Haha I don't get it, but still I'm happy for them. That is one mad ugly and weird device but certainly on the tube if I saw someone using it, I'd be all like "I totally could never use that **** but nerd you have my respect tbh."
However, physical keyboards do hold a special place in my heart since I had the original Droid and a couple HTC WinMo phones before it with one...so I understand their appeal..even on a square phone.
200 000 units to take care of the pent up demand was probably about right. It's not impressive by any means, but at least they were smart enough to limit stock unlike the other launches where they had to write down billions in unsold phones.
Will be interesting to see the staying power of this device. I feel that most people who want one will be in those 200k orders. It's really an ugly and unwieldy looking device so the appeal will be extremely limited.
The passport is a relic of old management. If it survives on its own merits, it's thanks to old management.
As for impressive, only in a vacuum when compared to past failures. Heck, the new BB10 devices sold at a higher rate when they were released, so it's not even as impressive as that disaster.
Yes, the Passport is a development which started way back with the previous management, but that does not mean it would be such a success story if things had continued the same as before.
It is also the previous management who made the great decision of buying QNX to start with.
Interesting because it shows that analysts are just writing stuff without any knowledge base? Totally agree
Since when is Steel more expansive than aluminum?
He states that if people want a phone like an iPhone, Blackberry will wrap that phone. In the end he says that the phone is not trying to compete the iPhone, because Apple will always be better at building those..
At last the use of "-gate" terms totally makes him sound professional... not..
I don't say he doesn't have a point (BlackBerry for Business has its advantages) or that Apple didn't screw up the 8.0.1 update (they did). But this article screams: You guys buy that phone, because otherwise Blackberry would fail and I couldn't buy their phones anymore..
In the end Blackberry has some problems: BYOD for example is a big challenge for them, because their have to get the consumer to buy it, not the business itself. A market where they didn't really excel recently.