Recommended Posts

*shrug* I like my BlackBerry. I can't speak for anyone else's experience. I definitely wouldn't want a touchscreen phone, and the options with physical buttons are becoming more and more scarce on other platforms.

Thread comes off a bit arrogant, but there is some truth in it and I hope folks will take a second look at them. They may not be the stylish, popular choice, but they're still quite nice phones. <3

You're right. In a round-about edit to my reply, I'll say that for businesses, I really don't think there is a more universally deployable and maintainable device than a Blackberry. When one company I worked for jumped off their Blackberries and provider of many years and went to iPhones and AT&T company wide, I couldn't have been more disappointed. Not even in the same universe for business purposes IMNSHO.

My company has had well over 50 Blackberries going all the way back to the 7100 and up to the Tourch - based on the recommendation of the previous IT personel. Hated them since day 1. kept trying through the years to like em, but the IT guys even second guessed their own choices since the 8330. We were going to try to roll out the Tourches after they supplied me one to test... pffft.... i wouldn't recommend that phone to ANY one. Suffice to say we are all on Androids now and loving it. Part of the reason for the hate has already been stated. Menu system [even for IT] is confusing at best. Hardware is substandard at best . But in the end we've turned from BB and have not looked back since. The company could vanish and i could care less.

So myth's be damned - i hate Blackberry simply becuase they suck at doing what they're suppose to do.

I hate Blackberry as compared to other phones for a few minor reasons:

1.) They take ages to turn on and in typical old school PDA fashion, are only truly off when you do a battery pull.

2.) Ambiguous or redundant menus and settings. Having to deal with many different types a day, it's like travelling in a city with no street signs or too many of them. You just kinda have to poke around in the dark if you're unsure of where something is or on the other hand, go into three different settings with a similar name/look.

3.) The average person hasn't a facking clue about stuff like service books, Blackberry Admin, exchange servers, Enterprise, etc. so it's really only useful for the techies, executives with an IT department, or people on a PAYG service who just need a keyboarding phone.

4.) With the exception of stuff like the Storm, Torch, etc., the looks haven't evolved. Your choices are either Vanilla, Vanilla, Vanilla, or Sour Milk (touchscreen variants). They could be on OS20 and the design would still look like something out of the early smartphone craze.

My big problem with Blackberry is that they pretty much defined the industry at one point and still to this day have technology that hasn't been incorporated into current smartphones that are more "advanced". However, their plan seems to be to rest on their laurels, hoping that slight advantage is all it takes to carry them for another decade.

Missed this post but 100% agree. Add 5.) Hardware is easily broken.

I just got a brand new Verizon Blackberry Bold Touch 9930 about a month ago for work. Unfortunately we don't have a choice in work phones, Blackberry is it (I work at one of the top 3 US banks), and the only non-Blackberry options are using "Good Mobile" on my iPhone. Considering Good Mobile will not work on a jailbroken device, I had to go with the Blackberry option. Besides, having a second phone is cool right?

After living with the Blackberry for a month, I can say it's not the worst thing in the world. It really doesn't excel anywhere - email works just as well on the BB as it does on my iPhone. Calendar and messaging are nothing special as well (again, nothing different than what I have on my iPhone). The interface feels dated compared to Android/iOS/WP7 - almost feature phone like. The keyboard is nice, but I don't find that I type any faster or more accurately on it than my iPhone. Again, it's not bad - just nothing special.

Would I ever buy a BB for personal usage? No. Do I hate it? Not at all. It's just nothing to write home about.

I did find this comment from the OP sums up the BB experience quite nicely, however: (emphasis mine)

Now, what about more pedestrian concerns like camera/flash, video recording, music capabilities, etc. BlackBerries can do all of that; sure, the camera might not be the absolute best, but really -- who cares? It's good enough, and that is all that matters. If you need high-res photos, odds are you should use a DSLR anyway. Front-facing camera? Again, some people want it, most don't care. It's not a big deal. Music? BlackBerries support numerous formats like AAC, AMR,FLAC, MP3, M4A, OGG, WMA, WAV, MIDI, ADPCM2 (yes, some like MIDI are useless). Can an iPhone do FLAC? Nope. Don't know about you but I like my lossless audio.

Being simply "good enough" is why I suspect RIM is bleeding market share like a sieve. As for lossless audio - ALAC (Apple Lossless) works just as well as FLAC - and it too is open source. I too love lossless audio. :-)

vmware horizon mobile is going to change business phones.... you can have your personal phone and then have your secure work vm on it.... making it much easier on businesses so they don't have to spend money on getting everyone company phones. and this is another reason android is more appealing as well.

this technology is more important to businesses then something like BBM or whatnot.

I don't hate BlackBerries. Its just that the OS feels, a little, only a little, dated.

The Exterior is always great

World has yet to see keybords that beat the BB ones.

Yes, I have used Palm Pre and it was awesome but not as good as Torch.

I want to apologize if I came across as arrogant. It's just that for iOS/Android/WP7 people here seem to have agreed on a "it's a matter of personal choice" attitude, but with BBs they get a lot of (misinformed) negative opinions. I just wanted to try to clear a few things up in hopes that people will give BBs a fair shake -- they do some things much better than competitors, some things worse, and some about the same. RIM needs new management, but their problems can still be fixed. Their phones are not garbage, and it is just as reasonable to like BBs as any other phone.

  • Like 1

Have had a few Blackberry devices as my work phone over the last 4 years or so. They do the job for a work phone well enough for me and I'm happy with them from that perspective. With that said I would never ever consider getting one as a personal phone. They all look much the same and as has been said already, the OS is dated. It does what it needs to do and does it well, but it's certainly nothing special.

BlackBerry plays FLAC and OGG VORBIS out-of-the-box? What the hell, bro'?

Yep! From here http://docs.blackber..._1018040_11.jsp :

Supported audio and video file formats

Depending on your BlackBerry? device model and wireless service provider, some media file formats might not be supported.

  • AAC
  • AMR
  • FLAC
  • MP3
  • M4A
  • OGG
  • WMA
  • WAV

To be honest I haven't tested it on my Torch 9860, but that is straight from RIM's website, so... I don't see why it would be wrong. :)

Edit: Just tested a FLAC file. It works! :D

Edit 2: And, no, I'm not using any 3rd-party software.

You talk about how FLAC is so important but in the next phrase you dismiss criticism about the camera.

Also most of the stuff you listed Nokia's phones had ages ago. And they still have a better camera.

i had a blackberry curve for 2 years through my company. i hated the thing. the 3G was super slow. there were very few apps. the OS browser sucked, so i had to install Opera mini. trying to browse or do anything on that tiny 2" screen was abysmal.

after the 1st year, RIM simply stopped supporting the device and didnt issue anymore firmware updates. there were still numerous bugs too. often times the wifi simply didnt work. you'd enable it, but data would still come through the super slow 3G. the wifi performance, when it worked, wasnt even much better.

the camera sucked - super low res, everything was grainy.

i can go on and on...

I don't hate BlackBerries. Its just that the OS feels, a little, only a little, dated.

The Exterior is always great

World has yet to see keybords that beat the BB ones.

Yes, I have used Palm Pre and it was awesome but not as good as Torch.

Try the Dell Venue Pros Keyboard.

Try the Dell Venue Pros Keyboard.

I have, as a matter of fact. A friend of mine recieved it as a gift and I used it and it quickly became one my favourite devices. Yes, I don't mind the bulkiness. Its good too.

What I meant was that the keyboards on BB' are in a class of their own. Not to say that Venue Pro and Palm have bad ones. They are actually excellent.

who uses flac on a phone though??? even on a 32GB SD card you'd only fit a few albums on there as one album is typically 1-2GB... Not to mention you won't notice the difference between that and 320k bitrate mp3's on most sub 300 dollar heaphones anyways.

I laugh at people who have flac on thier phones and listen with cheap earbuds or 20 dollar headphones.... it's just a HUGE waste of space on the SD card and prolly a little more drain on the battery.

MYTH: If you hate Blackberry's, you are probably misinformed

Wrong. I knew everything you brought up. Still hate them.

Agreed, everyone I have every owned had nothing but problems and was painfully slow. Never going back either, Android is where it's at for me with much better phones and software options. Only thing great about a Blackberry is Blackberry Messenger but Whatsapp Messenger is better :)

I hate Crackberries, (used that work in an PC Week interview back in 2000 about the RIM product, it caught on). My T Support ID was T1001 then changed to T1003, so I know a little about them, and honestly, single point of failure (all email is routed through RIM servers) unless you have a exception (US congress, and few other companies). RIM does not do a lot of testing before the role out patches or fixes. They show the lack of skills in this area with all the black-outs this year.

Plus, I definitely wouldn't want a touchscreen phone, and the options with physical buttons are becoming more and more scarce on other platforms.

Huh? Every other platform (other than iOS) has numerous phones with physical buttons and keyboards. It seems like every Android phone out there (especially those made by HTC) come in both a model without a keyboard and a model with some sort of keyboard (some are sliders, others have keyboards below the screen like BBs).

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • I do not remember anything happening to Apple and Google for bribing people not to make Apps for Windows Phone. Edge barley has a foot print to matter. If the other browser companies want more of the Pie, they need to do better. I use Brave on all my personal device. However in industry, Edge of default, as we can manage it easier with MS tools.
    • On the one hand, it shouldn't be difficult. You buy a computer, you decide what OS you want, which browser etc. Simple enough. But that's the techie side of things. My sister, my mother, wouldn't bother with such a thought. And I'm pretty sure that if you presented a window asking them what to pick they would say, "I don't care! I just want to access my Email!"
    • CPU-Z 2.20.2 by Razvan Serea CPU-Z is a freeware utility that gathers information on some of the main devices of your system. CPU-Z does not need to be installed, just unzip the files in a directory and run the .exe. In order to remove the program, just delete the files. The program does not copy any file in any Windows directory, nor write to the registry. CPU Name and number. Core stepping and process. Package. Core voltage. Internal and external clocks, clock multiplier. Supported instructions sets. All cache levels (location, size, speed, technology). Mainboard Vendor, model and revision. BIOS model and date. Chipset (northbridge and southbridge) and sensor. Graphic interface. Memory Frequency and timings. Module(s) specification using SPD (Serial Presence Detect) : vendor, serial number, timings table. System Windows and DirectX version. CPU-Z 2.20.2 changelog: Intel Arc G3 and G3 Extreme (Panther Lake)(2.20.2). AMD Ryzen 7 7700X3D (Raphael) (2.20.1). AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 495, 492, 488 (Gorgon Halo). AMD Ryzen AI Max 490, 485 (Gorgon Halo). AMD Ryzen AI Max PRO 495, 490, 485, 480 (Gorgon Halo). AMD Ryzen 9 9950X3D2 (Granite Ridge). AMD Ryzen 9 PRO 9965X3D, PRO 9945 (Granite Ridge). AMD Ryzen 7 PRO 9755, PRO 9745 (Granite Ridge). AMD Ryzen 5 PRO 9645 (Granite Ridge). AMD Ryzen AI 7/PRO 450G/GE (Gorgon Point 2). AMD Ryzen AI 5/PRO 440G/GE (Gorgon Point 2). AMD Ryzen AI 5/PRO 435G/GE (Gorgon Point 3). AMD Ryzen AI Max+ 392 (Strix Halo). Intel Core Ultra 5 250KF Plus (Arrow Lake Refresh). Intel Core 7 360 and 350 (Wildcat Lake). Intel Core 5 330, 320 and 315 (Wildcat Lake). Intel Core 3 304 (Wildcat Lake). Intel Core 9 273PQE, 273PTE, 273PE (Bartlett Lake). Intel Core 7 253PQE, 253PTE, 253PE, 251TE, 251E (Bartlett Lake). Intel Core 5 223PQE, 223PTE, 223PE, 221TE, 221E, 213PTE, 213PE, 211TE, 211E (Bartlett Lake). Intel Core 3 201TE, 201E (Bartlett Lake). Intel Arc Pro B70 and B65 (BMG-G31). Intel Arc Pro B60 and B50 (BMG-G21). Support of HUDIMM and HSODIMM memory modules. Download: CPU-Z 2.20.2 | Portable ~5.0 MB (Freeware) View: CPU-Z Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Anyone who expects MS to play fair is a complete idiot.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Conversation Starter
      mobandz earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • Apprentice
      fernan99 went up a rank
      Apprentice
    • One Month Later
      nothanks earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      B2Proxy earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Year In
      MadMung0 earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      468
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      247
    3. 3
      Skyfrog
      79
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      75
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      60
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!