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A posed Blackberry Pearl smartphone is seen at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009. View Photo »
A posed Blackberry Bold 2 smartphone is seen at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009. View Photo »
A person poses while using a Blackberry Bold 2 smartphone at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009. View Photo »
A person poses while using a Blackberry Bold 2 smartphone at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009. View Photo »
Co-Ceo of Research in Motion, makers of the Blackberry handheld devices, Mike Lazaridis, poses for a portrait at the at the RIM headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009. View Photo »
Co-Ceo of Research in Motion, makers of the Blackberry handheld devices, Mike Lazaridis, poses for a portrait at the at the RIM headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009. View Photo »
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer attends a news conference to present the new Windows Mobile operating system at the company new headquarters in Issy-les-Moulineaux, near Paris October 6, 2009. View Photo »
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer attends a news conference to present the new Windows Mobile operating system at the company new headquarters in Issy-les-Moulineaux, near Paris October 6, 2009. View Photo »
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer attends a news conference to present the new Windows Mobile operating system at the company new headquarters in Issy-les-Moulineaux, near Paris October 6, 2009. View Photo »
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A posed Blackberry Pearl smartphone is seen at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009.
View Photo »A posed Blackberry Bold 2 smartphone is seen at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009.
View Photo »A person poses while using a Blackberry Bold 2 smartphone at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009.
View Photo »A person poses while using a Blackberry Bold 2 smartphone at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009.
View Photo »Co-Ceo of Research in Motion, makers of the Blackberry handheld devices, Mike Lazaridis, poses for a portrait at the at the RIM headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009.
View Photo »Co-Ceo of Research in Motion, makers of the Blackberry handheld devices, Mike Lazaridis, poses for a portrait at the at the RIM headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer attends a news conference to present the new Windows Mobile operating system at the company new headquarters in Issy-les-Moulineaux, near Paris October 6, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer attends a news conference to present the new Windows Mobile operating system at the company new headquarters in Issy-les-Moulineaux, near Paris October 6, 2009.
View Photo »Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Microsoft Corporation Steve Ballmer attends a news conference to present the new Windows Mobile operating system at the company new headquarters in Issy-les-Moulineaux, near Paris October 6, 2009.
View Photo »A posed Blackberry Bold 2 smartphone is seen at the Research in Motion (RIM) headquarters in Waterloo, November 16, 2009. Picture taken November 16, 2009.
View Photo »The Finns stand with a market-leading share of nearly 37 percent, but the new competition from Apple and from BlackBerry-maker Research in Motion in the retail business has the giant duly concerned; especially in the high-margin smartphone business.
There's a bias in the data, since AdMob ads run better on iPhone OS and Android devices than on, say, Research in Motion (RIMM) BlackBerries. But the trends are clear.
The gain happened mostly at the expense of Research in Motion's BlackBerry, he said... France is now the biggest market for the iPhone in Europe.
That has paved the way for this US dollar weakness, and then there was news that Microsoft was supposed to be putting in a bid for Canadian company, Research in Motion, and that saw the Canadian dollar strengthen.
And all Apple competitors, like Research in Motion, Nokia, Microsoft, Palm, and Google can do is sit there, mouths agape, wondering what to do next.
On Monday, Research in Motion quietly announced the successor to the world’s first touchscreen BlackBerry handset: the BlackBerry Storm2. With consideration to the tall expectations that faced its innovative but maligned predecessor at launch, the bungled announcement was a strange move
So far, neither Google nor Microsoft has proven they can slow the growth of the iPhone and Research in Motion's BlackBerry ... But that probably isn't Google's motive.
Picking up the BlackBerry Storm2, it’s clear that Research in Motion’s thought process here was simply to build a better BlackBerry Storm. They weren’t thinking about building an iPhone killer or worrying about what Palm is up to with their Web OS or what the next wave of Android phones might look like.
Handset makers now offering software stores include Palm, Nokia, Sony-Ericsson, and BlackBerry-maker Research in Motion. On the platform side, Google's Android and Microsoft's Windows Mobile -- competitors to the iPhone OS -- each have an app store now
He added that Windows Mobile's share of the mobile phone market is equal to Apple's. 'We and Apple are and we're chasing the two other players,' said Ballmer, referring to Nokia, the world's No. 1 smartphone maker, and Research in Motion.
The partnership signals a full-frontal assault on Apple's iPhone, which is distributed exclusively through wireless giant AT&T, as well as Research in Motion's BlackBerry mobile device
BlackBerry Planet: The Story of Research in Motion and the Little Device that Took the World by Storm.
The results confirm some of the worst fears expressed by this column on June 19, namely that Research in Motion's once high-profit margin business has collapsed permanently as smart phones have gone mainstream.
Last [week's] gloomy results from BlackBerry maker Research in Motion, accompanied by a gloomier outlook, only tell half the story
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The Latest News About Research In Motion From Solidgoldtweets http://tinyurl.com/yzff9og
- Solidgoldtweets 54 minutes ago