BlackBerry's Survival Plan: the Internet of Things 74
jfruh writes BlackBerry's smartphone business is famously floundering, but the company isn't betting everything on its new retro physical-keyboard phones. It's also making moves into distributed, embedded, and asset-tracking computing for homes, cars, and businesses, which can all be lumped under the currently trendy "Internet of Things" buzzword umbrella. The company got a head start when it acquired the QNX OS in 2010, which was intended as the basis of a new smartphone OS but which already had credibility in the embedded market.
Can they do it? (Score:2)
How hard is it to reposition a company?
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So I guess the old Microsoft was at the bottom of your chart?
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Re: Can they do it? (Score:2)
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Re: Can they do it? (Score:2)
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That would be an improvement! Their strategy is to follow the white ant because it knows where the food is, and after the white ant takes the food, they look for scraps it left behind. Even when the white ant hits a dead end and spins in circles, they are undeterred in heading over there.
Re:Can they do it? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it depends on the size of the company and more importantly the culture.
I worked at a much smaller company that did a very effective shift for honestly many of the same reasons. We saw the writing on the wall. Other (much larger) companies were stepping into our niche and basically wiping us out. We couldn't fight them and we knew it.
Much like Blackberry is doing, we looked at what we were actually good at, and shifted our business around them. Culturally pretty much everyone knew it was that or we were all out of work.
As the article says, blackberry wasn't always just about phones. They've got some other solid areas (not to mention infrastructure that probably makes even google drool). If their culture supports it, they can probably rebuild themselves around that stuff.
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I can to their infrastructure and it isn't really great at all
I can tell, apparently it drops words from packets. You should at least checksum that baby.
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Blackberry has incredible resistance to change. That's why they were left in the dust by Apple and Google. They might get around to repositioning the company in ten years but unfortunately they won't be around then.
Re:Can they do it? (Score:4, Informative)
ask apple
they went from a computer company to a mobile device company. MS is going all cloud. Amazon went from books to a huge cloud business. IBM doesn't make typewriters any more.
it's done all the time
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they went from a computer company to a mobile device company.
That doesn't make any sense. Apple is still a computer company. That and mobile devices are computers.
Nintendo Started As a Card Company (Score:2)
Blackberry could get into the hogs trading market.
Not as fancy as selling phones, but I've heard as an industry it really brings home the bacon.
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Yeah. those pocketpc devices were great.
fabulous battery life->course, you had to carry around multiple batteries to swap if you actually used it like people use iPhones now
anybody could develop for them->after buying the developer license from Microsoft
buy software from multiple vendors to load onto it->besides the fact that compared to the iPhone now [or even 6 months after the iPhone app store went live], there was basically a rounding error amount of software for it, that you hunt around to fi
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It's better they try and fail than not try at all.
Just ask Nortel.
If they're serious about it, and properly examine the assets and tech they already have, I'm sure they can find something they're good at.
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well apparently it was real easy for them to reposition qnx from "king of embedded" to an also-ran for IoT.
frankly speaking, qnx is unnecessary for IoT and if it comes with a licensing cost.. .. would you choose it? it's not like you have to have it.
Stop The Internet Of Things (Score:2, Interesting)
and don't hook the little thingies up, either (Score:2)
I can see a hundred little bots fouling up your house with this IofT nonsense. one release, no upgrade path, no thought of security built-in, sell 'em and run. I have several candidates, and there is NOT going to be any RJ45 or wifi permissions for them. period.
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Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)
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except for the personal data that they directly collect, like a video feed, whether anyone is home, whether the alarm is on or not.
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I can see a hundred little bots fouling up your house with this IofT nonsense. one release, no upgrade path, no thought of security built-in, sell 'em and run. I have several candidates, and there is NOT going to be any RJ45 or wifi permissions for them. period.
Oh hi! I'm your new LG refrigerator. Before I unlock the doors, please agree to this EULA and wait half-an-hour while I download the latest firmware!
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I hate the phrase as much as you do, but I'd never seen it like that before.
You're right, it's like saying "the rail network of stations" or "the interstate highway network of like cities and towns and diners with huge thermometers and all that shit".
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"IoT" in terms of consumer products, yes, it's a buzzword and no one wants. But other M2M applications like asset tracking and wireless smart metering would be a good business move.
The Internet of Dead Things (Score:1)
BlackBerry CEO: It's not dead - it's pining for the fjords....
Cool name, is it taken? (Score:3)
"Buzzword Umbrella Corporation"
Google: No results found for "Buzzword Umbrella Corporation".
Quick, someone grab it!
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Now that I've written it, it exists.
Hurray! /Zoidberg
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You usually don't want to be associated with the Umbrella Corporation (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umbrella_Corporation).
(\/) (,,,) (\/)
(Why not Zoidberg?)
BlackBerry is fine (Score:3)
They still have the best mobile management software out there. Citrix, Good, MobileIron, etc can't touch BB's offerings.
Plus they have QNX which is used in billions of devices around the world. So what if their handhelds aren't popular? Who cares? They will continue to have a niche market in handhelds.
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I'm talking about the BES12 service, not the legacy server. But even the legacy server was ridiculously easy to manage by anyone with half a brain.
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Plus they have QNX which is used in billions of devices around the world. So what if their handhelds aren't popular? Who cares? They will continue to have a niche market in handhelds.
Which doesn't mean much if it doesn't generate that much revenue. They bought QNX for $200 million. There's no way that's what one pays for a business generating lots of profits.
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And to further support this point. From a Forbes article [forbes.com]:
However, despite the strong proliferation and installed base, the QNX business is not believed to be very meaningful to BlackBerry’s financial performance (the company does not break out QNX financials). The business generates revenues through the licensing of QNX software products and through the professional services that BlackBerry provides to customers for developing QNX powered devices. Estimates from Bloomberg peg QNX revenues at just about 2% of BlackBerry’s total sales and IHS analysts estimate software licensing fees at a relatively paltry $3 per vehicle.
So something that is estimated to account for less than even 5% of its revenue is not going to save the company from imploding.
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Seeing how Ford will have QNX in almost all of their cars going forward, I'd say that QNX is a nice little profit for BB.
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It remains to be seen if they will eventually "win" the car computers system market or if they will do just like they did in the smartphone market, be an early player unable to innovate and becoming irrelevant in less than 10 years.
As long as reliability and stability remain the key requirements for car computer systems, then Android, iPhone, and Microsoft will never compete. Also, QNX UI is improving as well, so if they have to compete directly on UI, they have a decent chance there as well.
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Perfect (Score:2)
If Blackberry jumps on the Internet Of Things bandwagon then we can finally get our wish of having the term killed, beaten to a pulp, and buried.
The funny thing is... (Score:4, Insightful)
I have two family members that use new Blackberries. One has a model from about 14 months ago and my brother just got one about a month ago. They are both somewhat limited in terms of apps but conversely, they both have stupid amounts of battery life and they Just Work(tm). They're business phones so obviously they aren't getting stressed with Youtube/Netflix/etc. Still, it appears to be a solid product, if probably unsexy to the people always on my lawn.
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"Still, it appears to be a solid product, if probably unsexy to the people always on my lawn."
I still use my Blackberry Tour daily, bought about 5 years ago. Sooner or later it will die and I will replace it with a Blackberry Classic. I really don't associate sex with anything to do with smartphones because I figured out how to get sex before Tinder. My lawn is immaculate.
This will be interesting (Score:1)
They have been unable to make their smartphones work in the consumer market, and they've burned a lot of bridges with their corporate customers.
So... given the track record of being unable to judge the market and put out a solid, single product the company was focused on, they expect to succeed at putting out a variety of products with which they have no experience and know nothing about the market?
Good luck. I expect Waterloo will have some good commercial real estate freed up soon.
torch form factor running android - I'm buying (Score:1)
Not a new thing (Score:2)
In essence what your seeing is that blackberry downplay it's old porfolio and tries to live o
I Have a Question. (Score:1)
Blackberry + security (Score:1)
From the early days, Blackberry has had better mobile security than competitors. Even today, though their app selection is more limited, their permissions model is better.
I like my Android, but if I'm going to have something integrated into my home or vehicle, I'd go for "more security+reliable" over "pretty with apps"