-
This statement is unreasonable. People rely on their phones whether it's for facebook or business. It IS important to them and they have the right to upset about the loss of service. ESPECIALLY a service that is built into the core of a phone.10-12-11 04:13 PMLike 0 -
iOS 5 Update Problems10-12-11 04:23 PMLike 0 - Knowledge 6,
Appreciate your sentiments, but this is incredibly bad for RIM. Not just because a few million customers are suddenly unhappy with their service, but because of the impression something like this leaves on the general populace. If the general consensus becomes "RIM 's going down and can't get their **** together, so avoid them at all costs", that perception will haunt them forever.
No, it wasn't planned. Yes, **** happens. The trouble arises when that **** that happened gets irreversibly linked to your company--it can follow you around forever. Considering the awful year RIM has had, I'd say this has a pretty good chance of sticking.10-12-11 04:29 PMLike 0 - Some of ya need a reality check. ...I really mean that.
Posted from my CrackBerry at wapforums.crackberry.com10-12-11 08:21 PMLike 0 - exactly, people choose BB knowing they have that infrastructure.. there is a risk, and that risk is BIS being down..
and that is why Apple, Android and WP7 users don't have BBM, packet Data, and push notifications as good as BB's
if you can't handle that risk then buy any of the other mentioned devices and you don't have to suffer through BIS outages.10-12-11 09:25 PMLike 0 - Not sure, because when your new OS is possible bricking users phones, and they are unable to restore them. Could become much more of a headache then a phone that is slow to receive emails.
iOS 5 Update Problems10-13-11 09:11 AMLike 0 -
Thats why no one reported that BlackBerry had been up and running error free for months. This outage was all over the news last night, but this morning now that everything is back to normal, not one of those news outlets are saying, anything about it.10-13-11 09:40 AMLike 0 - BrantaRetired Network ModIf failure avoidance and continuity of service is so vital and important I recommend a fully redundant system with no single point of failure. That means at least - two phones with different OS, on different networks, each taking traffic from two different email addresses, hosted on geographically separated mail servers, using unrelated network routing.10-13-11 11:34 AMLike 0
- If failure avoidance and continuity of service is so vital and important I recommend a fully redundant system with no single point of failure. That means at least - two phones with different OS, on different networks, each taking traffic from two different email addresses, hosted on geographically separated mail servers, using unrelated network routing.
I wasn't angry, I just think it's asinine to make comments like that other forum member did.10-13-11 12:31 PMLike 0
« Ok so the services are on and we can afford to laugh a little....
|
Future of RIM/ Making the switch »
LINK TO POST COPIED TO CLIPBOARD