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Blackberry Businesses Hardware

BlackBerry's 'Classic' Smartphone Is About to Disappear (fortune.com) 74

From a Reuters report:The beleaguered tech company continues its shift to software. BlackBerry will stop making its Classic smartphone, 18 months after launching it in an effort to entice users who prefer physical, rather than touch, keyboards, the Canadian technology company said on Tuesday. The Classic was launched early last year, with a physical keyboard in the vein of its Bold predecessor and powered by the company own overhauled BlackBerry 10 operating system. BlackBerry has since launched a phone powered by Alphabet's Android software and plans several more, and BlackBerry Chief Executive John Chen last month expressed confidence the company's trimmed-down handset business can turn a profit by a self-imposed September deadline.
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BlackBerry's 'Classic' Smartphone Is About to Disappear

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  • It's Like (Score:5, Funny)

    by invictusvoyd ( 3546069 ) on Tuesday July 05, 2016 @04:06PM (#52451297)
    McDonald's will stop making burgers and now sell burritos.
    • Re:It's Like (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Grishnakh ( 216268 ) on Tuesday July 05, 2016 @04:09PM (#52451321)

      Well if most of the American population suddenly stopped eating burgers and instead ate burritos, it would be a sensible business move. However, it's questionable how many people would start eating at McDonald's again, considering their competence is in burgers (if you like McD's burgers), not burritos. Usually, when this happens, the business ends up failing. Trying to belatedly "join the crowd" is probably the best course of action at that point, but it's still usually futile.

    • This is more like when MickeyD's stopped using styrofoam containers for their burgers and instead went with paper containers... still the same crap inside, just a different package on the outside.

    • McDonald's will stop making burgers and now sell burritos.

      There's a big sign on the McDonald's on Prospect Ave that says they now sell something called a "Lobster Roll". Draw your own conclusions.

    • They cant do their own OS, it was too expensive and was damaging the company. When they can get the enormous android ecosystem for basically free, its a no brainer for them to join the android ecosystem. If they had done this years ago when everyone else did, they wouldnt be in the fix they are in. IT was the blackberry OS that was really doing in the company.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Just sell the business to Microsoft and increase their market share tenfold. Everybody should be happy :)

    • Microsoft already ruined Nokia they may as well ruin what's left of Blackberry.
      Microsoft kinda has the opposite of a Midas touch with mobile phone devices.

      Shame really as despite Nokia having an increasingly untidy ux with Symbian, it was better in many ways than anything we have now. Certainly it multitasked extremely well and things like Nokia Beta Labs had cool stuff like the sleeping screen which was just very intelligent use of technology.

      I don't think Blackberry was innovating in the way Nokia was up

  • I heard scientists had given it a latin name: BlackBerry 'Raphus cucullatus'. Lets see if anyone gets it...
  • Blackberry is once again paying for their lack of vision. They have lost their way and are slowly dying a public death. They are the "Old Yeller" of the tech industry. It is said to see them suffer and we all wish someone would just put them out of their misery.
  • Looking at the Classic, I can see clearly why it failed. It's like something from a decade ago. Sure, it's good to have a keyboard, but not at the expense of the screen! They got it right with the Priv and its sliding keyboard, that one is something I'd consider if I were thinking of buying a smartphone now.

    • I thought they meant the Classic phone for right-handed users only. I never got into the Blackberry crazy to begin with as the phone's ergonomics as a left-handed person was awful. Stupid thumb wheel.

      After I experienced that stupid design I never, ever looked at Blackberry phones again. I'm sure I'm not the only one.

    • Except that a smartphone hides much of that screen space when it pops up a touch sensitive keyboard. The blackberry classic actually looks like it has the same amount of screen space that my phone has when sending email. Basically I can't send email on my phone since it lacks a competent textual input device, a reasonable amount of screen space, find control over cursor placement, and so forth. At least with the Blackberry there's actual tactile feed back that you're on the right key so that you're not rel

      • There are Android phones with physical keyboards just like the Blackberry. So the choice is not between having a physical keyboard and not having one. The choice is actually between having a phone with many apps on it and having a phone with very few.

        • To me number of apps is irrelevant. Apple may have millions of apps but there are only a handful worth getting (even the free ones). There's the business phone, the productivity phone, but everyone's buying the social networking phone.

          • There's the business phone, the productivity phone, but everyone's buying the social networking phone.

            Why distinguish? I've made a good living with my iPhone as my business and productivity phone, and my social networking phone for the commute home.

      • Yes, but my iPhone reclaims that space when I'm not sending email.
      • A pop out physical keyboard wont make the screen smaller, it pops out from the side of the phone.

    • Many phones had a HUGE screen with a pop out keyboard on the side. This was one of the smartest things id seen.

    • Looking at the Classic, I can see clearly why it failed. It's like something from a decade ago. Sure, it's good to have a keyboard, but not at the expense of the screen! They got it right with the Priv and its sliding keyboard, that one is something I'd consider if I were thinking of buying a smartphone now.

      My experience of the priv keyboard was that the keys didn't work right. I remember the BB keys being convex and it was easy for your fingers to glom onto the center of the key. The priv keys felt convex and didn't give the right feedback.

  • by holophrastic ( 221104 ) on Tuesday July 05, 2016 @05:47PM (#52452185)

    So, no blackberry OS, no blackberry keyboard, the same rectangle screen as everyone else, the same OS as everyone else. So what's left? The pretty logo? Congrats. Another messaging app? Watch me care. Secure? Bullshit of course. So much for pride. Ready for the fall.

    • Tryinbg to do their own OS was killing the company. This was a major reason that they were getting nowhere. They cant benefit from the google app ecosystem. Too much inertia behind Android than to try to compete with it. When they can go android for free, it makes no sense to do their own OS. They could if they want do their own UI on android. A popout key board is a great idea which is what they should do, wont reduce the area for the screen since the keyboard pops out from the side.

  • It's the best mobile OS that no one is using. Sad. 100% gesture based - no buttons needed.

    I love my Z10, but I'll probably be moving to the Priv soon.

    • by xystren ( 522982 )
      I agree with you there, I'm on a Q10 and absolutely love it. They really did well with the Q10 keyboard. I didn't really like the feel of the Priv, but it was usable. My biggest issue most modern phones is the damn touch screen. Half the time the touch doesn't respond as it should, or it responds with the wrong key response. There is something to be said for the good, tactile response keyboard. I will miss that BB OS 10 when I eventually need to upgrade.
    • Ditto, I just wish I could get a Priv that is not sold through Friggen optus in Australia.
  • Don't really care (Score:4, Interesting)

    by neminem ( 561346 ) <<neminem> <at> <gmail.com>> on Tuesday July 05, 2016 @07:21PM (#52452833) Homepage

    Sure, I suppose, as someone who really likes physical keyboards, it's technically sad that we just lost another one, but I don't care that much, on grounds of a. Blackberry OS rather than Android, and b. keyboards should slide out in landscape mode, not portrait mode. So I would never personally buy one of those anyway.

    But when I can no longer find any Android phones with proper slider keyboards to replace my current one when it dies... I will be pretty pissed at that point.

    • I feel your pain. I just had to upgrade from my aging Droid 4 (with a pretty nice hardware keyboard.) I ended up going with a bluetooth keyboard/case for a Note 5. Not quite the same, but apparently the only viable option for hardware keyboard junkies who also like modern phones.

  • Its unbelievable that they didnt move to Android years ago given they get app compatability with the enormous android ecosystem, for free. Trying to develop their own OS was insane. The company would be in better shape had it done this years ago. I think the min keyboard idea is also good, after using on screen keyboards, i cannot believe there is no demand for a physical one.

  • My sister was dying for one of these. She is a huge BB fan. She contacted her telco when they first came out and they said, "We don't even know if we are getting them let alone when." She called around to other providers and they would only sell her one with an uber premium super deluxe extra plan. Effectively they wanted about $700 for the phone.

    So she contacted BB and managed to get a fairly senior person who pretty much told her that their priority relationship was with the telcos not the consumer.

    S
    • by Anonymous Coward

      You'd think the sister of the Emperor of Canada would get better treatment from a Canadian company.

    • > But best of all is that they let the telcos and the "enterprise" users turn off any features that made the phone enjoyable at all

      That misses the point of BB10. Sure, they can turn those features off when the user is on their "business account", but they can (or should be able to) still use them when using their personal account. And they can switch back and forth easily.

      I thought it was a great idea. Still do. Implementation? Not so much. But a dual-SIM iPhone or Android with such a system? Still seems

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