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It's time to admit the painfully obvious: At least from the business traveler's perspective, the BlackBerry is history. It is swiftly going the way of paper airplane tickets, fax machines, dual-time watches, world-band radios and dozens of other tools and tricks that once seemed an integral part life on the road.
As BlackBerry's share of the smartphone market evaporates, the parent company, Research In Motion (RIM) of Canada, has fallen and seems unable to get up. It has pushed back the release of its newest operating system until early next year. Besides, the first phones based on the BlackBerry 10 system won't even have physical keyboards. A new BlackBerry with a new operating system and an external keypad may not with battery such as Apple Presario R4145EA Battery , Apple A1175 Battery , Apple A1185 Battery , Apple A1189 Battery , Apple A1245 Battery , Apple A1280 Battery , Apple A1281 Battery , Apple E68043 Battery , Apple LBCAP8 Battery , Apple M6091 Battery , Apple M7318 Battery arrive until next summer.
A year is forever in business-travel time, especially since those of us who still carry a BlackBerry are probably dealing with devices that are dinged, dented and long past their physical as well technological prime. So, it's time to move on and remember the BlackBerry with the same misty nostalgia we reserve for those 30-pound Compaq "portable" computer, pagers and those little black boxes that emitted tones through a pay phone so we could access our telephone answering machines.
Still, the demise of the BlackBerry as a practical, mainstream business-travel tool raises some questions: What's next? What if I still want an external keypad? And what about all that stuff about BlackBerry being a superior device for corporate security considerations?
The masses shall inherit the mobile earth
Let's answer the last question first: corporate IT departments have given up fighting for email security and encryption on BlackBerry's terms. Like petty tyrants overwhelmed by the surging masses of the Arab Spring, technology gurus can no longer resist the bottom-up influx of iPhones and Android phones into the corporate environment. Besides, BlackBerry's most nimble competitors, like Samsung, are doing a better job sucking up to the corporate-technology elite. And if you need an on-the-nose business-travel example of how the corporate old guard is changing its security tune, consider this: The Australian carrier Qantas announced last week that it was junking its 1,300 corporately issued BlackBerry devices and replacing them with iPhones.