Strategy Analytics: Android claimed 70 percent of world smartphone share in Q4 2012

Estimate Android claimed 70 percent of world smartphone share in Q4 2012

Maybe it’s easier being green than we thought. We suspected Android would do well in smartphone market share when Strategy Analytics had Samsung surging ahead in the fourth quarter of 2012, but the firm’s newer breakdown of estimated share by OS shows an even larger jump for Google’s overall platform — from 51.3 percent in fall 2011 to 70.1 percent one year later. Apple was knocked down slightly to 22 percent, although it’s mostly other platforms that took the bruising. Collectively, BlackBerry, Symbian, Windows Phone and other platforms sank from 25.1 percent of the smartphone space in late 2011 to just 7.9 points as 2012 drew to a close. When just two companies’ platforms make up 92 percent of smartphones, it’s safe to call the result a duopoly, like Strategy Analytics does — even if others aren’t so content with the idea.

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Strategy Analytics: Android and Apple iOS Capture a Record 92 Percent Share of Global Smartphone Shipments in Q4 2012

BOSTON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–According to the latest research from Strategy Analytics, global smartphone shipments grew 38 percent annually to reach 217 million units in the fourth quarter of 2012. Android and Apple iOS together accounted for a record 92 percent share of all smartphones shipped worldwide.

Neil Shah, Senior Analyst at Strategy Analytics, said, “Global smartphone shipments grew 38 percent annually from 157.0 million units in Q4 2011 to 217.0 million in Q4 2012. Global smartphone shipments for the full year reached a record 700.1 million units in 2012, increasing robustly from 490.5 million units in 2011. Global shipment growth slowed from 64 percent in 2011 to 43 percent in 2012 as penetration of smartphones began to mature in developed regions such as North America and Western Europe.”

Neil Mawston, Executive Director at Strategy Analytics, added, “We estimate 152.1 million Android smartphones were shipped globally in Q4 2012, nearly doubling from 80.6 million units in Q4 2011. Android’s share of the global smartphone market has surged from 51 percent to 70 percent over the past year, crushing Symbian, Bada and other platforms in its wake. Almost half-a-billion Android smartphones were shipped in total worldwide during 2012. Android is clearly the undisputed volume leader of the smartphone industry at the present time. Android’s challenge for 2013 will be to defend its leadership, not only against Apple, but also against an emerging wave of hungry challengers that includes Microsoft, Blackberry, Firefox and Tizen.”

Scott Bicheno, Senior Analyst at Strategy Analytics, added, “Apple grew 29 percent annually and shipped 47.8 million smartphones worldwide for 22 percent marketshare in Q4 2012, dipping slightly from 24 percent a year earlier. Combined together, Apple and Android accounted for a record 92 percent share of all smartphones shipped globally in the fourth quarter of 2012. The worldwide smartphone industry has effectively become a duopoly as consumer demand has polarized around mass-market Android models and premium Apple designs.”

Exhibit 1: Global Smartphone Operating System Shipments and Market Share in Q4 2012 1

Global Smartphone OS Shipments (Millions of Units) Q4 ’11 2011 Q4 ’12 2012
Android 80.6 238.9 152.1 479.0
Apple iOS 37.0 93.0 47.8 135.8
Others 39.4 158.6 17.1 85.3
Total 157.0 490.5 217.0 700.1
Global Smartphone OS Marketshare %

Q4 ’11

2011 Q4 ’12 2012
Android 51.3% 48.7% 70.1% 68.4%
Apple iOS 23.6% 19.0% 22.0% 19.4%
Others 25.1% 32.3% 7.9% 12.2%
Total 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0%
Total Growth Year-over-Year % 55.9% 63.8% 38.2% 42.7%

The full report, Android & Apple iOS Capture a Record 92 Percent Share of Global Smartphone Shipments in Q4 2012, is published by the Strategy Analytics Wireless Smartphone Strategies (WSS) service, details of which can be found here: http://tinyurl.com/9djv7u8.

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Via: TalkAndroid

Source: Strategy Analytics

BlackBerry 10 Z10 Available For Online Orders In U.K. Starting Tomorrow

blackberry 10 z10 available uk BlackBerry 10 Z10 Available For Online Orders In U.K. Starting TomorrowTomorrow will be make or break for RIM as they’ll be showcasing BlackBerry 10 to the world and releasing some new BlackBerry 10 devices, which we already assume one of them will be the BlackBerry 10 Z10. Considering how many leaks have come out in regards to BlackBerry 10, we’re surprised we have yet to hear when exactly it will be available for retail. It looks as though the final piece to the BlackBerry 10 puzzle has fallen into place as we now know when it’ll be made available.

According to a Vodafone UK employee who sent an internal communication to The Verge, it looks as though we can expect for the BlackBerry 10 Z10 to be made available to order online starting tomorrow at 5PM local time in the U.K. Phones will be in-stock and ready to pick up at all Vodafone store locations starting on January 31.

So – we should now expect for BlackBerry 10 devices to officially launch in the U.K. starting Thursday, but what does that mean for the U.S.? Unfortunately, we aren’t completely sure of that at this point, although we’re hoping potential BlackBerry 10 customers will be able to get their hands on RIM’s new phones some time this week as well.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Starfish Technologies To Unveil Smartwatch At Macworld, Volvo Relies On Crowdsourcing For New App,

What we know about BlackBerry 10

Despite — or rather thanks to — major delays in releasing BlackBerry 10, RIM has let quite a bit slip about its upcoming operating system and related BB10 devices. We’ve had more than a year to absorb leaks, rumors and official information, after all, so it’s no surprise that we have a very good idea of what to expect when Waterloo pulls back the curtain on January 30th. That doesn’t mean things are as plain as day, though; the deluge of blurrycam shots and carrier screens have provided an almost indigestible amount of information about BB10, and we don’t blame you if you can’t keep the story straight. We’re here to parse the madness, though, so read on to find out what to expect at tomorrow’s launch event.

Software

Touch keyboard with predictive input

The first BB10 handset likely won’t sport a physical keyboard, but that doesn’t mean you should expect a subpar typing experience. RIM’s on-screen layout will boast quite a few enhancements to compete with SwiftKey and other similar input options. For instance, the company has demoed predictive typing; press on a letter, and a selection of likely words will hover over the corresponding character (“hey” when you hit H, for example). To pick one of the predicted words, you simply swipe up on it. The keyboard will learn and adapt to your linguistic habits, so you can expect more accurate suggestions over time. In addition to predictive input, the on-screen layout features intuitive gestures such as swiping to the left to delete text and swiping from the lower left to minimize the keyboard. Other gestures include swiping from the bottom to reveal numbers and special characters.

Timeline lens, camera filters

At BlackBerry World 2012, RIM showed us its take on fancy camera software: the “timeline lens,” which uses Scalado’s Rewind technology to capture frames even before you hit the shutter. This means you can cycle back through the shooter’s cache if you miss an image by a second or two.

If The Gadget Masters website, which posted a hands-on video with a “pre-production Z10,” is to be believed, we can also expect photo-editing software courtesy of Scalado, including Instagram-style filters and options such as transform, brightness / white balance adjustment, rotate and aspect ratio customization.

User interface with Peek, flow gestures

One of the most anticipated aspects of BlackBerry 10 is the user interface’s focus on multitasking. The aptly named Peek feature, showcased at BlackBerry Jam last September, lets users view apps running in the background by simply swiping from the left or right. From there, users can either return to their previous task or swipe back to go into previously launched programs. At least in theory, this is meant to provide a more fluid app-switching experience than the task list à la webOS and Android.

Back in May, RIM officially previewed the BB10 home screen, which will include an app grid that displays all currently running programs. From here, swiping to the right will bring up the full launcher, and gesturing to the left will bring you to the unified inbox. Here as well, you can use Peek to view recent notifications and any currently running applications, and then swipe to backtrack to the main hub. Users can also minimize a given window to see new notifications. We also got a hands-on look at the UI in action when we met with RIM Principal Architect Gary Klassen last June — check out our video.

Security features, BYOD

Historically, RIM’s handsets have been almost synonymous with the BYOD (bring your own device) movement, so it’s no surprise that BB10 devices will come with corporate-minded features on board. First off, the OS has FIP 140-2 certification, meaning it meets the security and encryption requirements of government agencies and enterprises.

BB10 devices will also have BlackBerry Balance, which partitions RIM’s phones into separate work and personal profiles. To toggle between these two modes, you simply pull down from the app icon grid. You’ll see different applications listed depending on which profile you’re in, and you can run applications simultaneously in both profiles. For instance, you can have the browser open on the corporate side, and it will adhere to your IT desk’s policies, and on the personal side it will run without these restrictions.

Apps

One of many tidbits we’ve gleaned from the leaked BB10 training manual is that RIM is promising some 70,000 QNX apps in the BlackBerry World store at launch. And indeed, Waterloo has been aggressively courting developers, offering a $10,000 guarantee for approved apps that make less than 10k in the first year. The company also held “Portathon” events to drum up app submissions with a cash incentive. One such contest netted 15,000 entries in less than 38 hours.

In addition to seeking new applications, RIM has invested time and money into securing the top names for its platform. Rest assured that a native Facebook app will be on board at launch, as will Foursquare. We also have good reason to believe that Google Talk and Twitter will be integrated into the unified inbox.

The devices

The all-touch BlackBerry Z10

Back in November, CEO Thorsten Heins told us that a full-touch device will be RIM’s way of gaining back market share, as the company’s smartphone success to date has been in the QWERTY category. Hence, the first BB10 device will feature an on-screen rather than a physical keyboard.

All signs point to the first flagship device being the full-touch BlackBerry Z10, a phone in the higher-end L-Series line. We’ve seen that model name come up repeatedly, in RIM marketing materials and most recently in a screen cap from Verizon’s website.

Leaked specs for the Z10 match up quite closely with the BlackBerry 10 Dev Alpha we first saw last May. Unveiled at BlackBerry World, the device sported a 4.2-inch, 1,280 x 768 display with 16GB of internal storage. Rumors and leaks about the Z10 have echoed that same set of specifications — save for 2GB rather than 1GB of RAM — and we now hear it will run a 1.5GHz ARM Cortex-A9 processor under the hood. Whether that CPU spec turns out to be true or not, it’s safe to assume the phone will pack a dual-core chip.

Lower-end and QWERTY models coming soon

From the beginning, Heins has made it clear that RIM’s BB10 strategy is to target the more “premium” end of the market first, though “at least six” handsets in total will debut in 2013. We can expect mid-range and lower-end devices in this batch; Heins said a physical keyboard model will be released soon after the first BB10 touch device, and this QWERTY model should fall under the N-Series. Physical keyboards have arguably been RIM’s bread and butter, and while the company clearly finessed its on-screen input for the all-touch Z10, it’s unclear whether QWERTY models will receive a keyboard revamp as well.

We’d be remiss to move on without mentioning the PlayBook. Though we don’t know if any new models are on the horizon, RIM has confirmed that existing versions of its biz-focused tablet will receive the upgrade to BlackBerry 10. Of course, this is possible because the PlayBook is a QNX-based device.

Carrier support

Unsurprisingly, most of the major carriers will be on board when BlackBerry 10 hits the market. AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon have all confirmed that they’ll be carrying BB10 devices at launch, and Sprint recently spoke up to reassure customers that it will be on board by “later this year.” UK carriers, including Three, O2 and EE, also confirmed that they’ll offer BB10 products in early 2013. Additionally, in our interview with Heins, he confirmed that BB10 devices, including the QWERTY handset, will support 4G LTE.

Wrap-up

Clearly, we won’t be walking blindly into the BlackBerry 10 launch event, as both RIM itself and countless leaks have furnished us with plenty of details about what devices and software features to expect. Still, nothing is for certain until Waterloo announces it on stage, so you’ll want to tune into our liveblog when the action goes down tomorrow.

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Reminder: We’re live at RIM’s BlackBerry 10 unveiling tomorrow

The BlackBerry Experience is almost ready to begin. In 24 hours RIM will deliver upon us a wholly new operating system, the QNX-based phone OS that ‘Berry fans have been awaiting for years. And, if that weren’t enough, we’re expecting two totally new smartphones to run it, one being the frequently leaked Z10, the other a somewhat more mysterious QWERTY model. Are you ready to see them for real? Set your browsers to our liveblog page right here and join us at the time listed below.

January 30, 2013 10:00 AM EST

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BlackBerry 10 adds ooVoo for 12-person video chat

BlackBerry 10 users will be able to hold multi-person video calls featuring up to twelve participants, thanks to a deal with ooVoo that sees the conference chat service integrated into RIM’s new platform. The ooVoo video and instant messaging service, which is free to use, will hook into BlackBerry 10′s calling system, with the companies claiming it will be straightforward to flick between a voice call and an ooVoo video call.

oovoo_video_chat

Since ooVoo is a cross-platform service – with clients for PC, Mac, Android, and iOS – those with BlackBerry 10 devices will be able to hold video calls with their counterparts using other devices. There’ll also be integration with the BlackBerry 10 browser.

ooVoo functionality isn’t the only streaming video option RIM is expected to include in BlackBerry 10. According to leaks last month, BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) on the new OS will also include full-screen video calls, as well as screen sharing, though it’s not expected to support multiple-user conversations.

Exactly when BlackBerry 10 devices will get the ooVoo app is unclear, with the company only saying that it will be available “later this year”; that could be a concession to RIM, however, which is yet to confirm specific release dates for the first BlackBerry 10 devices. We should know that for sure tomorrow, with RIM set to fully detail its new OS – and the smartphones that run it – at events in North America and Europe.


BlackBerry 10 adds ooVoo for 12-person video chat is written by Chris Davies & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

RIM Reduces Pricing Tier For Apps On BlackBerry World

blackberry RIM Reduces Pricing Tier For Apps On BlackBerry World Just over the weekend after renaming its BlackBerry App World to the much simpler and bolder BlackBerry World, Research In Motion revealed plans of updating the pricing tier on its apps on the storefront. RIM says that it will first update the British Pound (GPB) and Euro (EUR) currencies, and that updates to other currencies will follow shortly. Citing the reason for the adjustment, RIM says that it wants to make sure that prices are in line with currency fluctuations and that its apps within BlackBerry World are competitive. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Microsoft Office 2013 Now Available For Purchase, Barnes & Noble To Close 200 Stores In Future,

White BlackBerry 10 X10 Pictures Leak Online

 White BlackBerry 10 X10 Pictures Leak Online

We’re just two days away from RIM’s big press event where we’ll learn more about its upcoming BlackBerry 10 devices, two of which we assume will be the BlacBerry 10 Z10 and BlackBerry 10 X10 while a BlackBerry 10 tablet would be nice to see, we’re not holding our breath on it making its debut this Wednesday.

Since we’re so close to the event, it isn’t unexpected for additional leaks to be made. Such is the case as a number of images have made their way to the Web that not only show off the Z10, which we’ve seen a number of times already, but show it in its white version. We heard reports of a white Z10 mentioned in the past, but have yet to see a real version of it.

(more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Nokia Lumia 920 Service Manual Leaked, BlackBerry N10 Renders Appear With Keyboard In Tow,

BlackBerry Z10 renders make the case against iPhone 5

The fellow who brought you quite a few ultra-realistic renderings of smartphones and tablets over the past year Martin Hajek has struck again with the BlackBerry Z10. This time he’s making the case for a white version of the machine as it sits right next to the iPhone 5, also rendered by this amazingly talented fellow. What’s interesting about this device beyond its obvious inclusion in the same generation of smartphone aesthetics as the iPhone 5 is that it is, here, appearing to be a real iPhone competitor – could it be?

afweew

The quality of the renders here is something we’re having trouble not focusing on as it was this man’s work nearly the whole tech publishing universe was tricked by back when he first whipped up the iPhone 5. And he’s certainly not gotten worse with his skill set since then, that’s for certain. Once we’ve got that in mind, it’s looking like RIM has done an amazing job at creating a smartphone that, believe it or not, looks beautiful enough on its own (before the software, that is), that it holds its own against the iPhone.

fira

While the back of the device still rings a heavy RIM bell with a uniformly textured battery cover and a squared-off camera rectangle with beastly flash bulb next door, the sides and front are distinctly smooth and ready for a real modern fashion competition with the rest of the market here in 2013. The BlackBerry N10 is also rendered here in both white and black, appearing quite sleek and polished (as all renders from Hajek do), but again falling ever-so-slightly flat on the back.

232

The renders you see here are made from a combination of specification leaks, rumors, and what can be essentially considered confirmations (nearly) in photos and videos of the device that’ve been flowing for several weeks. Have a peek at the timeline below to learn more about the BlackBerry 10 launch (we’ll be there on the 30th of this month) as well as the BlackBerry Z10 you see above. Let us know if you’re going to jump on the BlackBerry 10 ship through the future, too!

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[via Gizmodo]


BlackBerry Z10 renders make the case against iPhone 5 is written by Chris Burns & originally posted on SlashGear.
© 2005 – 2012, SlashGear. All right reserved.

RIM: A brief history from Budgie to BlackBerry 10

RIM a brief history from Budgie to BlackBerry 10

Listen to much of the chatter about Research in Motion today and you’ll hear the launch of BlackBerry 10 described in almost apocalyptic terms. All-or-nothing. Live-or-die. Make-or-break. There’s some truth to the extreme language, but BlackBerry 10 is really just the latest in a series of transformational moments for a company that has frequently had to adapt to survive. In that sense, the appreciation for crises and opportunities is almost as natural as breathing for RIM. What’s less certain is whether or not the company in 2013 is as capable of wholesale shifts in strategy as it was for much of its not quite 30-year history. Read on to see why reform is possible, but won’t be quite so easy.

For its first two decades, RIM often showed the traits of a scrappy startup. It had nothing to lose and was willing to turn its business model on a dime to stay afloat. More importantly, it also had a simple, overriding determination to spread wireless data to the masses, no matter how that would come to pass. That gave it a leg up over contemporary technology stalwarts like Apple, Microsoft and Palm, all of whom were at least slightly behind RIM in seeing the value of truly instant mobile communication. CEO Mike Lazaridis (and eventual co-CEO Jim Balsillie) would see a void in the market, whether it was two-way paging or mobile email, and switch strategies to fill it.

Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie

The company spent more time trying to justify its existing smartphone philosophy and less time getting ahead of trends.

As the 2000s wore on, however, RIM slowed down. Much of the decade revolved around entrenching what we know as the core BlackBerry business model, where messaging-focused smartphones ship to large-scale customers. The company acknowledged the consumer world as early as 2003, but its approach was increasingly reactionary. We wouldn’t have had the BlackBerry Storm without the iPhone popularizing touchscreens first, for example. The company spent more time trying to justify its existing smartphone philosophy and less time getting ahead of trends, even as it lost its market share advantage and started working on BlackBerry 10. Some saw the eventual departures of Lazaridis, Balsillie and a slew of executives as necessary to undo an institutionalized resistance to change.

The launch of BlackBerry 10 isn’t just the test of a software redesign, then. It’s gauging whether or not a leaner RIM is once again nimble enough to stay relevant. We haven’t quite returned to the company’s early days, but its current position is an uncannily familiar one where RIM has to bet the farm on a new project. The difference? RIM isn’t entering an untapped wireless market this time. While it’s on better footing than a defunct mobile veteran like Palm, there’s not much room for a second chance. Follow along with our timeline to see just how RIM’s opportunities opened up, closed shut and maybe (just maybe) opened up again with a new OS.

1984 – 1994

Mike Lazaridis and Doug Fregin with Budgie

Mike Lazaridis and Doug Fregin officially founded Research in Motion on March 7th, 1984 with a desire to commercialize Budgie, a system that wirelessly displayed information on a TV screen. It generated enough business to let RIM take on side projects, including a film barcode reader, but the real kick start was the arrival of one of the earliest wireless data networks, Mobitex. Software deals to support it led to the 1993 launch of RIMGate, the precursor to BlackBerry Enterprise Server, and wireless point-of-sale terminals in 1994. This early period also saw the introduction of Jim Balsillie, who met Lazaridis while trying to negotiate a purchase of RIM in 1992 and quickly became the future BlackBerry maker’s VP of Finance. Few other companies were as actively interested in mobile data at the time: apart from Mobitex creator Ericsson, the most conspicuous participant was IBM, whose smartphone-like Simon Personal Communicator went on sale briefly in 1994 and still depended on a 2,400-baud modem for data.

1995 – 2001

RIM Inter@ctive PagerRIM’s experience developing code for Mobitex led it to building hardware, starting with a PCMCIA modem in 1995. The company’s first mobile messaging device, the RIM 900 Inter@ctive Pager, came a year later, followed by the smaller and more successful RIM 950 in 1998. The first hardware that resembled a BlackBerry as we know it today was the not-very-elegantly named RIM 957 from April 2000, but it only offered data and wasn’t joined at the hip with the BlackBerry name. While the BlackBerry email service launched in January 1999 and went mobile with the 957, it would be three years before there was a proper BlackBerry phone. More smartphone-like technology was emerging in the form of devices like the Nokia 9000 series in 1996, Ericsson’s Symbian-based R380 in 2000 and the Palm OS-running Kyocera 6035 in 2001, although few would say they cracked the market wide open when the PDA side was either crude or entirely separate. This was Palm’s heyday, and many were still satisfied with a cellphone in one hand and a PDA in the other.

2002 – 2005

Blackberry 5810

The BlackBerry era started in earnest in March 2002, when RIM unveiled the BlackBerry 5810. It was the first handheld from RIM to carry GSM and GPRS, although phone service was almost incidental when owners had to plug in a headset just to make calls. The situation got better when the 6710 and beyond had audio hardware built-in. Color came with the 7200 and 7700 series in 2003, but the real breakthroughs were the 6200 series from that year and the 7100 in 2004, which were explicitly targeted at “prosumers” who wanted a BlackBerry for personal use. In 2005, the 8700 series took the 7100’s sleeker aesthetic to the high-end; for many, it was the first modern BlackBerry, where a polished design, phone features and a full keyboard were all in one device. Not that RIM could rest on its laurels. Nokia, Palm and others had thrown themselves wholeheartedly into smartphones, and Microsoft’s launches of Pocket PC 2002 and Windows Mobile provided a start for smartphone makers that would eventually play important roles, like HTC.

2006 – 2007

BlackBerry Pearl for T-MobileIt’s at the middle of last decade that RIM simultaneously reached its creative zenith and sowed the seeds of its decline. The BlackBerry Pearl of 2006 was the company’s first phone built expressly for the regular public, and had such radical concepts (for RIM) as a camera and dedicated media playback. Both the Pearl and the QWERTY-equipped Curve of 2007 would be key to an explosion in sales over the next few years. However, it’s also in 2007 that Apple launched the iPhone and began the public’s love affair with touchscreens in their mobile devices. RIM’s response, even into 2010, was to downplay the threat; it argued that customers needed hardware keyboards. It was difficult to know then just how dangerous the attitude would be when others were similarly dismissive — see Steve Ballmer’s jab that the iPhone was too expensive to succeed, for example — but it’s clear in hindsight that RIM had put the blinders on at the very moment its eyes needed to be wide open.

2008 – 2009

BlackBerry Storm, Bold 9000 and Curve 8900

Despite its love of physical keys, RIM’s solution to newfound competition was to hedge its bets. Traditionalists got the upscale Bold 9000 line in May 2008; would-be Android and iPhone converts got the BlackBerry Storm in November of that year. BlackBerry App World also countered the Android Market and the App Store several months after the fact, in 2009. The platform reached a peak of 20.8 percent market share in the third quarter that same year, according to Gartner, but the bloom was already starting to come off the rose. The iPhone 3GS helped Apple outsell RIM for the first time, as Steve Jobs noted that fall. Hype for the Storm quickly fizzled out, and Verizon’s edition of the Storm 2 launched the same day in October 2009 as the more heavily promoted (and ultimately more successful) Motorola Droid. RIM could mostly take comfort in knowing that the competing Nokia N97 and Palm Pre also did little to halt the declines of their respective creators.

2010

BlackBerry PlayBook at DevCon 2010

RIM was aware that the BlackBerry needed more than just a small tuneup, and spent much of 2010 laying the groundwork for an overhaul. It bought real-time OS developer QNX in April for code that would eventually power BlackBerry Tablet OS and BlackBerry 10. Help building the interface would come in December, through the acquisition of mobile software developer The Astonishing Tribe. We quickly saw early results from the QNX deal when RIM previewed its first-ever tablet, the BlackBerry PlayBook, in September. Mobile customers weren’t patient enough to wait for a finished product: Apple eventually eclipsed RIM’s market share on a more permanent basis and more and more of the BlackBerry’s loyal enterprise users were among those switching to Android and the iPhone. Most long-serving competitors weren’t faring much better. Palm’s overcommitment to Sprint and its missed opportunity with Verizon led HP to snatch it up. The year was ultimately defined by Android, which Gartner says catapulted from a token 3.9 percent of the smartphone market in 2009 to 22.7 percent for 2010, just behind a rapidly crumbling Symbian.

2011

RIM arguably faced its nadir of public perception in 2011. The PlayBook was rushed to market in April and tanked badly enough to require fire sale pricing for unsold stock — in part because it initially lacked the very messaging features that were supposed to be RIM’s strong suit. BlackBerry 7 devices like the Bold 9900 series gave RIM’s legacy platform a last hurrah, but a sustained, worldwide service outage stained the line’s reputation (and the company’s) in October. Building the $2,000 Porsche Design P’9981 BlackBerry and losing the BBX trademark dispute didn’t exactly endear RIM to the public, either. Management was increasingly seen as the problem, rather than the solution, as disappointing earnings and delays became the order of the day. The firm escaped the ignominy of Palm’s fate, which saw HP reduce webOS to a side project, but was well behind Nokia in the reinvention process, which already had Windows Phone-based devices shipping in late 2011. Apple and Google both took advantage of customer frustration with old stalwarts like Nokia and RIM, to the point where their respective iOS and Android platforms were the only ones gaining significant share. Gartner and other firms crowned Android as the market leader in the spring, and Apple would eventually rise to second place in 2012.

2012

Thorsten Heins of RIM talks with Tim Stevens

The year of renewal… mostly. Balsillie and Lazaridis were out almost as soon as the year began, replaced by company veteran Thorsten Heins. He spent most of the year getting RIM’s house in order, including thousands of job cuts among the rank and file. Multiple long-serving executives left, and little energy was put into new hardware outside of the already expected 4G PlayBook and budget phones. Most of the company’s fate was now tied up in BlackBerry 10 and its matching devices. Heins ran into flak quickly: BlackBerry 10 was delayed into 2013, and the company started racking up significant losses after years of profit.

2013

BlackBerry Dev Alpha B hands-on

RIM is starting 2013 much as it spent most of 2012. It’s in a race to establish BlackBerry 10 as a truly credible third competitor among smartphone platforms before the industry shifts to an Apple / Google duopoly — and before the cash runs dry.

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Lenovo Might Not Take Over RIM After All

lenovo rim1 Lenovo Might Not Take Over RIM After AllThere was a story that made its rounds late last week that Lenovo is looking in the possibility of purchasing RIM, and it seems that the possibility of that is not happening anytime soon. After all, this bit of information came from the horse’s mouth, as Lenovo has stepped up to the plate and refuted such acquisition rumors. Bloomberg originally quoted Lenovo CFO Wong Wai Ming, “We are looking at all opportunities – RIM and many others. We’ll have no hesitation if the right opportunity comes along that could benefit us and shareholders.”

Well, Lenovo took an official stance today that their CFO did mean to say that Lenovo will remain open to possibilities of acquisitions, and targeting the BlackBerry manufacturer from Canada is not the only option. In other words, they said, “In general, we do not comment on M&A rumours or speculation. We are aware that Lenovo’s CFO Waiming was speaking broadly about M&A strategy in a recent interview. RIM was raised as a potential target by the journalist and Mr Wong repeatedly answered in a manner consistent with all of our previous statements on M&A strategy: Lenovo is very focused on growing its business, both organically and through M&A. When inorganic ideas arise, we explore them to see if there is a strategic fit. Beyond this we do not have anything else to say.”

Well, there you have it – right from the horse’s mouth.

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Facebook iOS App Updated To Allow For Voice, Video Messages, White BlackBerry 10 X10 Pictures Leak Online,