Research In Motion's recent BlackBerry outage was the worst in the company's history,
leaving BlackBerry users in the Middle East, Europe, parts of South America, Canada, Africa and the United States without service for a total of three days.
You're missing out big time if
you leave the BlackBerry users in the dust, so let's see it!!
Not exact matches
Users submit short, dating apps on
blackberry 10 video clips from their phone, check out what their friends have posted, and
leave comments.
It looks way better than Endomondo (which is available for BB10) and it seems a shame to
leave Blackberry 10
users out in the cold!
But it should offer enough flexibility and ease of use to keep most
BlackBerry users from
leaving the fold.
While it's unlikely that the Torch will draw consumers away from their iPhones and Android devices, at least
BlackBerry users won't be completely
left in the dust.
Truth be told these networks are cashing in via BIS»cause the average
blackberry user over here just emails, pings, tweets, does facebook with some browsing and ends up using just around 200mb monthly
leaving a whopping 2.8 gb to float free.
Well, up until now it was never really possible to tell, and there were no fun apps like Speedtest.net for the other devices, but now
BlackBerry users are no longer
left out of the fun.
Email - From the
BlackBerry Hub, the
user can now: File a sent email message in a folder that is created by the
user in the email client on a computer, Set the sync interval for IMAP email accounts, to control how frequently email messages are synchronized with the
user's
BlackBerry device, Automatically save a draft email by
leaving the
BlackBerry Hub, Download and save all the attachments in an email at the same time, Delete the original email text when replying to an email
A data service outage affecting some
BlackBerry users nationally this week seems to have
left them angry but not deeply concerned about the future of
BlackBerry's maker, Research In Motion Ltd..
PlayBook
users have been used to Angry Birds on their
BlackBerry tablets for some time now but
BlackBerry smartphone
users were
left out.
They
leave current
Blackberry users out in the cold, because they essentially say: we don't know how to develop a modern touch os without multi-core cpus.
We're not convinced it will bring back those who
left BlackBerry for pastures new, because smartphones have moved on and their
users have too.
For
BlackBerry users, although there are some great applications on offer, it's those common names that
leave you feeling shortchanged.
Why give
blackberry users a reason to
leave?
The iPhone Simulator is a very fitting name for this theme as it will
leave users wondering if they are really playing with a simulator, or still using their
BlackBerry device.
The idea of reducing operating costs when deploying
BlackBerry devices has always been atop most CIO and CFO's lists of things that typically get swept under a rug somewhere, so this added incentive of removing the footprint
left by
BlackBerry Desktop Manager from end -
user's machines definitely allows for some rather joyous expressions on everyone's faces, from deskside support groups to desktop management groups to systems administrators and right on up to the big dogs in the glass - wall offices.
You'll need to own one of five
BlackBerry models (
BlackBerry Bold 9780, Bold 9700, Curve 9300, Bold 9000 or Curve 8520) in order to use the app, which means it looks like CDMA
users are being
left out in the cold for now.
«There are only a couple million
BlackBerry users left, but the burn rate is 2 million, so
BlackBerry will literally vanish in a few years,» he told the E-Commerce Times.
This data opens itself up to all sorts of agenda - based interpretations (iPhone
users are mostly younger people,
BlackBerry users don't love their phones because they are limited and so on) so I'll
leave you to draw your own conclusions here.