Originally Posted by
MarsupilamiX Can you prove that, or is that yet another point you invented, to sugarcoat BlackBerry's strategy?
Apart from that: How big would a device have to be, when it has the display size of a Note 4, and a keyboard?
Why haven't we seen tablets with keyboards, in the candybar form factor?
And I don't mean hybrids like the Sony Vaio (which are funny products, but sadly flopped).
Physical keyboards on phones have been made obsolete, through the on demand virtual keyboard.
The whole history of keyboard phones, be it sliders or candybar designs, prove that.
But you'll never accept it, as it would mean that you have to accept that BlackBerry's strategy is a bad one.
Therefore, come back to me when BlackBerry sold so many Passports and Classics, that the keyboard niche exceeds or attains the 1% marketshare (I mean, even then nothing would have changed, and the strategy is still bad, but Keyboard phones at least passed the stage of having 0. something % of the market).
Until keyboard phones make a comeback and have a sizeable amount of the market again, what I say is true, because only then, has it been falsified.
And we both know that won't happen... So why even argue against reality?
Don't expect an answer if you reply, I am so done arguing the obvious with fanboys.
Call me when it happened.
Because focusing on less than 0.5% of the market makes so much sense when you don't sell for 5 times the price of your competition.
Oh wait, it doesn't make sense :O
But yes, you are correct. It should have indeed finally happened.
The Q5 and Q10 weren't exactly glorious.
The Passport seems pretty awesome on the other hand.
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