Thursday, January 16, 2014

Blackberry's response to competition

In an earlier blog post, I mentioned about finallly getting a smartphone last year. I mentioned that I got a BlackBerry Q10 because it allows users to type on a QWERTY keyboard while still allowing us to slide our fingers on a touchscreen.
 http://pablowegesend.blogspot.com/2013/10/adventures-on-my-new-smartphone.html


Blackberry.com
BlackBerry Q10

I was wondering why the competitors (ie. Apple's iPhone, Samsung Galaxy) didn't have a version that has allows users to type using buttons?

I mean, I 
hate   typing on touchscreens because they are either
  • too finger sensitive
OR
  •  requires a hard press on the screen.


My oldest brother ( I got 2 of them) is the tech guy in a family of non-techies. I had a brief conversation about the BlackBerry and I mentioned that I liked the Q10 (because it has buttons), and the BlackBerry had a crappy marketing strategy (more on that later) and my oldest brother said "nobody wants to press buttons anymore" and said "BlackBerry will go out of business soon"

I was ready to get all defensive, but someone came up to him  and distracted him with an unrelated topic.  So much for getting the verbal upper hand. 



And yet I wonder, why hasn't the iPhone or the Galaxy have a QWERTY keyboard option.


Well, one company had a solution to that dilemma

http://reason.com/archives/2014/01/16/blackberry-sues-the-competition

Consider the Typo Keyboard Case, which is supposed to start shipping to consumers this month. The idea behind the device is simple. Right now, people who prefer a smartphone with a physical keyboard basically have just one option, the BlackBerry.

If you like real keyboards but prefer the iPhone's operating system, you have to either put up with the BlackBerry's software or put up with the iPhone's virtual keyboard; no phone-maker offers a product that combines the best of both worlds.

The Typo fills that gap. It's a case that lets you slip a keypad over an iPhone and type the way the QWERTY gods intended, without a flat touchscreen that makes errors inevitable and without an algorithm that "corrects" words that weren't errors in the first place.

Typo's co-founder - Ryan Seacrest (yep, the American Idol host) was interviewed by CNN

 When a CNN correspondent discussed the device with Typo co-founder Ryan Seacrest—yes, the American Idol hostthe reporter suggested that the product gives users "the best thing about a BlackBerry, within the iPhone." Seacrest replied, "That's kind of how this came to fruition." Many press accounts have noted how much the Typo keyboard looks and feels like a BlackBerry keyboard; the phrase "BlackBerry clone" comes up a lot.



 So what does BlackBerry do about that? They sued Typo over "patent violations"!

 Enter BlackBerry's lawyers. In a suit filed January 3, the company charged the upstart with violating three of BlackBerry's patents and its trade dress. (A trade dress is a set of distinctive visual characteristics that reveal what company made a product—the shape of a glass Coca-Cola bottle, for example. They are legally protected in order to prevent customer confusion, so the premise here is that people might mistake the Typo for a BlackBerry product, even though it does not bear the BlackBerry logo and even though BlackBerry is not in the business of making cases for iPhones.) In addition to asking the courts to block sales of the Typo, BlackBerry is seeking triple damages.

 One of the commenters to article suggested the following


R C Dean||
Last serial post:
The smart play for Blackberry here would, of course, have been to buy out the Typo case and make it their own. Would have been faster and might have actually turned into a real revenue stream for them.

and this

JPyrate||
You know I have to wonder. Did BlackBerry even try to approach Typo with a deal, or did they just go straight to the lawyers ? This could have been a big advertising win for them. Blackberry could have cut a deal and put out a PR piece about how they support innovation in small start up companies, or hired someone to write a hit piece telling consumers that their competitors design is so bad someone had to come along and make it like a BlackBerry.

The sad thing is this -- if the BlackBerry had a REAL marketing campaign for their Q10 phone, they wouldn't need to resort to this!

I sincerely believe that had BlackBerry put an effective ad for their Q10 phone during last year's Super Bowl , that it would've

  • 1) tell everyone "we're back"
  • 2) made the Q10 phone highly competitive (and even equal in popularity) versus the i-phone and the Galaxy.
 They could've made a funny ad showing people's frustration with typing on a touchscreen and then showed the Q10 as a solution

(BlackBerry also has the Z10 that is all touchscreen, so they could've presented that as an option for touchscreen fans too)

 But they didn't have an effective marketing campaign and many people still remain ignorant of the Q10 option. And if people don't know of your great products, well .............
they can't buy what they don't know exists.

They think that just making good products is enough. They don't understand that you got to make your products trendy in order to get people to buy in to it, and that you need a real marketing strategy to do so!

But now, BlackBerry is in the news for suing the competition, and it will only remind the public about BlackBerry being a "company in trouble" instead of a company that actually made improvements in their smartphones!


Because I do like my Q10 phone, I hate to see BlackBerry go down. But if the company can't get it's act together and receives negative PR (which makes it harder to market their product), then things will only get worse.

As for me, I just hope that smartphones with a QWERTY keyboard doesn't go extinct!


Monday, January 13, 2014

Reporting vs Tattling

A common dillema: Many of us feel irritated when kids "tell" on another kid over something minor.

Many adults will resort to saying "stop tattletelling"

Some kids will take it as "Don't report incidents, no matter how major it is".


You might think I'm exaggerating.


Well, why do so many domestic violence victims don't report incidents to the police?


Why do so many rape victims suffer in silence, not even notifying the police?


Why did the murder of Biggie and 2pac, which occurred in front of many witnesses, go unsolved?


It's because many of us have heard "no tattle-telling" and took it to mean "don't report incidents, no matter how major".


You still might be shaking your head and think I'm just jumping to conclusion.


Well, a few years back "60 Minutes" had a  segment on the "No Snitching" message preached to many inner-city youth.

 http://www.cbsnews.com/news/stop-snitchin/

Harlem activist Goeffrey Canada has stated this about how the "no snitching" message has hurt his community

So this slogan, this 'stop snitchin'.' It now extends to rape, robbery, murder, really any crime?" Cooper asks.

"Any crime," Canada says. "It's like we're saying to the criminals, 'You can have our community. Just have our community. Do anything you want, and we will either deal with it ourselves, or we'll simply ignore it.'"

 But don't just take it from the activists.

Anderson Cooper then interviewed a bunch of teenagers from Harlem about this same issue.


Cooper met Victoria, Alex, Derrick, Darnell, and Tess through a church-based organization called Uth Turn. They're 14 through 19 years old, and they told 60 Minutes the "stop snitchin'" code doesn't just apply to rappers.

"A snitch is a tattletale, a rat, somebody who goes around telling other people business instead of minding they own," Alex tells Cooper.

Asked if he believes that, Alex says, "Yes.

"Anybody who comes forward and talks to the police about something they witnessed, a murder or a crime, are they a snitch?" Cooper asks.

"Yes… It's a crime, remember, in our community, to snitch," says Tess.


Most of these kids had witnessed at least one violent crime but had not helped the police identify the culprits. Victoria saw someone get shot a few years ago; she says she was scared to talk to the police then, and she wouldn't identify the shooter if the same thing happened today.

Asked why, Victoria says, "Because that's the rules."

Then Anderson Cooper interviewed rapper Camron who survived a car robbery attempt, but refused to talk to the cops about what happened! Cooper asked Camron if a serial killer moved next door, would you tell the cops. Camron said "I'll just move".

That got so much controversy, that even gangsta rap legend Ice-T criticized Camron. Ice-T said if you know someone who had a bomb about to board a plane, you shouldn't be like "I'm just not going on the plane", you should tell the authorities right away!
www.youtube.com/watch?v=_HHptNp5F7E

After that, Camron had to apologize to crime victims in general for sounding insensitive to those who reported crimes to the police!
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2007/04/19/60minutes/main2704565.shtml?tag=currentVideoInfo;segmentTitle

-----------------



So, what to do, what to do?


How do we tell kids to report serious incidents?

How do we tell kids the difference between minor issues (that don't need reporting) and major incidents (that DO need to be reported.


Well, one elementary school that I have worked at has posted this sign.

photo by Pablo Wegesend
via BlackBerry Q10



I wish we had this sign posted at my schools when I was a student.


A sign like this should be posted at EVERY school!

A sign like this should be posted at EVERY home!


Kids need to be repeatedly exposed to a message of when is an issue important enough to report to parents/authorities.


Otherwise, we'll just continue to have another generation of "no snitching" believers!