Apple’s iPhone gaining ground on RIM’s BlackBerry

“The BlackBerry mobile communications device is hard to beat in the corporate world, where it got its start, but it’s expected have a tougher time winning the hearts of consumers who are being wooed by Apple’s iPhone and other smartphones,” The Canadian Press reports.

“While there’s an opportunity for BlackBerry maker Research In Motion to fill a void in Canada while the iPhone isn’t yet available, Apple’s phone is a real threat, says tech analyst Jesse Hirsh,” The Canadian Press reports.

“‘Technology fetishists are discarding their BlackBerrys and they all drive to the States and buy an iPhone and look on the Internet for how to hack into them and they are all running iPhones,’ said Hirsh, who runs a tech advice website,” The Canadian Press reports.

“A recent upgrade to the BlackBerry wireless system appears to have been the cause of a three-hour service disruption on Monday that affected millions of users in North America,” The Canadian Press reports.

“Hirsh also said the Apple’s touch-screen technology is pushing ahead of the BlackBerry’s trackwheel and the more innovative trackball on the consumer-oriented Pearl smartphone and some newer models of the BlackBerry, which revolutionized wireless e-mail with features such as a full QWERTY-style keyboard for rapid two-thumbed typing.”

Full article here.

Stealth aircraft also “pushed ahead” of the biplane. Slightly.

37 Comments

  1. Actually of all the non-Apple companies out there, I kind of hope RIM does well. Their products are pretty decent and I like the company, overall. Plus competition is good for Apple since it’ll keep pushing them to produce better product!

  2. I wouldn’t know anything about a Blackberry, and I certainly don’t care for an I-Phone. I use a Motorola Q because it has a full keyboard and it has Windows Mobile which supports my library of WMA files ripped in Windows Media Player. I was just rocking UFO’s ‘Lights Out’ album just the other day. ‘Misty Green and Blue’ anyone?

    Will somebody do these Canucks a favor and clue them in to the fact the I-Phone has only one button so it’s pretty much useless. I’d hate to see them drive to the states, pay too much for Apple’s good-for-eye-candy-only interface when they could be using a Windows Mobile phone. They’re cheaper.

    Your potential. Our passion.™

  3. The BlackBerry mobile communications device is hard to beat in the corporate world, where it got its start

    I was recently reading that the BlackBerry actually got its start as a consumer device, and that enough people smuggling it into corporations through the back door forced IT to support it.

    Revisionist history reporters!

  4. This is simply stupid. Anyone who predicts one or the other will win out with the other dying simply misunderstands the industry.

    Globally about 1.2 billion phones are sold annually right now of which approximately 120-130 million are “smartphones”. The smartphone segment is growing about 25-30% per year as more folks upgrade from voice only, text message devices to full fledged email, web, media capable devices.

    Apple plans to sell 10 million iPhones in 2008 (<10% mkt share) and BB will sell 18-20 million devices (about 15% mkt share). So you have a growing pie AND very low mkt share for each – lots of room for growth which bodes well for BOTH iPhone that is awesome for web and media and BB which simply delivers a superior core communications product with media and web very mediocre.

    I’m sure all the iFanatics will say some snide remark about the recent outage. This was due to an upgrade and the outage occurred for 3 hours. Remember RIM runs their own network that peers into about 400 cellular networks to deliver information instantly to the user devices. Over the past 9 years since BB has run the network there have been very, very few blackouts and every time they get the network up an running within hours. How many times has ATT experienced issues with their networks and there have been temporary service outages? It simply happens. RIM only gets the big press because of the intense use of their product.

    iPhone no doubt is the coolest phone ever but people have different needs and the BB can coexist and serve different end users. I love my iPhone, but for my needs day to day I need my BB. When iPhone gets a true push, guaranteed delivery of emails queued at the network level (and not in the email server with a prompted sync), I’ll use the iPhone. Until then it’s iPhone for play and BB every other day. Now if you want to make some money go ahead and pick up shares in both companies. You’ll be psyched in 2 years when these stocks have doubled or tripled. WORD!

  5. @crazylegs

    Apple plans to sell 10 million iPhones by the END of 2008, not IN 2008.

    Get your facts straight.

    As far as the recent BB outage. Considering all crackberry users always mention how much better it is because of instantaneous email, it is a big deal.

  6. You know, it’s strage, people are always saying how huge Blackberry is amongst coprorate users, but never mention its massive impact with consumers. They are everywhere! And I don’t mean with IT guys, or high-powered business men, I mean with 18-25 year old college students, or people recently out of college.

    How do I know?

    Well, I’m a 19 year old college student, and just with friends who come over to my house once a week or so, probably 10 people, I’d say 7 or 8 of them have a Blackberry. I was talking to my friend’s boyfriend about it the other day, because he has one (and he’s not part of that group of 10) and he said that almost everyone he knows has one.

    Again, these are not people in the corporate world. These are consumers.

    And I love the iPhone, if I could, I’d buy one, but between school and work and friends, I know 2 people with an iPhone.

    Maybe I’m in an unusually Blackberry saturated market, I dunno. I wouldn’t think Ogden, Utah would be a huge booming place for a corporate device, seeing as there might be one corporation based in Ogden, but I highly doubt it.

    So I think the iPhone has a lot more ground to gain than people really realize. And I think people need to stop crying for corporate adoption, and maybe look a little into consumers as well.

  7. @ballonknot

    Believe it or not, you’re wrong. You can go back and hear it in the keynote from last January. The statement is very clear. 1% of the 1 billion piece market in 2008 or 10 million. The “in 2008” is unmistakeable.

    Full Disclosure: I was in your party for quite a while until I decided to go and watch the video for myself. Since then it’s been stated clearly a number of other times. 10 million in 2008.

  8. Crabs, thanks for your insight. I do think you will be seeing things change at some point down the road though. I think everyone will see some strong moves by Apple as it introduces versions 2 and 3 of the iPhone. Holding so many patents, it will be tough for others to move forward as aggressively as Apple will be able to move.

  9. @Crabs
    on a two year buy the iPhone is cheaper than a $99 Blackberry Pearl. The unlimited data plan for blackberry is an extra $35.00 per month. For an iPhone it’s only 20.00.

    Blackberry 35@ 24 extra per data plan is 840 + 99.00 $950

    iPhone 399 24 @ 20 = 879

    As soon as the college age market figures that out look for the iPhone to take off in that market.

  10. @crazylegs–

    Preach it brotha. ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”wink” style=”border:0;” />

    For the record, my portfolio is very well rounded, with diversified investments.

    My 401k has within it, AAPL, RIM, and yes, even MSFT.

    I didn’t ask for the MSFT though, it was just part of the package. ” width=”19″ height=”19″ alt=”wink” style=”border:0;” />

  11. Quote by zune tang: I was just rocking UFO’s ‘Lights Out’ album just the other day. ‘Misty Green and Blue’ anyone?

    Are you dating yourself by mentioning that you like UFO?

    It’s such a travesty to listen to my albums in wma format when you should be listening in Apple Lossless.
    I guess it’s your loss. Maybe you should go listen to I’m a loser from the album No Heavy Petting.

  12. Michael Freakin’ Schenker! OMFG! Duuuuude. You ROCK! You rock me like a hurricane! I can’t believe Michael Freakin’ Schenker actually responded to one of my posts! It’s almost as good as Apple finally selling computers with Windows or Ballmer responding to one of my posts. That would be awesome. Did I say you rock me like a hurricane?

    Dating myself? Hardly. I also like newer bands like Molly Hatchet, Foghat, and Toto.

    Your potential. Our passion.™

  13. Strangely enough, the Blackberry’s text like interface is far more usable than the Windows mobile UI despite the BB not having a pointing device (stylus).

    I used (or rather tried to use) a Windows mobile Treo for 3 months but every little thing I wanted to do was a complex task requiring both dexterity and concentration. I ended up using only a small fraction of the available features (e.g. taking a picture requires going through so many menus that whatever you wanted to shoot was long gone when you go to the picture mode, and then clicking on the button to take the picture would tilt the phone or require two hands.).

    When I got a Blackberry to replace the Treo, I felt like being in heaven.

    Then, a friend of mine let me play with his iPod Touch just to browse the net and look through eMail. This was just a glimpse of the iPhone features but the difference with the blackberry was as big as the difference between the BB and the Treo.

    The iPhone will be a big threat to RIM, no doubt about it. But neither RIM nor Apple are the kind to stand still (unlike the copy cats at MS) so that will be a very interesting competition to watch. Both companies base their product design on user workflows and that makes all the difference in usability. So far Windows mobile has not shown any signs of being adjusted to real life workflows, it only stacks up features upon features as if the check list in comparison sheets was the only measure of a phone’s value.

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