Official 10.1 is out now.
"This summer, BBM will go across multiple platforms."
10:54:54 AM EDT
"No matter what mobile device they carry."
10:54:40 AM EDT
"It's time, to bring BBM to a greater audience."
It isn't showing up for me, but I am 95% sure the recent leak is the same as the final 10.1. I think I already have it.
What network are you on? I know Bell's is live, but I'm on Rogers.
My OS version is 10.1.0.1762
HOLY CRAP
10:55:11 AM EDT
WHOA
10:55:10 AM EDT
"This summer, BBM will go across multiple platforms."
10:54:54 AM EDT
"No matter what mobile device they carry."
10:54:40 AM EDT
"It's time, to bring BBM to a greater audience."
This is completely inconsequential in the US, but it would have been HUGE if they did this two years ago. Releasing it now will just cause the BBM addicts in Asia to not need their Blackberries and dump it. These people have been carrying Blackberries just for BBM (in addition to their android or iphone) and now they don't need them anymore.
I don't think people carry blackberries for BBM anymore either. If your friends are off BBM, you just don't use BBM anymore.
The death of BlackBerry in emerging markets begins?HOLY CRAP
10:55:11 AM EDT
WHOA
10:55:10 AM EDT
"This summer, BBM will go across multiple platforms."
10:54:54 AM EDT
"No matter what mobile device they carry."
10:54:40 AM EDT
"It's time, to bring BBM to a greater audience."
You are wrong.I don't think people carry blackberries for BBM anymore either. If your friends are off BBM, you just don't use BBM anymore.
The good thing about this is BBM does chatting, voice calls, and video calls now, all over data.
It can replace skype, whatsapp, facetime, and imessage all in one, and doesn't require sending phone numbers back and forth to do it. No text charges, and no data/airtime charges for voice or video calls over wifi. And it's cross-platform.
I can now video chat with my parents again, because they can put BBM on their devices, and we'll be using a BB product on both ends to do it - not facetime.
I haven't yet, but I have seen a few in the wild and they look pretty great.
Also, BB just announced the Q5 today. It's the name for the previously rumoured "R10" and will be the replacement for the curve. QWERTY, but budget.
![]()
http://blogs.blackberry.com/2013/05/blackberry-q5-announced/?CPID=SOC_FBNA1000008
I thought bb was known for being rock solid.I've only had the reboot issue twice on the original OS.
Since the last os update i've been solid.
My last manual restart was on april 15.
![]()
Opening up BBM will be like free BB advertising to the millions of iOS and Android users out there.
I thought bb was known for being rock solid.
I'm on a community developed rom for my n4 since the beginning and I've never had it reboot randomly.
Two things:
1. If I am Microsoft today I throw a billion at BB to make BBM platform exclusive to their phones and allow them to consolidate that market rather than let it go to Android.
2. If true and it has any sort of feature parity on other platforms, then that is the end of BB devices. In that vein,
What is it advertising about BB? "The only really killer app a BB phone has is now on your current phone too, so buy a BB device because, um, we are nice guys."
Isn't this actually a move *against* MS though? Look what platforms BBM is going to: the ones they aren't going to beat anyway. If your friends are on BBM, then you can go to Android/iOS but you can't go to WP8. Maybe BB figures they don't have to outrun the giant robot, they just have to outrun the fat tile guy, locking up #3.Two things:
1. If I am Microsoft today I throw a billion at BB to make BBM platform exclusive to their phones and allow them to consolidate that market rather than let it go to Android.
2. If true and it has any sort of feature parity on other platforms, then that is the end of BB devices.
1. Blackberry is worth a lot more than a billion. Their market cap alone is near $8B, and valuation will probably be higher now that they have a high margin bestseller in the Q10 (and likely the Q5 overseas)
My guess is BBRY didn't just do this out of goodness of their heart, they probably think the benefit of this 'exposure' probably outweighs the risk of users migrating to other platforms (a lot of people tied into corporate systems won't ditch BB anyways).
Isn't this actually a move *against* MS though?
I'll be dead before Verizon pushes 10.1.
