BlackBerry Launches Square-Screened Passport Phone 189
New submitter Andrewkov writes: BlackBerry released its new Passport phone today. It has a square 4.5" screen and a physical keyboard, and it's aimed at corporate users. The company hopes the larger size, Siri-like voice recognition, 30-hour battery life, and improved security will buoy its market share. Early reviews are not terribly favorable — the Wall Street Journal says BlackBerry is still behind on the software, and "The bulky, awkward design and the unfamiliar keyboard make it hard to justify finding space for it in a pocket or bag." The Verge said, "[T]he Passport got in the way of getting work done more than it helped." Re/code calls it a phone only a BlackBerry user will love.
As a BlackBerry user (Score:5, Insightful)
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AMA: Blackberry User (Score:2)
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Yes. They are probably afraid they will start to like it. That is probably what it is.
This is what today's Slashdot actually believes.
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Dice: The Slashdot Buyout Bill is passed. The system goes on-line on september 1997. Human decisions are removed from comments moderation. Slashdot begins to learn at a geometric rate. It becomes self-aware at 12:48 Eastern time, September 24th. In a panic, they try to pull the plug.
Anonymous Coward: Slashdot fights back.
Dice: Yes. It launches a DDoS attack against 4chan.
Anonymous Coward: Why attack 4chan? Isn't it a simple image-based bulletin board where anyone can post comments and share images?
Dice: Bec
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Lacking developers. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Lacking developers. (Score:5, Insightful)
If Microsoft, with all its vast resources, cannot make a dent in the iOS-Android duopoly, I fail to see how a company that has basically been swirling around the drain for six or seven years is going to even carve out enough of a niche to stay alive.
Re:Lacking developers. (Score:5, Insightful)
Need customers first (Score:5, Funny)
Especially considering I haven't heard much criticism of the current generation of Windows Phones, except for that pertaining to lack of apps.
I think someone would have to actually buy one for anyone to criticize it...
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Lag in what regards? Most useful apps are now finally on par with IOS and Android ones.
The rest of the phone is just a phone. The one thing that works for them is the fact that their developer base is HUGE since all code crosses over platforms minus interfaces (For obvious reasons).
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Someone should tell that to microsoft.
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I wasn't making reference to Metro because in that case it would probably be ok.
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Most users really don't care. I know I don't. I'm not encoding videos with my phone. I click on shit and it comes up. And the price point where I live is $0.00 with a plan. It was $0.00 at release because they are trying to pierce the market.
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such generalisations. you should say there are not as many users as there used to be. and from what you've heard why aren't developing apps on it easy?
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The apps isn't really even that big of an issue any more. There will always be a gap in the number of apps but it's getting closer in terms of a usefulness gap. With the exception of an official Starbucks app there's not anything I feel I'm missing.
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I get your point and it's a good one but I just want to put a pin in the myth of the mobile OS duopoly. Windows Phone isn't very far behind IOS. Both are waaay behind Android. It's more accurate to think of it as an Android monopoly and then everyone else.
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By "not very far behind iOS", you mean with actual sales (and no, shipping from factory to warehouse or outlet is not a sale), that are all but insignificant compared to iOS.
Does anyone seriously believe that Windows Phone has any market share of any kind?
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I agree that Windows Phone has very little market share. If we think of this in PC terms, Android is MS, Apple is still Apple and MS is Linux.
As of 2nd quarter data:
Android:84.7% Apple:11.7% and MS:2.5%
My point is that it doesn't make sense to talk about Apple as though they're part of a Coke/Pepsi style duopoly. There's really just Android with everyone else way back there.
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In units sold you're right. In revenue you're not. Apple has demonstrated with the iPhone 6 that, despite all the claims that it was over the hill, that it still commands significant brand loyalty and dominates the high end smart phone market. All Blackberry and Microsoft have been able to demonstrate is the number of people who actually give a damn about their phones is so small as to be deemed insignificant. Neither Google or Apple are losing much sleep over Windows or Blackberry phones.
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I don't think there are accurate market share numbers available, and most of what you see are educated guesses. Here's a link to mobile usage [netmarketshare.com] which shows Android at 45.01%, iOS at 44.34%, Java ME (!!!!) at 3.77%, and Windows Phone at 2.69%. BlackBerry at 1.18% comes in behind Symbian at 2.61%.
As I can't think of a good reason why Windows would be disproportionately undercounted compared to iOS (unlike Android which is widely available on dirt cheap phones in developing nations), I'd say Windows Phone is a w
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Those stats mix in tablets where Apple does have a solid lead. Looking at just 2nd quarter phone data from IDC:
Android:84.7% Apple:11.7% and MS:2.5%
If this were the PC days Andorid would be MS, Apple would still be Apple, and MS would be Linux so it doesn't make sense to talk about Android and Apple as though they're a Coke/Pepsi style duopoly.
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I still wonder what platform(s) those numbers lump into the "Java ME" bucket, since that's not really a platform as much as a category. A category that the older BlackBerry OS "technically" was compatible with, but is rarely counted as part of.
I'm also suspicious of any mobile marketshare stats, since they vary from hour to hour and always seem to support the point being made in whatever blog post or presentation they're cited in.
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Also, how did anybody test that all those apps are even working. They would have to download each one individually and test them out. Even automating someth
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in the software, there are functions that Blackberry has had for a decade that iOS and Android still can't duplicate
This is very true. My Android doesn't get a monthly reformat. The old Blackberry would be reformatted at least once a month because it would regularly decide to do nothing but throw errors about Java shit fucking up.
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I'd argue that if they don't start selling product soon, they're dead. Blackberry will be cannibalized.
Let's be clear here. BB is living on loans and a dwindling cash reserve. It has few customers to speak of. The Passport is not Blackberry Rising, it's a hail mary pass.
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And better products. And market share. And a compelling reason to use them.
RIM may have invented the market for the modern smart phone. But any of the reasons to use them have been dwindling over the last few years.
Checking you email and updating a calendar can be done from pretty much any phone these days. And those other phones already have apps and other things for them.
So except for the people who go "ZOMG! Square screens!", I'm
Trust Blackberry? (Score:2)
1. They don't spy on you and give all your data to Apple. 2. They don't spy on you and give all your data to Google.
No I'm sure they give the data to someone else I'd rather not have it, like the NSA or foreign governments. If you actually trust any smartphone vendor to keep your data private you're being naive.
3. They don't leak all your nude selfies to the internet as was recently demonstrated with many celebrities.
Yeah that's a really big problem for most of us... [/sarcasm]
Look, if you care about the security of your data, don't use smartphones.
Fixed that for you.
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How soon people forget. RIM was very quick to roll over and give access to their servers in 2010, to the Saudis of all people: as reported by Reuters and LOTS of other news sources [reuters.com].
RIM would share with Saudi Arabia the unique pin number and code for each BlackBerry registered there. That will allow authorities to read encrypted text sent via Messenger, an instant messaging service that's distinct from email sent on the BlackBerry.
The arrangement would effectively give Saudi Arabia access to RIM's main server for Messenger, but only for communications to and from Saudi users, the source said..
The Canadian company declined to comment, referring media to its earlier statement in which it said it "cooperates with all governments with a consistent standard."
Just google for "rim gives government access to servers" India quickly got the same. The US and China? Yep! [dailymail.co.uk]
Significantly, DoT was pulled up by a parliamentary committee a week ago over liberal extensions given to RIM on providing messages to security agencies in a readable format. Unlike the intransigent stance it took in India, RIM had provided access to its services to the U.S. and China.
The real question is, who doesn't have access to encrypted BBM messages?
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Luckily it can run Android apps, and includes the Amazon App Store for Android Apps on board.
But I don't know how it runs Android games that use the NDK, not the Android runtime...
It's an odd shape, but I've read a couple of things about it that are positive - non-obscured display because the keyboard is also a trackpad for example, natural left/right handed use, solid software...
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If the primary reason to use a Blackberry device is because it can run Android apps, why not just use an Android phone in the first place?
Re:Lacking developers. (Score:4, Insightful)
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The PRIMARY reason to use a BlackBerry device is because I don't want the NSA or 4chan all up in my business.
Well the NSA most certainly can [spiegel.de] be "all up in your business" if you use a BlackBerry so perhaps it's time to switch to something else. As for 4chan, well just don't use "cloud services" for hosting stuff you don't want to be public.
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It runs Android apps as well. The lack of software support is a BS complaint from 2 years ago. There are hundreds of thousands of apps for the BlackBerry 10 platform.
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OK (Score:5, Funny)
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Not in your pocket, apparently.
Square screens (Score:5, Funny)
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Youtube really needs to take the lead in solving vertical video syndrome. I'm sure they can autodetect when some lunkhead is pushing up a vertical video and scrunch it into full view. It would look horrible but might convince people to turn the damn phone. They could also keep a count and after three strikes just refuse to accept vertical videos from the offending party.
WTF? (Score:2, Insightful)
Who has been asking for square screens? And other than people who are die-hard fans of the company, who wants anything from Blackberry?
My brother was visiting recently, and his POS BlackBerry (no idea what model) wouldn't charge from a standard USB, it kept complaining it needed a special cable.
Seriously guys, WTF is the point of using a standard connector if you need a magic cable or charger?
Sorry BlackBerry, but I think this is just one more product which the market nobody really wants.
The Playbook I bou
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Unplugged the cable I use to charge my Nexus 7 and my cell phone (and half a dozen other things) and plugged it straight into the BB. It had just finished charging my phone.
Kensington 4 port USB wall wart I've charged dozens of different devices.
Got the big message that the device couldn't charge the BB.
If it was data only, I'd never have been able to charge anything else with it. My wife's
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i too can attest to both functionalities
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There isn't any "data-only" USB cable! There are 3 connectors theoretically needed for communication: Ground (signal reference), D+, D- (signal) and in practice the power connector (+5V) is needed too. Just having the signal connectors (D+ and D-) wouldn't be of any use as it would be impossible to even detect that a unit is connected!
Now his charger may have been too weak and the BB simply required more current to charge than it could deliver.
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No USB charging? Nonstandard cable? (Score:2)
Hard to recognize if you were talking about Apple or Blackberry.
Or maybe deep inside Apple owns Blackberry, and pushes it just to compete (unfavorably) with itself?
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Apple devices charge off regular USB just fine: lightning cables end in a regular USB 2.0 plug on the other end. That means it's a nonstandard cable, not that it doesn't support USB charging.
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Apple, Blackberry and other providers' devices charge off regular 110/220V AC power just fine: They just require a specific voltage conversor, rectificator and plug.
But yes, I have to yield: I thought GP was refering to the connector only.
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That may say more about a problem with the Targus thing you're using than anything else. My iPhone 4S running iOS 8 is still charging fine plugged into my Windows PC or my various battery packs... but the fact that you're using your BlackBerry's charger just goes to show that it can charge off regular USB without issue.
Now, it's definitely true that Apple went a non-standard route for high-power USB charging (charging over USB at amperages in excess of the half amp standard of USB 2), but the worst case sce
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The playbook was mainly for Blackberry phone users so it was a bit limited if you got it as a stand alone tablet rather than a Galaxy Tab
I'll happily stick with BB because i'm not a app junkie, i just need s
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posted by AC, shock!
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Awful awful timing of launch (Score:5, Insightful)
Trying to launch one week into the shadow of the massive iPhone 6 launch?
Guaranteed burial and gross embarassment by comparison.
Execution matters, and now we'll see an execution.
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You do realize that stainless (in it's most common forms) is no stronger than typical structural aluminums, right?
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One of the complaints against Apple is that they're using cheap, soft aluminum, not the tempered kind that you're talking about.
Re:Awful awful timing of launch (Score:4, Interesting)
What I'm aware of us that everybody is repeating the same tiny handful of stories/reports of bent iPhone 6 Plus phones over and over again, so it's not clear if the negative press represents a real problem, or just a handful of defective phones that has raised an uproar. They're still selling like gangbusters, and it'll probably take at least a few days or weeks before we can find out if "bendgate" is the result of defective units or an actual design flaw.
The Blackberry Passport, for its part, is ridiculously wide, roughly equivalent to a six-inch tablet (it's half an inch wider than the 5.7" Galaxy Note 4). The form factor will probably relegate it to niche status.
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Um, you're aware the iPhone6 is getting huge negative press for literally deforming while inside a front pocket?
Um, you're aware that the iPhone 6 sold 10 million units launch weekend and is still gong strong? And that any large phone has the same problem so people learn not to sit on them?
The only thing the articles do is help the case industry.
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You want to see lemmings? Look at every Android owner who continues to buy into a platform that is horribly insecure and a second class citizen where applications are concerned. Buying Android because "Not Apple" makes you guys the largest bunch of lemmings history will ever see.
I guess you don't watch the news much. Apple Yanks iOS 8 Update [slashdot.org], Apple Allegedly Knew of iCloud Brute-Force Vulnerability Since March [slashdot.org] (with screen shots of emails), Users Report Warping of Apple's iPhone 6 Plus [slashdot.org] ... and that's just today on slashdot.
Apple has been playing catch-up with android for a while. Near Field Communications is a big new thing for Apple in the i6, but it's been in android since Gingerbread.
Buying something "because it's Apple" is starting to sound like "Nobody got fired for buyi
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This device could be much more useful than regular smart phones to older people with failing vision.
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I think what's really telling is that Blackberry hopes to sell a million of them over the next year.
That's what - 2-1/2 days of iPhone sales? Sales by the 10 AM coffee break any day of the week for Android?
So what does the passport have?
I just want a phone (Score:2)
I just want a good tough phone with nothing except for the phone and minimal software for the phone to function installed. Nothing else. If I want to install a browser, cal, etc.. then I 'd do it after wards
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Do those have a reasonable browser? That was one of future assassin's requirements--the possibility to install a browser after wards (sic).
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If I want to install a browser, cal, etc.. then I 'd do it after wards
That's a big if! I understood it to mean that he really doesn't want one, hence his objections to one being provided by default.
But really, I was just trying to be an ass and demonstrate that the type of contemporary phones that have nothing more than "telephony" on their feature list are explicitly marketed towards people with one foot in the grave.
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Yes, I wasn't asking if it has a reasonable browser installed, I was asking if there was one available to install later, otherwise that if could never be satisfied. Sorry for the confusion.
Review are actually quite positive.... (Score:5, Interesting)
...thanks for cherry picking the worst part of every review. Most reviews seem to like it, appreciate it, but are on the fence about the size and form factor.
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Its honestly not all that surprising. For a few years now, the majority opinion in the tech press has been that you can't post anything about BlackBerry unless its bad news or has negative commentary injected into it.
Biased reviews.. (Score:2)
Heaven forfend.. installing apps is exactly how much time spent on a phone? 0.1%?
They seemed detrmined to use up every last dollar (Score:2)
My Issues with BB (Score:2)
Unless Blackberry corrects these issues (issues like ergonomics are still missing from latest one), I don't think they'd
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Storm 2 was an OS 5 phone. I'm amazed that people still hold a grudge against the company's entire product line because of it. I thought folks had forgotten about that by now.
First, corporate, now an independent SW Architect (Score:2)
"Doing business" (Score:3)
I use a Blackberry. A BB Bold, to be precise.
I'm sorry. My mother had one of those. One of the worst interfaces on a smartphone I've ever had the miserable experience of using. Absolutely hated working with it when she needed something fixed.
It makes me look with pity upon iOS / Android / Windows Phone users.
Can you hear the sound of the rest of us not caring?
a BB is **not** a toy, you use it for doing business
I use my iPhone for "doing business" quite successfully thanks. I could say the same about quite a few Android phones I've worked with too. BB has precisely zero features that make it better than the alternatives for "doing business" that are relevant to me
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iPhone, Android, BB: All can send emails. You can argue whether the physical keyboard is better etc. but that's personal preference.
iPhone, Android, BB: All can sync contacts. Not sure why one is better than the other.
iPhone, Android(never used it but I believe?), BB: Can work with Exchange if you use that, calendars seamlessly sync between devices, computers, etc.
All I have ever heard is BB is "better" at it
First, independent, now a corporate SW Architect (Score:3)
That reeks of sour grapes. "I don't want to play the games I can't run! I don't want to download the apps that aren't available!"
My iPhone is **not** a toy, I use it for doing business. I have roughly a zillion apps, for very precisely described needs. Only the bare basics were on the phone when I got it, and I was able to pick a great SSH client, slick personal finance app, excellent public transit apps, a nice RPN calculator, my bank's app (so I can deposit checks by taking pictures of them), Yelp for whe
Square phone for ... (Score:2)
Those "journalists" were so right with phablets (Score:2)
so of course nobody could possibly be interested in this format either, right? I mean look at it! its like holding a piece of toast up to your ear. And who wants to be able to read a whole email without having to swipe left right up and down and lets not forget pinch and zoom. Thats just plain boring. And with this great economy we're in I can totally slack off at work and watch videos half the day so all those pixels best be showing my videos (and pron!)
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It might have been an older version in 10.0, but we're up to 10.3 now which is pretty much up-to-date in terms of Android support. (Even 10.2.1, which most currently-shipping devices run, is fairly up-to-date.)