Showing posts with label black berry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black berry. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

BlackBerry's Bet With Android Offers A Guaranteed Win


BlackBerry’s latest handset, the Priv, is the Canadian manufacturer’s first Android-powered smartphone. The switch to a new platform is never easy, but BlackBerry has made the best of it. The Priv may succeed or fail in the market, but either result will be a win by BlackBerry, because it will tell the company which of the two OS paths it should follow in 2016.

The question is not if Blackberry has a guaranteed win, it’s how much that win will be worth to the company.

BlackBerry Leap (image: BlackBerry PR)
BlackBerry Leap (image: BlackBerry PR)

The BlackBerry Priv (reviewed here on Forbes) has many distinguishing features in hardware, but one of the most telling differences is software. Running Android, it is a major departure for BlackBerry. Until this handset was released, part of the BlackBerry magic was in its bespoke operating systems. It provided a secure platform to build the BBM messaging platform on, as well as many security-focused features that made BlackBerry one of the smartest choices for a smartphone in ‘sensitive’ locations.
BlackBerry’s market share has fallen in the face of the assault from iOS to a certain extent, and from Android in a much larger sense. The migration of developers to those two platforms, along with an increased focus on third-party applications and web services as apps in general, has left BlackBerry on the fringes of mainstream acceptance.
Should BlackBerry stay there with its own BB10 OS, or should it embrace the wide base of Android as it moves forward? The Priv will answer that, one way or another.
BlackBerry Oslo (images via N4BB)
BlackBerry Oslo (images via N4BB)
If Android proves to be the salve that many believe it will be for the beleaguered Canadian manufacturer, then the way forward is clear. Future BlackBerry handsets will be focussed on Android, BlackBerry’s software team will concentrate on secure apps for the platform, and the company can work on establishing itself as a strong niche player in security-focussed messaging devices.

Saturday, November 7, 2015

Android Circuit: iOS Smashes Android, Galaxy S6 Fails Samsung, BlackBerry Priv Reviewed

Taking a look back at seven days of news across the Android world, this week’s Android Circuit includes Samsung’s Galaxy J saving the mobile division, Google hunts bugs in the S6 Edge, the monthly security update from Mountain View, Marshmallow’s market share, reviews of the BlackBerry Priv, reasons to buy the Sony Xperia Z5, the best smartwatch for Android users, and the app that asks how high can you throw your phone?
Android Circuit is here to remind you of a few of the many things that have happened around Android in the last week.
Samsung Galaxy S6 vs Galaxy S6 Edge (image: Ewan Spence)
Samsung Galaxy S6 vs Galaxy S6 Edge (image: Ewan Spence)
Samsung’s Saviour Is Not The Galaxy S6
Which handset had the most impact in Samsung’s recent results? That the South Korean company arrested the seven-quarter run of falling profits was welcome, but with much of that turnaround coming from the display and semi-conductor business, what did the mobile division bring to the table? It certainly wasn’t the under performing Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge, or the Note 5 or Edge Plus. Instead the big contributions came from a mid-range, mid-specced handset, the Galaxy J:
With weaker sales at the top end of its portfolio, Samsung is having to sell more handsets for less individual return to maintain its place in the market. There are fewer opportunities to lead the conversation and have an impact on the public perception of what a smartphone is if you are reliant on a mid-range handset to make up the numbers.
It also starts a worrying trend. If the flagship sales are falling, what can be done to turn them around? Samsung has spent most of 2015 trying to reverse the trends of 2014 which saw sales, revenue, and profit all slow down.
Calling Out Samsung’s Bugs
That wasn’t the only awkward story for Samsung this week, as Google’s Project Zero team decided to look at the Galaxy S6 Edge to find out how vulnerable it was to attack. Previously the team has looked at the Nexus devices, and now it has focused on an OEM. The results? Eleven vulnerabilities were found, and disclosed privately to Samsung. Eight have already been patched, with the final three expected to be addressed in November:
 A week of investigation showed that there are a number of weak points in the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge. Over the course of a week, we found a total of 11 issues with a serious security impact. Several issues were found in device drivers and image processing, and there were also some logic issues in the device that were high impact and easy-to-exploit.
The majority of these issues were fixed on the device we tested via an OTA update within 90 days, though three lower-severity issues remain unfixed. It is promising that the highest severity issues were fixed and updated on-device in a reasonable time frame.
It’s an unusual step to call out a partner publicly, but the ‘happy resolution’ at the end of the blog post leads me to think that this is a ‘look, we can fix everything with monthly updates’ good news story to rebuild confidence in the Android brand.
Nexus 6P (image: Google PR)
Nexus 6P (image: Google PR)
Google’s Monthly Bug Hunting Results
Speaking of monthly updates, the latest Android update patches twenty-three bugs in Android. Forbes’ Thomas Fox-Brewster:
There’s another Stagefright vulnerability in town, but it’s not the scariest bug in the latest monthly Android update from Google, announced today. Seven other flaws in different software libraries are the most concerning, all allowing remote control execution, where hackers can send multimedia messages or emails to launch their attacks.
Android partners were alerted on October 5th to include these fixes with haste, while Google’s Nexus line up of developer-focuses smartphones were patched over the air as quickly as possible.
Android’s Internal Market Share
Staying with monthly updates, Google’s Android Developer Dashboard refreshed the current share of Android devices running various versions of the mobile operating system, A month after release, Android Marshmallow showed up with a 0.3% share – an improvement over Lollipop which took three months to appear on the dashboard.
It ask shows that Lollipop has finally broken the one-in-four mark a year after it was first released, with a share of 25.6 percent.
The dashboard is already showing the impact of Android Marshmallow. The 0.3 percent share of the market may be a small figure but the only Marshmallow devices so far are in Google’s own Nexus range of devices. The Nexus 5X and 6P are starting to ship to customers, while Marshmallow images for the Nexus 5, Nexus 6, Nexus 7, Nexus 9 and the Nexus Player were made available on October 5th.
It’s a much stronger roll-out compared to Lollipop. Version five of Android was launched in November last year and it took another three months before it showed up in the developer dashboard. Google discounts any version of Android under 0.1% share from the dashboard, so Marshmallow has broken that barrier three times faster than Lollipop.
And if you want to put those shares in context, Apple posted details on the iOS 9 update rate. That updated operating system is now running on sixty-six percent of all compatible devices, smashing Marshmallow’s 0.3 percent.

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

BlackBerry to Buy WatchDox





BlackBerry Ltd. confirmed Tuesday it would buy closely held WatchDox Ltd., its latest niche acquisition aimed at boosting sales of mobile security offerings to government and corporate customers.

The deal also gives the Canadian smartphone maker a platform to expand its research and development operations into Israel, a center for the development of security technologies.

Waterloo, Ontario-based BlackBerry didn’t disclose financial terms, but The Wall Street Journal reported earlier that it is paying about $70 million for WatchDox.

Startup WatchDox is based in Palo Alto, Calif., and develops software that allows companies to control how employees edit, copy, print or forward files. Its software can also revoke access and delete files remotely across desktop and mobile devices, including BlackBerrys, Apple Inc.’s iPhones and smartphones powered by Google Inc.’s Android operating system.

The acquisition follows BlackBerry’s $32.5 million purchase in September of Movirtu Ltd., which develops software that helps companies reduce their employee mobile-device costs, and its $82 million acquisition in December of Secusmart GmbH, a maker of mobile encryption and anti-eavesdropping technologies.

WatchDox and Secusmart together allow BlackBerry to offer enterprise customers “secure voice, secure data, secure messaging and secure documents,” across platforms, Jim Mackey, BlackBerry’s executive vice president of corporate development, said in an interview.

BlackBerry is betting on the sales of mobile security and productivity software, and smartphones aimed at professionals, to reignite growth after a failed attempt in 2013 to compete in the consumer market against Apple, Samsung Electronics Co. and other device makers.


Still, its growth strategy remains unproven amid uncertainty BlackBerry can win back its traditional enterprise customers after many abandoned its older technology for mobile security offerings from Citrix Systems Inc., MobileIron Inc. and other rivals. Last month, BlackBerry reported a 32% decline in quarterly revenue.

Founded six and half years ago, WatchDox counts private-equity giant Blackstone Group L.P., Nike Inc., the well- known running shoe maker, and the California Department of State Hospitals among its customers. It won’t say if it generates a profit.

The deal gives WatchDox access to BlackBerry’s 160 carrier partners to help its boost sales of its file security technology.

“BlackBerry can really help us accelerate our reach into markets,” Moti Rafalin, WatchDox’s chief executive and founder, said in a telephone interview.

WatchDox also operates a research and development center in Petah Tikva, Israel, where slightly more than half of its 85 employees work. Israel is a well-known technology center for security and BlackBerry hopes the R&D center will allow it to take advantage of this opportunity.

The WatchDox acquisition “is the best way to get to that market and to get access to the talent,” BlackBerry’s Mr. Mackey said.

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