Having been a multi-year user of crackberry devices I think they have a lot to fear from the general adoption of windows mobile push technologies. More phones, more variety of services, greater integration with the most deployed mail server, etc. having said that, there are a lot of government and other agencies that probably would not touch a windows system of any sort with a 10 foot pole and thats probably all that RIM has going for them in the near future. RIM will ride the wave of freedom from an MS environment which may be just enough to keep them in business.
“There's a certain feeling of wading through water with this phone, as every time we went exploring the menus, we were met with a delay long enough to make us doubt our keystrokes registered.”
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Having been a multi-year user of crackberry devices I think they have a lot to fear from the general adoption of windows mobile push technologies. More phones, more variety of services, greater integration with the most deployed mail server, etc. having said that, there are a lot of government and other agencies that probably would not touch a windows system of any sort with a 10 foot pole and thats probably all that RIM has going for them in the near future. RIM will ride the wave of freedom from an MS environment which may be just enough to keep them in business.