iToy is just not ready for business yet!
- I'm a rep for for an outdoor advertising company in northern CA. Today I arranged a conference call with one of our largest clients. Turns out the number of people involved was too great for a conference call, so we decided to to place our phones on speaker and allow everyone opportunity to give their input. I charged up my trusty Blackberry Tour, set it to speaker, placed it on my dining table and dialed the number. The connection was made within the same state (50miles away) and we began our meeting. I noticed right- away the dialog from their end was cutting in and out. I asked if they could hear us clearly and they said we sounded as if we were sitting in the room! I suggested they reposition the phone our move closer to the microphone. The problem only worsened and all the while they could still hear all of us clearly. I asked the client (a VP) what device he was using and he told me it was an iPhone 3G. When I told him we could could barely hear anything from their end he went "Fanboy" on me and started a lecture on the benefits of iToy. I suggested we hang up and re-connect, as soon as the connection was made it immediately dropped completely. I had hoped we could hammer out some business on a Saturday and not have to open up the office to use a hard-line but "no go." I took the blame because he's the the customer... All the while knowing it was his iToy that prevented proper business from being conducted. The moral of the story is... Blackberry is for business, and was made for business. Keep your iToy to impress your friends and family, but don't attempt to bring it into the business world where it doesn't belong.05-22-10 09:22 PMLike 0
- Well said. If the you can't make calls and hear them, then it's really just an iPod Touch with a slow connection.
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com05-22-10 09:35 PMLike 0 -
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- No, it's the iPhone that sucks. It's a great multimedia device, but it seems to be issues with the phone itself. Stuff like that is why I got rid of my iPhone and now sport a BB and an iPod Touch (and I know several power users in my company who have done the same).05-24-10 01:45 PMLike 0
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Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com05-25-10 12:15 PMLike 0 -
- I'm a rep for for an outdoor advertising company in northern CA. Today I arranged a conference call with one of our largest clients. Turns out the number of people involved was too great for a conference call, so we decided to to place our phones on speaker and allow everyone opportunity to give their input. I charged up my trusty Blackberry Tour, set it to speaker, placed it on my dining table and dialed the number. The connection was made within the same state (50miles away) and we began our meeting. I noticed right- away the dialog from their end was cutting in and out. I asked if they could hear us clearly and they said we sounded as if we were sitting in the room! I suggested they reposition the phone our move closer to the microphone. The problem only worsened and all the while they could still hear all of us clearly. I asked the client (a VP) what device he was using and he told me it was an iPhone 3G. When I told him we could could barely hear anything from their end he went "Fanboy" on me and started a lecture on the benefits of iToy. I suggested we hang up and re-connect, as soon as the connection was made it immediately dropped completely. I had hoped we could hammer out some business on a Saturday and not have to open up the office to use a hard-line but "no go." I took the blame because he's the the customer... All the while knowing it was his f-----g iToy that prevented proper business from being conducted. The moral of the story is... Blackberry is for business, and was made for business. Keep your iToy to impress your friends and family, but don't attempt to bring it into the business world where it doesn't belong.05-25-10 12:43 PMLike 0
- I don't think the iPhone is going anywhere. You could start laying in about RIM's failure to get rid of truncated e-mails, the crappy browser, the "slowness" to innovate, the lack of high end specs, and just turn into a flame fest. We all know what each phone is capable of and in the end, it's what you like. Why people must debate opinion is beyond me. I personally have never used an iPhone but why would there be so many sold if they were such crappy devices?05-25-10 01:19 PMLike 0
- I don't think the iPhone is going anywhere. You could start laying in about RIM's failure to get rid of truncated e-mails, the crappy browser, the "slowness" to innovate, the lack of high end specs, and just turn into a flame fest. We all know what each phone is capable of and in the end, it's what you like. Why people must debate opinion is beyond me. I personally have never used an iPhone but why would there be so many sold if they were such crappy devices?
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com05-25-10 04:52 PMLike 0 -
And to make it worse, you carry one of the WORST blackberrys available!05-25-10 07:17 PMLike 0 - I'm a rep for for an outdoor advertising company in northern CA. Today I arranged a conference call with one of our largest clients. Turns out the number of people involved was too great for a conference call, so we decided to to place our phones on speaker and allow everyone opportunity to give their input. I charged up my trusty Blackberry Tour, set it to speaker, placed it on my dining table and dialed the number. The connection was made within the same state (50miles away) and we began our meeting. I noticed right- away the dialog from their end was cutting in and out. I asked if they could hear us clearly and they said we sounded as if we were sitting in the room! I suggested they reposition the phone our move closer to the microphone. The problem only worsened and all the while they could still hear all of us clearly. I asked the client (a VP) what device he was using and he told me it was an iPhone 3G. When I told him we could could barely hear anything from their end he went "Fanboy" on me and started a lecture on the benefits of iToy. I suggested we hang up and re-connect, as soon as the connection was made it immediately dropped completely. I had hoped we could hammer out some business on a Saturday and not have to open up the office to use a hard-line but "no go." I took the blame because he's the the customer... All the while knowing it was his f-----g iToy that prevented proper business from being conducted. The moral of the story is... Blackberry is for business, and was made for business. Keep your iToy to impress your friends and family, but don't attempt to bring it into the business world where it doesn't belong.
Last edited by CrackberryBrandon; 05-25-10 at 07:54 PM.
05-25-10 07:37 PMLike 0
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iToy is just not ready for business yet!
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