The maker of the BlackBerry said Friday that it wants U.S. and Canadian regulators to investigate a “false and misleading” report by a financial analyst that claims the company’s new smartphone is being returned in unusually high numbers.
Tag Archives: RIM
The Reinvention Epidemic
By Bill Fischer, Contributor Kodak couldn’t do it; HP and RIM are struggling, the popular betting is that Nokia won’t be able to do it, and that Dell wants to go private in order to hide the things that it might have to do – we’ll see for all how they play out. The jury is certainly still out on SONY and Yahoo. What about Samsung, does it have what it takes? It’s far from clear at the moment! Whole industries might be ready for it: tobacco, processed foods, mass transportation, entertainment, even banking? Did Detroit’s Big 3 do it or not, and if they did was it done willingly? Nestlé did it in coffee with Nespresso, and have been hugely successful in the effort, but it wasn’t entirely “willingly,” and they had to move that entire activity not only out of the company, but also out of town to succeed. IBM, has also had great success, along with Telekom Malaysia and China’s Haier Group, the three of whom are among the few that have done it several times; but name three others, if you can? …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Is Android in the business world to stay?
It’s official, and it’s been official for a while—Android is far and away the most popular smartphone OS in America. Ever since January 2011, when the platform surpassed RIM to take the top spot for the first time in comScore’s monthly market share rankings, Google’s operating system has continued to grow its user base, which accounts for 52 percent of the market as of this January.
This growth has been created on the back of substantial software upgrades, in the form of Ice Cream Sandwich and Jelly Bean (Android 4.0 and 4.1, respectively), as well as increasingly impressive hardware from OEMs like Samsung, HTC, Sony, Motorola and LG. Last year’s Samsung Galaxy S III was the first phone to dethrone the iPhone in total quarterly sales in years, according to research from Strategy Analytics, though the subsequent release of the iPhone 5 saw Apple retake the top spot quickly thereafter.
It’s easy to find a host of reasons for Android’s ascendance among consumers—a wide variety of devices offers more choice to prospective buyers, stronger hardware and bigger screens appeal to fans of the latest and greatest, and as of Android 4.0 and 4.1, the interface is arguably more impressive than the latest version of Apple iOS.
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…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld
When CEOs Get Terminated (by companies they founded)
By Karsten Strauss, Forbes Staff With RIM’s recent launch of its Blackberry 10, founder and board member Mike Lazaridis may have felt he’d, in some way, seen his company to safe harbor. “Safe” may be an overstatement, given competition in the mobile smartphone market these days and RIMs place in it, but let’s just say it gave him a positive event to step out on. But Lazaridis gave up CEO leadership at RIM over a year ago, some say due to shareholder pressure. It must be a surreal moment to be cast aside by a company you’ve founded. At best it must be like being dunked on by your own son, at worst like being shot in the knee by him. No wonder Facebook founder Mark Zuckerburg took such a strong ownership stance with his company. A number of founding company leaders have been dressed down by their own companies, some are stories of betrayal, some failure and some of redemption. In 2007, Jet Blue’s David Neeleman was pushed out of the top spot by the company he’d founded eight years prior. The reason? Service difficulties and the notion that JetBlue could have been more profitable with different leadership. Without skipping a beat, Neeleman stayed with the company and founded another airline, Azul, the following year. Aubrey McClendon founded Chesapeake Energy in 1982 at the age of 23. He announced this past January that he will step down as CEO amidst allegations of self-dealing, questionable business practices and a spendthrift nature. FORBES profiled McClendon in 2011, calling him America’s Most Reckless Billionaire. Possibly responsible for McClendon’s ouster is billionaire Carl Icahn, an investor with a presence on Chesapeake’s board, who felt he wasn’t cutting costs. In the wake of his departure announcement share prices have risen. Without the responsibility of running the company, McClendon may have time to complete the still unfinished massive wine cellar he began building in Oklahoma City in 2008. Win-win? Perhaps the most famous story of founder ouster is that of Steve Jobs. After hiring John Sculley as CEO in 1983, Jobs changed his mind about the former Pepsi President and conspired to have him removed. In a shocking twist, the Apple board sided with Sculley and Jobs was removed from his managerial role with Macintosh and resigned some months later. Following a failed but inspiring startup, NeXT Computer, and the acquisition of what would become Pixar, Apple’s purchase of NeXT brought Jobs back to Apple leadership and the rest, as they say, is history. Jobs has confessed that his ouster from Apple had been instrumental in his education and allowed him to develop his creativity and leadership. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
RIM founder says board asked him to stay as CEO
Research In Motion co-founder Mike Lazaridis says he has no plans to sell his significant interest in the BlackBerry maker now that he’s retiring as vice chairman and director. He also reveals that the board asked him last year to reconsider stepping down as chief executive. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org
RIM sells 1M BlackBerry 10s, surprise 4Q profit
Research In Motion Ltd. said Thursday that it sold about 1 million of its critically important new BlackBerry 10 devices and surprised Wall Street by returning to profitability in the most recent quarter. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org
Research in Motion Returns to Profitablity in Latest Quarter
Filed under: Technology, Telecommunications, Stocks, Mobile Technology, Consumer Electronics
By ROB GILLIES
TORONTO — Research In Motion said Thursday that it sold about 1 million of its critically important new BlackBerry 10 devices and returned to profitability in the most recent quarter.
The earnings provide a first glimpse of how RIM‘s new touch-screen Z10 is selling internationally and in Canada since its debut Jan. 31. Details on the U.S. launch are not part of the fiscal fourth quarter’s financial results because the Z10 just went on sale in the U.S. last week.
In the quarter that ended March 2, Research In Motion Ltd. (BBRY) earned $98 million, or 19 cents a share, compared with a loss of $125 million, or 24 cents a share, a year earlier. Revenue fell 36 percent to $2.7 billion, from $4.2 billion. Analysts surveyed by FactSet had expected $2.82 billion.
“I thought they were dead. This is a huge turnaround,” Jefferies analyst Peter Misek said from New York.
Misek said the Canadian company “demolished” the numbers, especially its gross margins. RIM reported gross margins of 40 percent, up from 34 percent a year earlier. The company credited higher average selling prices and higher margins for devices.
“This is a really, really good result,” Misek said. “It’s off to a good start.”
Chief executive Thorsten Heins said he implemented numerous changes at the company over the past year and those changes have resulted in RIM returning to profitability.
The company also announced that co-founder Mike Lazaridis will retire as vice chairman and director.
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Cisco, Apple, and Google Join Forces on Patent Law
By Douglas Ehrman, The Motley Fool
Filed under: Investing
Thursday saw lawmakers busy themselves with the issue of patent reform surrounding a bill introduced by Representative Peter DeFazio, an Oregon Democrat, which would raise the stack on any party bringing an infringement case that was not also a “practicing entity.” As complicated as all that may sound, the heart of the bill is targeted at shifting the cost of litigation to a party that does not actually use the patent but still brings suit and loses. Major technology firms including Cisco , Apple , and Google all support the bill because each spends millions every year defending these cases. Still, the proposed law poses some real hazards that ultimately outweigh its benefit as written.
The players
The new legislation is targeted specifically at patent litigation enforcement companies — aka PLECs, or “patent trolls” as they are more affectionately known by the companies that they harass and annoy. A PLEC does not actually make anything, but rather hunts for patents that it believes are being infringed and then files lawsuits. In rare cases, the original patent holder — the inventor of the patented technology — is a party to the suit, but in most cases, the PLEC buys the patent for itself and then goes about enforcing it.
The best-known patent troll case, and the one which brought the practice en vogue, was one that involved a judgment against BlackBerry (then Research In Motion), in which it was ordered to pay $612.5 million to NTP for patents the smartphone maker had infringed. What made that case especially egregious was the fact that Research In Motion had independently developed the technology and not acted in bad faith. Furthermore, the U.S. Patent Office had issued NTP “non-final rejections” of the patents held by NTP but had not processed the matter quickly enough to protect RIM. The judgment was the largest patent ruling in history at the time in was given, having only recently fallen to the Apple ruling in the Samsung case.
On the other side of this battle are the actual technology companies like BlackBerry and Cisco and Google that uses these patents to protect the things that they make. Last fall, The New York Times did an in-depth review of the issue:
In the smartphone industry alone, according to a Stanford University analysis, as much as $20 billion was spent on patent litigation and patent purchases in the last two years — an amount equal to eight Mars rover missions. Last year, for the first time, spending by Apple and Google on patent lawsuits and unusually big-dollar patent purchases exceeded spending on research and development of new products, according to public filings.
Cisco reported that it spent $50 million last year to defend 50 baseless cases. Clearly the cost of patent litigation is out of control and some type of reform is appropriate. The very existence of PLECs is premised on exploiting inefficiencies in the system and allowing non-productive opportunists to …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
New BlackBerry coming to the US on March 22
BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion will launch its new touchscreen smartphone in the U.S. with AT&T on March 22. The release will come several weeks after RIM launched the much-delayed devices elsewhere. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Phys.org
BlackBerry Z10 Could Arrive on March 22nd
After debuting in 21 countries already by the end of this week, sources for AT&T tell Bloomberg that RIM‘s big gamble in the smartphone industry, the BlackBerry Z10, will finally hit American shores on March 22nd. No price has been confirmed by AT&T, according to The Verge, but Verizon has noted the price will be $199.99 with a new contract.
…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Tech
The CloudFlare Outage: Security Comes From A Diversity Of Suppliers
By Tim Worstall, Contributor It’s a useful general rule that true security comes from having a diverse system of suppliers. Of course, no system at all is 100% perfect but having a number of different suppliers based in different places is likely to give the greatest security one can get. The outage that CloudFlare had is a good example of this. Here’s an excellent little piece describing what went wrong: This is one of the aspects of the Internet’s reliability that continues to worry me. It includes some very large, complex distributed systems owned by a range of companies (Microsoft, Google, CloudFlare, Facebook etc.) but within those companies there is a natural tendency to standardise on a single vendor and small range of devices to perform key functions like edge routing. The Internet as a whole is very diverse in technologies and software, which is why it is so robust, but we are going to keep seeing these large entities suffering large if not global outages as long as they value economy of scale in purchasing and maintenance over true system diversity. Worse, if multiple companies standardise on the same hardware, you get problems like the Juniper BGP routering vulnerability that nailed Blackberry maker RIM and a number of ISPs. The basic problem they faced was that all of their edge routers were from Juniper. And when they were hit with an oddity (something that is near inevitable in something as complex as the internet) then all of them went over at the same time. The suggested solution is that at least one edge router in each of their data centres should not be a Juniper one in the future. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
When Virtualization Meets Mobile
Virtualization and mobile have been two of the largest trends to hit enterprise IT in the last decade. Virtualization from a server perspective has been a disruptive force in the IT world, resulting in VMware becoming one of the largest software company in terms of market cap and analysts estimating that well over 50% of servers are now virtualized. And we all know about the mobile and Bring Your Own Device (“BYOD”) revolution happening in enterprises today. But implementing some form of virtualization on mobile devices is not yet widely deployed in the enterprise market, and to date has been the purview of smaller companies offering solutions. But with recent announcements by major mobile players RIM and AT&T, and with today’s announcement at Mobile World Congress by Samsung of a new platform called KNOX, it appears that virtualization on mobile is turning the corner and will be heading towards widespread adoption this calendar year. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Not Even Alicia Keys Can Save BlackBerry As Supply Constraints Cap Sales
Research in Motion mounted an impressive rally over the past few months in anticipation to the release of its new BlackBerry 10 smartphones, yet investors may havebeen irrationally exuberant. Recent channel checks by Canaccord Genuity suggest sales have dramatically underperformed previous estimates, mainly because of supply constraints and limited support from carriers. While the product may look good, it will be difficult for RIM?s Z10s and Q10s to compete with a host of new Android and Window phones, and possibly a new iPhone expected in the first half of 2013, according to Canaccord?s analysts. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Technology
Former RIM Co-CEO Sells All RIM/BlackBerry Shares
Filed under: Technology, Industry News, Telecommunications
BlackBerry (NASDAQ: BBRY) has gone through quite a lot of changes, including a name change from Research In Motion. What is interesting is that its former co-CEO Jim Balsillie is no longer a shareholder. A Schedule 13G filing with the SEC on Thursday morning shows that Balsillie has eliminated his entire stake.
Balsillie was formerly one of the largest shareholders, with more than 26 million shares. The date is very delayed, as well as the as-of date, which turns out to be Dec. 31, 2012. Balsillie’s opportunity costs might have been huge. We do not know at what date the sales started, but RIM shares closed out 2012 at $11.87 and peaked above $14.00 earlier in December. Before that, all you have to do is to go back as recently as November 21 to see RIM shares back under $10.00. The lowest price of the fourth-quarter was listed as $7.27, and that was on October 1.
We would note that Michael Lazaridis shows in the same sort of filing that he held some 29,904,297 shares as of December 31, 2012.
What is interesting is that BlackBerry shares are up 3% at $14.40, even after the Balsillie filing was made known. BlackBerry shares have traded in a 52-week trading range of $6.22 to $18.32.
Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Consumer Electronics, Corporate Governance, Insider Activity, Technology, Technology Companies, Telecom & Wireless Tagged: BBRY
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New applications for Blackberry 10
Hi everyone,
Introduction
I have been planning this post for a while, but I had some real life troubles and also other duties. Finally, I have some time to write this down briefly!
In short, I have created two new applications for Blackberry 10. I tested them on my
| Reading articles |
Mrdanga Player
I had been playing bass guitar for many years during my student years, and I have been a fan of mrdanga recently. There was an application for Harmattan (N9) called “Finger Drums”. I felt in love with that application after the first checkout. It is an awesome piece of software with lots of fun!
This drove me to write an application for Blackberry 10 to enable people to get to know what mrdanga is and how it sounds. It is a lot simpler emulation than a whole drum kit. I think it is still nice for those who like this instrument, and potential newcomers that can get to know it this way. There is also a nice video on youtube if you would like to check out what the masters can do with this instrument. 🙂
The source code is available under the KDE umbrella. The migration is now ongoing to Playground/Mobile where the wiki-reader also resides.
The application was submitted to AppWorld, and it is in review stage. For those who would like to try out the latest version, I uploaded the package to my dropbox. I would also like to share some screenshots here.
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| Splash screen |
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| Mrdanga heads with darker background |
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| Mrdanga heads with brighter background |
Kudos
Many thanks go to RIM for providing DevAlpha and Limited Edition devices to the community!
For sure, many thanks go to the KDE Project as well for providing the source code repository, bugtracker, and the whole KDE infrastructure for this!
There will be a follow up post soon about developing Blackberry 10 applications from command line with cmake. Stay tuned!
…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Planet KDE
Three obstacles to restoring the BlackBerry brand
RIM today hosted a major event in New York to launch the new BlackBerry 10 OS. RIM also announced that the company is rebranding itself as BlackBerry. A fresh new brand with a highly anticipated mobile platform should give the company reason for optimism, but BlackBerry 10 (BB10) isn’t just a new iteration of the once-dominant smartphone brand—it’s a sink-or-swim proposition that will determine the fate of the company itself.
BB 10 has been delayed time and time again. You can’t fault a company for being dedicated to getting it right—BlackBerry deserves kudos for having the conviction to make sure BB10 is polished and delivers the experience intended, despite the fallout and negative impact of delaying the launch.

While we’ve waited to see what’s next from BlackBerry, though, its market share has plummeted. BlackBerry has dropped from the leading smartphone platform, to battle with Microsoft’s Windows Phone for a distant third place—fighting over the few table scraps left over from iOS and Android.
Restoring faith in the brand and winning back customers won’t be easy. Here are three primary challenges the new BlackBerry must overcome in order to make BlackBerry formidable once again.
To read this article in full or to leave a comment, please click here
Source: FULL ARTICLE at PCWorld
Blackberry 10: A New Market Worthy Competitor
By Maribel Lopez, Contributor In a global launch that spanned London, Dubai, Johannesburg, Toronto and New York, RIM announced a re-invented product and company. VP of Developer relation Alex Saunders spoke about the amazing global developer support with 15,000 apps being submitted in one weekend and another 19,000 in the following the next. Saunders said “It’s the largest catalog of apps every for a first generation launch in mobile. Developers have embraced BB10.” Martyn Mallick said over 70,000 applications available on BB10 today. “With this momentum, we expect thousands of apps to be submitted per week.” He mentioned that it wasn’t just the volume of apps, but the critical apps that were important. He stated Blackberry has support for the top 1,000 apps globally. These include business and consumer apps such as Skype, Angry Birds, Amazon’s Kindle, and SAP.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
Analyst Shows Caution Right After Blackberry 10 Launch
Filed under: Technology, Earnings, Telecommunications
Research in Motion Ltd. (NASDAQ: RIMM) has now debuted its very late release of the Blackberry 10 operating system. While we have already seen releases that Verizon, Sprint, and AT&T will carry the new devices, we wanted to know what Wall Street thinks of the launch. Its stock price indicates “not very much” but we still wanted to see what analysts are saying.
Yesterday we had some caution from UBS and Oppenheimer ahead of the Blackberry 10 release. Now we have Shaw Wu of Stern Agee voicing some concerns. We maintains a Neutral rating and has no price targets on RIM.
On changing the name to BlackBerry, Wu said, “We believe changing the company name to BlackBerry from Research in Motion (RIM) makes sense in that it simplifies its brand name. This is a move that many have asked for some time and interesting to see that the company has finally agreed.”
Wu thinks that the new phones are coming to the market too late and that the prices may be too high. He said, “While the Z10 will be available in the U.K., Canada, and the U.A.E. soon, the later launch in the U.S. in March could be disappointing to some. In addition, the Q10 won’t be available until April. So far, price points at $149.99 and $199.99 don’t seem competitive as many Android smartphones are available for $99, $49, or free. We believe RIMM and/or carriers may need to price more aggressively to generate interest.”
Wu concluded, “We maintain our Neutral rating as we continue to be concerned with RIMM‘s fundamentals where competitive pressures from Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) and Google Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) are unlikely to subside and the company faces a major product transition with BB10.”
After 2:30, shares are down 6.5% at $14.64 versus a 52-week trading range of $6.22 to $18.32. More important than anything is that RIM has traded a whopping 180 million shares against an average daily volume of almost 50 million shares. This is unheard-of trading volume.
Better late than never.
Filed under: 24/7 Wall St. Wire, Analyst Calls, Consumer Electronics, Technology, Technology Companies, Telecom & Wireless Tagged: AAPL, GOOG, RIMM
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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance
BlackBerry 10 Provides Slim Hope For BlackBerry
By Forrester Research, Contributor To avoid brand dilution, RIM’s corporate brand name is disappearing today and is being replaced by BlackBerry for shareholders and employees in an attempt to instill brand values internally.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest
BlackBerry Names Alicia Keys as Creative Director
At today’s BlackBerry 10 launch in New York, CEO Thorsten Heins announced that Alicia Keys would be joining the company’s ranks as their new Global Creative Director. The recently rebranded BlackBerry – fare thee well, RIM – has been desperate to shore up interest in its products and services to slow the downward spiral of its own stock, and it’s hoping that a famous face might inspire an uptick in sales. Celebrity executives are evidently all the rage, with Intel and Polaroid teaming up with will.i.am and Lady Gaga respectively and now Keys is the latest addition to the exclusive club of pop stars with impressive corporate titles.
Source: FULL ARTICLE at IGN Tech







