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Blackberry Canada Movies

New Film 'BlackBerry' To Explore Rise and Fall of Canadian Smartphone (www.cbc.ca) 81

The rise and catastrophic fall of what was once Canada's most valuable company is set for the big screen. CBC.ca reports: Blackberry will tell the story of Waterloo, Ont.-based Research in Motion (RIM), creators of the titular device, which for a time was the world's most popular smartphone. The film stars Canadian actor Jay Baruchel as company co-founder Mike Lazaridis and It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia's Glenn Howerton as co-CEO Jim Balsillie. The film was adapted from the 2015 book Losing the Signal: The Spectacular Rise and Fall of BlackBerry, by Sean Silcoff and Jacquie McNish. Toronto's Matt Johnson directs and also appears in the film as RIM's other co-founder, Doug Fregin. The cast also includes Cary Elwes, Saul Rubinek and Michael Ironside.

RIM was founded in 1984 by business partners Lazaridis and Fregin, who had previously worked together on a failed LED sign business. After a decade of dabbling in various other technology projects, they turned their attention to the two-way communications systems that would become the foundation for the BlackBerry device.

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New Film 'BlackBerry' To Explore Rise and Fall of Canadian Smartphone

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  • Really scraping the bottom of the barrel for Canadian cultural film grant fodder...

  • by shanen ( 462549 ) on Wednesday August 24, 2022 @07:51PM (#62820055) Homepage Journal

    My take on the sad story is that the system is so broken that honest work, good products, and even sustained profits are no excuse now. The penalty for insufficient greed is death. (But I think Nokia was a sadder story, even though the company didn't die as completely. Relatively friendly environment?)

    Also loss of freedom. No one can choose BlackBerry now, no matter how well it might match your needs. My own fixation is on freedom maximization, so these days I object to the games that are rigged for profit maximization über alles. More choice and more innovation and more freedom are also important things to think about.

    Actually, it's quite rare when profit maximization should be the only criteria, but it's completely insane when the profit maximization is based on guessing about the future stock prices driving capital flows hither and yon. No one knows the future. Even the "smartest" computers are just guessing a few milliseconds into the future.

    Maybe that should be the basis of a joke, but I can barely recognize a funny joke when I stumble over one. Certainly can't recall the last time I wrote a good one, though sometimes I get a laugh in conversation...

  • Nokia, Erickson, Motorola, and all the rest. Industry changes and them at the top, some do not change.

    They did have a excellent phone though at the time.
  • by Kernel Kurtz ( 182424 ) on Wednesday August 24, 2022 @08:24PM (#62820159)
    I hate typing on a screen. I'm not good with a tiny keyboard to begin with and most modern implementations suck. It is too bad they were not able to bring that together with a larger higher res screen and touch UI in one device. There were some attempts by both BB and others to have a slide out keyboard, but that was not enough to make up for the lack of progress on the software side, and the tech at the time made them kind of clunky. Even the purchase of QNX, an excellent OS, could not overcome the optimization of iOS and Android at that point.

    Give me a modern OS and a nice big screen and a real keyboard now though and I would buy it in a second. Like a Galaxy Fold, but with a real keyboard on one (in)side and a Note size screen on the other (like the old Nokia 9210 - basically like a tiny pocketsize laptop). Bonus points for a screen on the outside too, so you can use it for many tasks without unfolding it.

    We can always hope, right?
  • by Anonymous Coward

    If only BlackBerry's marketing team had placed free advertisements at the end of every user's emails that say "Sent from my BlackBerry.". They missed the free exposure that would cause people to buy BB devices to be one with the herd.

  • and then missed the boat.

    There. No need to see it.
  • I worked at Nortel and had buddies over at RIM back in the day. They both vacuumed up brainy people and they bloated out in the middle management ranks... for padding your resume with R&D credentials, it was great. But there was vicious internal competition in middle management. The lack of unifying vision became "the engineers are real smart people, they'll figure it out" ... Sure. Engineers are smart. But they aren't managers. So no one was really steering the ship and once the iPhone landed, that key
  • one feature you can't find in smartphones today that the blackberry had was the speed-dial feature. you can program any one of the keys to a preset number and even with the devices locked down you can still hold the device in your pocket, press the key of your choice (because you knew by memory and touch which key it was) and you can speedial your way out of a sticky situation if you needed.

    my coworkers and i programmed our numbers with each other and if we ever needed an emergency or to be bailed out from

  • The early Blackberries were essentially "mobile terminals". When they started, that was a rather empty niche. Unfortunately they never opened their systems which meant that the only use for them was "mobile outlook".... and even that required you to either send your mail through a service they provided, or to install their proprietary software with high access rights.

    If they had opened their terminal protocol, they would have had a whole range of new markets. For example their terminals could have been inte

  • Sounds real exciting. Maybe beats ice fishing, I guess.
  • If you want the inside story of why Blackberry is failing [theglobeandmail.com], read this article.

    It was the kernel that was later expanded by its authors to the book which the movie is based on.

    Fascinating read for any tech enthusiast, watching how RIM was over confident while Apple, then Google, gobbled up market and mind share ...

  • I studied software engineering at McMaster, which is about an hour from Waterloo where RIM was headquartered. Back then in the early aughts RIM was the 800-pound gorilla, a huge employer of graduates and attracted a ton of students to both software eng and comp sci programs in the region, even as the dot com bust was slowing down the entire industry. I never got a RIM-job myself and went on to build my career in the U.S. but the stories I heard of the mismanagement and eventual tanking of RIM were super dep

  • One thing that really didn't help them was having to fight off a huge lawsuit from a US patent troll. The fact that they were a Canadian company probably did not help them in the US court system.

    While they were distracted by fighting in court, American companies like Apple and Google were busy innovating and taking away their market share from them.

    I wonder when the next Canadian tech giant is due to rise and fall, following in the shoes of Nortel and Blackberry?

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