Big Deal by Angus Kidman

Industry veteran Angus Kidman casts his cynical eye over what passes for news in the world of ICT. He exposes the deep disconnect between what vendors claim is the next big thing and what IT managers are really looking for to help them do their job. This often bitter and twisted rant comes to you courtesy of ZDNet Australia and any venue game enough to host Kidman during his extensive travels.

BlackBerry still lacking some flavour

Posted by Angus Kidman @ 14:29 2 comments

My recent rant about ongoing shortcomings in Microsoft's ActiveSync -- generated a variety of responses, ranging from ''sucked in'' to ''tell me about it'', but there was one more complex theme: why not use a BlackBerry instead?

One anonymous poster was particularly enthusiastic, remarking that the BlackBerry was "secure, stable, reliable, user-friendly, intuitive, supported, market-leader, industry-standard, java-based (open standard) and very cost-effective and now on 3G networks".

I could take issue with several of those points, but "cost-effective" is the biggest one. The expense of running one is the single main reason I don't use a BlackBerry as my main device. I don't actually need right-up-to-the-minute access to my e-mail, and I can't justify the cost of paying for what amounts to a permanent GPRS connection just to keep my information synchronised on a mobile device.

If someone else is paying the bills, and you really do feel the need to reply to every e-mail within seconds, then the BlackBerry is undoubtedly the best option available at the moment. But how many people genuinely fit into that category?

Terms like "intuitive" are dangerous at the best of times, and I certainly wouldn't make that claim of the BlackBerry either. Yes, it's straightforward enough once you've learnt it, but (to give a single example) the existence of an "escape" key for cancelling is not something I think any BlackBerry neophyte would work out on their own.

I'm also not totally convinced by the "stable" claim. The BlackBerry I intermittently use for mobile web browsing tends to get caught in a browser security loop after a while, and the only way to get it working again is to remove the battery. A friend of mine has a BlackBerry that occasionally decides to switch the keyboard lock off for no apparent reason.

Obviously, the BlackBerry's ongoing success (Gartner gives it 25 percent of the worldwide PDA market in its most recent numbers) mean that it is working well for many people. But "working well" and "working perfectly" are not the same thing.

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Talkback 2 comments

    i agree barry -- 29/08/06 (in reply to #120141476)

    angus, couldn't agree more!

    Blackberry is AOK by Me Michael Crichton -- 31/08/06

    I'm an IT professional responsible for managing a fleet of 50 corporately connected BlackBerry units.

    I do agree with Kidman's issue with the cost of these units. We're out of our original service contract, which means that we now are only paying for the service itself and not the handsets, and the cost still seems a tad too high. I for one would not pay it for my own unit.

    However, I've a few things to say in defence of the units themselves. I disagree with Kidman's arguments that the units are not intuitive though. I personally trained employees at my site to use these dveices, from CEO level down to just plain old manager, and without fail these people (whom I'd usually put in the "too hard basket" for training purposes) got the hang of the units quickly. It sounds to me that Kidman's arguments are based more on how hard it is for someone who is already a technophile to adapt to using these devices.

    Oh, and Angus, the button below the wheel serves as an escape key!

    For the final say on usability though, even my children and wife are able to use these devices with ease.

    As for reliability, the BB's I have been involved with have been fairly well behaved. We've had some hardware faults (not unexpected, since we were an early adopter of these units) and the occasional (and I do mean occasional) software error from which the units restart and go on their merry way. But hey - try telling me that your Windows PC doesn't ever crash!

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Angus Kidman

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