
Someone Should Make a BlackBerry-Style Phone, Says BlackBerry CEO While Not Doing That
Hopefully someone asks permission first, so BlackBerry doesn't sue them.
Hopefully someone asks permission first, so BlackBerry doesn't sue them.
Among the allegedly stolen features is the displaying of timestamps in the messaging interface, and “mapping techniques to establish and maintain real-time activity location information.”
After trying and failing to get a dialogue going for years, BlackBerry are taking Facebook to court.
Blackberry now fancy themselves as smart car security specialists, and it sounds like they're making a good go of it.
The actual BlackBerry brand continues to shuffle along in the form of a partnership with Chinese company TCL.
For the very small number of people like you, who give a damn about BlackBerry, it’s a solid device.
MWC 2017: I want the next generation of great smartphones, not reminders of a long-begone era.
New owner of the battered brand having another go.
Cue sharp intakes of breath.
It’s the end of an era.
The dusty old smartphone pioneer is releasing its second Android phone, even after investors (and an uninterested public) urged CEO John Chen to ditch the handset business altogether.
Runs Android, built by another manufacturer.
BlackBerry CEO John Chen defended his company’s approach to authorities in the wake of police breaching its messaging encryption.
One with keyboard, one without, both Android powered and coming in under the £300 mark.
Bye-bye Facebook. Bye-bye WhatsApp.
Dutch cops copped a specially modified secure Berry and still managed to decrypt what's inside.