Tag Archives: Steve Jobs

iPhone and iPad competitors could benefit from Jobs’s resignation

Apple’s iPhone and iPad competitors could benefit with Steve Jobs out as CEO of Apple. “It’s going to give competitors a bit more of a lease of life to go out and compete harder,” Nomura International Plc. technology analyst Richard Windsor told Bloomberg, which noted that Sony and Nokia’s stock prices jumped after Jobs’ announcement. “It’s been thought about, talked about endlessly for the past several years that Tim Cook would probably take over so while you get an initial knee-jerk reaction on the downside, we would probably expect that not to last very long.” Apple will also need to maintain the momentum and market lead that Steve Jobs created as CEO. “If the new management team doesn’t sustain the level of innovation that Steve Jobs spearheaded, it’s going to be an opportunity for the competition in the long term,” Korea Investment Management Co. fund manager Lee Young Seog said. “Still, because of Tim Cook’s competence and the system at Apple, the competitive landscape isn’t likely to change anytime soon.” Steve Jobs announced his resignation from his CEO post on Wednesday and he will be replaced by Tim Cook, who has effectively been running the company while Jobs has been on leave. “Apple’s brightest and most innovative days are ahead of it,” Jobs said in his resignation letter on Wednesday.

Read

via:BGR

Hey RIM, Malcolm Gladwell says bronze is the new gold!

go for the bronze

Last Monday, at the annual Cannes Film festival, Canadian-born author Malcolm Gladwell made a statement in regards to the business world; in so many words getting the bronze is worth more than getting the gold. What that means is that it’s not always who does it first, it’s who does it best. More often than not the ‘late-starter’ ends up being more successful. I guess you could say it’s a modern day take on Aesop’s Tortoise and the Hare. In his speech, Gladwell didn’t actually call out RIM by name, but he did allude to Apple co-founder Steve Jobs and how his ability to come fashionably late to the party has definitely paid off; even the biggest BlackBerry abusers can admit that. As he said, it’s not necessarily the innovators, but the “tweakers and implementers” who create profitable businesses.

“If you look at the history of Apple, they’re always the last to the party,” said Mr. Gladwell. “They’ve made a business out of being late.” Steve Jobs, he added, “is the archetypal entrepreneur of our age, right? And he is not an innovator, right? He’s the guy who comes second or third and makes it better.”

RIM did come out with the PlayBook long after the iPad made its debut, but has been heavily criticized (I still love it though). Now think about it for a minute, RIM was the leader of the pack for a long, long time. Those who have been nipping at its heels on the hardware and software side are now giving them a run for their money. It wasn’t necessarily ground-breaking, brand spanking new inventions that brought humanity to a new level of awareness. It was a tweak and a twist of a pre-existing product or idea. So maybe RIM should block out the deafening cries for something no one has seen before, so that they can work on implementation versus innovation think of the -. Take a bite out of Apple with a riper BlackBerry. It’s worked vice versa.

Source: Globe and Mail

via:cb

RIM’s sixth-largest investor to dump its entire stake

Following RIM’s first-quarter earnings release on Thursday, the company’s sixth-biggest investor confirmed that it is giving up on the Waterloo, Ontario-based BlackBerry maker. “They are resting on their laurels,” said Stephen Jarislowsky, chairman of Jarislowsky Fraser Ltd., on Friday in an interview with Bloomberg. “Steve Jobs is a much better marketer than RIM,” Jarislowsky added. ”We are on the way out. The stake has been reduced by more than 50% or even more.” As of the end of the first quarter, Jarislowsky Fraser Ltd. owned 10.2 million shares of RIM stock. Earlier on Friday, RBC Capital Markets said RIM still has some fight left in it. Sadly for RIM in this instance, it looks like not everyone agrees.

Read

BGR

Blackberry 101: Word Substitution: possibly the best feature on a BlackBerry

BlackBerry 101: Word Substitution/AutoText

Autotext and Word Substitution

For me I’m asked one question almost every day “Why do you use a BlackBerry?”  I’m asked it by friends, family members, clients and in radio interviews. Unlike many people I can’t give the easy answer “It’s what my company gave me” no, I need a real answer.  I fully understand the question from those who don’t know how cool a BlackBerry really is.  I have strayed over to other devices over the years but my BlackBerry has always been near by.  Last summer I wrote an article that was well received about my unexplainable love affair with BlackBerry Messenger.

Side-by-Side to many an iPhone looks shinier and more sexy but there are still a few things that other platforms just don’t have.  This week Apple rolled out iMessage and other enhancements to iOS at their ‘iClone’ event in San Francisco, but in my opinion still fell a little short.  Kevin did a head to head video with Rene from TiPb and speed wise BBM and iMessage pretty much tied, but BBM stayed out front with a more feature rich experience that comes from BBM being a mature platform.

For my money, the real killer app in the BlackBerry is AutoText, now called Word Substitution.

Back in 1998 I got my first RIM handheld called the Interactive Messenger which was quickly replaced with the BlackBerry 950.  Even back than my Interactive Messenger and BlackBerry had AutoText and what’s really incredible is the number of people that own BlackBerry devices and don’t know what it is.

AutoText Example 1          AutoText Example 2

Even if you’re not clear on what Word Substitution is, you’ve used it.  My pal Joseph scratched the surface on a recent rant about his BlackBerry PlayBook typing skills; press the space bar twice and the BlackBerry inserts the period and auto-capitalizes the first letter of the next sentence for you.  It will also complete your contractions for you – cant becomes can’t.  Or my favorite is when someone asks for my PIN to add me to BBM, reply to their message with mypin and press space and pin:1a2a3a4a appears as if by pure magic.

You can create your own personal Word Substitutions as well.  Think “bb” becomes “BlackBerry” or “pb” becomes “PlayBook”.  The sky is the limit, you can create as many as you like and they can be as long as you like.  For example say I was telling someone about a new OS leak available on CrackBerry.com and I wanted them to remember the ‘leaked OS disclaimer’ and I’ll be damned if I’m going to type all the out.  I create a Word Substitution called “osdisclaim” and simply type osdisclaim plus the space key and voila!

AutoText Example 3          AutoText Example 4

So how do you create this BlackBerry Magic?  It’s actually quite simple and can be quickly explained.

OS 6 – using Universal Search type “Word Sub” and tap on the wrench “options” and tap “Word Substitution
OS 5 and lower
– from the Home Screen scroll to and select the wrench “options” and in the options list select “AutoText”

From here press the BlackBerry Menu button and select “New” and you should see something that looks like this:

AutoText Example

Now in the “Replace” field enter what you’re going to be typing in the message screen to trigger the Word Substitution.  For example “bb” or “osdisclaim” or “pb” – again you can put anything here.

AutoText Example

In the “With” field this the the text you want.  Again for example “BlackBerry” or “PlayBook”, I’ve never typed an entire novel here but have never been constrained by the number of characters here.  I’ve had 9 paragraph canned messages here before.  Perhaps I’ll attempt paste Kevin’s PlayBook review in my device one day to test worst case scenario.

AutoText Example

The last option here of note is the “Using”, you have two options “SmartCase” or Specified Case”.  The difference being how you want the BlackBerry to deal with capital letters.  If you select “SmartCase” if the Word Substitution occurs at the beginning of a sentence it will capitalize the first letter and if it is in the middle of a sentence than it will leave it not capitalized.  For Word Substitutions using product names like say BlackBerry, the case is specific regardless of where it finds itself in a paragraph, so you would want to select “Specified Case”.

OK! So that’s Word Substition/AutoText (one of my most favorite BlackBerry features) in a nutshell.  Look for Steve Jobs to ‘invent’ this feature at a future WWDC event 🙂

Via:cb

Switched On: RIM's shot

Much like their home countries, Apple and RIM share much in common, but contrast in important ways. Both companies are among the few that produce their own software for their cellular handsets. Apple, a personal computing pioneer, sees market expansion in smartphones. RIM, a smartphone pioneer, sees market expansion in mobile computing. Looking at the tablets on offer, Apple has been just as adamant in decrying a 7-inch display as RIM has been defending it, the latter saying that it sought to create an ultramobile device with the PlayBook.

Apple designs products for consumers that have relevance for enterprises. RIM designs products for enterprises that have relevance for consumers. This has also been evident with the PlayBook, which has taken heat for its lack of native e-mail and calendaring options. RIM consciously put these on the back burner because it wanted to appease CIOs concerned about data theft, even though it meant a less appealing launch product for consumers. Another parallel: RIM has suffered as AT&T delays in supporting Bridge, just as Apple struggled with AT&T supporting tethering on the iPhone.

Indeed, when Steve Ballmer took the stage at BlackBerry World in Orlando, it brought back memories of a scene that leads off the movie Pirates of Silicon Valley, when Bill Gates appeared on screen at Macworld Expo in 1997 to announce a deal that would make Internet Explorer the default browser for the Mac. Fourteen years later, Google has replaced Netscape as Microsoft’s archrival and the BlackBerry has become a prize for Bing.

If Apple was able to pull itself back from a “near-death experience,” can RIM regain its lost luster too?

Despite some missteps and significant market share losses, RIM is nowhere near the state of financial crisis that Apple was in back then. However, in both cases, the appearance of a Microsoft CEO has been a sign of confidence in a platform against which Microsoft competes. So, if Apple was able to pull itself back from what Steve Jobs has called its “near-death experience,” can RIM regain its lost luster too? Has it hit a bump in the road amidst a transition or is it in freefall as Nokia was prior to its recent overhaul?

Apple has one demonstrated advantage compared to its northern neighbor, and that has been an acute sense of timing. Like the big cats for which its Mac operating systems are named, Apple has shown a strong pattern of pouncing on the industry at just the right time. When the right components become affordable enough, Apple envelops them in a luscious layer of user experience to drive mass adoption. RIM, meanwhile, has seen growth stall since miscalculating the challenge of iPhone and its mercenary competitor Android.

Nonetheless, a key reason for optimism is the one-two punch of RIM acquisitions QNX, which handles the nimble, low-level plumbing of the BlackBerry Tablet OS, and TAT, which is infusing the historically efficient but stodgy RIM user interface with a sense of imagination, whimsy, and exploration. We have seen the beginnings of RIM assembling these pieces in programs such as the PlayBook’s scrapbooking app, and also in sprucing up the workaday calculator with flourishes such as watching the calculation history get torn off like paper from a vintage adding machine. Here, RIM — like Apple — controls its own destiny. Unlike Nokia’s position with Windows Phone 7, it need not, for example, keep reigns on a user interface direction to avoid disturbing consistency with competitors.

The challenge, as was acknowledged several times at BlackBerry World, is time. The core components are there. Now RIM is racing competitors to synthesize its acquisitions. It must create a competitive experience with headroom to grow across a suite of its own core apps, those of its developers, and, most importantly, expand from a dual-core tablet platform into a revitalized line of BlackBerry handsets. The sand in the hourglass is the goodwill of corporate and carrier customers that RIM says still have strong demand for its products and trust in its approach.


Ross Rubin (@rossrubin) is executive director of industry analysis for consumer technology at market research and analysis firm The NPD Group. Views expressed in Switched On are his own.

via:Engagdet

How RIM Can Win the Next Great Tablet Race – PlayBook in Cars From Factory

It was still launch day when the folks at SoundMan Car Audio custom mounted an Apple iPad 2 into the dashboard of a Ford F-150 (see video above). The end result is definitely impressive and it makes for an interesting argument, as our friends at TiPb pointed out…

The iPad 2 is the perfect car audio and entertainment system, the way these guys have installed it, complete with charging, video out to rear screens and the perfect fit and finish has really got us thinking. Car manufacturers really need to stop doing customised LCD panel audio and sat-nav systems and just adopt the iPad 2. This should be an extra in any good car manufacturer’s price list! It makes so much sense and offers so much more.

It’s almost time for me to replace my old clunker, so I’ve been doing some browsing in my spare time and have to agree that I’m not really sold on the car manufacturer dashboard LCD audio/sat-nav systems that are shipping on most automobiles today (at least the ones I’m looking at). That’s a somewhat dumb thing to say of course, as a lot of these systems are powered by QNX which is now owned by Research In Motion and forms the foundation of the BlackBerry Tablet OS, but there in lies the opportunity!

The more I learn about QNX, the more I’m convinced it’s the Chuck Norris of operating systems (on twitter I hear it can win a game of Connect Four in three moves and play a two hour movie in two minutes!). In the automotive environment, it’s not really the current underlying OS in these dashboard LCD systems that is the problem, but rather that there are too many cooks in the kitchen wanting to cook with cheap ingredients. Each manufacturer wants their own UI, their own unique features, and wants to do it as low cost as possible. While tossing iPads into cars from factory and passing off the cost to the consumer as an added feature is one possibilty as noted by TiPb, beyond media and entertainment I think integrating the iPad into the entire car’s computer systems would likely be a bit of a challenge. On the other hand, QNX already has the ability to connect with literally everything in a car (see QNX Car Application Platform). As consumers, what we need to see happen next is for the RIM/BlackBerry influence to enter the automobile and tie it all together with native in-dashboard support for a tablet device such as the BlackBerry PlayBook (I’m guessing we’d have to wait for the next generation).

Here’s my dream… in step by step form:

Continue reading How RIM Can Win the Next Great Tablet Race – PlayBook in Cars From Factory

RIM Ships 14.1 Million BlackBerries for Last Three Months

“We’ve now passed RIM, and I don’t see them catching up with us in the future because they must [transform] to a software company,” Jobs said. “I think that’s a challenge for them, to get developers.” Remember this notable quote by Steve Jobs from October? Jobs made a rare appearance during an investor conference call to boast of the company’s strong iPhone sales for the quarter and to establish Apple as the smartphone leader.

Well, according to Reuters, in the past three months RIM has shipped about 14.1 million BlackBerry units, matching Apple’s last quarter total shipments. Analysts agree that RIM has developed popular hardware and software, which has propelled sales in the last quarter. As of October, RIM trailed Apple by only 0.5% in terms of smartphone OS share. It will be interesting to see what these figures look like in the next month.

Don’t look now Jobs, but it seems that with the launch of the BlackBerry 9780, BlackBerry Style, and of course the upcoming PlayBook, RIM has definitely responded to the challenge.

 

bbos

Fighting Fire with Facts: RIM posts BlackBerry PlayBook vs. Apple iPad Web Browser Comparison Video

Oh man, I love the new attitude we’re seeing from RIM with the upcoming launch of the BlackBerry PlayBook. Check out the video above and you’ll see what I mean. RIM posted a new video on the BlackBerry youtube channel that puts the pre-release PlayBook head to head against the Apple iPad in a comparison and test of web browser performance and fidelity. The PlayBook fairs pretty well in this one.

Following up the whole Steve Jobs 7″ ain’t big enough comments of a few weeks back which was followed by an official response from RIM’s Co-CEO Jim Balsillie, it’s good to see RIM putting up a video like this. Fighting Fire with Fact. It’s fun for the fan boys, good for the street (RIM stock has been moving up again) and good for building up some consumer demand. Of course the Rene Ritchie Apple response on this one will be let’s see how the PlayBook compares to the iPad 2, which is valid, but I’m still thinking we won’t see flash support from Apple on that one either. Sound off in the comments!

Source:CB

<p

RIM’s Balsillie Fires Back at Apple and Jobs’ Reality Distortion Field

Remember Apple’s conference call the other day where CEO Steve Jobs took a few swings at 7″ tablets, which included RIM’s upcoming PlayBook? Specific to BlackBerry, Steve Jobs said:

“We’ve now passed RIM. And I don’t see them catching up with us in the foreseeable future. They must move beyond their area of strength and comfort, into the unfamiliar territory of trying to become a software platform company. I think it’s going to be a challenge for them to create a competitive platform and to convince developers to create apps for yet a third software platform after iOS and Android. With 300,000 apps on Apple’s App Store, RIM has a high mountain ahead of them to climb.”

Continue reading RIM’s Balsillie Fires Back at Apple and Jobs’ Reality Distortion Field

Funny Video: Action Movie iPhone Call Fail – Get A BlackBerry!

Funny Video: Action Movie iPhone Call Fail   Get A BlackBerry!

As I’m sure many of you know, Apple’s Steve Jobs likes to point fingers. So much so that RIM released an official statement telling Apple to leave them out of their self-made debacle. The video included in this post makes fun of the “antennagate” issue in an action movie scenario. If you have a few minutes and would like a quick laugh, definitely watch this video.

Continue reading Funny Video: Action Movie iPhone Call Fail – Get A BlackBerry!