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- RadioShack Contest Offering “Free Phones for Life!” to 4 Lucky Winners!
- BlackBerry Curve 9360 Also Found on eBay
- BlackBerry Bold 9900 Auction Pops Up on eBay UK
- BlackBerry Dev Speaks Out in “Letter from Outer Space”
- 4th of July BlackBerry Themes & Free Fireworks Apps!
- Happy 4th of July from the BerryReview Team!
- Free QRem App Lets You Scan AND Create QR Codes on Your BlackBerry
RadioShack Contest Offering “Free Phones for Life!” to 4 Lucky Winners! Posted: 05 Jul 2011 01:58 AM PDT Fred let me know that RadioShack has a slick contest going on right now called the "RadioShack Free Phones for Life Sweepstakes." They are basing their "Free Phones for Life" prize as $25,000 based on estimated costs of $500 per year for a new BlackBerry for 50 years. I guess they assume your phone will be embedded into your brain in 50 years. The are giving away 4 of these packages so that is 4 possible winners! They have an odd system going of how to enter that is a bit confusing. Anybody living in the US who is 18 or older can enter to win for free at www.radioshack.com/FreePhonesForLife which gives you 5 entries into the contest. You can enter this way 5 times per week for up to 25 entries. The odd part is that you also get ONE entry for purchasing something at a RadioShack store (unless you live in California), ONE for buying something at RadioShack.com, ONE for applying for a RadioShack credit card, and ONE more for your first purchase with said new RadioShack card. Odd that you would get more entries online than when you actually buy something. RadioShack is also placing a hard limit of 100 total entries per person or email address no matter how you enter along with a few other restrictions like: One in-store purchase transaction per person/store per day, regardless of number of items purchased; one online purchase transaction per person per day, regardless of number of items purchased; one entry via new RadioShack Credit Card (The Shack Card) application per person. Twenty Five (25) entries via Entry Method #2 (Online form) per person per week. So what are you waiting for? Enter to win free phones for life every week until July 30th at www.radioshack.com/FreePhonesForLife If you liked this article, you might find these interesting:
Posted by Ronen Halevy for ©BerryReview, July 5, 2011, 4:58 am. | RadioShack Contest Offering “Free Phones for Life!” to 4 Lucky Winners! | Leave a comment | |
BlackBerry Curve 9360 Also Found on eBay Posted: 04 Jul 2011 10:36 AM PDT You have to love how these unreleased devices are showing up on eBay. They usually get sold behind the scenes but once they show up on eBay you know there are quite a few mulling around. We told you about the BlackBerry Bold 9900 that was spotted on eBay but now we have the BlackBerry Curve 9360 there too (spotted by BBNews.pl) from a different seller in the UK. Its going for GBP 379.00 which translates into about $608.14. Check it out for yourself at this link If you liked this article, you might find these interesting:
Posted by the BerryReview Team for ©BerryReview, July 4, 2011, 1:36 pm. | BlackBerry Curve 9360 Also Found on eBay | One comment | |
BlackBerry Bold 9900 Auction Pops Up on eBay UK Posted: 04 Jul 2011 10:29 AM PDT You know you we are getting close to a launch once prerelease devices start showing up on eBay. The team at BBNews.pl spotted a BlackBerry Bold 9900 on eBay in the UK. Its going for a hefty £900.00 but oddly has an auction length of almost 25 days remaining. I am not sure what to make of that but the seller has pretty good feedback. Check it out for yourself at this link. Thanks to everyone who sent this in! If you liked this article, you might find these interesting:
Posted by the BerryReview Team for ©BerryReview, July 4, 2011, 1:29 pm. | BlackBerry Bold 9900 Auction Pops Up on eBay UK | 5 comments | |
BlackBerry Dev Speaks Out in “Letter from Outer Space” Posted: 04 Jul 2011 09:30 AM PDT
With the media declaring doom and gloom for RIM at every corner its nice to see developers coming out to explain why they choose the BlackBerry platform and the future they see in it. There are tons of BlackBerry developers making good money developing slick enterprise and consumer apps but they tend to keep quiet. Ekke, a long time BlackBerry developer, decided to do something about it and penned his "Letter from Outer Space" explaining why he develops for the BlackBerry Platform and the current game plan he is seeing at RIM and what he is hearing from actual RIM employees. Most of you are probably tired of the "Open Letters" from "RIM Employees" but I highly recommend checking out this one. I asked Ekke for permission to repost his letter below which originally appeared on EkkesCorner. Let us know what you think of it! Preliminary remarksthis blog is something like a reaction on anonymous RIM insider reports as published here. I'm, not an insider – so this is my "letter from the outer space" I don't know what's right or not, but whining never helps and I got so much positive feedback reported by (real known, not anonymous) RIM employees, so I have a good feeling to continue with the BlackBerry platform. As you probably know, I'm an independent software architect working for medium sized companies in the domain of enterprise and mobile business applications. I'm doing this since more then 30 years now and the only goal of my daily work as consultant, architect, developer or trainer is to design the best solution to satisfy the requirements of my customers. I'm also an Open Source enthusiast and like developing with (and for) Eclipse Projects. And I'm a fan of Apple products since Apple][, Apple ///, Lisa and Macintosh. Of course I'm developing using newest full-featured iMac at my home-office and MacBookPro at customer site and my (and my wife's) smartphone is an iPhone. My two youngest kids like their HTC Desire Android phones (and I can see how Android works and also can test APPs at Android Devices). If you followed my blogs and twitter @ekkescorner you have seen many posts about BlackBerry Development (using Eclipse to develop native Java Apps). Perhaps you're asking "why the hell is ekke developing for BlackBerry platform instead of iOS or Android ?" The answer is easy: because I had some customer requirements I could only solve using BlackBerry (more below). If you know the way I'm working to produce high-quality software, you also know that I don't touch only the surface, I always go as deep as possible into frameworks / platforms / technologies to find the best solutions. And that's what I also did with BlackBerry. Developing BlackBerry Java APPs totally changed my mind about RIM and BlackBerry. This article is based on my subjective personal experiences with BlackBerry and discussions with other developers. I don't want to be part of a war between anonymous writers and their employers. Reading so many shallow media articles about RIM and BlackBerry and anonymous letters from 'insiders' published last days I decided it's time for me to write this article from the outside. I have enough distance, no stock options and survived so many technologies, so hopefully reading this article causes someone to rethink about BlackBerry and RIM. Image 2: young ekke – survived many technologies since thenWhy BlackBerry is the optimal solution for some of my customersat first I want to talk about the reason, why I preferred BlackBerry for some of my customers. easiest to explain taking a look at some of the must-have-requirements from one of my customer projects:
These are only some examples – it's not the goal of this article to go deeper into other requirements. I myself was astonished how many times the answer was: this special requirement could only be solved using BlackBerry or causes extra development costs on other platforms. video: UI and Navigation BlackBerry OS 5(if video not visible click here to watch) Only marking requirements as solved by a platform isn't enough – users have to rely on a platform for years – and much more important: the users also must have… A good feeling – esp. using mobile devices with whole-day-business-APPsthat's the reason of iPhones success story: Apple was the first company providing Applications and mobile Devices where users have fun to work with. Why most people are not thinking on BlackBerry if talking about cool devices and software ? Years ago BlackBerry was the leader and the first one putting BlackBerry phones into Enterprise companies. Esp. pushing emails to the devices through BlackBerry infrastructure was unique and powerful. The look and feel of native applications using Java ME maybe was acceptable in the past, but not if compared with Android and iOS. The mistake done by many 'experts' is to compare such old applications (OS 4.x) with modern Apps on Android or iOS. You can develop all kinds of mobile Applications using BlackBerry OS 6 – per ex. using Maps, Routes, GPS, Geodata and Accelerometer: video: shake your BlackBerry to follow the path(if video isn't visible, you can watch it here) Starting with BlackBerry OS 5 the look-and-feel of BlackBerry native Java Applications changed radical and this story was continued by BlackBerry OS 6 and OS 7. It's always the same: if I'm demonstrating some of the applications I developed for customers running on BlackBerry, nobody could believe that this is a BlackBerry Application. You could really develop very cool Applications for BlackBerry and if you're just starting you should forget all the old OS versions and start with OS 6. Reading letters from anonymous 'insiders' and their whining about BlackBerry Applications I think they don't know what they're talking about. I know from my experiences and customer – feedback that OS 6 BlackBerry applications are playing same level then Android or iOS. I placed some videos at http://vimeo.com/channels/blackberrydev – more will follow and also some blog series where you can verify this. Not only the look-and-feel changed – also the developers at RIM added more and more API and (extended) JSR's to make the life as a java developer easier and to provide more and more functionality. Yes – I know, RIM's first touch-device (the Storm) was disastrous (compared with an iPhone), but they learned and the Torch is much better providing a good feeling. (I use Torch, Bold 9780 and iPhone daily and always like the hardware keyboard). The upcoming devices (Bold 9900, 9930…) will again be much better because of better hardware and graphics – they also will have a compass, NFC and OS 7 on board. Actual devices perform well and cool apps can be developed – what's the problem ? All current BlackBerry Smartphone Apps rely on an outdated platform under the hood and it's clear to survive this must be changed. That's where QNX comes into play and the BlackBerry Tablet OS running on BlackBerry Playbook. BlackBerry PlayBook – first step into the futureLast year at Developer Conference DevCon in San Francisco RIM announced the first tablet: the PlayBook and now it's available – even in Germany since some weeks. BlackBerry PlayBook is the first RIM Device using an OS based on QNX: TabletOS. QNX is a modern and robust OS and since many years used in sensible domains. Now RIM has a counterpart to Apple's OSX. QNX will also be the future OS for RIM's smartphones. BlackBerry PlayBook is a real Multitasking System: switching between apps doesn't pause them – they're all running – this enables great application – scenarios esp. for business APPs. Yes, there are negative comments from analysts because there's no native mail + calendar application or they miss an UMTS version of the PlayBook, but last quarter RIM sold more PlayBooks then expected (500,000+) to the channels. If you ask someone working with the PlayBook daily – you'll get enthusiastic reports: the PlayBook runs fast, is intuitive, has many cool features and you got a good feeling holding it in your hands. Most PlayBook users are very impressed and some told me, they don't understand why analysts are writing so negative. Perhaps some analysts compared PlayBook directly with iPad2 and have overseen, that
… they put the hurdle to overcome by RIM too high. image 3: don't put the hurdle too highI think, RIM has done a very good job for this first step. Yes: native email and calendar are missing yet, but you can use the browser in the meantime and RIM has announced that both will be shipped soon. Of course: time is running and RIM has only a small timeframe, but the chance is good that RIM solves this. Yes: there are not so many Apps available then for Android or iOS, but RIM announced a player allowing it to run Android Applications on the PlayBook and another Player to run existing BlackBerry Java Apps from OS5 + on the PlayBook. Both players are announced for summer / autumn and will enhance the number of available applications drastic. For me the TabletOS has the power to enable the BlackBerry PlayBook as a unique player at eye level with iOS. Looking at the technical specifications of the PlayBook you'll see it's up-to-date: 7″, 1024*600, Multitasking, 1GHz Dual Core processor, 1 GB RAM, Wi-Fi, GPS, Bluetooth, 1080p HD Video with 3 Megapixel Camera (front) and 5 Megapixel Camera (back), Flash supported, 3G for this 1st version of a BlackBerry PlayBook via Tethering. Missing: native email client and calendar, but announced to come this summer via software update. But if you're only looking at the tech specs your way too short – if tech specs are the most important things today, then all these Android Tablets should have more success compared with iPad. The real difference is the unique UI and the feeling you got – there's the real difference and that will be the reason (from my POV) that RIM will be catapulted ahead. There will be a 4G Tablet later this fall and you should also expect BlackBerry SmartPhones using the same cool UI not far away. One drawback at the moment: there are much less APPs available for PlayBook then for iPad or Android, but RIM is working on this – more later. RIM – Research |
4th of July BlackBerry Themes & Free Fireworks Apps! Posted: 04 Jul 2011 07:51 AM PDT In the spirit of the holiday I thought I would highlight some cool BlackBerry apps and themes. The most popular holiday theme is definitely Magmic's 4th of July theme which is available for $1.99 in the store and in App World. You can find more themes like it in App World or in the store. There are also a few animated fireworks themes in App World. Also worth checking out is a free Fireworks app by Handmark that Ashley pointed out in the forums. There is also a relatively cheap FireworksHD PlayBook app by Dangazak in App World for $0.99. There is also a free fireworks PlayBook app but it seems to suffer from some serious lag. Or simply head on over to http://tinyurl.com/6f7dbxt from your PlayBook browser to create your own fireworks message in JavaScript! Let us know if you spot any other holiday themed goodness! If you liked this article, you might find these interesting:
Posted by Ronen Halevy for ©BerryReview, July 4, 2011, 10:51 am. | 4th of July BlackBerry Themes & Free Fireworks Apps! | 2 comments | |
Happy 4th of July from the BerryReview Team! Posted: 04 Jul 2011 07:17 AM PDT I am sure by now every one that resides in the US has is planning their celebration of the 4th of July. Its looks like it will be a beautiful day here in NYC and I am hoping it will be the same for all of you. Let us know how you are celebrating Independence Day in the comments! If you liked this article, you might find these interesting:
Posted by Ronen Halevy for ©BerryReview, July 4, 2011, 10:17 am. | Happy 4th of July from the BerryReview Team! | 4 comments | |
Free QRem App Lets You Scan AND Create QR Codes on Your BlackBerry Posted: 04 Jul 2011 05:30 AM PDT While there are quite a few QR Code scanners out there for BlackBerry QRem is the first one I have seen that lets you generate and create QR codes from your device. They built their app to let you create your own QR codes for Contacts, Calendar Events, Tasks, URLs, Memos, PIN numbers, GPS coordinates, Emails, Phone Numbers, and SMS messages. It adds a new context menu item to applications that let you simply select "Show QR Code" and it will generate a QR code for that item. Its kind of a cool way to share a contact between different devices or a calendar event. Best of all it is totally free. You can pick up QRem in App World here. If you liked this article, you might find these interesting:
Posted by Ronen Halevy for ©BerryReview, July 4, 2011, 8:30 am. | Free QRem App Lets You Scan AND Create QR Codes on Your BlackBerry | 5 comments | |
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