Blackberry Messenger - the pros & cons.
- Someone already said it but it really should be stressed that people know when youre reading their messages but ignoring them. Ive seen quite a few arguments go from bad to worse just because of bbm.
They should add a feature to where the person gets a "this person is not accepting messages" message or something. I know you can be unavailable, but since messages still flow its pretty worthless.05-05-11 10:07 AMLike 0 - This should have been on my list of Cons...broadcasting is so annoying...#1 reason why I delete people!
fastpitch_dad likes this.05-05-11 10:07 AMLike 1 -
-
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com05-05-11 10:33 AMLike 0 - DuviRetired Moderatori don't do groups and sometimes the people that need to get messages aren't in groups (when i did groups)... do those that "hate" and/or never use broadcast, would you send the same message to 4 or more people?
for example.... i would need to send a broadcast message to my ex and her sisters about where to meet up and at what time. another example i use it would be for the example i used in a previous post. i also needed it at at&t... my boss expected our whole team to be reachable by bbm and would have me send a broadcast to meet in her office for urgent updates/happenings around the call center.
y'all must have some annoying contacts. i apologize for them. lol.05-05-11 01:23 PMLike 0 -
I liev in a rural area where it's rare that I get above 2 bars GPRS and SMS has been spot on for me even on my phone that doesn't have WiFi Calling. The only time I've had SMS issues is on New Years Eve Night/Early Day when the networks are overloaded like ****. I've been dealing with this coverage for 6+ years now, and never had any issues with reliability outside of that timeframe.
SMS doesn't require 3G coverage, it just needs a GSM connection :P That's why dumb phones without 3G radios have no issues sending and recieving SMS (and MMS, for that matter).05-05-11 02:53 PMLike 0 - I travel widely to REAL rural area ( population density 1 person per 300 square miles).if you have a blanketed coverage in your area I don't call it rural, I would say I get about 5 failed SMS per week, and 6 or 8 failed emails
Failure rate on BBM less than 1 per month
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com05-05-11 03:03 PMLike 0 - i don't do groups and sometimes the people that need to get messages aren't in groups (when i did groups)... do those that "hate" and/or never use broadcast, would you send the same message to 4 or more people?
for example.... i would need to send a broadcast message to my ex and her sisters about where to meet up and at what time. another example i use it would be for the example i used in a previous post. i also needed it at at&t... my boss expected our whole team to be reachable by bbm and would have me send a broadcast to meet in her office for urgent updates/happenings around the call center.
y'all must have some annoying contacts. i apologize for them. lol.
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com05-05-11 05:52 PMLike 0 - I travel widely to REAL rural area ( population density 1 person per 300 square miles).if you have a blanketed coverage in your area I don't call it rural, I would say I get about 5 failed SMS per week, and 6 or 8 failed emails
Failure rate on BBM less than 1 per month
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com
I don't get failed SMS/MMS or emails here because T-Mobile has WiFi calling and everything is routed through my data connection.
Don't wanna do the semantics thing. First talking about not having 3G coverage and now the definition of a Rural are. The population density has nothing to do with it. The connection type/strength is more of what I was referring to.
2 Bars of GPRS is almost no connection (5 Bar GPRS -> 5 Bar EDGE -> 5 Bar 3G). It's about what you'd expect in any rural area that anyone would consider having coverage...
Anything less than that and you mind as well not even have a cell phone if you spend most of your time in those areas...Last edited by N8ter; 05-05-11 at 07:19 PM.
05-05-11 07:11 PMLike 0 - This is a rural area, and it would be literally impossible to get a failed BBM here becuase T-Mobile has free UMA.
I don't get failed SMS/MMS or emails here because T-Mobile has WiFi calling and everything is routed through my data connection.
Don't wanna do the semantics thing. First talking about not having 3G coverage and now the definition of a Rural are. The population density has nothing to do with it. The connection type/strength is more of what I was referring to.
2 Bars of GPRS is almost no connection (5 Bar GPRS -> 5 Bar EDGE -> 5 Bar 3G). It's about what you'd expect in any rural area that anyone would consider having coverage...
Anything less than that and you mind as well not even have a cell phone if you spend most of your time in those areas...05-06-11 09:19 PMLike 0 - Thanks for all the replies
Still trying to get my head around how BBM works in relation to charges.
MY understanding is that as I've got the Blackberry additional data-plan (I'm on Vodafone UK), regardless of where I am in the world, if I want to send a BBM, it will go through the BIS server. No roaming charges etc. In other words, it's free.
There seems to be a lot of conflicting information about this - probably due to the varying range of data-plans available worldwide.
I can see that there's some great benefits to BBM, especially if you've got lots of friends/contacts using 'Berry though.
Dan05-07-11 03:37 AMLike 0 - Thanks for all the replies
Still trying to get my head around how BBM works in relation to charges.
MY understanding is that as I've got the Blackberry additional data-plan (I'm on Vodafone UK), regardless of where I am in the world, if I want to send a BBM, it will go through the BIS server. No roaming charges etc. In other words, it's free.
There seems to be a lot of conflicting information about this - probably due to the varying range of data-plans available worldwide.
I can see that there's some great benefits to BBM, especially if you've got lots of friends/contacts using 'Berry though.
Dan
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com05-07-11 03:44 AMLike 0
- Forum
- Popular at CrackBerry
- General BlackBerry News, Discussion & Rumors
Blackberry Messenger - the pros & cons.
LINK TO POST COPIED TO CLIPBOARD