Tag Archives: ESPN

BlackBerry Climbs To #2 on The Vitrue 100: Top Social Brands of 2010

blackberry social

 

The BlackBerry brand has done an incredible job climbing the ranks of The Vitrue 100: Top Social Brands. The Vitrue 100 is a list of 100 brands and the volume of discussion on Twitter, Facebook and YouTube. In 2008, the BlackBerry brand ranked number 20, in 2009, BlackBerry rose to 15 and in 2010, BlackBerry is the number 2 social brand.

A little while ago we had some inside tips and stats regarding RIM’s social media strategy, which according to this report is doing great things for brand awareness. Hit the jump for The Vitrue 100: Top Social Brands of 2010.
Continue reading BlackBerry Climbs To #2 on The Vitrue 100: Top Social Brands of 2010

T-Mobile TV for the Bold & Curve

T-Mobile now supports TV for the Bold 9780 and Curve 9330 according to their website and
it’s being preloaded on these devices, providing free access to the following TV Channels:

  • ABC News Now
  • Azteca America
  • Fox Sports
  • PBS Kids

When T-Mobile TV first launched, it was limited to a few devices and none of them were BlackBerrys. Now BlackBerry lovers can experience T-Mobile TV too.

There are also premium packages available that include Comedy Central, ESPN Mobile TV, NBC, Nickelodeon and the Disney Channel.

Do you watch TV on your BlackBerry? Let us know!

ESPN Radio for BlackBerry now available

ESPN Radio for BlackBerry ESPN Radio BlackBerry

I’ve been waiting on this one for quite a while and can happily say that ESPN Radio for BlackBerry is now available. With this new app you can fire up ESPN Radio no matter where you are right from your device and keep in touch with all the latest happenings in sports. The app features live broadcasts of loads of ESPN stations across the country. Listen to college football games, ESPN podcasts, ESPN shows like Mike and Mike in the Morning, SportsCenter on demand and much more. The ESPN Radio app is available for $2.99 from BlackBerry App World for all devices.

Cricket Wireless looks to go national

Share 7

Al Moschner probably wouldn’t blame you if you’ve never heard of Cricket Wireless. But if he has his way, you’ll know about his company soon enough.

As the executive vice president and chief operating officer of the nation’s seventh-largest wireless carrier, Moschner directs marketing and branding efforts for Cricket’s products and services. A subsidiary of Leap Wireless International founded in 1999, Cricket serves 5.3 million prepaid customers in select communities in 25 states, or about a third of the country. Though that focus has served Cricket well over the past year–total revenues for parent company Leap Wireless increased 10.2 percent from the second quarter of 2009 to the same period this year–the carrier isn’t standing still. Even as it stays true to its prepaid roots, it is embarking on plans to attract new customers, expand into smartphone content services, and develop the network necessary to become a national carrier.

Last Tuesday, just before Cricket released its first smartphone, the Sanyo Zio, Moschner dropped by CNET’s San Francisco offices to talk about how his company and the wireless industry is changing. We covered a range of topics, including the growth in prepaid, an impending music service, cheaper data plans, and, of course, a CDMA iPhone.

Cricket’s Al Moschner

(Credit: Leap Wireless)

Q: You operate your own network, yet you also act as an MVNO (mobile virtual network operator) for Sprint. Why be an MVNO, too? Why not just funnel people onto your own network?
A: It’s about national reach. An important part of our strategy is to become national. We’re not going to stop building out our own infrastructure, but given that real growth in the industry is with prepaid users, we need to be a national carrier today. And more importantly, if you believe that a significant shift of sales is moving to a national carrier footprint, the only way for us to be relevant is to be national.

Continue reading Cricket Wireless looks to go national

Cricket Wireless looks to go national

Al Moschner probably wouldn’t blame you if you’ve never heard of Cricket Wireless. But if he has his way, you’ll know about his company soon enough.

As the executive vice president and chief operating officer of the nation’s seventh-largest wireless carrier, Moschner directs marketing and branding efforts for Cricket’s products and services. A subsidiary of Leap Wireless International founded in 1999, Cricket serves 5.3 million prepaid customers in select communities in 25 states, or about a third of the country. Though that focus has served Cricket well over the past year–total revenues for parent company Leap Wireless increased 10.2 percent from the second quarter of 2009 to the same period this year–the carrier isn’t standing still. Even as it stays true to its prepaid roots, it is embarking on plans to attract new customers, expand into smartphone content services, and develop the network necessary to become a national carrier.

Last Tuesday, just before Cricket released its first smartphone, the Sanyo Zio, Moschner dropped by CNET’s San Francisco offices to talk about how his company and the wireless industry is changing. We covered a range of topics, including the growth in prepaid, an impending music service, cheaper data plans, and, of course, a CDMA iPhone.

Cricket’s Al Moschner

(Credit: Leap Wireless)