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    RIM BlackBerry Disruptions Could Create Windows Phone Opening

    By
    Nicholas Kolakowski
    -
    October 12, 2011
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      RIM’s current spate of BlackBerry service outages, should they persist, have the potential to weaken the company’s standing in the eyes of both business and consumer users. If that happens, the door opens for Microsoft’s Windows Phone to challenge RIM as the smartphone space’s third major ecosystem.

      At the moment, RIM appears safe from a serious Windows Phone challenge. Research firm Nielsen estimated the company’s share of the U.S. smartphone market at 18 percent through August, behind both Google Android (43 percent) and Apple’s iOS (28 percent) but well ahead of Microsoft (8 percent).

      However, Microsoft is determined to seize a greater share of the market. Its methods for doing so include the new “Mango” update, which started rolling out Sept. 27 and offers some 500 new tweaks, including a revamped Office hub. Microsoft has also signed deals with manufacturers ranging from Nokia and Samsung to Acer and ZTE to produce Windows Phone Mango devices. Dual-core and LTE devices are apparently in the pipeline, as is a massive marketing effort.

      Meanwhile, RIM is still working feverishly to transition to its own next generation of QNX-powered “superphones,” which the company claims will allow it to compete more heartily against the likes of Android and iOS.

      Until those devices reach the market, however, RIM will rely on a just-released set of devices running BlackBerry 7 OS. During its Sept. 15 earnings call, RIM reported revenues of $4.2 billion for the second quarter of fiscal 2012, a 15 percent decline from the $4.9 billion it earned during the previous quarter. The company shipped some 10.6 million BlackBerry smartphones and around 200,000 BlackBerry-branded PlayBook tablets during that period.

      Those numbers have led to analyst pessimism and even a well-publicized call, from Canadian merchant bank (and RIM shareholder) Jaguar Financial Corp, for a RIM shakeup. “Everybody is in support of a sale of RIM or another value creative transaction,” chief executive Vic Alboini told Reuters Oct. 11.

      A persistent series of service disruptions won’t help RIM’s attempts to maintain its user base, or push its latest round of BlackBerry devices as reliable and secure above all others. BlackBerry users in North America took to online forums and Twitter Oct. 12 to complain of service outages, a day after similar reports began trickling from geographic areas as diverse as Europe, the Middle East and Africa, Brazil, Chile, Peru and Argentina.

      BlackBerry users in Baltimore, New York City and Ontario told eWEEK they were experiencing issues with their service. RIM declined to respond directly to a request for comment by press time, but provided some updates through its official channels.

      “BlackBerry subscribers in the Americas may be experiencing intermittent service delays this morning,” RIM wrote in a short message posted on its Website Oct. 12. “We are working to resolve the situation as quickly as possible and we apologize to our customers for any inconvenience.”

      In another posting, the company suggested that the issue had become “our Number One priority right now and we are working night and day to restore all BlackBerry services to normal levels.”

      If RIM can’t achieve that goal-or if it does, only to combat yet another widespread outage in a few weeks-it could drive BlackBerry users into taking another look at an alternative platform, just as Microsoft makes another effort to amplify Windows Phone’s marketplace presence. The end result could be a market shift, one not in RIM’s favor.

      Follow Nicholas Kolakowski on Twitter

      Nicholas Kolakowski
      Nicholas Kolakowski is a staff editor at eWEEK, covering Microsoft and other companies in the enterprise space, as well as evolving technology such as tablet PCs. His work has appeared in The Washington Post, Playboy, WebMD, AARP the Magazine, AutoWeek, Washington City Paper, Trader Monthly, and Private Air. He lives in Brooklyn, New York.
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