Home Forums Chat Forum BlackBerry Gives Up On Consumer Market

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 52 total)
  • BlackBerry Gives Up On Consumer Market
  • hora
    Free Member

    As a Blackberry consumer user all I can say is **** off and farewell. Piece of ****!

    http://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/blackberry-maker-gives-consumer-market-073611652.html

    konabunny
    Free Member

    No apps = death.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Can’t say as I’m totally shocked. I’ve always said that they’re brilliant corporate devices but poor personal ones. I can’t think of anything I’d rather have as a work phone.

    Popular with the kids for some reason, BBM and all that. Never quite understood that.

    Kuco
    Full Member

    I would rather use my iphone for work over my bumberry.

    Cougar
    Full Member

    No apps = death.

    Catch 22, isn’t it. No unit sales = no apps, no apps = no unit sales.

    You’re right, though. The stale “Blackberry World” is its biggest problem; that’s where the serious investment needed to go.

    Zulu-Eleven
    Free Member

    Thing is – after the outages/complete collapse of the system earlier in the year, business users have been running a mile too.

    hora
    Free Member

    Well its going the way of Nokia IMO.

    joemarshall
    Free Member

    Catch 22, isn’t it. No unit sales = no apps, no apps = no unit sales.

    Partly that, but also a problem of making it a pain to develop for, and needing to jump through hoops to code for it and to release apps.

    iPhone and Android both have lovely modern operating systems that are easy to write apps for, and apps have really taken off. Same with Symbian, it was the most horrible piece of junk to develop for, and nokia made it worse by making it a real expensive pain to release apps publicly for, so no developer with half a brain would ever write anything for it, so it went boom.

    Apple have the pain that is approval, but they seem to have got away with that, partly by making it dead easy to do and partly just due to the perceived higher profits to be made from users of such incredibly expensive phones.

    FuzzyWuzzy
    Full Member

    5 years ago a Blackberry made sense, I can’t see any reason a consumer or a corpo would buy them now other than you can do a lot of centralised policy control but realistically how many corpos need much more than basic stuff like remote wiping which you can do on Android and iPhones.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    Bloody Blackberry World – half the time I get update notifications, it’s for the sodding Blackberry World itself ffs!

    stilltortoise
    Free Member

    Wasn’t this on the cards when they released their first tablet with no native email client? Talk about not having a clue

    Cougar
    Full Member

    Just been on the radio, RIM have confirmed they’re not pulling out of the consumer market.

    It’s this sort of decisive action that made them great.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    It’s a bit ironic as they’re really popular with teenagers due to BBM and free messages, yet with white collar workers, they’re loosing ground to Apple eg at my work we’ve all gone to iPhones / Android, no one wants a blackberry any more.

    FuzzyWuzzy
    Full Member

    I guess iMessage will kill-off the teenage Blackberry market to

    randomjeremy
    Free Member

    I’m the other way, where I work we swapped out Iphone 4s for blackberry 9900s and they’re better by a mile for the stuff we do. (Lots of email and encrypted access)

    piedidiformaggio
    Free Member

    Within the industry, there’s a concensus that RIM may dissapear up it’s own chuff given recent performance

    Cougar
    Full Member

    I don’t think that view is restricted to the industry. They’ve been on borrowed time for ages and consistently failed to capitalise on any of the great ideas they’ve had.

    tops5
    Free Member

    Just as work “upgrade” me to a Blackberry 🙁

    Still – are there any decent tracking/training apps to be had for it?

    tops5
    Free Member

    Just as work “upgrade” me to a Blackberry 🙁

    Still – are there any decent tracking/training apps to be had for it?

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    consistently failed to capitalise on any of the great ideas they’ve had.

    Same story as Nokia really – it was theirs for the taking, and for some reason they completely failed to take it!

    jfletch
    Free Member

    Same story as Nokia really – it was theirs for the taking, and for some reason they completely failed to take it!

    Was it theirs for the taking?

    The exact thing that made Blackberry popular with business users in the first place is entirely at odds with what made the iPhone and Andriod phones popular in general. So to “take it” they would have had to completely redesign their product and business model.

    Same for Nokia, the thing that made them popular was making the best phones. But this is at odds with mini-computers that also make phone calls. Again, to “take it” they would have had to redesign their business model and products from the ground up (something they are now doing with Windows phones).

    TPTcruiser
    Full Member

    Odd, I thought the next version of their OS was going to include an Android emulator so you could use Google Play/Market for apps a plenty. Must be dead in the water so have dropped consumers.
    I upgrade in six months, either stick with Android or try out Win8…

    CaptainFlashheart
    Free Member

    The exact thing that made Blackberry popular with business users in the first place is entirely at odds with what made the iPhone and Andriod phones popular in general. So to “take it” they would have had to completely redesign their product and business model.

    ^^This^^

    The Crackberry remains the best mobile business communication device out there. If you want a toy, by all means get a JesusPhone or Android. Then you can tell everyone about all the apps you have. Lucky you.

    As a communication tool, Blackberry really got it right.

    Del
    Full Member

    or not?[/url]

    TiRed
    Full Member

    I’m an unashamed BB fan. For my needs, it works so much better than an iPhone. But we have moved to MS Exchange, the company doesn’t want to keep paying for BES licenses. So everyone is moving to Android and iPhone. What BB need to do is think about reducing their reliance on BES as I can see that this isn’t going to be sustainable.

    And of course, what teenager/rioter/… wouldn’t want free secure messaging and file transfer. Although Son1 has expectations of his mother’s iPhone.

    Last point, at 200 pounds, the Playbook is great value, especially with OS2. Ask yourself how many Apps you really use.

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    So to “take it” they would have had to completely redesign their product and business model.

    Not really. They were early leaders in “smartphone” tech. They had the knowledge, the product and some good patents.

    They could, with more far-sighted management, have branched out into a consumer line of smartphones quite easily – well before Apple and Androi got there.

    Same for Nokia, the thing that made them popular was making the best phones. But this is at odds with mini-computers that also make phone calls. Again, to “take it” they would have had to redesign their business model and products

    Nah – again Nokia were making smartphones with downloadable apps long before Apple. They were just a bit crap at it.

    Anyone who detests iTunes has clearly never had to faff about with Nokia PC Suite 🙂

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    As a communication tool, Blackberry really got it right.

    I see the argument from a corporate IT point of view. They are much easier to manage, administer and lock down.

    But from a user’s point of view I can’t see that Blackberrys offer much over modern iPhones or ‘droids.

    jfletch
    Free Member

    Not really. They were early leaders in “smartphone” tech. They had the knowledge, the product and some good patents.

    Not really – The things people like about modern smartphones are the opposite of BB was about back then, hardcore business security and efficiency of communication.

    Nah – again Nokia were making smartphones with downloadable apps long before Apple. They were just a bit crap at it.

    Yep – That is because they were coming at it from an angle of making “their phones do more stuff”. Rather than Apple coming at it as “how do we make a new handheld device that is more that a phone”. (Or the Google approach, “how do we replicate iOS!)

    So neither company was better placed to take advantage of the opportunity as any other big company with cash to spend on R&D. More so it would have been very difficult for them to do it as they would have had to explain to their shareholders that they were abandoning their current successful products, write off all the investment and start from scratch.

    CountZero
    Full Member

    As a communication tool, Blackberry really got it right.

    It makes phone calls and let’s you email and message. Wow, what an exciting concept, lots of mileage in that.
    My phone lets me make calls, message for free across three different devices and two OS, and send emails. It also takes superb photos and video, is an excellent navigation device, very good ebook reader, as well as a variety of other functions.

    GrahamS
    Full Member

    Uh oh.. the Count has shown up.

    Fanbois to your trenches![/url]

    😉

    Kuco
    Full Member

    One thing I will give Blackberry is they stick decent cameras on their phones. My 3.2mp on my Bold takes pretty good pictures.

    crikey
    Free Member

    In his favour though, the Count is making good use of the iParagraph App these days… 😉

    chewkw
    Free Member

    What people want is a nano computer that can be used for everything like a computer but much smaller that fit into pocket.

    Apple iPhone started the trend but the rest have been playing catch up since, so I am not surprised to see traditional mobile phone companies going burst.

    So I suspect there will be more software companies entering the mobile phone market in future. The hardware is merely cosmetic … 🙄

    randomjeremy
    Free Member

    Oh yeah and battery life, I can talk and email plenty during the day and still have plenty of charge left. My iphone was dead by mid afternoon most days 🙁 Saying that, I have an ipad 3 and it’s lovely.

    Am I allowed to like my blackberry AND like my ipad? Surely this breaks some kind of code.

    samuri
    Free Member

    Blackberries *were* easier to tie down as corporate devices.

    Not any more. There are hundreds of mobile device management solutions out there now, lots of them are better than RIM’s and often cheaper. I reckon in a couple of years, most reasonable sized enterprises will offer bring your own device solutions to all their staff who will either get an iphone if they’ve got money or whatever 50 quid android device that is currently doing the rounds. Blackberrys will be seen no more.

    I’m currently operating a proof of concept for one such solution right now. It works really well, integration with exchange is seamless on the iphone, we have far more granular control over the iphones/ipads than we have with our Blackberries, it’s massively cheaper and everybody wants it right now. We have 500 Blackberries in use now, if we have any at all in two years I’ll be surprised.

    grum
    Free Member

    My gf has to use a blackberry for work and she absolutely hates it. She’s not a big app user on her own phone either (basic Nokia). What was mean to be so good about them?

    poly
    Free Member

    Catch 22, isn’t it. No unit sales = no apps, no apps = no unit sales.

    No its comparitively hard work to develop for BB. It should be easy to port Apps from Android to BB since they both use Java – but its not.

    One thing I will give Blackberry is they stick decent cameras on their phones. My 3.2mp on my Bold takes pretty good pictures.

    Cameras on blackberries are typically much worse than other smartphones. (I believe the issue is the lenses which means even equivalent pixel cameras are not as good). Its easy to see why the camera budget is lower on a mainly corporate device.

    Within the industry, there’s a concensus that RIM may dissapear up it’s own chuff given recent performance

    Indeed and this:

    Blackberries *were* easier to tie down as corporate devices.

    Not any more. There are hundreds of mobile device management solutions out there now, lots of them are better than RIM’s and often cheaper. means there is increasingly a movement towards bring your own device (BYOD). If uncertainty surrounds Blackberry’s longevity then large enterprise IT departments won’t be long to ditch it so they aren’t left with devices they can’t support/replace.

    footflaps
    Full Member

    I BYOD to work with my own 4s, and it’s locked down via MSExchange with enforcement of passcodes and remote wipe etc, so the advantages BB are now pretty much standard (and free) with Android / Apple devices. Really can’t see how they can last seeing as they’ve dropped from market leader to being so far behind the technology curve in just a few years…

    MrSalmon
    Free Member

    Oh yeah and battery life, I can talk and email plenty during the day and still have plenty of charge left. My iphone was dead by mid afternoon most days

    This is the one area where my OH’s Blackberry scores over my Android phone- well, that and the physical keyboard, if you’re bothered about that. In pretty much every other respect it’s like it’s a couple of years behind.

    konabunny
    Free Member

    I wish there were an iPhone with physical keyboard.

    Byod bah humbug!

Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 52 total)

The topic ‘BlackBerry Gives Up On Consumer Market’ is closed to new replies.