Whether you’re working in technology or you’re a gadget-head (or both!), you probably hate RIM’s BlackBerry phone. Not only is RIM falling behind in the mobile game, RIM is also struggling internally with leadership turnover and late product releases.
Even the biggest advocates of BlackBerry usage, American corporations, are now hating on RIM. Companies are now responding to the requests of employees who want the freedom to use iPhones or Android phones for work. According to a Bloomberg poll, out of 200 US companies polled, 83 percent now let their employees use devices other than a BlackBerry. This comes with the recent announcement that employees of Gannett, Haliburton, and even the US Government are now allowed to choose alternative smartphones.
Despite all of the obvious reasons why everyone should hate RIM’s BlackBerry, many people don’t know exactly why they cringe when they see a biz dev guy tapping away on his Blackberry at the local pub. I had a moment like this happen to me last summer when I was at a wedding. One of the guests pulled out a BlackBerry and started dazzling the other guests with how he could check his email on his phone, and why he thinks Apple is evil. That was a lot to pack into a compound sentence, and both my software developer husband and myself immediately went on the defense by offering counterpoints for the rest of the table. Although it wasn’t a very tech-savvy crowd, it made me think about why tech folks hated BlackBerry phones so much.
Here are some clear reason why both consumer and developers hate BlackBerry. Feel free to use them at your next awkward dinner party or happy hour confrontation:
Consumers hate BlackBerry because:
Companies don’t build BlackBerry apps.
Popular consumer utilities and entertainment apps like Netflix, Yelp, and Hulu are not building apps for RIM’s BlackBerry or Playbook. Apps are a form of media that are increasingly part of our popular culture. Caring about our favorite apps is the new caring about our favorite soap opera. If you don’t have access to apps that are captivating the collective imagination like Spotify for example, you are missing out on a common cultural experience.
BlackBerrys are “all work, not play”.
When BlackBerry was introduced to the market, the ability to send and receive email on the go changed the way that workers operated in the new 24/7 mobile workplace. Workers could suddenly work at all hours, and some bosses abused this new capability. But now the mobile workplace has changed again. Employees now use devices and computers for a mix of entertainment and work. Tablets for example make excellent devices for delivering presentations during out of office meetings. But what makes the iPad even more valuable is that you can close the presentation and then watch a movie via your Netflix app on the train ride home.
BlackBerrys cause image problems.
We live in a time where pulling a BlackBerry out of your pocket and placing it on the desk during your interview could cost you the job at startup or tech company. The popular image of a BlackBerry user is that they are out of touch with contemporary technology. In short, it makes you look like a dinosaur. People hate BlackBerrys because they don’t want to be associated with tech pariahs.
Companies don’t build BlackBerry apps because:
Developing for BlackBerry is painful.
Ask any mobile developer about building apps for BlackBerry and they will roll their eyes. Building BlackBerry apps is notoriously hard. According to a letter from an anonymus RIM employee published in Boy Genius Report:
Developing for BlackBerry is painful, and despite what you’ve been told, things haven’t really changed that much since Jamie Murai’s letter. Our SDK / development platform is like a rundown 1990′s Ford Explorer. Then there’s Apple, which has a shiny new BMW M3… just such a pleasure to drive. Developers want and need quality tools.
If we create great tools, we will see great work. Offer shit tools and we shouldn’t be surprised when we see shit apps.
The letter that the writer refers to can be found here. The letter begins with:
You win. I concede defeat. I no longer want to attempt developing an app for the Playbook. Are you happy now? Surely you must be. Considering how terribly designed the entire process is, from the registration right through to loading an app into the simulator, I can only assume that you are trying to drive developers away by inconveniencing them as much as humanly possible.
If no one wants to develop for RIM devices, then the consumer loses out.
There is no financial gain in developing for BlackBerry.
Because the BlackBerry marketshare is dropping rapidly, there is no financial incentive to build BlackBerry apps. The process is so painful (see above), that any potential profit to be made is not even worth it. Instead, companies are focused on building top apps for iPhone and iPad.
There is a glimmer of hope for Canadian-based company RIM. Canadians love their BlackBerrys! In the Canadian smartphone market, BlackBerry users account for 32.6% of total smartphone users. iPhone accounts for 31.2% and Android accounts for 27.9%.
The next time you find yourself in a showdown with a diehard BlackBerry fan, don’t justify your anti-BlackBerry arguments with the phrase, “because everyone thinks so”. Everyone does think so, but facts make for better ammunition.
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View Comments (9)
Did you write this article to receive a free Apple product? The 'article' (more like a personal blog) should read "Why I dislike the Blackberry"; I strongly believe it is faux-pas to pass off your bias personal opinions as facts and make overall assumptions of how you think the world perceives RIM. As a journalist, please sell the world of useful information, not your integrity. Â
The great thing about blogging is that you get to both report news and analyze news. The fact that RIM has been losing at the smartphone game is not news. Many people hate Blackberry phones, and the reasons that I outlined above are not unique to just me. What has RIM done in the past year has been innovative, even a little bit?Â
@Kate Hough NFC, QNX
@Kate Hough NFC, QNX
"We live in a time where pulling a BlackBerry out of your pocket and placing it on the desk during your interview could cost you the job at startup or tech company."
Seriously...?
I work at a startup and use a blackberry. I had the first two iphones and switched back to blackberry because I can type much faster on it. Entertainment type stuff and apps are nice, but texting and sending emails fast is the most important thing I need from a phone.Â
I guess some people can type faster on Blackberry phones. In the startups that I am surrounded by, we are used to using Skype, 37Signals apps, JotNot for scanning docs on the fly, etc. For these business functions, we use iPhones.Â
You should get your facts straight. Developer makes the most money in the BlackBerry platform.
Sorry but you should use do your due dilligence before you write an article.
That's what RIM's VP of developer relations, Alec Saunders wants you to think. From Information Week: "There's a big reason why RIM is talking
profitability to developers: PlayBook OS 2.0 and BlackBerry 10 will
utterly fail if developers don't support the forthcoming platforms with
tens of thousands of applications." You can make some money from BB apps, but the effort is not worth it if you are building a sustainable company. If you are an indie developer and you want to make a one-off app, then go ahead. It's just not a good idea for startups to focus on building BB apps. BB is flooding the media with this PR because no one wants to build for them.
my first smartphone was a 8220 flip adult table then went to kids table with a 8520 curve after 14 of them i went to a torch 2 9810 4g, i don't hat bb, i just don't want to be a sheep and go with most evil apple or not so evil android, i like a real keyboard, and my email accounts, i use pandora, i heart radio, and a few others i have no real trouble with my bb,