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BlackBerry Looking To Quench 'Insatiable Demand' For New Smartphones

DavidGilbert99 writes "BlackBerry is on something of a roll. It finally delivered its BlackBerry 10 platform along with the first smartphone to run the OS, the Z10 in January. This weekend saw the launch of the Q10 and there is an 'insatiable demand' for this smartphone with its physical keyboard, says BlackBerry's UK head Rob Orr."

118 of 173 comments (clear)

  1. Um? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Has the company a question mark?

    1. Re:Um? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Most consumers has a ? about BlackBerry, and the company's future has in ?, and they may even has cheezeburger ?, but I'm not sure if the company has ?.

    2. Re:Um? by robthebloke · · Score: 2

      All gone a bit mad for Sylvester McCoy's Doctor Who?

    3. Re:Um? by gadzook33 · · Score: 4, Funny

      No no, it's a mad lib. Like has the company underpants.

    4. Re:Um? by fellip_nectar · · Score: 3, Funny

      The submitter accidentally the whole summary.

      --
      Worst. Signature. Ever.
    5. Re:Um? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      "With more devices due to be revealed in May, has the company... blank? Charles Nelson Reilly?"

    6. Re:Um? by kernelistic · · Score: 1

      Where are my mod points, when I need them?

    7. Re:Um? by doohan · · Score: 1

      I think he means that they might have solved the step before "4. Profit". The ever elusive step "3. ?????"!

    8. Re:Um? by Ed+Avis · · Score: 1

      "Riddle me this: what is it that is always coming, but never arrives?"

      --
      -- Ed Avis ed@membled.com
    9. Re:Um? by NatasRevol · · Score: 4, Funny

      Next week?
      Next year?
      Tomorrow?
      The future?
      A porn star?

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    10. Re:Um? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      They'll have problems stealing market share from Windows Phone 8. Microsoft Windows Phone 8 is the best phone I've ever used, slick and professional yet friendly, warm and welcoming. Windows Phone 8 is the phone for me bar none, and it should be the phone for you.

      RIM may make good phones, but why would you buy anything but a Windows Phone 8, it's so clever, so smooth so intuitive and so beautiful!

      Have you tried it yet?

    11. Re:Um? by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 2

      I too have difficulty stealing things from people who don't have the things I want to steal.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    12. Re:Um? by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

      Damnit! Who typed a question mar on the TelePrompTer? For the last time, anything you put on that prompter, Burgundy will read!

      --
      Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
    13. Re:Um? by LordLimecat · · Score: 1

      Uhoh, I think the editors accidentally the submission....

    14. Re:Um? by mccrew · · Score: 3, Insightful
      --
      Hey, Windows users, there is no such thing as "forward" slash, there is only slash and backslash.
    15. Re:Um? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      BlackBerry unfortunately hasn't figured out the 3.??? line just before 4. Profit!

    16. Re:Um? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Hmm, "Best Windows Phone" is about as high an accolade as "Best kick in the shins", or "Best hit to the face with a burlap sack full of bricks".

    17. Re:Um? by davester666 · · Score: 1

      A modern BlackBerry device?

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
  2. has the company... by alphatel · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is ? the new !

    --
    When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
    1. Re:has the company... by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 2

      He's just trolling now. He must love the attention.

      Dice, do yourselves a favour; Fire all of the "editors" and hire some who are competent. The current batch are borderline literate, or just don't care.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
  3. They've got preorders for BOTH of them? by Overzeetop · · Score: 2

    This is as bad as Microsoft running out of Surface tablets.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    1. Re:They've got preorders for BOTH of them? by BasilBrush · · Score: 2

      But Blackberry is very popular amongst gangsters. Blackberry Messaging is perfect for keeping in touch with the gang, without the police being able to eavesdrop, apparently.

      All the London looting riots of summer 2011 were organised via BBM.

      It may be popular in certain corporations for much the same reason.

    2. Re:They've got preorders for BOTH of them? by Threni · · Score: 1

      There's a lot of this in the press at the mo. They've done a good job. Handling the press, that is. They've already lost to Android and iOs. Let's just hope all those corporate sales hold out.

    3. Re:They've got preorders for BOTH of them? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Except it is not true. Blackberry was being confronted for example in India and Arabia with a threat to ban their gadgets if BB wouldn't allow their local police and security forces to eavesdrop all BBM.

      BBM is not save from the police. It's a myth.

    4. Re:They've got preorders for BOTH of them? by narcc · · Score: 3, Informative

      Except it is true. Blackberry can't give away to keys fro BES users because they don't have them. Blackberry offers the only secure solution if you want to keep your messages private, away from authorities.

  4. Re:Does anyone proof read these? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Yes, they have.

  5. Blaance Sheets and Cash Flow statements by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    BBRY is doing quite well. Anyone familiar with balance sheets and cash flow statements knows that BBRY is not near death and has never beeen near death. The companyi s a cash generator. People need to realize this.

    People are startign to realize this. With 30%+ short interest in the stock, a short squeeze is overdue. I bought in at several price points. Lowest being around $8/ share. My only regret is not putting even more money into BBRY at that time.

    1. Re:Blaance Sheets and Cash Flow statements by BonThomme · · Score: 2

      that's not the only regret you're going to have about investing in the past...

    2. Re:Blaance Sheets and Cash Flow statements by Xest · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is "Please please please, everyone else, just please buy Blackberry shares so I can cash out"?

    3. Re:Blaance Sheets and Cash Flow statements by Entropius · · Score: 1

      Netcraft confirms, etc.

    4. Re:Blaance Sheets and Cash Flow statements by squiggleslash · · Score: 2

      >{? In fairness I took a look at their stock this morning and, however difficult it is to believe (it really is to me) it has been mostly rising throughout the entire 12 months - the few drops it's had it's recovered from, and those seem to have co-incided with general stock market jitters, not BlackBerry itself per-se.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    5. Re:Blaance Sheets and Cash Flow statements by Xest · · Score: 2

      Yeah, in all honesty I'm in the camp that there is still some hope for Blackberry, people still underestimate it's presence - it still has more than double the market share of Windows Phone, and it still shifts one Blackberry for every 3 or so iPhones sold which given the volumes Apple sells and the profits they make still allows Blackberry a pretty viable business model.

      I just felt the guy I was originally responding too sounded a little too desperately like he was trying to pump their stock.

      This said, I still think they'd be a far richer company if they focussed on producing Blackberry business integration software for Android and iOS as well as or instead of pursuing their own hardware/OS line. There's a massive amount of money in the software services industry - look at Oracle and IBM, and mobile business integration is still shit and they're best placed to offer it and tie it all up. If they became the defacto standard for business integration for mobile phones again by supporting other platforms they'd be laughing given the explosion in the size of the market in recent years.

    6. Re: Blaance Sheets and Cash Flow statements by UnknowingFool · · Score: 1

      Stock price fluctuates based on expectations. BBRY has dropped in value because they went from a dominant player to a minor one in a few years. They were slow to address the changing nature of smart phones. Their offerings have been lackluster, and most of their customers gave up and moved onto other platforms. I think the platform is the most secure you can get (if you use BES). But not everyone needs that level of security and the other platforms offer good enough security for the masses.

      --
      Well, there's spam egg sausage and spam, that's not got much spam in it.
  6. finally by slashmydots · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This might be one of those times when everyone in the market is pissing people off with features they don't want getting shoved down their throat (a gigantic, fragile screen with an impossible to type on touchscreen) then one company comes in with exactly what people want. We switched from blackberries to Android phones at my business and now we have zero control over them. There's no centralized anything. It's like a free for all. That is not how you run a business phone system. Also, our salesmen hate the phones and Activesync is a pain in the ass.

    Unfortunately, Blackberry's software was memory leaking, server-controlling garbage so hopefully they fixed that this time around. If so, tough and nice to use phones with central control software and easy exchange integration would be lovely. They'll take over the business market instantly.

    1. Re:finally by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      ActiveSync is Windows phone.

    2. Re:finally by BradleyUffner · · Score: 1

      And how Android talks to Exchange.

      ummm... no....
      Android talks to exchange though the OWA web API.

    3. Re:finally by ArhcAngel · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Android talks to exchange though the OWA web API.

      Not if it isn't enabled on the server it isn't! In our organization it's either BES or ActiveSync (for either Android or iOS). You can access OWA from a web browser but the API is locked down so even Outlook can't use it on the company issued laptop.

      --
      "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
    4. Re:finally by RobbieCrash · · Score: 1

      You are 100% incorrect. Android natively uses either IMAP, POP3 or EAS.

      --
      Keep on knockin'
      https://robbiecrash.me
    5. Re:finally by mlts · · Score: 2

      For the enterprise, it essentially is a "pick your poison" choice. RIM devices and relatively expensive BES, in return for security [1] that is actually enterprise level. Or go with ActiveSync and relatively little control, other than iOS with its pushed policies. Maybe Windows Phone 8 has usable GPOs.

      It would be nice to have an ability for more Android devices to have partitions separating work stuff from home stuff. With BYOD definitely becoming more common, this will be a great thing for all parties involved, perhaps with dual SIMs to completely separate things.

      [1]: Only Blackberries have the feature to erase themselves if they have not checked in with a server after a period of time, or if an unauthorized SIM card get put in.

  7. Can you blow me where the pampers is? by EmagGeek · · Score: 2

    Slashdot editors need to lay off the weed...

    1. Re:Can you blow me where the pampers is? by BonThomme · · Score: 1

      "Dude, where my question mark?!"

  8. It's really clear. by goombah99 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Has the company a question mark?

    What he is saying is that the company has finally.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:It's really clear. by TrollstonButtersbean · · Score: 2
      The last sentence of the article is quite appropriate.

      Nobody knows what role Blackberry can fill in the world. But they are making progress getting there.

      Perhaps in the future we will understand their quote unquote "plan".

    2. Re:It's really clear. by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Blackberry has finally a whole smartphone market. Is that bad?

    3. Re:It's really clear. by brabo · · Score: 4, Funny

      Has the company a question mark?

      What he is saying is that the company has finally.

      I agree with the.

      --
      --- 'Pain heals, chicks dig scars... glory... lasts for ever!' -- "Footstep" Falco
    4. Re:It's really clear. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nobody expects the Spanish.

    5. Re:It's really clear. by cbiltcliffe · · Score: 1

      In fact, those who do expect it.

      --
      "City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
    6. Re:It's really clear. by davester666 · · Score: 1

      Yes, they have 60% of the BlackBerry market.

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    7. Re:It's really clear. by EETech1 · · Score: 1

      If they go for the market that wants a phone that respects the privacy of the user, and doesn't send every keystroke back to the mothership for datamining, they might do reasonably well!

      Sometimes I really miss WinMo 6.5...

  9. Appalling writing, negligible subbing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Ends on this corker; "and for the first time in a number of year, it looks like BlackBerry could be back at teh smartphone top table." THUD!

    1. Re:Appalling writing, negligible subbing. by cc1984_ · · Score: 3, Funny

      Give them some credit. They were probably writing it on a BlackBerry keyboard.

  10. Physical Keyboard FTW by Bigbutt · · Score: 3, Funny

    Honestly, I have both an Android phone provided by work and an iPhone that I bought and the lack of a physical keyboard has driven me to fling both phones across the room more times that I care to admit (and autocorrect can die in a fire). I have two cracks across the face of my iPhone and am reluctant to upgrade to a new phone just because of the frustration of dealing with the lack of a physical keyboard. I used to have a Blackberry and really liked that it had a physical keyboard.

    [John]

    --
    Shit better not happen!
    1. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Meh, I guess it's better than nothing, but I'll wait for the version with mechanical switches. This one just isn't clicky enough for me.

    2. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by EmagGeek · · Score: 5, Funny

      "(and autocorrect can die in a fire)"

      Autocorrect can be easily disabilities by any on on either plates formed.

    3. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by Jerry+Atrick · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My HTC G1 is sitting on my desk right now and I miss it's keyboard on my current mobile. However the market voted and Android devices with keyboards more or less vanished.

      I don't believe there are enough of us hard keyboard lovers to sustain a mass market and BB are about to discover that. BB probably already have all the users this might attract.

    4. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by Skater · · Score: 2

      I've found I'm just as fast and accurate on my BB Bold's physical keyboard as I am with the iPhone and Android keyboards (I use all three regularly - BB is for work, the iPhone is my retired 3GS that I still use for a couple things, the Android is my current phone). But, the physical keyboard on my BB takes up space that could be used for displaying things when I'm not typing, so I much prefer even my 3GS over my current BB. Word on the street is that work is switching from BBs to iPhones this year. I'm hoping it's sooner rather than later, because I don't like the BB at all. (Actually, what I really want is a solution for my Android phone so I don't need two phones at all. But security may prevent that.)

      A separate gripe about the BB: It's picky about its charger. We have a lot of USB chargers we have around the house, since we both have tablets (Android and iOS), there are three or four iPod models floating around, we both have the iPhone 3GS, and my wife has an iPhone 5 while I have an Android phone, plus chargers in the cars, etc. We probably have 20 or 30 chargers, easily, from many different manufacturers - Apple, Samsung, Asus, and other brands. I tried every single charger we have, and I could only find two that will charge the BB - one is the BB-branded charger that came with it that I keep at work, and the other is the Samsung charger that came with my S3 (however, the S3 charges on every standard USB adapter I've tried). It won't even charge off my laptop. Sure, it's a standard connector on the BB phone, but it won't work with an off-the-shelf charger. Jerks.

    5. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by Chris+Mattern · · Score: 1

      You can have an Android with a physical keyboard: both my Androids do, it's a feature I insist on. iPhone, you're kinda stuck, yeah.

    6. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by Necroloth · · Score: 2
      I used to be all for physical keyboards ... preferred to actually press on buttons and can cancel phone calls in my pocket without looking and no accidental swipes or such ... however I did envy the touchscreen users for their much larger displays!

      I had a BB 9105 Pearl and then got myself the Z10 as the Pearl was feeling it's age and I've not looked back since! The Z10 is really easy to use and quick. Typing with the Z10 is amazing - all my friends actually like how you can flick words up and string full sentences with real words rather than some alpha-numberic coded gibberish at great pace.

      One of the reasons I went away from the physical button phone, apart from the larger display, is that I preferred the old-school candybar phone button layout - I can't handle those tiny but full keyboard button layouts! Friends who have them vouch for them but just not for me! Hope BB do well though cos I really think there new range is good.

    7. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by Brucelet · · Score: 1

      Autocorrect can be easily disabilities

      I agree

    8. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by SIGBUS · · Score: 1

      I have a Galaxy S Relay, and it's too bad the phone is already discontinued, because I love having the slide-out keyboard. I wouldn't mind a bit bigger screen or a higher-resolution camera, but it's smooth and responsive, and there's no substitute for a real keyboard.

      I wouldn't mind seeing an S4 with a slide-out, but that's not bloody likely. The lack of a physical keyboard is the only thing that makes me think twice about trading up.

      --
      Oh, no! You have walked into the slavering fangs of a lurking grue!
    9. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by compro01 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but you can't get one with a good screen size and a recent Android version. I am aware of precisely ONE Android phone with a keyboard that runs JB 4.1 and 0 that have 4.2.

      I believe there's a grand total of 11 that even run ICS, and half of those are Sprint/Verizon CDMA2000 devices.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    10. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by tapspace · · Score: 1

      I, too, am a phone thrower. I have been super impressed with the durability of my iphone in the $30 apple bumper (that is not sarcasm, but $30 is ridiculous). I have absolutely throttled the thing at the ground more than once. I will stop doing that from now on. Promise! But, I digress.

      The onscreen keyboard is fine... in landscape mode. In portait mode, it makes me want to murder people. You have to be like 4 years old to use a keyboard that size. I haven't owned a phone with a physical portait keyboard in like 8 years (the venerable Moto Q), and I wouldn't buy one these days. How hard would it be to ALWAYS let me use the landscape onscreen keyboard? I'd even choose it if the app didn't rotate and I had to read sideways. Using the portrait keyboard is that bad.

      Also, I might actually like the portrait keyboard if I had swype (yes, I like swype). I had iSwype installed for a while (an unofficial swipe clone for iOS), but it had a few bugs which I couldn't get over (and swype is pretty limited without some learning capability which iSwype doesn't have).

    11. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by narcc · · Score: 4, Insightful

      a horrible OS. It's slow, and the native web browser horrible times ten.

      Sorry, are you from the past?

      The browser is demonstrably the best on the market. It even has the best HTML5 support of any browser, scoring higher than every desktop browser. You find that even sites that use Flash or WebGL run smooth.

      As for the OS being slow, you'd be the first reviewer to suggest such a thing.

      I haven't tried BB OS 10 yet.

      Well, that explains it!

    12. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by hardluck86 · · Score: 1

      (and autocorrect can die in a fire).

      (Andy auto corruption candy on a flier).

      There, FTFY - with autocorrect!

    13. Re:Physical Keyboard FTW by horza · · Score: 1

      I have had a range of phones, but my favourites were with keyboard. In some ways my old Nokia E71 was one of the best phones I owned: long battery life, thin and light, proper keyboard, good software including an on-board answer-phone (something my €700 Galaxy Note 2 doesn't even have). I use my phone as much for social as business, so I love the screen of the Note2, but having played with the new Blackberries they are superb. Even the touch-screen one is so intuitive to use. Unlike the rather tired and limited iPhone, I can see Blackberry selling well. Not for me but for anybody serious about business and productivity it's excellent.

      Phillip.

  11. Physical keyboard? Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I guess I don't understand the physical keyboard. I've seen those BB's with the micro buttons that you can only press with a toothpick and can't image using them. I guess I look upon physical keyboards on a phone like people who get new online reporting ability and then ask how to print it out. It just doesn't make sense.

  12. This is getting silly now by iB1 · · Score: 1

    Come on Slashdot editors. In the last week I have seen summaries with such poor spelling, grammar and content that an 8 year old would be embarrassed to submit them. Is a 30 second proof-read too much to ask? I am beginning to get disenchanted.

  13. Not really what it says by water-and-sewer · · Score: 1

    Hey, this interests me - I've got a BB for work and I like it, and I never understood all the BB hate. I can almost type out a message without looking on that physical keyboard, and can't with my Android. So I clicked on the article ... ... which doesn't really say what the summary does. In fact, it looks more like a creative press release with a statement by a guy who is predicting insatiable demand, not identifying it.

    I'm unimpressed. But I'm still hoping for BB to come back to life. I think they make great phones, and the touch keyboard is over rated, I really think so.

    --
    If this were Usenet, I'd killfile the lot of you.
    1. Re:Not really what it says by swalve · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think it's two things. One, Blackberry is not "cool". It seemed to be for like one summer when all the celebrities were carrying around Bold 9000s, but besides that, the Blackberry is more tool and less of a toy. So people who want toys hate them. Secondly, for the longest time, Blackberries were old/cheap/broken pieces of shit people got through their work. So everyone hated them because they were reminders of their job sucking.

  14. ohh wow no physical buttons? by Tomji · · Score: 1

    Yes, lets make "touch" gaming even shittier than it already is.
    Cannot wait for the gamers to be punted back into the main menu because they inadvertently entered a gesture. First thing I had to disable on the Ipad...

    1. Re:ohh wow no physical buttons? by BradleyUffner · · Score: 1

      Yes, lets make "touch" gaming even shittier than it already is.
      Cannot wait for the gamers to be punted back into the main menu because they inadvertently entered a gesture. First thing I had to disable on the Ipad...

      That's probably actually a feature, not a downside, to the businesses that are BlackBerry's primary market.

  15. Free Trade up by mrops · · Score: 5, Informative

    Well, looks like you need free upgrades. We did a while back. The new platform manages BB and iOS/Android devices. If you have your BES 5.0 and earlier License CALs lying around, its a free upgrade to their new BES 10.0

    https://enterprise.ecomm.webapps.blackberry.com/caltradeup/home.do

    Considering, going forward you will need to pay a monthly fee and the Trade Up program give you non-expiring licenses, I think its a worthy upgrade even if you don't intend to run BB in long run. At least you will have new CALs if you so choose to continue.

    1. Re:Free Trade up by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1

      Have they fixed all the memory leak and stability problems with their server side software?

  16. Versions by viralburn · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't a Z81 be better than the Z10?

  17. Re:Does anyone proof read these? by TrollstonButtersbean · · Score: 1
    The day when wikipedia deletes that entry is the day I will have more faith in the world.

    Journalism wasn't invented in the last 10 years, and no number of cargo cultist "link repeating doorknobs" will make it so ...

  18. Re:Physical keyboard? Really? by anagama · · Score: 1

    I once had a cheap feature phone with a physical keyboard -- it's way easier than you think it is. The issue with touch screens is that you need to look at the keyboard while you type. This leads to typos going unnoticed until after hitting send. Throw in some auto-corruption and touch screen typing is a real slow down. With a physical keyboard, you can type while looking at the screen which is faster and more accurate, because your sense of touch gives you information. A flat plate of smooth glass is not informative.

    Still, with every manufacturer focusing on how thin they can make things, as if that is more important than the proportion of width to thickness, we'll never see top-end phones with a real keyboard. Instead, in a few years phones will be thin enough to lacerate your hands if you hold them. I wish someone would tell phone makers that holding a thin slab isn't ergonomic. Imagine if Apple made knives -- you'd not be able to tell which end to hold and would bleed all over everything you tried to chop. There's a reason knives come with a handle that isn't a flat thin slab of metal like a blade.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  19. TFA sounds like part of a shareholder presentation by Picass0 · · Score: 1

    The only people struggling more in the phone market is Microsoft.

    Nobody walks onto the sales floor at verizon and asks for a blackberry. BB is the phone you are issued at work.

    A few months with a new product are not enough to turn BB around. IT and telephony departments everywhere are moving away to other platforms.

  20. CFAs and Wall Street people know nothing. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I'm familiar with balance sheets, cash flow statements and accounting.

    These statements are snapshots of the past. Although, they are losing money and their margins are negative.

    The stock market trades on what is expected in the future. The markets have seen Blackberries sales decline and their market dominance get killed by Apple and Android devices.

    Be careful when reading analyst (CFA) reports. Wall Street folks are great at grasping at straws when valuing and promoting a company.

    Very few of those people have actually ran a business and therefore have no real idea what it takes to keep one going.

  21. at least googles eric schmidt by DMoylan · · Score: 1

    at least googles eric schmidt will be able to ditch his old blackberry for a new one.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/mar/21/eric-schmidt-blackberry-user

  22. Self shilling? by iB1 · · Score: 1

    I assume that the DavidGilbert99 who submitted the article is the same David Gilbert who wrote the article.

    1. Re:Self shilling? by DavidGilbert99 · · Score: 1

      I was indeed

  23. Oops by nanotech · · Score: 1

    They accidentally the whole BlackBerry

  24. Re:Keyboard isn't a real keyboard by swalve · · Score: 2

    There are two versions. One is a "Torch" style all touch, the other is a "Bold" style with a real BB keyboard.

  25. Re:TFA sounds like part of a shareholder presentat by Spudley · · Score: 1

    Nobody walks onto the sales floor at verizon and asks for a blackberry. BB is the phone you are issued at work.

    That was always the case with blackberry. Their core market always was business users, and they did pretty well out of it.

    I'm sure they're very keen to eat some of Apple's consumer market share too, but don't confuse a lack of consumer sales with a lack of sales in general. In fact, when it comes to making a profit out of users, business users are a much better prospect than consumers, so if blackberries are still the phone you get issued at work, as you suggest, then BB should be laughing.

    --
    (Spudley Strikes Again!)
  26. Re:who would want one? by johanw · · Score: 1

    I wpould want a Q10 when my Nokia E72 wears out. A new Nokia is not interesting, it runs either the semi-smart S40 or closed WP. And it seems I don't have that much choice when I want a real keypad.

  27. They've finally reached the step... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...just before Profit!

    1. Re:They've finally reached the step... by kernelistic · · Score: 1

      AC, you owe me a new keyboard!

    2. Re:They've finally reached the step... by MadKeithV · · Score: 1

      Come on mods, mod the AC up!

    3. Re:They've finally reached the step... by cbiltcliffe · · Score: 2

      Must be using a Windows 8 Phone.....

      --
      "City hall" in German is "Rathaus" Kinda explains a few things......
  28. Re:Physical keyboard? Really? by swalve · · Score: 2

    The tiny buttons work fine. Our fingers are much more sensitive than a touchscreen. Or something like that. When you hit a touch "key" you are just mashing a circle and the OS has to best-guess which letter you meant. When you type in a BB keyboard, your fingertips can feel the ridges of the different keys and your brain can figure out where to direct the pressure to hit the right one.

    Some people have less pointy fingers than others, and I suspect that's where the preference lies. Pointy fingers can use touch keyboards much easier than less-pointy ones.

  29. Depends on your interpretation of insatiable by scotts13 · · Score: 2

    As in, unable to sate. they built 100, and have 150 customers.

  30. Blackberry will live on by TheSkepticalOptimist · · Score: 1

    Microsoft has dropped the ball big time by offering not compelling enterprise device on the Windows 8 platform, phone, tablet, or otherwise.

    Apple is dropping the ball with the iPhone, failing to invest any effort into innovating the platform which has become stagnant after 5 years.

    So there is room for growth with the new Blackberries.

    Realize that a lot of iPhone users were once Blackberry addicts, the Q10 might provide the right kind of nostalgia to bring back some of those customers who start to remember how nice it was to use a real physical keyboard rather than the sado-masochistic on screen keyboard experience that Apple offers.

    As long as Blackberry does not have delusions of grandeur they should be fine. If they operate under the premise they can gain a solid and respectable 3rd place in the smartphone market and not assume they could actually overtake Apple or Android then they should continue to enjoy success with their new product line. The moment they decide to go after Apple or Android is what will kill them off quickly.

    --
    I haven't thought of anything clever to put here, but then again most of you haven't either.
    1. Re:Blackberry will live on by mjwx · · Score: 2

      Realize that a lot of iPhone users were once Blackberry addicts, the Q10 might provide the right kind of nostalgia to bring back some of those customers who start to remember how nice it was to use a real physical keyboard rather than the sado-masochistic on screen keyboard experience that Apple offers.

      The thing is...

      And the fanboys are absolutely going to slam me for this.

      is that the OSK on the Iphone is terrible compared to other OSK's. The stock OSK on Android 4.2 is vastly superior to IOS with both traditional typing (hunt and peck for most users) and "swype"-like gesture typing. This is the stock KB, there are alternatives that suit specific typing styles better but the stock is the best KB I've used for speed and a multitude of typing styles.

      The Iphone on the other hand (4s on the last two versions of IOS) had significant typos in almost everything, it was slower and harder to type correct words and significantly harder to go back to correct them. Android handles typo's better and actually learns what mistakes I typically make, the Iphone keeps making the same mistake. For example, I type "no probs" (short for no problems) and Android used to correct it to "no probe", IOS still corrects it to "no probe" and I've switched ROM's twice (and phones once) on Android since then. It always learns in the first 4 or 5 corrections I make.

      Awaiting the inevitable flames (and probably mod downs) for suggesting this.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  31. Re:1100 USD phone? by damnbunni · · Score: 1

    That's not the real price of the phone. Those are speculators, who got them early and are trying to make a quick buck before the phone is actually out.

    It's the same thing you see when a new video game console comes out and hits ebay for double the list price.

    (The Q10 is likely to be about $500 - $600, depending on storage and exact model. In line with other smartphones.)

  32. Re:TFA sounds like part of a shareholder presentat by gbjbaanb · · Score: 1

    their other core market was kids who wanted a secure messaging platform, apparently this is the killer feature everyone wants as its also more of a group messaging thing rather than a one-to-one text approach (ie so keeping in touch with a load of mates is easier, like the IRC chat version of sms text messages).

    I don't think BB is the only choice of work phone anymore as you can get secure message apps for Android or iPhone nowadays, but now they're back,maybe IT depts will not bother to look for alternatives and will simply upgrade everyone who used to have an old BB with a new BB.

  33. Re:TFA sounds like part of a shareholder presentat by Frankie70 · · Score: 1

    Lumia is doing really well in a lot of countries.

  34. Underpants Gnomes by trodofor · · Score: 1

    As in
    Phase 1: Collect Underpants
    Phase 2: ?
    Phase 3: Profit

    WTG Blackberry. Brilliant!

  35. This is pretty reasonable by hideouspenguinboy · · Score: 1

    I myself have several table legs that are slightly shorter than the other three.

  36. Re:TFA sounds like part of a shareholder presentat by schnell · · Score: 3, Interesting

    business users are a much better prospect than consumers

    Unfortunately not so much anymore. That is/was BlackBerry's whole problem. Five years ago, smartphones were purely business tools, and "BlackBerry" was a synonym for "smartphone." But after the iPhone arrived, consumers started buying smartphones. Now, not only is the consumer smartphone market bigger than the business market, BYOD behavior is pushing some businesses to accept the user's choice of devices - which is almost invariably not a BlackBerry.

    BlackBerry's current woes all result from a classic strategic mistake - they kept building products to address their core market, then somebody went and changed the market dynamics on them. I remember reading an interview with a RIM engineer about how they laughed when the iPhone was launched. They said "this thing doesn't have a keyboard, battery life isn't great, there's no corporate administration capability built in... who will ever buy it?" They only realized belatedly that the dynamics had changed a couple years later, and then discovered that they were very poorly positioned to meet the new market's needs.

    --
    "95% of all Slashdot .sig quotes are incorrect or completely fabricated." -Benjamin Franklin
  37. Re:Press release by BonThomme · · Score: 1

    you must be new here. welcome!

  38. Re:Physical keyboard? Really? by omfglearntoplay · · Score: 1

    I sort of type with the edges of my fingernails. I use the edges of my thumbs where the thumbnail and skin meet to type on physical phone keyboards. BB physical keyboards are usually very very good... much faster and less annoying for me... I never really hit the wrong key on the physical keyboards. But apparently some people I know can't figure out how to type on them, or they just type so slowly anyway that they don't mind touchscreens.

    For the last several weeks I've been using a BB Z10, so I've been forcing myself to use the touchscreen to type on it. I also have an iPhone ... got it about year or 2 back, but I never liked typing on it. Strangely typing on the Z10's touchscreen is slightly more accurate for me than the iPhone, but I still don't love typing on it as much as a physical keyboard. And I still very much miss having a ton of one touch dialing on the physical keyboard. I had 13 or so one touch dialing on my last BB, and love love love that feature. So it's quite tempting to get the Q10. Then again, 90% of the time I now dial through my car's interface so it doesn't matter as much. Hmm... keep the larger screen or get the better to type on keyboard?! The dilemma never ends. Meanwhile, I still use my iPhone regularly for a podcast that is iPhone friendly and is a must have.

  39. physical keyboard, slider, nice gesture ui... by SCHecklerX · · Score: 1

    It would have been nice if HP had actually done something with WebOS. *sigh*

  40. Re:Does anyone proof read these? by harperska · · Score: 1

    The fact that journalism is several orders of magnitude older than the career of the journalist after whom the law was named doesn't make the meaning behind the law any less real. Do you have a better name for the law that would also be relevant to whatever you imagine the 'golden age' of journalism to be?

  41. Why touchscreens beat keyboards on phones by sjbe · · Score: 2

    This might be one of those times when everyone in the market is pissing people off with features they don't want getting shoved down their throat (a gigantic, fragile screen with an impossible to type on touchscreen) then one company comes in with exactly what people want.

    There were many attempts at smartphones with physical keyboards and they were largely rejected. The size of a phone is relatively limited by the practical constraints of portability. If you put a keyboard on it, you have to take away space from something else in the design. Generally speaking a bigger screen is a more useful feature to more people more of the time than a physical keyboard. Most of what a phone it good for does not require much data input. A physical keyboard is wasted space the majority of the time and unlike a screen cannot be used for anything else except typing. Furthermore a physical keyboard cannot be changed to suit the task at hand whereas a touchscreen keyboard can.

    While a touchscreen keyboard does have noteworthy design tradeoffs, they are generally adequate to the task and the gain of a larger screen more than outweighs the drawbacks for most of us. Personally I'll take a bigger screen or a bigger battery over a physical keyboard on my phone anytime. If I really need to do a lot of typing I go find my laptop which is vastly better to type on than any phone. If I need to communicate a large volume of information to someone while on the road I CALL them rather than try to type a long message with a tiny keyboard.

    1. Re:Why touchscreens beat keyboards on phones by pnutjam · · Score: 2

      physical keyboard's on phones will stick around until the people who demand them die off, it shouldn't be too long.

    2. Re:Why touchscreens beat keyboards on phones by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      Besides that, I think the Blackberry keyboard (at least on my Bold) is the most horrendous little PoS I've ever had to use (work). The keys are tiny. It's just not meant for man thumbs. I'll take a soft keyboard over that any day.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    3. Re:Why touchscreens beat keyboards on phones by Foresto · · Score: 2

      Mostly true, yet for some of us, a physical keyboard is more important than a third day of battery life or 720p video playback. The Sony-Ericsson SK17i (SK17a in North America) did a pretty good job of combining a real keyboard with a compact form factor. I hope someone improves upon that idea in the next year or two.

    4. Re:Why touchscreens beat keyboards on phones by mlts · · Score: 1

      I used to have a very good slider phone around '06, when the hot device was the Motorola RAZR V3, and smartphones were mainly the geek/exec crowd, ran Windows Mobile, BlackberryOS, or PalmOS, and cost $400-$600 with a 1-2 year plan.

      They can be done. The problem is that the Android makers think they are aiming towards the old Sidekick market. Those people have long since flocked to the iPhone, so that market is definitely gone. Instead, a slider should be marketed to people who are professionals, and who want a real keyboard. One can type some text on a phone's touch screen, but for anything but a short note, it can get slow. A good physical keyboard can improve that, and even allow decent touch typing.

      I'm sure there are other people out there who would buy a quality slider phone, and really don't care about the thinner craze (assuming a relatively thin device to begin with.) With the slightly larger form factor, a bigger battery, more SSD, more cores (high and low power cores, and hopefully both CPU and GPU), a better camera, and other items can be fitted in. Plus, with the bigger screens, making larger keys becomes easier. Motorola has done some advances in this, but their mistake was aiming them towards the low end as opposed to execs who are used to Blackberries and typing out longer memos.

    5. Re:Why touchscreens beat keyboards on phones by EETech1 · · Score: 2

      For sperd ansd accuryacy nithimgncan beeat thenresl keyboa5d on my mOtoropla Pho5on Q 4G LTE!1

      yp'ucfe m7sta never teiwd a good keybopard beforew!

      sen4g from my Q

  42. Re:Physical keyboard? Really? by geoskd · · Score: 1

    I once had a cheap feature phone with a physical keyboard -- it's way easier than you think it is. The issue with touch screens is that you need to look at the keyboard while you type. This leads to typos going unnoticed until after hitting send. Throw in some auto-corruption and touch screen typing is a real slow down.

    I have been using an iPhone for about 2 years now, and I find that I no longer need to look at the keys while I am typing. I can type pretty much full speed with only an occasional miss, which the auto correct fixes. I only really get tripped up on names and contacts, which the auto fixes to some pretty bizarre things sometimes. Its just like any other typing skill, practice makes perfect.

    --
    I wish I had a good sig, but all the good ones are copyrighted
  43. New PR Staff? by jasper160 · · Score: 1

    They must be using the KCNA for their PR department now.

    --
    No good deed goes unpunished.
  44. Quality Slashdot reporting. by benmhall · · Score: 1

    "With more devices due to be revealed in May, has the company ?""

    I was quite worried that the reporting standards on this site would change when it was last sold. It's good to see that they haven't.

  45. Re:TFA sounds like part of a shareholder presentat by th3rmite · · Score: 1

    Blackberry sales have declined because for many businesses, Blackberries became "good enough". Many of my stepfather's business associates, himself included, have been looking forward to the Blackberry Z10/Q10 for awhile now. Just anecdotal evidence, but I think Blackberry will see a growth in market share with these and their upcoming devices.

  46. I hope that is true by damn_registrars · · Score: 1

    While the new Blacberry is outside my current price range, I would really like to see RIM survive as a company. I do believe they can add something of value to the smartphone market if they can find a way to right their ship.

    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
  47. Re:TFA sounds like part of a shareholder presentat by Ravaldy · · Score: 1

    In Canada the Z10 is fairly popular. For some reason there's a following and they love their BB. More than half the people in my surroundings that have had to replace their phone opted for a Z10.

    I almost spit my coffee laughing when I read the bit about MS. You are so right. When I asked to see the Samsung Ativ (windows 8 phone) at a very busy mobile store, the staff looked at me flabbergasted. I basically purchased the first Samsung Ativ at that location. This was in January. Just tells you nobody knows about them or is interested in them. Too bad all their previous phones were crap. This one is definitely an improvement.

  48. Re:TFA sounds like part of a shareholder presentat by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

    I agree, the nerds are older now, I tend to cling to phones for a long time, I had my black and green LCD nokia 1100 until summer 2011. At that time I upgraded to a Bold 9700 as android wasn't quite "there" in terms of polish and iOS doesn't allow any freedom (you can't even select your own audio files as ringtones without buying an app for that)

    --
    Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  49. Sliders still have tradeoffs by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Instead, a slider should be marketed to people who are professionals, and who want a real keyboard. One can type some text on a phone's touch screen, but for anything but a short note, it can get slow. A good physical keyboard can improve that, and even allow decent touch typing.

    Sliders still have tradeoffs. They don't sacrifice screen size necessarily but they do sacrifice space in other ways. They require extra housing, slide mechanisms, and of course the keyboard itself. You are trading size/weight and possibly features like a bigger battery in exchange for the keyboard. I'd take a few extra amp hours of battery time over a keyboard any day of the week. I would totally be fine with a thicker iPhone that had 2-3x the battery life. If you want the lightest or thinnest possible phone, a slider will not get you there. A physical keyboard also adds a lot of cost to the device, especially if the device is going to have a touch screen as well.

    My basic take on typing on a phone is that if you truly need the marginal gains that you get from a (tiny) physical keyboard on a phone, you are probably using the wrong device for the task. I realize there probably are some corner cases where I'm wrong but for most people the physical keyboard just isn't the best combination of tradeoffs. Don't get me wrong, I totally get that some people just prefer a physical keyboard and if they don't mind the tradeoffs then why not use one? But most of us just don't care that much. I used to be firmly in the physical keyboard camp but eventually I realized it just didn't make enough of an improvement in my typing to really matter. It appears that most other people have come to the same conclusion.

  50. Battery life by sjbe · · Score: 1

    Mostly true, yet for some of us, a physical keyboard is more important than a third day of battery life or 720p video playback.

    Three days? I'd be happy with >1 day of battery life.