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BlackBerry’s decline felt

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In this March 28, 2002, file photo, Joseph To holds his BlackBerry device in San Francisco. There is talk that the fate of Research In Motion, the company that fathered the BlackBerry in 1999, is no longer certain as its flagship property rapidly loses market share to flashier phones like Apple's iPhone and Google's Android-driven models. AP PHOTO/JUSTIN SULLIVAN

WATERLOO, Ontario—President Barack Obama couldn’t bear to part with his BlackBerry. Oprah Winfrey declared it one of her “favorite things.” It could be so addictive that it was nicknamed “the CrackBerry.”

Then came a new generation of competing smartphones, and suddenly the BlackBerry, that game-changing breakthrough in personal connectedness, looks ancient.

There is even talk that the fate of Research In Motion, the company that fathered the BlackBerry in 1999, is no longer certain as its flagship property rapidly loses market share to flashier phones like Apple’s iPhone and Google’s Android-driven models.

With more than $2 billion in cash, bankruptcy for RIM seems highly unlikely in the near term, but these are troubling times for Waterloo, Ontario, the town of 100,000 that was transformed by the BlackBerry into Canada’s Silicon Valley. RIM is Canada’s most valuable technology company, an international icon so prestigious that founder Mike Lazaridis and its other driving force, Jim Balsillie, are on an official government list of national heroes, alongside the likes of Alexander Graham Bell.

RIM’s US share of the smartphone market belly-flopped from 44 percent in 2009 to 10 percent in 2011 according to market researcher NPD Group. The company still has 78 million active subscribers across the globe, but last month RIM issued a warning that it will lose money for the second consecutive quarter, will lay off workers this year, and has hired a team of bankers to help it weigh its options. Last July it slashed 2,000 jobs.

Of RIM’s 16,500 remaining employees, 7,500 live in Waterloo, a university town 90 minutes’ drive from Toronto, where everyone seems to know someone who works for RIM.

John Lind says RIM’s impact on his field, commercial real estate, is enormous. “We talk about RIM in hushed tones in this region because no one wants to be negative about it, no one wants to be seen as not on their side,” he said. “But people are saying, ‘What would this region look like without RIM?’”

The decline of the BlackBerry has come shockingly fast. Just five years ago, when the first iPhone came out, few thought it could threaten the BlackBerry. Now Chief Executive Thorsten Heins says his employees “are getting asked all the time, ‘What’s going on with you guys? What happened? I mean RIM is the star of Canada and what happened to you guys? And how bad is it going to go?’”

RIM’s software is still focused on e-mail, and is less user-friendly and agile than iPhone or Android. Its attempt at touch screens was a flop, and it lacks the apps that power other smartphones. Its tablet, the PlayBook, registered just 500,000 sales to Apple’s 11.8 million in the last quarter despite a price cut from $500 to $200, well below cost.

RIM’s hopes now hang on BlackBerry 10, a new operating system set to debut later this year. It’s thoroughly redesigned for the new multimedia, Internet browsing and apps experience that customers are now demanding.

Heins, formerly RIM’s chief operating officer, says he can turn things around with BlackBerry. He took over in January after the company lost tens of billions in market value and founder Lazaridis stepped down along with co-CEO Balsillie.

RIM was once Canada’s most valuable company with a market value of $83 billion in June 2008, but the stock has plummeted since, from over $140 share to around $10. Its decline is evoking memories of Nortel, another Canadian tech giant, which ended up declaring bankruptcy in 2009.

“It has to be very sad,” BGC Financial Partners analyst Colin Gillis said from New York. “I feel for those people up there because what else are you going to do — work at the Apple store that just opened in the mall?”

But Waterloo is home to more than 800 tech companies and is certainly no company town, many here insist. Smaller firms like e-learning company Desire2Learn have doubled their head count in the last year, and Google has opened an office here.

Tad Homer-Dixon, chairman of the Center for International Governance and Innovation, a Waterloo-based think tank, likens Waterloo to Rochester, New York, where the blow of Kodak’s bankruptcy filing is cushioned by the network of startups the company helped to spawn.

“They’ve taken an enormous hit because of the collapse of Kodak, and Waterloo will take an enormous hit assuming that RIM ultimately vanishes from the scene, but I think the overall economy and region has been so fundamentally changed by RIM that it will actually do very well,” Homer-Dixon said.

Homer-Dixon says RIM’s impact on the city has been staggering.

His think tank was created by RIM’s Balsillie, and he also is a professor at the Balsillie School of International Affairs at the University of Waterloo. Balsillie and Lazaridis have together donated more than $400 million to the community. Lazaridis has donated $150 million to the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics, which he founded in 2000 and which attracts the involvement of such giants of physics as Stephen Hawking.

“Ten years from now BlackBerrys will be in the Smithsonian but these institutions will hopefully still be thriving,” Homer-Dixon said.

Lazaridis, 51, remains on RIM’s board. Canadian billionaire Prem Watsa, a fellow board member, calls the Turkish-born Greek immigrant a genius who pioneered the smartphone. “It really would be unfortunate if anything happened to RIM, and I’d like to do whatever I can to help,” Watsa said.

In an interview with The Associated Press at RIM headquarters in Waterloo, Heins said he won’t try to compete head to head with Apple but will try to build on RIM’s strengths, such as its dominance of the corporate smartphone market. RIM says more than 90 percent of Fortune 500 companies use BlackBerry and that more than a million North American government workers rely on BlackBerry’s software security.

But Heins acknowledges RIM failed to quickly adapt to the emerging “bring your own device” trend, in which employees bring their personal iPhones or Android devices to work instead of relying on BlackBerrys issued by their employers.

That’s where BlackBerry 10 comes in — delayed but not too late to vie with the new Apple iPhone expected this fall, or so Heins hopes.

“At the end of the day if the product is good you can always come back,” Heins said. “There’s many examples of how that has happened. I’m not that scared about this, frankly.”

Other tech companies have indeed recovered from the ropes. The late Steve Jobs said Apple was less than three months away from bankruptcy when he rejoined it in 1997, and it’s now the world’s most valuable company.

Homer-Dixon said it’s amazing that RIM in Waterloo got this far, considering it has had to compete with Silicon Valley, “the most powerful engine of innovation that humankind has ever created.”

Neither Lazaridis nor Balsillie has given interviews about RIM since stepping down, but Homer-Dixon suggests Balsillie is well prepared for a change of fortune.

He recalls being on a boat in the Arctic in mid-2009 with Balsillie, who talked about the importance of luck in building a tech giant. A crew member asked where RIM would be in five years.

“He said, ‘Well the smartphone industry is a rapidly expanding market and I think we’ll retain a segment of it.’ Then his last words were ‘I don’t think RIM will go bankrupt, but who knows.’”

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Tags: Blackberry , BlackBerry on the rocks , nada

  • jurbinsky77

    The downfall of Blackberry could be traced to - 

    A. The people that RIM employs.

    There is a dept in RIM that encourages employees to submit suggestions that may provide improvements, technical or otherwise. That office is named Patent Office. If you check the previous suggestions that were accepted and copyrighted you would notice that majority were about antenna design for wireless communication.

    I sent my humble suggestions on 2 separate occasions when I was in RIM 3 years ago. After a preliminary courtesies, I was informed that the next level would be a committee meeting to discuss the viability of my suggestions. I was expecting that somebody would give me a call. What they sent me the day after their scheduled meeting was an email informing me that the committee decided not to pursue further steps for now but it does not preclude the committee’s revisiting the proposal in the future. I was thinking that maybe if they asked me, I can provide more details rather than they themselves discussing about ideas that are not visible to them. Or maybe they will revisit my proposals when I am long gone from RIM.

    The only features that I can remember in my proposals are:

    1) the combination of GPS tracking system and ad hoc on-demand cluster networking. Application: The mother would setup her Blackberry as the master unit while her children’s units which shall be opened only during the periods that they are outside the school building: recess and after class. The GPS tracker on the mother’s unit would show where her children are relative to her location.

    2) on-demand group communication hub.
    Application: Anyone in the defined group can send broadcast message at anytime to the other members of the group, like the device used by SEAL in contacting the team.

    3) additional feature for Blackberry as health monitoring device. 
    It is not difficult to equip any smart phone with dual processors and enhanced graphics for instance. Extension equipment such as probe attachments, NAS-like device to store documents (documentations/manuals), video clips and music would just be a cinch like headphone.

    There is no excuse for clumsy file access and manipulation interface, even PS/3 has a decent directory access system
    Application: portable technical documentation, jukebox, picture album, pedometer, real-time blood pressure, pulse and breathing rate, etc.

    It is 2012.

    Samsung Galaxy is amazing and other Android phones in the market are pleasant to use and pleasant to the beholder.

    Any new Blackberry offering? None. The latest item is a confused mix of buttons and touchscreen controls. And Blackberry’s monthly plan and ownership are more expensive than Android and at par with iPhone. But iPhone is sexier when you have iMac and iPad.

    In short, Blackberry’s marketability has been left to the conservative segment. However, due to reverse security requirement, Blackberry’s strength in security area has been overtaken by recent global terrorism activities, it became moot and academic, in a manner of speaking.

    B. The second big undesirable thing in RIM is the excess of people.
    So many are working on nothing but redundant and extraneous review of what the R&D in Europe and US are churning out. And they are like spoiled children.Each cubicle in Bldg 5 for instance, has a Windows and a Red Hat desktop. A laptop can do both but laptops are only for Contractors/consultants.

    And historically RIM is weak in innovative complimentary technology. How many times that the Company has been penalized due to illegal commercial use of a piece of software?

    C. The Computer Operations groups are operating as silo units. Even within its Unix Engineering Support Team, the person who does the Superdome-hosted cluster program is alone, the Red Hat guy keeps his knowledge locked within himself, his Satellite or Spacewalk is his baby. The virtualization guys are zealously guarding their domain, the storage admins act  like divas of sort.And there is no procedural documentation whatsoever.

    Even in 2010, I had the feeling that RIM is in downhill path due to the foregoing even as Stephen Hawking came for a lecture at PI, a televised event with all local, regional and many federal politicians occupying the front rows.

    It is too early to play the dirge, but there must be a lot of blood-letting and fat-shedding before RIM can again mix it up in the scrimmage.

  • JB Pil

    Except for the lack of available apps, i think the blackberry is, pound for pound, better. It’s secure, reliable, durable, and bandwidth-efficient. They just have to attract good developers and they will be ok.

    And fire the sumb#%+ch who came up with the Playbook!

    • Jeff Lebowski

      BB’s data encryption is very reliable, Saudi Arabian government threatened to ban BlackBerry services because of security concerns expressing concern over BB’s stringent data encryption.

      and yes, Playbook :(

  • Jeff Lebowski

    RIM, it’s over.
     
    Reasons why to not get a BlackBerry:
    They are slow
    They are clunky
    They are daft
    They are overly-priced!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
    The have stupid keyboards
    They are fidgety
    They have rubbish screens
    They have rubbish cameras
    They have rubbish processors
    You can’t download apps to them
    You can’t download music to themY
    ou can’t watch videos/movies on them
    They aren’t touch screen
    They are fat
    Blackberry is Overrated!!!!

    • im_not_convinced

      sound like someone who has never even touched a blackberry. the only real downside to the BB is the limited “fun apps” craved for by the masses of the smart phone market. as for the business community for which it was designed for, it is still the efficient, secure tool it was meant to be. go play angry birds on another device.

      FYI:
      the keyboard is more practical than the glitchy touch screen
      the screen has good resolution
      the camera is good (video cam function is great too)
      you can download apps (even games, but that’s not what it is meant for)
      it does come with apps like google borwser, facebook, youtube, twitter
      you can load it with music music
      you can watch videos (and record them in high resolution)
      the current generation of BBs are as thick as an iphone

      Blackberry is not for kids.

      • BayanBangon

        Samsung S-3 is amazing and very fast smart phone I ever have (Previous owner of iPhone 4g & 4s, BB Torch 9850 & BB Bold 9930). I am so happy for the S3 and 10.1 Tablet with 4.0 Android , just waiting also for the next version Samsung Notes.  Android is way much better than RIM and IOS.

      • Jeff Lebowski

        Sounds like someone who just switched to a second hand blackberry(from 3210) after years of wishing. You’re referring to later models Mr. Gizmo. When they start to realize they are losing their market to iPhone and cheaper Android.

        Throw away your “precious, source of pride, i will protect to death” BB and get an Android. You won’t regret it.

        Android is for everybody.

        Anyway If the facts agree with you then why:

        “BlackBerry maker Research In Motion is giving its freshly
        departed co-chiefs $12 million worth of parting gifts, according to
        paperwork filed Thursday with US regulators.”

      • im_not_convinced

        what a fan of reviews and 2nd hand info. did a friend show you his/her android phone and felt you had to pretend to have one too? get job and stop stealing wifi from your neighbors. who knows in a few years you can buy a cheap galaxy y.

      • Jeff Lebowski

        Blackberry fan. oooohh oohhhh ohhhh sorrryy.

        Even the Title of article doesn’t agree with you….

        I LOVE RIM!!! Good Enough?



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