Interview with Chris Smith, Blackberry's vice president for its application platform
- BlackBerry: Run Your Android Apps Here! | News & Opinion | PCMag.com
Didn't see this posted. Thought I would share.
BlackBerry: Run Your Android Apps Here!
BARCELONA�BlackBerry isn't bashful about its Android app compatibility anymore.
The ability to run Android apps was one of the worst-kept secrets of the BlackBerry 10 platform. For most of BlackBerry 10's first year, you had to go through a complicated series of steps to "wrap" an Android app to run on BlackBerrys. The 10.2.1 upgrade in late January let BlackBerry's phones run Android apps directly, but BlackBerry kept the ability out of the release notes and initially didn't want to talk about it publicly.
Those days are over. "You can now go to an Android store as of 10.2.1 and pull down [application files] directly," said Chris Smith, Blackberry's vice president for its application platform. "In terms of an open ecosystem and an app and content story, we've had some challenges with that. We did a great job of bringing content for launch, but the reality is that there's a long tail out there and certain key apps we haven't been able to bring across, and that's held us back in certain markets," he said.
To demonstrate, he loaded up the Amazon Appstore on a BlackBerry Q10 by clicking on a button on Amazon's Web page. Within about two minutes, I had downloaded a game. Smith said that pretty much anything will work that isn't dependent on Google services, like Maps.
"The level of performance and capability of those apps is equivalent to what you would see on a stock Android device," he said.
BlackBerry might seek an even closer or more formal relationship with existing app stores, Smith said.
"We're still thinking about what the right experience is there, but we've definitely opened it up much more to the average consumer," Smith said.
Let's make one thing clear, though: this excludes the Google Play store, or any Google services. BlackBerry isn't Android, and the company isn't seeking the Google certifications needed to legitimately run Google's store and services.
Why BlackBerry Needs BB10
So why isn't BlackBerry Android, anyway? Smith said BlackBerry needs to maintain its own operating system to ensure the level of corporate security it requires.
"The reality is that security starts at the bottom, in terms of securing the hardware, and really builds in concentric circles on top of that. It's not that there aren't alternatives out there; it's that we have very specific intellectual property, working in the most secure environments in the world, and we have complete confidence in an approach where we have total control," he said.
BlackBerry is designed for business security, not personal privacy, though. When I asked Smith about Blackphone, the encryption-centric Android phone (video below), he said BlackBerry was trying to keep its eyes on the corporate prize.
"Our focus has always been working with our large enterprise customers and others in regulated industries. I think that's going to continue; the audience that the Blackphone is potentially going after is not our primary focus," he said.
With control over the platform, BlackBerry can also focus on plumbing in new features that its core enterprise customers want, Smith said. Expect to hear more this year in terms of optimizing battery life, text input, text management, and enterprise intranet apps.
"On the enterprise app side, unlocking all of those assets that enterprises keep behind the firewall ... there's a huge opportunity to unlock that and bring it down to the device," Smith said. Those enterprise apps wouldn't be Android apps; they'd be exclusive to BlackBerry, as they'd use BlackBerry's unique corporate security platform features.
Outside the enterprise, "battery life, the best possible input experience, managing text or moving text around ... those are areas where you're going to continue to see innovation coming from us," he said.03-01-14 11:43 PMLike 4 - Thanks for the article.
Brilliant about all the text manipulating features. They aren't bad, and probably the best, but there's nothing wrong with improving an already fantastic feature.
Quality Poultry - Channel PIN: C004B64D103-02-14 08:40 AMLike 0 - No, I think it's a good idea.
I would have an issue subscribing to Google Services, and would prefer BlackBerry use different routes to get the apps on BlackBerry 10.
Quality Poultry - Channel PIN: C004B64D103-02-14 09:23 AMLike 3 - Not surprising BlackBerry chooses now to shout out about Android apps. Nokia just released phones that directly compete with the z3 unabashedly running their own Android app store, complete with Microsoft and Nokia services to fill in for GPS, and continuing rumors that Windows Phone now also about to be able to run Android apps.
Posted via the Android CrackBerry App!03-02-14 10:37 AMLike 0 -
Some of these urban legends about BlackBerry ignoring thing get a little more grandiose over time. I've also seen people said they "ignored apps" (also BS - you could make BlackBerry apps with BlackBerry SDKs for years before there was an iPhone), and people say they didn't want cameras on phones until after the iPhone came out. LOL
Not singling you out and not suggesting they haven't made some mistakes, but the scope of the mistakes seems to grow as the legend does. ;-)03-02-14 10:41 AMLike 4 - Myself, I love Google Services. I'm not a fan of Android as an OS at all, but damn, I love Google Maps, Google Talk, Google Drive, Google Docs, Google Mail etc. etc. etc. I'd love if I didn't have to jump through hoops in many cases.03-02-14 11:05 AMLike 0
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Also, we don't have the same people running the company that was there when the iPhone came out. So I'm sure the real internal response is very different.
It could very well be that Blackphone is going after a different market segment. It could be why BlackBerry is pushing integration into the enterprise so hard.
I haven't kept up with this Blackphone all that much beyond the basic headlines about it, but is it made to integrate into the enterprise well, or is it meant as a standalone device totally separated from anything and everything?
Posted via CB1003-03-14 09:46 AMLike 0 -
Response crafted in seconds on a Z3003-03-14 10:44 AMLike 0 - I agree with RubberChicken76. That's a public statement that should not be confused with what they may be thinking internally. You always publicly highlight your product, and downplay your competitors - with class if you can, but downplay them nonetheless.
Also, we don't have the same people running the company that was there when the iPhone came out. So I'm sure the real internal response is very different.
It could very well be that Blackphone is going after a different market segment. It could be why BlackBerry is pushing integration into the enterprise so hard.
I haven't kept up with this Blackphone all that much beyond the basic headlines about it, but is it made to integrate into the enterprise well, or is it meant as a standalone device totally separated from anything and everything?
Posted via CB1003-03-14 02:24 PMLike 0
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Interview with Chris Smith, Blackberry's vice president for its application platform
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