It's no surprise that Blackberry entered the smartphone market a bit late. Do you still think that the Blackberry 10 can change the game. Will iOS be affected. I think their device looks really sleek. What are your thoughts?
There are many companies that still use Blackberry since corporate tech acceptance tends to have a lot of inertia.... but iOS has made some pretty significant inroads as well.BBB 10 is not much of a threat to iOS or Android at the moment, but it is solid enough. I expect it will shore up Blackberry's (still) sizeable consumer base and do very well in the corporate market.
Blackberry could do worse than push out an BB10 Playbook update asap as this too has a sizeable user base, most of whom picked up their devices on the cheap.
An unintuitive interface on an OS with hardly any decent apps on a device with battery life that doesn't even last a day? Yeah right.
RIM is dead.
Have you actually seen the videos of BB10? The UI looks really intuitive.
And I don't think you can comment on battery life when none of the devices have been released yet.
I'm guessing you're judging past versions of the Blackberry OS.
No I'm judging based on The Verge's review. They've been using one for a week.
I think intuitive may be the wrong word for BB10.
What I like is that things like menus and the action bar are not there permanently taking up real estate. They only appear when you need them. For example; press and hold an email and a bar comes up where you can drag the email onto certain actions to perform that action. That seems like a pretty good way of doing things, whereby the buttons only pop up when they're needed. Keeps the UI clean.
I think the UI actually looks fairly confusing until you realise which gestures you have to use, so yeah, definitely not intuitive.
The hub and notification system is pretty cool though, where you can get to everything and peek without exiting the current app.
What I like is that things like menus and the action bar are not there permanently taking up real estate. They only appear when you need them. For example; press and hold an email and a bar comes up where you can drag the email onto certain actions to perform that action. That seems like a pretty good way of doing things, whereby the buttons only pop up when they're needed. Keeps the UI clean.
I think the UI actually looks fairly confusing until you realise which gestures you have to use, so yeah, definitely not intuitive.
The hub and notification system is pretty cool though, where you can get to everything and peek without exiting the current app.
Perhaps on the corporate front - RIM are still reasonably trusted in the business world.
Perhaps on the corporate front - RIM are still reasonably trusted in the business world.
They should have did this back in 2007.
No I'm judging based on The Verge's review. They've been using one for a week.