Saturday, March 31, 2012

Conan O'Brien Buys Mashable, Ousts Pete Cashmore as CEO





Hello, fellow Mashables. It’s Conan O’Brien, and I’ve got big news. Two hours ago, I purchased Mashable.com. I’ve taken it over. Why did I take it over? Very simple reason.

[More from Mashable: Mobile Jobseeking is Going Mainstream [INFOGRAPHIC]]


I’m sick and tired of scanning the Internet looking for any news about technology: Devices, gadgets, what’s coming up, maybe even a rating system for gadgets that are out there. It doesn’t exist on the web and it’s high time it did.


I go to the Mashable see the atrocious job they’re doing. So I decided it’s time to for me take it over.

[More from Mashable: Keep Track of Your Volunteer Work With This New App]


That’s why, several hours ago, I called Pete Cashmore and I told him, “You’re out! Get out! You’re through Cashmore! Through! Get out!”


Of course, keep in mind, I was screaming “Get out” from a phone call and he was speaking at home…So it wasn’t clear what I was throwing him out of. We straightened that out.


He said, “You’ll have to buy me out.” I said, “Buy you out? How about thirty-five hundred smackeroos?” He didn’t know what smackeroos were, but we talked again.


There’s going to be a lot of changes around here. So stay tuned, cause I’m in charge now. I’m going to be sending out a lot of tweets!


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

This iPhone Platform Will Change The Way You Shoot Videos






A new Kickstarter project is aiming to redefine how you shoot video with your iPhone. The Galileo is an iOS-controlled robotic iPhone platform that lets you manipulate the angle your iPhone from another iOS device, giving you the ability to adjust your iPhone to almost any angle you could possibly want.

[More from Mashable: Top 10 iPhone Word Games]


For instance, if you were video chatting with a child who moved out of sight of the camera you could move the platform to follow her using your own device. The platform could also be used in situations like meetings so you can can follow all the action going on in the room. The platform's inventor originally created the device in order to have better chats with his son while he was away on business.


Galileo can be controlled from another iOS device such as an iPad or iPod touch by swiping a finger across the screen, and gives you infinite 360-degree panning and 200-degree tilting. You can see everything around the iPhone and above it, with the only unavailable angle being what's going on below.

[More from Mashable: ‘Wonders of the Universe’ Lets You Explore Space On Your iPad]


The platform is also offering its SDK (software developers kit) for app development, giving app developers the freedom to integrate Galileo functionality into existing apps or create apps and software specifically designed to work with the product.


Galilieo has currently raised close to $270,000 on Kickstarter, and only required $100,000 to go into production. The project will be officially funded on April 21, 2012, after which the device will go into mass production and be sent out to project backers and then likely general consumers.


What do you think of the project? Tell us what potential uses you see for Galileo in the comments.


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

Investment capital firm set to rescue Game

Game Group

The investment group, Opcapita, will announce on Sunday it is buying the rump of the troubled Game Group out of administration, the BBC understands.

The deal will keep open 333 stores and save 3,100 jobs.

Half a dozen banks, led by Royal Bank of Scotland, who are owed £85m, have approved the takeover, says BBC business editor Robert Peston.

Last Monday the video game retailer went into administration, with 277 stores closing down immediately.

Administrators PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) also announced 2,104 staff would be made redundant but the remaining 333 stores were kept open as they searched for a buyer for the business.

The retailer had suffered from high fixed costs and an ambitious international expansion.

Its business has been hit by competition from online retailers.

Richard Wilson, chief executive of games industry trade association Tiga, welcomed the deal but said Game would have to develop its online business to survive.

He said: "It's important for the company to change to consumer spending habits, and it's really vital that Game also appeals to video game developers. Many video game developers in the UK are of course selling online as well.

"Game is going to have to change its strategy but that doesn't mean it's impossible, and the fact that Game has got this new backing behind it, this new management, I think that's all for the good."



Source & Image : BBC

Google: Japanese Court Didn't Ban All Our Search Suggestions




Google is setting the record straight about a court's demands that Google stop automatically completing its searches in Japan.

Google searches on most browsers and devices automatically suggest search terms that you might be looking for, based on their popularity. Type "mash," for example, and the search engine will suggest you're looking for "Mashable" followed by a suggestion for "mashed potatoes."

[More from Mashable: Now You Can Explore Nelson Mandela’s Archives Online]


Numerous outlets reported that a court in Japan had asked Google to suspend the autocomplete function entirely, after a Japanese man claimed his certain criminal acts appeared as a suggestion next to his name when Googled. The man claims he was fired from one job, and missed out on being hired from others, because of the association.


The court ruled that certain terms must be deleted from searches, Google says -- rather than a blanket ban on autocomplete.

[More from Mashable: How to Enchant Your Audience With Social Media [VIDEO]]


A spokesperson from Google tells Mashable the company can't say what terms will be removed from Google autocomplete searches in Japan, since it is a current legal matter.


Here's Google's statement: "A Japanese court issued a provisional order requesting Google to delete specific terms from autocomplete. The judge did not require Google to completely suspend the autocomplete function. Google is currently reviewing the order.


“Autocomplete is a feature of Google search that offers predicted searches to help you more quickly find what you’re looking for. These searches are produced by a number of factors including the popularity of search terms. Google does not determine these terms manually--all of the queries shown in autocomplete have been typed previously by other Google users.”


The Google spokesperson wouldn't speculate as to whether or not Google autocomplete could be turned-off entirely in Japan.


This is not the only legal battle Google is fighting at home and abroad. The company has been the target of numerous investigations into its privacy practices and how it uses the public's information.


What do you think about this ruling in Japan? Tell us in the comments.


Image courtesy of iStockphoto, alija


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

NBA Brings Twitter Handles to T-Shirts in Pro Sports First




So you're a big Kevin Durant fan. You watch his games, you wear his jersey -- but do you have his Twitter-handle T-shirt?

In what's believed to be a pro sports first, the NBA this week began selling official T-shirts that feature some of the league's biggest stars' Twitter handles above their jersey numbers, where surnames would normally go. The shirts are available at the NBA Store website and include Durant, Dwyane Wade, Jeremy Lin and a number of other big names.

[More from Mashable: Did This Guy Just Land the Coolest Job in Sports Social Media?]


Lisa Pilken, the NBA's vice president of licensing, says the move is in keeping with the league's tradition of creativity in social media.


"We are always looking at new ways to connect with fans," Pilken told Mashable in an email. "As the top sports league on Twitter with more than 4.5 million followers on @NBA and more than 350 NBA players active on the site, we thought this would be a great way to engage with our fans."

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NBA players were among the first pro athletes to embrace Twitter. In 2009, Milwaukee Bucks forward Charlie Villanueva was reprimanded for tweeting from the team locker room during halftime of a game. Later that year, Minnesota Timberwolves forward Kevin Love used a tweet to break news that the team's coach had been fired.


The league as a whole has been especially adept at leveraging social media as well, and this year hosted a digitally influenced All-Star Weekend.


While the NBA is the first league to officially make player Twitter T-shirts, it's not the first to have a version of the idea. The sports-meets-social site TweetStarGame has an online store selling Twitter-handle shirts of players from a number of sports. Professional soccer and lacrosse teams have also replaced players' names with their handles on official game uniforms.


Do you think putting players' Twitter handles on T-shirts is a smart marketing play or not? Let us know in the comments.


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

Top 5 Podcast Apps for Android




Google Listen



If you just want a solid podcast player then try Google Listen. The app integrates with Google Reader to make podcast administration easy. Just add a show's RSS feed to the "Listen Subscriptions" category in Reader and new episodes will appear in the app, ready for you to stream or download.

Price: Free

Click here to view this gallery.

[More from Mashable: Tax Day On the Way: The 4 Ways You Can Tax Your LLC]

Whether you’re new to podcasts or just tired of syncing the latest episodes to your MP3 player, there are plenty of “podcast catchers” for Android that can pluck those shows from the cloud. Here are five we think are worth checking out. Do you have a favorite that we missed? Tell us about it in the comments below!

SEE ALSO: 6 Apps Worth Downloading This Week

[More from Mashable: The Evolution of Facebook for Brands]


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

Sir Richard Branson Unveils 'Virgin Volcanic'




Journey to the center of the earth? Virgin CEO Sir Richard Branson would like you to think the famous Jules Verne novel could be a reality. On April 1, Branson's Virgin Volcanic program, which will supposedly launch five people into the center of the earth, goes live. If that doesn't raise your suspicions of a prank, the news release contains nutty quotes about traveling into live, active volcanos.

The Virgin Volcanic website says the vehicle will take a group of people, including Branson, into the earth's core through one of five active volcanos (Etna in Sicily, Italy; Stromboli, Aeolian Islands; Yasur, Republic of Vanuatu; Ambrym, Republic of Vanuatu and Tinakula; Solomon Islands) and emerge on the other side of the world. Sound like a joke? It is. No one has ever been to the center of the earth, but scientists have used seismic observations to speculate that the earth's mantle is made of liquid iron and nickel. Others say a black hole is at the center of the earth. The press release says the corkscrew-like vehicle is made from "patented" carbon carbon.

[More from Mashable: Google’s April Fools’ Day Prank: 8-Bit Google Maps]


Branson said, "I have a long held a fascination with volcanoes having read Jules Verne’s Journey to the Centre of the Earth as a young boy. I decided that one day I would go there too. Alongside our adventures with Virgin Galactic and Virgin Oceanic, volcanoes are the next great unexplored terrain. What can I say, I lava challenge!"


[More from Mashable: Google Whips Up 3D Graphing Goodness in Search]


The spiral-shaped probe looks straight out of Austin Powers. Seth Green, the actor who played Dr. Evil's son Scott in the movie Austin Powers, is one of the passengers. He is quoted on the site saying, "Ever since filming Austin Powers, I've had this obsession with underground layers. I've waited patiently for Sir Richard to make the dream of traveling to the Earth's core a reality."


Liquid hot mag-ma, anyone?


The other riders include actor Tom Hanks, Will.i.am and documentary filmmaker Barbara Kopple.



The post goes even further to say Barbara Kopple will make a documentary about the expedition, along with a soundtrack by Will.i.am that will be recorded inside an active volcano.


Some companies just can't wait for April Fools' Day to arrive. Already by Saturday, pranks were hitting the web, with some sharp commenters catching on to the jokes and others taking it very seriously.


What do you think about Branson's Virgin Volcanic announcement? Did you get a laugh from this prank? Tell us in the comments.


Photo courtesy of iStockphoto, http://www.istockphoto.com/user_view.php?id=1253162


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

Mashable Seeks Graphic Design Rock Star




Are you a graphic designer with a portfolio full of impressive, high-quality work? If so, you're in the right place. Mashable is adding a key position to its design team in our New York headquarters.

We are looking for a motivated graphic designer with new-media experience to take initial direction, run with it, and execute creative designs. Under the direction of the VP of Design, our Graphic Designer will create concepts for a wide range of web-related projects, including large-scale websites, mobile devices, banner campaigns and more. See details about this position and apply here.

[More from Mashable: Tax Day On the Way: The 4 Ways You Can Tax Your LLC]




Working at Mashable




We are a team of driven and passionate people who care deeply about the work we do. Mashable is a unique and open culture where innovation and collaboration thrives. Every day is an opportunity to spread knowledge, find solutions, and take risks — not to mention have fun, laugh, and pet a team member’s dog.


We are proud to be part of the connected generation, and we always have an eye on what’s next.

[More from Mashable: 5 Cities Benefiting From Mobile Apps]


Sound exciting? Mashable is looking for smart, driven and energetic new team members. Check out our jobs page for our most recent listings.



Mashable Meetings



Meetings at Mashable are rarely boring.

Click here to view this gallery.

This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo

Wait, Google earns four times more from iOS than Android?





What’s worth more to Google — Android or Apple’s iOS?


The answer seems straightforward: Android, obviously. After all, Google has spent years developing Android and its associated ecosystem, and Android has long-since overtaken Apple’s iOS as the top-selling smartphone platform. Android is the core of Google’s mobile strategy, and although some players like Amazon hide Android under their own custom veneers, almost every Android device ties in directly with Google services like Search, Maps, Gmail, and more. Google may earn most of its money from search advertising, but Android is clearly Google’s most important play in the mobile arena.


And yet, a proposed settlement with Oracle reveals Google may have made as little as $550 million on Android through 2011 — a figure that’s chump change in the scope of Google’s overall business. If Android is so important, why isn’t Google making much money from it?


Settle down


The startling figures on Android revenue come from Google itself, by way of a proposed settlement to its high-stakes litigation with Oracle over Java technologies. Both companies have been taking very hard-nosed approaches to the case — frankly, Oracle knows no other way to litigate — but the judge ordered Google draw up a settlement proposal in an effort to avoid a big messy trial, so Google (reluctantly) complied. Oracle, of course, immediately rejected the proposal as too low, ratcheting up pressure on Google to make its case before a jury. That trial now has a fixed start date — April 16.


But Google’s proposed settlement is illuminating. In it, Google offered to pay Oracle $2.8 million in damages for infringement on two patents remaining in the case. The $2.8 million payment would cover the period from 2008 to 2011, from Android’s public launch through the end of last year. Going forward, Google offered to pay a combined royalty of 0.515 percent for every Android device sold until the patents expire: one goes dark in December 2012, but the other hangs on through April 2018.


In January of this year, Google said that it had activated some 250 million Android devices worldwide. If that figure is accurate and that that 0.515 royalty rate can be projected back on Google’s Android-derived revenue through 2008, then Google is essentially saying Android generated $543 million in revenue from Android from 2008 to 2011. The Guardian was the first to do the math.


There are a couple of important notes to go along with Google’s settlement details. First, the documents do not detail how Google has calculated Android revenue, only that they comply with figures calculated by Dr. James Kearl, a court-appointed expert. Second, in offering the proposal, Google is not saying it agrees with those figures, nor is it admitting it infringed on Oracle patents or copyrights — for Oracle to get this deal, it still has to succeed in its infringement case. Basically, Google crafted the proposal primarily because the court ordered it to do so, not because it was interested in pursuing this particular settlement.


The Guardian took the math a bit further, estimating that the proposal’s figures imply Google makes slightly more than $10 per Android handset per year. This isn’t a simple case of dividing the $543 million by 250 million device activations: An estimated 90 million Android devices were activated in the last two years, and thanks to Android’s strong adoption many tens of millions of them have not been around long enough to have generated that revenue yet. However, projecting that rate forward based on recent data on Android activations, that means Google could see as much as $1 billion in revenue from Android this year. That sounds like a lot, but it likely would represent only about two percent (or less) of Google’s overall revenue for the year.


Google revenue from Android versus iOS

Here’s the oddity of the figures that apparently underlie Google’s assessment of Android revenue: In October 2011, Google CEO Larry Page claimed Google’s overall mobile business was then operating at a run rate of $2.5 billion per year.



Why the discrepancy? Google’s mobile business is substantially bigger than Android, and the elephant in the room is Apple’s iOS. Apple’s iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch devices all build in a number of Google services, including Google Search, Google Maps, and YouTube. Overall, Apple has sold more than 315 million iOS devices worldwide since the launch of the iPhone in 2007. While the majority of those iOS devices were purchased in the last 12 months, the long-term success of Apple’s iOS apparently accounts for the bulk of Google’s mobile revenue. And not just the majority: If Google’s figures are to be believed, iOS devices were worth more than four times as much to Google than Android devices since the launch of Android in 2008. To be sure, folks use Google Search from Windows Phone, Symbian devices, and perhaps even a BlackBerry or two. But iOS is undoubtedly the dominant source of Google’s mobile ad revenue.


Are these numbers to be believed?

It’s tempting to take Google’s settlement proposal figures at face value — after all, they’ve been submitted to a court! But the proposal has to be considered in the larger context of Google and Oracle’s legal battle.



The case was launched in 2010, with Oracle claiming technologies at the heart of Android infringe on Java copyrights and patents, which Oracle acquired when it bought Sun Microsystems in 2010. Oracle opened the case with a broad legal salvo and eventually argued it was owed up to $2.6 bilion in damages, but in order to hasten proceedings, District Judge William Alsup has been requiring both companies to come up with ways to streamline the case. As a result, the case is now primarily about copyright, although two of Oracles patent claims remain in play.


Google’s proposed settlement applied only to the patent portion of the case: The copyright issues are not impacted. However, Google may have had an interest in presenting Android revenue figures that were as low as possible. Oracle wasn’t likely to accept a damages settlement from Google anyway — Oracle wants an outright injunction on Android — but by tendering an offer and having Oracle reject it, Google gets to paint Oracle as belligerent and unreasonable. That tactic may not not sway a judge, but a jury could be a different matter.


Oracle really wants to get this case in front of a jury. Juries are historically more favorable towards patent and copyright holders in infringement cases. To make its case, Google will likely have to roll out hundreds of pages of computer code and try to explain why they aren’t protected by copyright — even though some have Sun’s name all over them. The trial is expected to take about two months.


Oracle’s copyright claim against Google and Android could be devastating. Google essentially has to argue that material related to an API specifications — the actual calls programmers make to an operating system so their apps can function — are not copyrightable. Back in December, Google tried to get Oracle’s copyright claims thrown out and Judge Alsup dealt Google a harsh blow. Alsup ruled names in the API materials are not copyrightable — as a general rule, names aren’t copyrightable in any medium — but denied Google’s assertions that specifications can’t be copyrighted and that, even if they could, Google’s use amounted to fair use. Alsup’s decisions aren’t final, but they means Oracle will be able to bring the questions before a jury.


If Oracle can win its copyright case, it can almost certainly get an injunction against Android. At that point, Google will have almost no choice but to negotiate a license to Oracle’s material — Oracle will not be restricted to any previous court-approved estimates of damages or Android revenue. Oracle could demand the Moon.


Google has everything to lose when the case goes to trial, so anything it can do to paint Oracle in a bad light — like having it reject a damages settlement proposal — might help.


OK, but what if the numbers are legit?

If the figures from Google’s proposed damages settlement accurately reflect the revenue Google is deriving from Android, Google needs to work the Android ecosystem towards a revenue inflection point soon. Google’s bet with Android is based on quantity. Android devices may not earn Google very much money over the course of their useful lives, but if there are enough devices out in the world, the cumulative revenue they generate for Google ought to be substantial. If the damages figures are correct, that isn’t yet working out for Google.



Where does Google make money on Android? Google does take a 30 percent cut of every Android app sold, but the market for paid apps under Android just isn’t as robust as iOS — and even Apple isn’t making major bank on content or app sales. Instead, Google’s revenue from Android derives primarily from advertising it serves to mobile users. That advertising primarily comes in Google’s own apps for Android: Google Search, Google Maps (filled with location-specific promotions), and YouTube. These are also the same services that generate mobile advertising revenue for Google on iOS.


However, Apple seems to be divorcing itself from Google services. The first move came with Siri on the iPhone 4S, which preferentially uses services like Yelp and Wolfram Alpha, falling back to a potentially-Google-powered Web search only when those options don’t seem like they’re going to work out. Apple’s new iPhoto for iPad drops Google Maps for Apple’s own mapping service based on OpenStreetMap; 9to5Mac reports Apple’s agreement to use Google Maps in iOS is due to expire this year. These moves are both comparatively small, but they represent threats to the revenue Google’s mobile business is deriving from Apple’s iOS. Given how much more revenue Apple’s iOS seems to generate for Google, changes don’t have to be very big for Google to feel them.


How Google is coping

Google is already working to derive more revenue from Android.



The most obvious is Google Play, Google’s new all-in-one store that not only serves up Android apps, but also music, movies, and books. By presenting a unified storefront, Google is hoping to encourage more Android device owners to spend more money — and spend it with Google, rather than competitors like Amazon, Netflix, or Barnes & Noble. Of course, Google faces a bit of an uphill battle: Most consumers are used to Google services being available for free, but when they’re ready to spend money, they’re used to turning to other companies. In some cases, Google Play also still lacks the international infrastructure and broad content offerings of competitors, but it’s early days — Google certainly has the expertise to catch up.


Also expect Google to amp up its advertising business. However, this does not necessarily mean presenting more advertisements to users via its mobile apps — Google no doubt realizes if it over-saturates its offerings with advertisements, it devalues its own platform. Instead, expect Google to work hard to refine the demographic data and profile information it gathers about each and every users of Android and Google services. Advertisers are willing to pay a premium for highly targeted placements — after all, it might not do any good to promote your new boutique to 10 million random Android users, but it could be very worthwhile to hit 200 who happen to live in (or regularly wander through) your neighborhood. Being able to refine demographic and user profile information is at the heart of Google’s new unified privacy policy.


Google Android business is still about quantity: It wants as many devices as possible out in the market, all generating revenue. But moves like Google Play and refined ad targeting are also about notching up the amount of revenue Google generates from each Android device. Sure, they may not make any difference at all for some Android device users. Folks with Nook Tablets and Kindle Fires may not see any change at all. But if Google can wrangle one more purchase a year from Android users, or ratchet up the fee it charges to send advertising to that user, Android’s per-device revenue to Google could surge.



This article was originally posted on Digital Trends


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Speaktoit: The Android answer to Siri


The 18 most important patents Google takes home with Motorola


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Source & Image : Yahoo

RIM Doesn't Need BlackBerry 10 -- It Needs a Time Machine





Research in Motion's latest quarter almost doesn't need commentary. With revenues down 19% and posting its first loss in seven years, the company is clearly on the decline. The dismal financial news follows the revelation that BlackBerry phones were no longer the device of choice even in RIM's home country of Canada.


Many have used the news to pile on, saying the long-predicted implosion of RIM has finally begun. Acquisition, once the topic of idle speculation about the company, is now a very real possibility.

[More from Mashable: RIM to Refocus on Enterprise, Will No Longer Try to Be ‘Everybody’s Darling’]


There appears to be one glimmer of hope, though: BlackBerry 10, the next-generation device software that's supposed to debut later this year. Repeatedly describing BB10 as a "platform" that the company will build its entire suite of products around in the coming years (maybe), CEO Thorsten Heins said the future of RIM depends on its successful and on-time launch.


That's not entirely true. The future of RIM has just been determined by a recent decision Heins revealed in its earnings call: that it was going to refocus on the enterprise market. He backpedaled a bit later, saying that it doesn't represent abandoning the consumer market (the majority of its customers are everyday "consumers"), but the message from RIM was clear: We lost the consumer smartphone war to Apple and Google. We're backing off.

[More from Mashable: RIM Confirms the PlayBook Will Get BlackBerry 10]


This decision makes a large degree of sense -- and I support it -- but that doesn't make it any less tragic. By retreating back to its core strength of enterprise devices and services, RIM may eke out a happy existence, but it will never be the smartphone titan it once was, no matter how good BlackBerry 10 is.


The reason is the smartphone market is worlds apart from where it was when RIM was king -- which was just a mere three years ago, as the market share flies. The "consumerization of IT" trend is in full force -- witness the staggering number of businesses that plan to buy iPads in the coming year.


SEE ALSO: RIM-sanity! Beyond the BlackBerry Bloodbath


The business customer has evolved. The new species is much less tolerant of carrying two devices. It's spent quality time with both the iPhone and Android handsets, and its pack leaders (read: executives) are quite partial to them. Finally, re-training the entire tribe on a new operating system like BlackBerry 10 just seems like a waste of time when everybody already knows how to use other platforms that are just as good if not better in many ways.


In the end, the number of businesses that really need BlackBerry -- for its security, manageability and solid industrial design (RIM still makes the best keyboard phones on the market) -- is fairly small. While RIM (or another company) can certainly create a viable business targeting those customers, a platform that's based on them won't ever achieve the kind of scale the company enjoyed in past decade.


If the outlook is so bleak with an enterprise focus, then why do I support it? Because RIM's right -- the consumer game is lost, at least as far as BlackBerry is concerned. You have two major ecosystems (iOS and Android) with a third on the rise (Windows Phone). More important, the market just crossed an important milestone with half of U.S. consumers now owning a smartphone.


Every day a new person enters the smartphone market, it declares loyalty to an ecosystem. By all counts, not many of those people are opting for a BlackBerry. By the time the new OS is an option, there will be even fewer of those first-time buyers left. BlackBerry 10 might be good, but it's hard to imagine it being so amazing that a new customer will opt for it instead of the sexy iPhone or Android superphone on the next dias.


The time for RIM to strike back and regain its former consumer glory is long past. Really, it needed to see the iPhone for the wake-up call that it was five years ago. Or even four years ago. Or -- what the hell -- three. But it took until 2010, when the company acquired QNX software, for RIM to take decisive action in replacing its BlackBerry OS with something worthy of a modern smartphone.


So it doesn't matter how good BlackBerry 10 is, or even if it comes a few months late. The businesses that RIM plans to court will use it regardless. They'll buy it (because they're convinced nothing else can do the job), their employees will use it (because they're forced to), and RIM will either downsize or get bought (because what else are you going to do?). The rest of us will shrug, wonder what might have been, and go back to playing Angry Birds.


Images courtesy of Flickr, miggslives


This story originally published on Mashable here.



Source & Image : Yahoo