The death of BlackBerry-maker RIM

Parallels Desktop 6 for Mac “A friend just asked me if I was on BBM. That’s BlackBerry Messenger for the uninitiated,” Bob Lefsetz writes for The Big Picture. “And many may never be initiated, because BlackBerry is so 2001. Or 5. Or maybe even 6 or 7, but certainly not 11.”

“BlackBerries do one thing incredibly well, process e-mail,” Lefsetz writes. “And that’s it.”

Lefsetz writes, “If you think BlackBerries surf the Web well, then you don’t, or have never used an iPhone.”

“Make a great tune and it lasts forever,” Lefsetz writes. “A mediocre, trend-following track may be a hit today, but it’s as useless in the future as a Motorola StarTac.”

“I know, I know, you’re Canadian, you beat your chest for RIM,” Lefsetz writes. “But it’s over.”

Full article here.

MacDailyNews Take: As we wrote back on August 05, 2010: RIM. Dead company walking.

37 Comments

  1. I’m a long time fan of all things Apple but I like my blackberry better for these reasons:

    1) They come with trackpads where you can easily mouse over to links and click on them.
    2) It has a keyboard and I can easily read email and the web with one hand (most of the time). It’s hard to do this with a touchscreen.

    It is true that browsing on a blackberry is not all that great. But for me, it’s more than good enough.

    If Apple wants me to buy a phone from them, it’ll have to come with a trackpad and a keyboard (and not one of those sideways sliding out keyboards as those require two hands to use).

  2. @BMWTwisty:

    Using one analyst’s comments (or even several) and one day’s stock market results (thus far) has no bearing on a company’s ability to compete or outperform its competition. Investors, particularly large investors, really don’t care about the companies they’re investing in or what products they make, only that they will be able to realize the return they want in the time frame they want. If the company can’t do that, for whatever reason, then its shares won’t be bought and the price will go down.

    Take Apple’s decline today. That certainly doesn’t mean that Apple had peaked, and that the company is doomed to failure. What its decline today means is that more people think Apple is priced a bit too high, or that they are selling to take their profits, than those who are buying. Period.

    RIM may be up simply because it was deemed to be undervalued, and that its announcement of the new tablet will give a temporary boost to the stock, thus a profit making opportunity. Nothing more, nothing less.

    Large investors whose purchases affect market results and trends don’t buy a company’s shares because they like the product. They buy because they can, one way or another, make money off of buying, holding or selling the company’s shares. The company’s products only matter to the extent it permits the large investor to realize its goals.

  3. As for Android, the majority are buying the phone that they like. It happens to be Android which is a direct build to emulate iOS.

    Those that have purchased the iPhone have typically purchased it because of the iOS. The iPhone is one model- like it or leave it.

    If any one Android phone out sales the only model that Apple makes- please state that one model. Then again, what will happen when Apple starts to make various models for other demographic price ranges and domestic GSM, CDMA, or 4G with all carriers? Ummmm, Android may have a fight to hold to any gains made.

    Then again, make one android model and put that against the iPhone. That will be interesting

  4. Are you kidding? Say what you want about needing a keyboard (I personally prefer the iPhone’s keyboard), but not wanting an iPhone because it doesn’t have a trackpad? That’s insane! How is scrolling over to a link with a little nub easier than directly tapping it with your fingertips? It’s not.

  5. “I don’t really think anyone is surprised by this. Is “market-share” really that important, when the competition is doing 2-for-1 specials?”

    ———————–

    @bob,

    I’m not surprised by it either.. I’m just saying that Android is Apple’s competition not RIM.

    BTW: The article states that there were not any 2 for 1 Android specials in the European market. They were legitimate sales.

  6. @Mark I’ve been using an iPhone one-handed for over 2.5 years. A stroke just 2 weeks after I got my original iPhone left me with limited use of my left hand/arm. My BB friends always use two hands to send emails.

  7. “RIMM today got an upgrade to “Buy” and a price target raised to $80 by the analyst at Jefferies who was upbeat about the new OS. Shares are up ~6% while Apple is down by ~1.6%”

    You REALLY need a history lesson here, Twist. RIMM’s all-time high was $146+ a couple of years ago (June, 2008). They’re now at $61.82 in after hours trading.

    AAPL’s all time closing high was around $318+ earlier this year, so they’re about 7 points off their record price.

    Hmmm. So which company is on the way up, which on the way down, huh? Easy to see . . . if you’re not blind to facts.

  8. Apple makes a vertically integrated cell phone. So does RIM, Nokia and Palm/HP. They are Apple’s competition.

    Google makes Android OS for phone manufacturers. So does Nokia and Microsoft. They are Google’s competition.

    To say that the Android OS is Apple’s competition shows a complete lack of common sense.

  9. @mark
    I had the first BB curve, my brother in law got the 2nd version curve from his work.
    He just a few months ago got the newest curve.
    I’ve played with the new one and I must admit the trackball is much better than my first curve was.

    But… To say it’s better than the iPhone for web????….. You have stumps for fingers, or hand eye coordination real bad for you?

    My dad has huge hands/fingers. I have him using my old 3G iPhone for the last month.
    It has taken him a few weeks to get used to the onscreen keyboard but he has fewer and fewer issues with it now than when he first tried it.

    I know lots of people want a “real” keyboard on a phone, but once they get used to the onscreen it’s easy.
    I just think apple should let the user shrink the landscape keyboard a bit if they want. I would like to see a bit more of the screen myself. Like in mail…

    But iPhone keyboard vs BB keyboard and the trackball?… Sorry iPhone wins that battle.

    I have become pretty good at pinch/zoom with one hand… Holding the entire iPhone and pinch/zoom a webpage with the same hand.
    It’s not hard.

  10. Say what you will about RIM, but at least they care enough about their customers’ experience to NOT rely on a third party (Google or Microsoft) to provide something as critical as their products’ operating system and key software. Makers of Android and Windows Phone 7 phones are just lazy and will leave the user experience to someone else.

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