CrackBerry - If you live in the US, Puerto Rico or the Virgin Islands and have been waiting for the iHeartRadio streaming radio app to arrive for BlackBerry 10, then you're in luck. We had heard, what seems to be many months ago, that the company was working on a native app for the platform and it has finally arrived and is available for download in BlackBerry World.
It is sad that BlackBerry is struggling to stay alive and it looks like the ailing Canadian company could officially kill the BlackBerry brand in 2017. Of course, it could still have a tiny thread of existence with its Android range of smartphones that’s if they think its financially wise and technically viable.
It looks like it is game over for BlackBerry 10.
Perhaps, if BlackBerry had pushed BB10 same year when Android came out or even a year later, things could have been a little different. They where comfortable with the old and dated OS 6, shame.
Yes now the time for blackberry ends and they are lost behind android. They might finish BB in 2016 only but to stay alive in this race they must need to do a miracle and that will not be easy for them take people through from android.
I already have two blackberry phones lying in my drawer. Don't know if I will ever use them again after using iPhone.
How times change. I remember an era when people bragged about having a Blackberry. My friends tried to get one even if just a used older model. It was symbol of prestige and class. And now look at it today. Touchscreen smartphones and OS killed the past giants of the smartphone industry.
I always keep my old phones as back ups in case something happens to my main phone.
BlackBerry 0S 10 future is no longer certain, the Canadian OEM recently announced the layoff of additional 200 staff; 125 from its HQ in Waterloo, Ontario and 75 in Sunrise, Florida.
Like Nokia, they couldn't see beyond their Nose. I really loved the Z30 and it's a shame BlackBerry is now a shadow of itself. :(
Here's a breakdown of all the important speeches and conferences from last week's Super Mobility Week in Las Vegas. Hear what everyone from Wikipedia's Jimmy Wales and Dreamworks' Jeffrey Katzenberg to FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler think about the future of mobile content.