons why most companies don't *want* users to have links into a second Exchange server... and yet the poster child for the walled garden has given us the option to use it or not.

  16. Sounds familiar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nicole Perlroth writes that the BlackBerry, once proudly carried by the high-powered and the elite, has become a magnet for mockery and derision from those with iPhones and the latest Android phones.

    Using an Apple Mac or Leenooks would make you a magnet of mockery and derision back in the mid 1990s.

    How long until Apple, Samsung and Google become uncool?

    1. Re:Sounds familiar by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      Linux didn't make you mocked in the 90's. The only people who really had an awareness of Linux were going to be the people who actually liked it. To everyone else, it was like some sort of UNIX or something. You'd be a nerd, but the same sort of nerd people had been dealing with for 30 years. The worst you'd get were people wondering where your beard and red suspenders were. And that's just for people who had any idea what UNIX was.

  17. How did this make it on my morning news read by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    .... seriously slashdot, terrible article

  18. Of the three by Bigbutt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I used a Blackberry since I got to my place of work 5 years ago. A few months ago it was traded in for an Android RAZR. On the personal front, I bought an iPhone 3GS 2 or 3 years ago.

    For consistent reliable access to company e-mail and alerts from the monitoring system, the Blackberry wins hands down no question. On the Android, we've had alerts not show up for hours and at other times, the alerts repeat every few minutes. The Blackberry is inherently part of the system for getting e-mail. On the Android I have to use a third party app ("Good"). If the app bails, I don't get any further e-mail until I log back in to the app. The Blackberry would last 5 days without having to charge it. I have to plug in the Android phone every single morning. And the battery's anywhere from 5% to 90% charged when I plug it in. At 5% it takes 4 hours or so to charge back up to "Charged".

    The thing I dislike about both the iPhone and the Android are the virtual keyboards. Nothing is more frustrating for me than having to look at the damned keyboard while I type and still I get garbage in the message. Even worse, on the iPhone the autocompletion can be so frustrating that I have to put the phone away or I'll throw it as far as I can. I've bounced it off the carpet more than once over the past year. The Blackberry had an actual keyboard and I seldom made the mistakes I make on the Android/iPhone devices.

    Back after I got the Blackberry, I was thinking about getting one for personal use. I kept putting it off because I had such a hard time surfing the 'net. Having to spin the little ball and press on it to click was annoying, not always staying where I pointed when I clicked so I'd click on some different link. And that's assuming I could even get to the site. It's the primary reason I went with the iPhone. The web surfing worked so much better than the Blackberry. And I was able to get all my e-mail in one place.

    But you know, on the Blackberry, work e-mail and SMS alerts worked with very few issues. If I had my choice right now, I'd go back to my old Blackberry.

    [John]

    --
    Shit better not happen!
  19. Headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not even going to waste time to read the summary of this article because this smartphone bullshit is ridiculous... but can we take a moment to appreciate how perfect the headline is? It reads like a kid's picture book.

  20. You Are Your Phone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, it seems that the article is suggesting that you are your phone. That if you don't have a hip electronic leash you and your business are headed for ruin? Give me a break! It's a phone. Grow up.

    I guess I fit squarely into the article's pathetic stereotype. Though I lack a Blackberry, I occasionally wear ties and think they are quite becoming, I don't participate in social networking apps (on my desktop or Android), I rarely rely on a phone for pictures preferring a higher resolution camera with a real lens, I have no issue navigating around the globe without ever using my Android for that purpose, and frankly I find using the internet from a phone to be rather cumbersome if not taxing so I don't do it all that much either. Yet, despite all of my woeful phone inadequacies, my business is booming, my finances are stellar and women throw themselves at me.

  21. Herd Mentality: baa, baa, baa by water-and-sewer · · Score: 2

    I'm really not impressed with the sudden emphasis on gadget trendiness and 'cool' factor, implying Blackberries are less cool and thus to be shunned like clamydia or herpes sores.

    You know when I stopped carrying my Palm Tungsten? Last week. That's right, about 7 days ago. Old? Yes. Perfectly functional, useful, and integrated into my daily system for staying organized? Absolutely. I upgraded to a "hot/awesome/trendy/fantastic" Google Nexus 7 tablet, and though it does some things better it does some other things worse.

    So I'm not overly concerned about how tech pundits feel about Blackberry today. I use a BB for work and admit I wish it had better apps. But I love that keyboard (I have trouble with the Nexus 7 touchscreen keyboard even when I use a stylus and truly fail to see the attraction of a screen with greasy fingerprints all over it), and nothing tops it for email.

    Pundits suck. I think the Android phones are fun and useful and do all sort of neat things that BBs don't. But that doesn't mean BB should just piss off and die. And I don't appreciate the attempt in convincing consumers that's the case.

    --
    If this were Usenet, I'd killfile the lot of you.
  22. Trolls by Barryke · · Score: 1

    This whole post should tagged "Irrelevant socalled news" and moderated to "-5 Trolls feast here".

    --
    Hivemind harvest in progress..
    1. Re:Trolls by DarenN · · Score: 1

      Slashdot would be a better place with that moderation. You made me laugh, thank you.

      --
      Rational thought is the only true freedom
  23. Effortlessly Navigating Streets with iOS 6... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, who in the WORLD wrote that? :P

  24. What a stupid article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, Slashdot. What the fuck is the matter with you?

    First of all, it's bullshit. Blackberry wins hands down for reliable email delivery and error-free email entry. As far as accomplishing the business mission, there is still nothing better than a Blackberry.

    Second, this article reads like it was written by just another hipster douchebag in skinny jeans riding a fixie and carrying a bike messenger bag. Yes, smartphones that run Android or iOS are hip, cool, and in. No, they are not the best tool for business.

    Tell me. Why is it better for business that someone be able to waste company time checking Facebook and surfing the web? That's not the point of having a company-issued device. The point of a company-issued device is to DO WORK FOR THE FUCKING COMPANY, not sit around wasting your employer's time and money.

    1. Re:What a stupid article by ledow · · Score: 3, Insightful

      1) Except for that time that the entire European Blackberry base couldn't send or receive email for several days because it was all routed through one datacenter (even if you used a local Exchange connector, I believe) and there was a "data incident" that took WEEKS for them to catch up properly with normal email delivery for an entire continent? (Nothing to do with connectivity or the hardware itself, just the stupid idea of routing ALL email through a central server!)

      Because that's what killed my employer's use of Blackberry from that day onwards.

      2) The best tool for business is generally the best tool full stop. I'm not aware of many areas of technology where consumer/business versions aren't pretty much identical unless you're doing something quite serious - and that's a different matter. The majority of "business" is NOT huge corporations with thousands of employees.

      Mobile phones, for example, were always consumer items until BB turned up. They got used in business. They were so popular that people offered business packages. And now BB is dying because all consumer phones can do what the BB can do.

      Because that's what my employer did when the contract for the BB phones came up for renewal - they evaluated it, ditched it, went consumer, and never had any problems or missing features. They actually saved money at no loss.

      3) You think your employees aren't surfing anyway? Sure you can chain them to the desk and enforce a "no-mobiles" rule, and block everything online, but you won't make a happier or more productive staff by doing so.

      Whereas if you just open it up but say "on your head be it, and don't let it interfere with work", there's no expensive and resource-intensive management required, your staff will be happy that they can check that little Jimmy got to the doctors okay with his grazed knee without worrying, they'll be able to do what they want in lunch-hour anyway and you can STILL sack them if they don't do the work you require in a reasonable timeframe (which is the ONLY metric worth bothering with).

      Though I agree that work is a place for work, I'd die in a place that wouldn't let me show others a picture of my kid from Facebook while I'm chatting at lunchtime, or log in to check my delivery status on my Christmas order just before the end of the day to see if I can drive straight home or need to drive 20 miles out of my way to pick up a parcel before leaving or, hell, just do things like add things to my personal calendar or sort out family "emergencies" (like Jimmy's left his school shoes at home but only I know where they are).

      Sure, I can do that some other time. And I do. But I also do "work" stuff on my own time too and getting strict about that border actually works AGAINST my employers. Vastly.

      The company that treats its employees like the enemy is like the customer services department that treats its callers like the enemy. Costing you more to do less and making everyone miserable in the process.

    2. Re:What a stupid article by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FWIW, due to the nature of some of the work out there, employers sometimes do not allow COTS smartphones into their facilities.

      Due to the nature of the work we do, for example, we do not allow any devices into our facility that are capable of recording either video, photo, or audio. This includes the majority of smartphones and even most blackberries - although there are some that do not have cameras still, and that don't have the software to do audio recording. Oh, and our employees aren't surfing, because there is no Internet access in the facility, for security reasons.

      Most of the problems you mention can be solved without the use of a cell phone and Internet, as well. If you are just dying so show off a picture of your kid, you can bring in a photo. If you need to check the delivery status of a package, you can call UPS or Fedex on the phone, punch in the tracking number, and find out that way (although if you do it just before the end of the day, you're still doing it on my time, and you shouldn't be. Wait until just AFTER the end of the day, please). Same goes for checking up on little Johnny (although a grazed knee is not even something you need to take your kid to the doctor for, let alone an emergency that justifies missing work time).

      Telephones worked fine for decades before the Internet, and they still work fine today.

    3. Re:What a stupid article by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      although if you do it just before the end of the day, you're still doing it on my time, and you shouldn't be. Wait until just AFTER the end of the day, please

      As long as I bill for less hours than I actually work, and I get my job done in a reasonable and agreed time frame, then my employer/client is ok with some private surfing and calls, and we can access pretty much anything from the corporate net. That is because we're all responsible adults here... and in the rare case that excessive surfing affects someone's work, it is easy enough to have a chat and set them straight.

      A lot of job ads have something about the company looking for people who "don't have that 9-5 mentality". Guess what: that works both ways.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
  25. Get off my lawn! by hazydave · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Blackberry is a great moving telephone, I don' t know what they're talking about. I can reads all my emails too, which is a bonus on a phone these days -- can't do that on the office or home phone. Very rugged, too, I dropped mine while adjusting the rabbit ears on my 24" big screen TV (still can't pull in a signal worth a damn anymore), and it didn't break. I hear you can even surfs the internets with the Blackberry, though I'm not sure just what people see in all that.

    --
    -Dave Haynie
  26. Who arbitrates what is 'cool'? by benjfowler · · Score: 1

    So white kids and businessmen don't consider BlackBerry to be "cool".

    You should see the shittier parts of London, where all the black gangsta types carry Blackberries. Not because of encrypted free BBM, but because it's "bidness, innit".

    Don't think for a minute that you are the final arbiter of what is 'cool' out there, because as we should all know, one man's meat is another man's poison.

  27. The Security, until they dumbed it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Remember all those governments that said their dip's had to have bb's up to the 10's. When the saudi's said they had to have the keys to the bb, Thats why you smart ones shoud have an older bb. Nicely encripted mail to whoever you want.

  28. I have a dream today. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the phone they carry but by the content of their character.
    I have a dream today.

  29. What I don't need or use in a phone by Murdoch5 · · Score: 0

    1) Social networking
    2) High res photos ( I bought this new device called a camera!!!!!!!! )
    3) GPS ( I own a GPS :-O )
    4) High speed browsing ( I can use a computer )

    1. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by Arker · · Score: 1

      I have to agree with you. I dont even have a GPS, but I would have one if I hadnt spent way too much on this damn "smart" phone with builtin GPS. Which has the crappiest GPS antenna known to man and probably some other hardware problems as well - it usually works, eventually, but it's more of an irritant than an asset. I'd have been a lot happier with a simple phone that works, and a separate GPS device that also worked, instead of having both crammed into one device that often doesnt work.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    2. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by garcia · · Score: 1

      You know. You're right. You don't *need* any of those things in a phone. However, most people *want* those things in a phone.

      I have a Garmin 76CSx with the entirety of North America loaded. I have used it extensively both for geocaching and traveling. It's an amazing device for autorouting and I would never consider a phone in their current states as a replacement for this device. That said, I use it only when I'm geocaching (which is pretty rare these days, after nearly 5000 found it's just not as fun as it used to be) or while I'm traveling across long distances which may find me out of service. The rest of the time I use my phone. Why? Because it's more convenient, it is easier to use, and it has voice turn-by-turn. Yup, they have their issues but claiming I wouldn't want a new phone w/a GPS I can turn on and off at will is silly.

      I also own a Nikon D5000 DSLR. I use it to take photos fairly often, especially of food and ones of the kids that we want to make more special than our iPhone 4S and 5 can offer. However, it's a pain in the ass to upload and e-mail photos and it's big and bulky to carry around everywhere with us when we're already carrying stuff to fuel a 2.5 year old and a 4 month old. IOW, yeah, the DSLR is superior and an iPhone would never make up for it but the convenience factor alone makes the DSLR almost obsolete.

      As for the browser and social media. I actually sometimes prefer the mobile browsing experience to the regular. In order to use my laptop I have to have access to it. Sometimes I'm somewhere that I do not have access to my machine. Other times the machine sits on the table and I am on my phone because it's easier to scroll through my RSS items, e-mail and social media stuff on the phone than it is on the computer. Oh and "high speed browsing" is kinda funny. My iPhone seems as fast as my MBP and it has LTE when I'm out of the house which matches (and sometimes beats--especially in upstream) my business class connection at home (I am routinely pulling 25/25 on VZW LTE in the MSP metro area vs 25/3 on Charter Business Class).

      YMMV.

    3. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

      Whats interesting and what I just thought of is this, You wouldn't ask a single contractor to overhaul your house, do the plumbing, electrical, wood working and etc.... So why would you buy a phone to be a jack of all trades. The more you can do in a smaller package the lower quality you can do it. Sure a contractor can do electrical and plumbing and frame a house but the work wont come close in quality as it would if you hired an electrician and plumber.

      However I will give you that some times snapping a photo on a phone is nice, or just jumping on Facebook for an update. However I would say those are option which the phone can be used for as opposed to being used in a capacity to replace ( If that makes sense ). I'm one of those people who believe that when a device exists to solve a real problem, if exist for a reason. For instance GPS was created out of need, high quality cameras were created a need and the same with mobile phones. If I want to take a picture I wont go buy a GPS with a camera. That might be just me and a small handful of others.

    4. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      What phone did you get that has such crappy GPS? I'm rather happy with my iPhone 4s, it is far faster to acquire a signal than any GPS I've owned and very accurate. Probably because this phone supports both GPS and Glonass, the latter being more accurate here in Europe.

      By the way, here's what I don't need or use because I have a phone:
      1) Social netowrking (ok, I don't this, period. Phone or no)
      2) Camera. My phone makes very decent pictures and I always have it with me. For the very rare occasion that I need top notch photos and/or a decent flash, I'll bring a separate camera, but in practice I hardly use mine.
      3) GPS. Who needs a separate unit that is bound to get nicked from your car, when you already carry one with you all the time?
      4) Notepad/pen: Taking quick, short notes on the phone works just fine. And making a picture of whiteboards or flipovers is even quicker!
      5) Music/video/entertainment device. My phone does it all.
      6) When you're on the go, who needs a laptop or access to a full sized computer (in a webcafe or some such) when you have a smartphone? Sucks for prolonged browsing but great if you're outside and need to quickly look up an address or do a price comparison.

      If I had to drop one feature from my phone, it'd probably be the ability to make calls.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    5. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by garcia · · Score: 2

      Actually, I would hire a contractor to do the work and expect him to farm out the work to subcontractors to do the parts he cannot. Usually these subs are brought in at the lowest bid the contractor can find to get the job finished on time while passing inspection.

      A phone seems to fit this model just fine.

    6. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by jythie · · Score: 1

      Eh, there is a constant back and forth between people who like devices that do one thing well or devices that do lots of things 'ok'. Some people prefer devices that cram as many features as possible into a single package but are not really built for any of them, other people would rather have multiple devices with each doing it's job well.

    7. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by Murdoch5 · · Score: 1

      The issue here is that the mobile platform isn't even okay at doing these jobs. It's really bad, if you bought a camera or GPS that performed at the level the phone does you wouldn't just send it back you would besmirch the name of the company for eternity. The GPS in my phone can't even lock onto a single satellite, I've tried it a few times for fun and just gave up. The "new" iPhone and Samsung S3 take pictures which frankly look about as good as a 10 dollar point a click. You would assume or think for the $600+ price tag you get something better then poor.

    8. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      Whats interesting and what I just thought of is this, You wouldn't ask a single contractor to overhaul your house, do the plumbing, electrical, wood working and etc.... So why would you buy a phone to be a jack of all trades.

      Because I don't actually make decisions based on overstretched metaphors.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    9. Re:What I don't need or use in a phone by lennier · · Score: 1

      So why would you buy a phone to be a jack of all trades.

      Because I only have one free pocket in my jeans.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
  30. Long Time BB user here. by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 2

    I was forced to use a BB for work for years. I have a shoebox full of useless BBs that I can't even sell.

    BB OS 10 won't run on your 9900. You can add it to your shoebox.

    The camera, keyboard and call quality was nice. The MDM set the bar for the industry.

    The industry passed the last of BB's advantages some time in 2011. There are much better devices out there now. Get an iPhone, it will not only have a better camera, microphone and display, but Apple won't abandon it next year. Your skills and knowledge will also be relevant when all those law firms finish evaluating iOS and start migrating.

  31. RIM's lockin by jbolden · · Score: 1

    I agree RIM's lockin was nowhere near as great but the fact is that IT departments still don't have a good management strategy for non RIM devices. BBMS had an exclusive. As far as not trained on iOS (I'm saying iOS not OSX deliberately here) on Android I think smartphones are solving that and at this point much less the 2020s Microsoft users will be familiar with those OSes and quite functional in them.

  32. Meh... old phones are better. by onealone · · Score: 1

    I still use a Nokia 6310 most of the time. Sure, it doesn't have any internet connectivity, but it's a better phone than anything being sold today, the battery lasts for a week, I can drop it without it breaking, and no one's going to steal it. There's certainly no shame involved. Quite the opposite in fact. When people are boasting about their new phones and I pull my old Nokia out the reaction is: "Wow! I used to have one of those. Now that was a good phone!"

  33. alliteration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Arrrrgggghhh!

    Death by alliteration!

  34. BB10 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People here should be unbiased. RIMM is developing the BlackBerry 10. It is amazing from everything that can be read and seen about it. They recently started to allow video to be taken of their interface. It makes the iOS and Android experience look, well ... in technology terms .... 5 years old. That's a long time.

    I have a Droid 3 from Motorolla and the reason I am looking at non Android phones for my resfresh is because it sucks. Apps shutdown when phone calls come in. Phone crashes and reboot atleast once a month. And this 8 month old phone of mine already has a headphone jack that is breaking. So, the headphone cjack is jsut an example of why a fragmented market is bad.

    And I will not get an iPhone.

    So, I am hoping that BB10 is the answer when it comes. It looks VERY promising. I jsjt feel sorry for those that blindly dismiss it today. Atleast research it.

  35. I hardly use my cellphone by Quakeulf · · Score: 1

    Not being a slave to trend and technology keeps me sane and my mind fresh. Do yourself a favour and detach yourselves a bit more from the devices around you. It will only serve you well as a rational human being. Also that is all I hear from coders is to "reduce and remove dependencies", yet they cling to their phones and iDevices. Isn't the hypocricy here just sweet?

  36. First World Problem by yoey · · Score: 0

    I don't have anything else to say....

  37. Email and messaging are no longer enough by sjbe · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you want a no nonsense device with a physical keyboard and superior email and message handling, a BB is still the best.

    "No nonsense"? Have you actually used a Blackberry? They do a few things rather well but overall they are almost obnoxiously annoying to use. I'll take any of the better Android phones or an iPhone over any Blackberry any day of the week. My mother uses a fairly recent BB and good grief is it irritating. Oh it can email fine but heaven forbid you want to do anything besides messaging with it including changing settings.

    You also have to remember that the devices it is competing against are general purpose computers which happen to be able to make calls. The BB still is in a world where email is the so-called killer app. Things have changed and just email isn't enough anymore. Even if we concede that the BB is better at dealing with email and messaging, the difference is marginal for most people. The advantages of the BB don't even come close to outweighing its deficiencies.

    1. Re:Email and messaging are no longer enough by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Yup. The other thing that is killing them is the whole BYOD thing.

      If the company wants to issue me a blackberry no big deal - I'll stick it in my bag and pull it out if I need to do work.

      However, companies are getting cheaper. Most don't want to issue phones, but instead ask that employees use their own phones to do work. Well, as you can imagine the typical employee could care less how hard the phone is to remote administer when they're paying for it. If the company's standard HAPPENS to support my phone I might use it to get some extra work done. If not, then I won't.

      Then there is the whole thing that even company-issued phones are a bit of a status item. The big manager wants the fancy phone that everybody will envy, not the stodgy one that people will chuckle about when their back is turned. Even though Angry Birds has nothing to do with getting work done, it ends up impacting the purchasing decision.

  38. Oh please by sunking2 · · Score: 2

    The real reason businesses are switching is because Blackberry doesn't have as many games to keep you occupied during meetings. Not that you'll get management to admit it, but it's true.

  39. That is nothing compared to ... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 3, Insightful

    People using black berries are mocked and made fun of? Get over it buddy. It is nothing compared to the humiliation and derision invited by the lone college freshman using Dell in an ocean of Apple logos.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    1. Re:That is nothing compared to ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha, yes!!!!
      So true.

  40. Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by briantf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Your explanation for setting up ActiveSync means the account you have is connected by an incompetent IT department.

    Setting up an Android or an iPhone for Exchange needs only an email address and a password. There are at least 3 different means by which Autodiscover can be configured to take care of client device configuration. If your IT dept can't figure that out, what makes you think a BES server is within their capacity to manage?

    Your shrill denunciation of SSL and the assumption that users are too stupid to use a password seems almost self-denigrating. You don't use SSL in any web app? You can't remember your corporate credentials? The iPhone might be too complicated for you.....

    Finally, we see the issue - you have a phone you don' t like, so it must be someone else's fault. The phone you did like was designed and built by a company so incompetent they self-destructed. It must be someone else's fault. I'm starting to see a pattern here....

    Regards,
    Brian in CA

    1. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by LordLimecat · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I use SSL, but I certainly dont trust if it the entitiy Im worried about is the government. SSL has gigantic flaws that are widely recognized; one is that the signing authorities tend to be incompetent, and one bad authority can completely wreck your day if someone wants to spy on you.

      _I_ dont have problems remembering my web password, but apparently you dont do IT support in any capacity that has you dealing with users on a regular basis. Some of them-- particularly those who dont have to care because of their position-- have that problem.

      Finally, we see the issue - you have a phone you don' t like, so it must be someone else's fault.

      The security issues and the setup issues arent "my phone" problems, theyre inherent problems with active sync. Just because you declare "its not THAT much more finicky or insecure" doesnt get rid of the real issues: Per-device keys are simply better in a corporate environment than SSL which requires you to either remove trusted roots from each device or else trust every public root authority out there. Which, I believe, includes China.

      Youll note that India doesnt seem to have issues with ActiveSync email spying; its only Blackberry theyre getting pissed off at, because you simply cannot intercept BES traffic.

      Its also interesting that people loudly proclaim how great Android is, then when I point out how laughably bad the Motorola Admiral (touted as a business phone) is, they say "well, all OTHER androids are great". Wonderful, so is there some whitelist of the Android phones that DONT suck at business use?

    2. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should have known that your irrational I-hate-the-government lunacy would somehow be involved with your irrational I-love-my-Blackberry-and-everything-else-sucks lunacy.

    3. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by whoever57 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I use SSL, but I certainly dont trust if it the entitiy Im worried about is the government. SSL has gigantic flaws that are widely recognized; one is that the signing authorities tend to be incompetent, and one bad authority can completely wreck your day if someone wants to spy on you.

      As opposed to BlackBerry, where we know that some governments have access to at least some emails sent to/from blackberries. If we know that this capaiblity has been provided to the Indian government, do you really think that it hasn't been provided to the US government?

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    4. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His explanation of using ActiveSync for a cell phone that doesn't run Windows Mobile 6.5 or earlier sounds like his company has invested in some device management software.

      The one I work with for a client's devices is called MobiControl. With it, I can build a new app executable, package it into an installer, and deploy it to several hundred phones within a span of about 5 minutes. I can also remote-control a phone when a user is having trouble with it, retrieve debug logs, and even twiddle the data files for the custom apps I develop. So instead of having to use a test setup and try to replicate a bug report, I can see it happen on the user's device directly. (Most of the time, it's user error... surprise!)

      It's not any of his account configuration that requires ActiveSync, it's the fact that his device is tracked and remotely managed by corporate IT that does.

      As a note to the GP, though: BES sucks donkey balls. Large ones. If it didn't, IT departments wouldn't hate it and wouldn't be looking for alternatives. That's why BB is dying. There was no real competition at first, but once the competition showed up, it put BB/BES to shame. And RIM hasn't tried to improve it much. They're simply being out-competed. This is how the market is supposed to work.

    5. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by tilante · · Score: 2

      _I_ dont have problems remembering my web password, but apparently you dont do IT support in any capacity that has you dealing with users on a regular basis. Some of them-- particularly those who dont have to care because of their position-- have that problem.

      From my own experience in IT support, those who don't have to care about not being able to remember their email password because of their position also are high enough that they don't set up their own devices - IT does it for them, or their executive assistant (or whoever normally handles their email for them so they don't have to log in and look at it themselves) does. For them, it doesn't matter how complicated the setup is, unless it's something that needs to be redone on a frequent basis.

      (Indeed, that's how our IT department people first got their own Blackberries - a few high execs decided to get them, then called our CIO and said, "Have somebody set these up for us." They got handed over to us, and then our manager went back to the CIO to say, "Hey - if we're going to be expected to support these, maybe we should have a few for testing?"

    6. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You apparently have NO idea how a BES server works,

      What you are thinking about is a BIS, made for and ran by Telecoms, Not a BES which is made for and ran by businesses. RIM has no way of knowing or accessing your BES server, it does not touch RIM in any textual form only as encrypted packets, set by and encrypted for -- you guessed it your BES server!

    7. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      "I use SSL, but I certainly dont trust if it the entitiy Im worried about is the government. "

      Hello BlackBerry GIVES the government the keys tot he kingdom. ALL your BlackBerry traffic is in the clear unencrypted for the government.

      Have you not been paying attention over the past few years as BlackBerry and RIM had rolled over for the UAE and then every other country giving them a unencrypted middle man attack server for all BB traffic in their respective countries?

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    8. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by Marcika · · Score: 1

      BIS is shared with governments. BES which is used by every enterprise out there, isn't. You generate your own AES key and don't to share it with anyone.

    9. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by lennier · · Score: 3, Informative

      As opposed to BlackBerry, where we know that some governments have access to at least some emails sent to/from blackberries.

      Actually, we don't know that. Are you possibly confusing BIS with BAS? It's a little like the situation with Java vs JavaScript: RIM runs twoBlackberry services, one of which is a hosted email system, Blackberry Internet Service (BIS), on a par with Gmail and Hotmail but accessible by Blackberry devices, which is indeed intercepted by some governments in which it's located. Blackbery Enterprise Service, on the other hand, is a server which is located on your corporation's own LAN and theoretically is not crackable even by RIM, as it uses AES encryption end-to-end. And it's BES that most corporates will be using, not BIS.

      Now I say theoretically because there is an additional wringle: even with a private BES server, all your emails are sent not just over the Internet but through RIM's own Blackberry routing servers, so they do have access to an encrypted copy of everything you send. That means your security really does depend on how well they've implemented AES and that there really truly are no backdoors. And it's close-source software so of course nobody can verify this. If there were backdoors - even just "the NSA runs a huge server farm / quantum computer and brute forces your cipher" - then, yes, your corporate mail would be readable by RIM and whoever they chose to give that data to. They of course swear blind that there are no backdoors in BES. But, then again, that's exactly what they would say if .gov had got to them, wouldn't they? And RIM is the preferred contractor for the US military and White House, which means as a company they've got the potential and a very big incentive to comply with "special" cyberwarfare requests. So I'd tend to assume that everything you send via Blackberry is at least cached in encrypted form in an NSA server. As is everything you send through any US internet interconnect point (remember the wiretaps that were installed about five years back?) But maybe that's just my tinfoil talking.

      But back this side of the rabbit hole, for most people, they're worried about "Blackberry" because they've completely confused BIS with BES, which is pretty silly, and that's solely because the tech press has created this confusion with their usual abysmal standards of reporting.

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    10. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      India has been on RIMs case for the last several years to get access to their system. RIM caved and gave them BIS access, but of course cannot grant BES access-- which has india still rather pissed off.

      I also have to deal with securing systems going to areas of the world where the gov't is all too happy to forge SSL certs to spy on folks. You can call me paranoid, but these are issues I have to deal with. SSL is a problem, and if you dont understand that you simply havent been paying attention.

    11. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      That was their BIS system, which is glorified activesync hosted by RIM. You hand your email OWA credentials to RIM, they push email to your blackberry.

      It has absolutely zero bearing on their BES security, since with BES they are never in posession of either the master key or the derived device keys.

      Its wonderful that ignorance like this gets modded up, however.

      Source (among many):
      http://crackberry.com/rim-encryption-keys
      The only people capable of such access are the corporate customers in control of the accounts in question, therefore, any Indian government agency requiring lawful access would need to request it from the corporate customers themselves and not RIM directly.

    12. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      Hello BlackBerry GIVES the government the keys tot he kingdom. ALL your BlackBerry traffic is in the clear unencrypted for the government.

      Utterly wrong. If you are using BIS, yes, that probably gets spied on. If youre using BES, it is not technically possible for RIM to hand anything to anyone since they do not have the encryption keys.

    13. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by whoever57 · · Score: 0

      Its wonderful that ignorance like this gets modded up, however.

      It's wonderful haw people cannot read posts here at /.. From my posting:

      where we know that some governments have access to at least some emails sent to/from blackberries.

      Did you notice the "some" in there? "Some" doesn't mean "everything, including emails sent via BES".

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    14. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by LordLimecat · · Score: 2

      I will repeat: Your post displays ignorance about BIS vs BES, and how blackberries work in general.

      The ONLY emails they have access to are the ones you are EXPLICITLY giving them the login details to. That is, NOT BES.

    15. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      Your post displays ignorance about BIS vs BES, and how blackberries work in general.

      Apparently you have difficulty with the concepts of sets. "Some emails" refers to the emails that are not accessed via BES.

      Let's be clear though, the non-BES email setup is less secure than is provided on Android and IOS devices because it provides an extra (and very convenient central) point at which emails can be snooped upon.

      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    16. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The denunciation of SSL was neither shrill nor inaccurate. Perhaps you'd better educate yourself on the vulnerabilities of things you trust every day, and really shouldn't. Of course, that would require educating yourself instead of just being a hipster jerk. Go back and play Angry Birds on your little iPhone and grow up a little before you try to talk tech again.

    17. Re:Bad IT Dept doesn't know how to setup Exchange by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      RIM gives up the keys they control. They don't control the keys to any private BES server, which includes all business servers.

      The only time you have to worry is if you're using a carrier server. If you're using servers controlled by your carrier, it doesn't matter what phone you use. All of them have been legally required to have intercept capabilities long before smartphones existed.

  41. Slashdot is officially by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    run by 10-year-olds.

    You're only cool if you have a certain brand of phone!

    You're only cool if you write open-source software! Closed-source is for losers! Boo!

    You're a loser if you don't know how to install packages from source!

    You're an idiot if you can't write code!

    You're worthless if your degree is in anything non-technical! Go make my latte you loser!

    You're only cool if your mom packs Ho-Hos in your lunchbox! Swiss Rolls don't count, they're for poor people!

    You know, for a culture that complains so loudly about being treated differently as a child for having different looks, different needs, different interests, or different possessions, you guys really know how to dish it out to somebody else for not being a carbon copy of you.

  42. Re: As a biz tool - its what it doesn't have by michaeldgale · · Score: 1

    A Camera! There are very few cellphone models that do not include a camera. If you work at a facility where no cameras are allowed, yet you need cellular voice & text messaging there are d@#n few options available. If only the keyboard and small screen weren't so good at "creating a negative pressure differential over deceased game fowl".

  43. BB vs Android / iPhone by jbolden · · Score: 2

    I had no problems with google maps on BB either, though the touch screen controls for zooming are very intuitive and faster than the mouse. I've never used the BB in place of a GPS.

    Oh boo hoo, how will business proceeed without facebook?

    Facebook is kinda important to a lot of business, talk to someone in PR. But more important are things like Linkedin for HR or sourcing. Twitter is becoming a regular source of information. There are also all sorts of business oriented networks like Jive.

    Blackberry absolutely crushes android in email messaging and anyone who says otherwise either has odd definitions of usability, or else has never used a blackberry.

    I'd agree, for authoring. For viewing I think screen size and pinch to zoom are rather helpful.

    Blackberries are still the best device from an IT standpoint; whether the users like them or not SHOULD be irrelevant, because their job isnt to like their business phone, its to do business.

    Two comments.

    a) The more employees dislike their job the more money they demand to do it. Coal miners, sanitation engineers and police officers get paid a lot more than their skills would demand because of the unpleasantness of their work. Same with people who work for large trading houses, their job sucks but they make a ton of money. Employers because the job market has been soft have been able to get away with not being concerned with employee moral. However employee unhappiness results in turnovers, turnovers cost generally between 3 and 18 mo of salary in terms of lost productivity. Among millennials so far quality of work experience matters a lot to them statistically.

    b) Blackberries are great to manage. The other platforms suck but are rapidly getting better. However, the advantages of IT disappear if IT has to implement complex workarounds for missing functionality.

    1. Re:BB vs Android / iPhone by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Great post, thanks.

      I agree with most of your points, I just dont see why users cant have a personal phone and a business phone if they really want a media consumption device. I feel like the idea that one device needs to be great at everything (essentially an impossibility) is slowly ruining the business phone market.

    2. Re:BB vs Android / iPhone by slack_justyb · · Score: 2

      Coal miners, sanitation engineers and police officers get paid a lot more than their skills would demand because of the unpleasantness of their work.

      I've not known coal miners to be making that much cash. In these parts they can stand to make $33,600 topped out and starting around $26500. So that's a spread of $12.75 per hour to $16.15 per hour, with the usual pay increase $0.05 to $0.10 per hour per year.

      Additionally, I think you place very little value on their skill. Most miners are using pretty advance machinery which have complex displays that show gas concentrations, slurry input/output, core rotor tempature, coolant inflow, rotor RPM, and so forth. Most of the miners go to school for pretty much a two year degree for operations and a four year degree is required for mechanics.

      This isn't the pick axe and cart operation that some like to think that is coal mining. Surface mining is a little less complex, but still more demanding that one would expect.

      Yes, the people who have their jobs dislike that crap that they put up with day in and day out, but they don't keep going because the pay is super fat. I could tell you, but hell, come on out here to Kentucky, Tennessee, or West Virginia and see for yourself why they go in and out of a mine day in and day out.

      I'm sure it will be enlightening.

    3. Re:BB vs Android / iPhone by jbolden · · Score: 1

      The way I see it.

      1) There really never was a fully developed business phone market. RIM didn't offer enough consulting services so business phones never got deeply integrated. For example their MVS product which gives mobiles PBX functionality is fantastic. But most business don't even know about their PBX functionality.

      RIM missed their chance to deeply integrate, the way Microsoft took their desktop platform and built a server platform.

      2) The move from EVDO to 3G is responsible for a lot of what you are talking about. Many of blackberries features like compressed email are great for EVDO but don't matter on 3G. There certainly would be a market for high speed compressed video services over 3G/4G but those are different customers that RIMs.

      3) Carriers are not anxious to offer less expensive plans with limited data for business only uses. If say 100m of data was $3 extra per month while 2g / of data was $30 /mo extra, business would be much more concerned with limiting data. Since carriers aren't doing that business have no reason to want a more limited experience.

      ____

      IMHO I think Nokia / Microsoft offers the best chance for a good business phone. Google's business model makes them a terrible choice for enterprise. Apple's culture makes them a terrible choice for enterprise. Ubiquitous computing, the Windows 8 strategy does strike me as something business might love. Microsoft has a strong hold on enterprise and Nokia needs a market.

      I wouldn't say the Lumia 920 is a business phone. But... Microsoft Lynx is excellent. If Microsoft would just bundle Lynx service for free with Lumia that would make it a good choice for small business and possibly BYOD companies. Which gets it off the ground for enterprise which...

    4. Re:BB vs Android / iPhone by jbolden · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the correction.

      Its a bit odd I'm finding data all over the place. Like the BLS lists average mine worker salary (which would include things like office staff) at $18 / hr. News reports average salaries are much higher. The average starting salary for a coal mine worker is $60,000, for example.

      Payscale lists it at 77,277 with associates
      54,500 with HS.

      So pfff I don't know which one of is right, data is totally contradictory.

      As for an honest 8 hr workday with a low cost of living, sounds nice.

    5. Re:BB vs Android / iPhone by Barsteward · · Score: 1

      The new version of the BB OS is going to be able to split and separate personal/business activities on the phone. I think this is the best idea for a single phone usage in business. BB is a tool to do a job well and securely, IOS and Andriod are just fanbois options.

      --
      "The hands that help are better far than lips that pray." - Robert Ingersoll (1833-1899)
    6. Re:BB vs Android / iPhone by DiSKiLLeR · · Score: 1

      I believe coal miners can earn over $100k in Australia.

      (And the AUD is worth more than the USD.)

      Mining is HUUUUUUUUUUUUGE in Australia.

      --
      You can tell how powerful someone is by the magnitude of the crime they can commit and be able to get away with.
  44. crap by cheekyboy · · Score: 1

    90% of my software is made in the last 2 years.
    I have very few binaries dated 2007, let alone pre 2000. I have no legacy crap I need. true legacy can run in a VM if needed.

    Anything that old is totally obsolete.

    But old libraries and apis were much smaller and thus take little overhead if remapped under new frameworks.

    --
    Liberty freedom are no1, not dicks in suits.
  45. Enterprise SDK by jbolden · · Score: 1

    Sounds to me like you need to move to allowed and supported: https://developer.apple.com/programs/ios/enterprise/

    BTW if you are a mid or large sized business and want to talk about this seriously I'd be happy to.

  46. This, a hundred times this!!! by moogla · · Score: 1

    I would get an android phone in a heartbeat but google in its infinite wisdom requires carriers and handset makers to include a camera to officially call it an Anrdoid device. They need to rethink this. You could suck up half of the extent BB market with a simple policy change.

    --
    Black holes are where the Matrix raised SIGFPE
  47. Why phones aren't just phones by sjbe · · Score: 1

    A phone is not just a phone...It hasn't been for a long time. Apple would be out of business if that was true.

    I don't know that Apple would be "out of business" but agreed that a phone is no longer just a phone.

    Phones are Jewellery and have been for a long time.

    Kind of went off the rails with this bit of your argument. Your assertion that phones are merely jewelry could only be true if people use their phones for no purpose other than decoration. Maybe you know some people who do that but I've never met any. Phones aren't phones because they are now computers that also make phone calls. Any decorative purpose they might serve is mostly incidental to why they aren't just phones anymore.

    1. Re:Why phones aren't just phones by tuppe666 · · Score: 1

      Your assertion that phones are merely jewelry could only be true if people use their phones for no purpose other than decoration.

      I never said that a phone is just for decoration, My Nike trainers still protect my feel from harm, My Lee Jeans protect my modesty, my Superdry T-shirt keeps me warm. I am still a brand whore!

  48. Great advertisement! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How much did Apple pay for this piece?

  49. It's a fucking phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's a fucking phone.

  50. Re: As a biz tool - its what it doesn't have by jbolden · · Score: 1

    http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/Enterprise_Deployment_Guide.pdf

    You can disable the camera using the Enterprise management features.

  51. Is that all I'm missing? by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    mingle on social networking apps that are not available to them

    That's OK, I'm the last person on earth (or so I'm repeatedly told) who is not on facebook. So I have no need for your social networking apps.

    take higher-resolution photos,

    I have a camera for that.

    and effortlessly navigate streets

    I can read a map just fine on my own, thank you. I have a GPS for when I really need it, and it has a better display than a phone for that situation.

    and the Internet - with better GPS and faster browsing

    My crackberry does 802.11g, and I'm too cheap to pay for a data plan.

    I'll keep my crackberry, thank you very much.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  52. Which Misfits are we talking about? by moogla · · Score: 1

    Because I always rooted for those bitches, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5A5XFA84tMs, they're so punk and badass.
    Even bought the band shirts, I still get strange looks for it. (http://24.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lmxzjydGZP1qe75x7o2_1280.jpg, http://www.toplessrobot.com/1305-3785-large.jpg)

    --
    Black holes are where the Matrix raised SIGFPE
  53. RIM is doomed - probably by sjbe · · Score: 2

    - I love the keyboard!

    Personal preference but nothing wrong with that. I used to prefer a physical keyboard but then I realized it is just a whole bunch more stuff that can (and does) break. I don't really miss not having a physical keyboard and I do like not having to carry the extra bulk of one around. Personal preference however and I get the appeal of a physical keyboard.

    - Unified inbox; everything is in one spot.
    - Different modes; EG: when I go to bed I have a mode called "bedtime" that only alerts me if something important from someone important comes in.
    - Contact based alerts. So during the day when I'm at work my phone will only "ring" if it's my mom (she has cancer, so lay off) or my wife (only calls if it's important, sends a text otherwise).

    I can do all of this on an iPhone and I'm pretty sure most of the better Android phones as well.

    - Canadian company. Home country pride :)

    You're proud of using an inferior product just because it was designed by a Canadian company? I live in the US but I'd never buy an inferior US product just because it was made here. When the Blackberry was genuinely the best product available a few years back I get that argument but now it makes little sense.

    As for other phones, I have looked but not willing to move at this time. I am very excited for BB10 and hope it will allow RIM to mount some kind of comeback.

    If you are fine with what you have and don't care about the bits you are missing out on then that is fine. That said I wouldn't hold my breath on BB10 making much of a difference. We're not going to see it for another 4-6 months and that is an eternity in this business. Once people dump BB they aren't likely to come back unless BB10 provides something that simply cannot be gotten from iOS or Android. I think RIM is headed either for bankruptcy or a buyout but I just don't see a comeback in the cards. Their three largest competitors (Apple, Microsoft and Google) have gigantic war chests and RIM doesn't. I don't really see any reasonable scenario where RIM makes a real comeback.

    Finally; it's just a phone people - there are bigger things in life to worry about.

    Actually it isn't just a phone. These days they are computers that just happen to be able to make calls. I use my smartphone as an alarm clock, news feed, camera, email, messaging, games, research, calendaring, calculator, reminders, music, podcasts, home automation control, shopping, navigation, video and oh yeah, making telephone calls. Saying it is "just a phone" really isn't even close to being true anymore.

  54. Love my BB by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love my BB because it is very rugged and can take a beating. I smash it on my desk out of frustration several times a day and it refuses to die.

  55. Walled Garden Gardening by kylegordon · · Score: 1

    I can't help but think this is what happens when you don't look after your walled garden... Sure, there's a variety of other factors at play, but app choice and quality is certainly a big factor too.

  56. at least some are doing work by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

    as they watch their counterparts mingle on social networking apps that are not available to them, take higher-resolution photos, and effortlessly navigate streets — and the Internet — with better GPS and faster browsing."

    And I wonder which group is actually getting the work done they are supposed to be doing to collect a paycheck?

  57. Apple Maps by gidoca · · Score: 1

    Yeah, effortlessly navigating streets that don't exist...

  58. What about the iPhone... by SuperKendall · · Score: 3, Informative

    Some of your information was wrong in regards to Android, but others have corrected you there... a few points though where you are wrong on iPhone:

    1) iOS is easily remotely configured by the enterprise, a user pretty much just needs the password THAT THEY LOG INTO WORK WITH EVERY DAY.

    2) I can type one-handed on an iPhone too, it's not that hard. It also recognizes phone numbers including international formats. There is also ZERO LAG for pressing the software button for answering the phone. You should have bought a faster device I guess.

    3) The iPhone has the same levels of on-device security without your data all having to go through a server in Canada. BES is a 24x7 man in the middle attack that you pay Blackberry for.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:What about the iPhone... by tzanger · · Score: 1

      There is also ZERO LAG for pressing the software button for answering the phone. You should have bought a faster device I guess.

      I've owned a 3G, 3GS and 4; wife has a 4S. There is absolutely lag in the soft answer button from time to time. I am not sure what background task is causing it, and while it's true that it's nonexistent on a factory-fresh, no-apps-installed phone, that's not a realistic use case.

    2. Re:What about the iPhone... by tilante · · Score: 2

      Same here. Indeed, I've had it happen a couple of times that I press the "Answer" button, get no reaction, and think that maybe I didn't make good contact with the screen, so I move to press it again... and then, as my finger is moving, it picks up, and I now press the "End Call" button, which conveniently goes right across where "Answer" was before.

  59. Blackberry users are Muslims? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What exactly is being asked for here? Ban all Android and iPhones because Blackberry users feelings are hurt? Actually I think the outrage here is completly made up in order to drive clicks to their site.

    Hugh is the new Roland. Hopefully he dies too.

  60. I support BB/iPhones/Androids for businesses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And BES is the main reason most of our clients are ditching the BlackBerry phones.

    There are too many times when the service needs to be restarted, mail flow stops randomly, etc.

    So much easier to just use Exchange + Native Email app (on android/iPhone) and be done with it.

    The users are happier too having "modern" phones!

  61. Crackberry by dayton967 · · Score: 1

    There are a few issues I can see for Blackberry
      - Smaller Company with too many models for a company that is only in a single area (17 phones in 5 models currently on their website). This should have been reduced to a handful, in various price brackets.

    - Not innovating as much as they use to. I don't recall many big news innovations or changes from RIM for awhile.

    - Increased competition, more companies making phones.

    One of the biggest pro's, over all of their competition is the fact that the phone can be centrally managed, though at an increased cost, with BES, it's $55/user at 500 users, and 2000 users/server. The Server price alone is $3000. They have added a product line to manage android and iOS devices as well, This looks like it's an additional cost as well, ontop of the cost for the BES server, the fuctionality should be part of BES not as a seperate server.

    But the price is way high, and they would make a great deal more money, with a lower server price, with an option for licenses that must be renewed at a lower cost per year (or 3 years etc) to perpetual licenses at an increased cost.

  62. This just furthers my findings. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I noticed that americans are pretentious, smug, mindless cattle that want fit in and be cool with the majority. They will buy products not for the product itself but just to be seen with product X infront of other people.

    Thats why Apple has exceeded so much in america because americans want to be on the current trend and the current trend is to own a iphone or an ipad. Despite the fact they severly limited in options compared to android in what the user can do or put on one, the fact they are no better in performance than a good android device, or the fact they pay much more money for one than an android device. They dont care because they want to be on a populairty bandwagon and do what everyone else is doing because they mindless zealots.

    Its why women generally wear thicker rimmed glasses now. Because they want to fit in.

    Its why everyone took the internet to lash out at sony when they got hacked despite the fact dozens of other game companies were hacked, foriegn governments, hb gary a internet security specialist company, credit card companies, paypal and dozens of other companies by the same hacker group. They didnt care that dozens and dozens of other places were hacked and ignored that fact just so they could single out sony and act as if they were the only ones and were evil because they got hacked.

    Its why everyone chanted how awesome bush was when he went to the middle east after 911 and then suddenly turned on him in unison a year later and called him the worst president ever.

    People are retarded monkeys that cant think on their own.

  63. Re: As a biz tool - its what it doesn't have by steviesteveo12 · · Score: 1

    But then everyone in your secure location has to keep checking if your iPhone is one of the ones using the enterprise management scheme or one where the camera hasn't been disabled.

  64. Too big to fail by Monsting · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I had a business meeting at the RIM office in Toronto in late 2005. I asked the lead technical guy i met with casually after we had rounded up after the session, when they were planning on launching a camera with their phone, not really expecting an answer. The answer I got I will never forget. "Why would RIM want to add a camera to its phones, we make business products, not consumer gadgets". In hindsight, RIM had likely already started adding a camera to their coming phones in development projects, but this relatively senior guy must have been unaware of it. But it was quite telling to me and showed clearly the mentality of a company which had found it niche and business model and refused to innovate.

  65. Bloody american dream chasing fools by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who gives a shit what the person next to you is doing. Grow up children.

  66. Re: As a biz tool - its what it doesn't have by jbolden · · Score: 1

    Oh I see. Yes that's a problem. And since it has a front facing camera as well, you couldn't even just use a case that covers the entire rear.

  67. Wait till they come up with the OS 10.... by abhi2012 · · Score: 1

    I had a glimpse of what will be in store for users with Blackberry 10 at a seminar held in our school by RIM and I daresay it does have the potential to be in the league of Androids and iPhones.

    1. Re:Wait till they come up with the OS 10.... by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      ...I daresay it does have the potential to be in the league of ....

      That and $3* will get you a cup of coffee.

      *on your iPhone or Android Starbucks app

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  68. Suffer from shame, public humiliation? by TheDarkener · · Score: 1

    Oh puulease. I still use a Palm Tungsten C (yes, a Palm PDA - not even a phone!) every day. If someone ridicules you for it, they're a fucking hippster. Who the hell cares what other people think? This crowd should be used to that kind of stuff, anyway.

    --
    It is pitch black. You are likely to be eaten by a grue.
  69. Re: As a biz tool - its what it doesn't have by BigT · · Score: 1

    At the facility where I work, you cannot have the camera hardware in the phone; disabling it in software isn't close to sufficient. You have to remove the camera module, fill in the cavity where the module was with JB-weld or other hard epoxy so that the phone can never again have a camera, and then get the phone inspected by security, and get a sticker/card for it. Another nearby facility I occasionally have to visit doesn't even allow that, the phone has to be non-camera from the factory.

    The only reason I still have a blackberry is because it is the only thing close to a smartphone I can get without a camera. At least, without voiding the warranty on a new phone I have to pay big bucks for.

    --
    Is it weird in here, or is it just me?
  70. Re: As a biz tool - its what it doesn't have by schnell · · Score: 1

    You can disable the camera using the Enterprise management features.

    Unfortunately, that won't work for most of the users that need camera-less phones. You may know your camera is disabled, and your administrator may know the camera is disabled... but how do you convince the security guard at the Federal courthouse of that? Or the person guarding entry to the SCIF, or the restricted NOC, or the other [insert camera-barred facility here]? That's why companies ask for phones with no camera at all, so it can be verified at a glance.

    --
    "95% of all Slashdot .sig quotes are incorrect or completely fabricated." -Benjamin Franklin
  71. Next Ubuntu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quickly going through the headline made me think about next Ubuntu: "Blackberry Blackballed". Well time for sleep...

  72. Trust autocorrect... by Zinho · · Score: 1

    I can type in complete sentences rapidly on an iPhone. You just have to trust autocorrect and type quickly...

    I don't see anything wrong with that...

    --
    "Space Exploration is not endless circles in low earth orbit." -Buzz Aldrin
  73. Well it's good to know by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With the economy in the tank its good to know that the real decision makers at companies have free time to belittle coworkers for not having expensive enough mobile phones. Really making everybody proud to work for you mr ceo

  74. Nice editing by asmkm22 · · Score: 1

    That has to be one of the most poorly edited articles I've ever read. I had to double-check and make sure I wasn't reading translated version from another language. Sadly, I wasn't.

  75. you've got to be kidding me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're totally right about BES and ....Wait wait.... wait, what? Did you just imply that Microsoft Exchange is not a nasty poorly written server? Are you high?

  76. Re: As a biz tool - its what it doesn't have by vakuona · · Score: 1

    And they don't get iPhones then. That is such a narrow use case that the market is not worth pandering to for the likes of Samsung, Apple and even RIM.

  77. Still faster by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Ha Ha.

    Fixing a word or two that autocorrect got wrong is still faster than typing carefully. And if you really use autocorrect a lot it does get more accurate for your typing.

    I can type faster on an iPhone than I ever could on those miserable compact mobile keyboards, even a blackberry keyboard...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Still faster by bingoUV · · Score: 1

      But does it save you from putting your foot into your mouth ?

      but if you really really cannot ket by without a

      --
      Bingo Dictionary - Pragmatist, n. A myopic idealist.
  78. Re: As a biz tool - its what it doesn't have by jbolden · · Score: 1

    Makes sense. I know there are some high durability dumb phones that don't have cameras but yeah I gotta admit that is a good use case for BB.

  79. Have you used a modern Blackberry? by Orinoko · · Score: 1

    The big problem with all the name callers is that their company issues ancient budget BB's and these can't compare to the idevice that they've got on a 7 year contract. Our stock device at work is the 9300 and its OK as a basic phone and organiser but that's about it. Bear in mind this phones costs £130 to us, whereas you are looking at double/triple the price for an iDroid Having a role in which I maintains mobile infrastructure I personally have used and trialled tons of phones, smart or not. I tried using a OneX for a while but fell back to using my 9800 Torch because it does what it is supposed to, the battery lasts forever and the email and organiser functions is seamless. I use Google Maps on it just fine and the Twitter and FB clients are really good, the browser isn't the best but it works and in ranks of functions for me its pretty low. The difference between a modern BB and a 'smartphone' is that the BB is the best communications device hands down, its not trying to be a smartphone. I've got a Nexus 7 and its great, I've got a BB Torch and that's great too. I couldn't give a monkeys if they are cool or not, each does the job that I need it to do. BB10 looks great, if they can wrap the security up in a competitive device it should work. I fear the press have got it in for RIM and even if they produce a jesus phone it'll still be derided. ActiveSync cannot compare to BES security, we've had independent commercial pen tests done against ActiveSync on iPhone/Android and the list of invulnerabilities tower above the BES list. If you don't deal with confidential data then AS is fine but anything else needs the security of a BES. Obama still doesn't carry anything else.

    1. Re:Have you used a modern Blackberry? by Orinoko · · Score: 1

      iPhone/Android and the list of invulnerabilities tower above the BES list.

      Haha, that'll be vulnerabilities then!

  80. Bullshit Blackberries Buttballed By Better Builds by aybiss · · Score: 1

    You chose the dumbest device that ever existed to carry around and now you think you're 'savvy' so you're just starting to notice...

    --
    It's OK Bender, there's no such thing as 2.
  81. effortlessly navigate streets? by grouchomarxist · · Score: 2

    Perhaps for those iPhone users who haven't upgraded to iOS 6?

  82. International Travel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From Australia, if I take my BB overseas I might get a bill equal to $300 per week in data charges. If I take an iphone or ANY other smartphone the costs could be thousands in a few days. Downloading a 14mb email attachment could cost $700 alone. When the other phone makers deal with this issue, then and only then will our company switch from BB.

    Sincerely, an IT manager who once received a $33k bill for an iphone after the idiot who took it overseas failed to follow instructions. Also, you must understand that even if you put it in wifi only, once an iphone goes to power save mode all bets are off.

  83. Timothy your a wanker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Timothy your a wanker for posting this, well not just for posting this.