Lontan si u ti pe servi enn Sagem ler u truve ki enn Nokia kav fer eventielman u aste enn Nokia. Anfet probableman u renuvle enn Nokia ek enn lot Nokia parski zot pa tiena kompetiter serye. Lerla enn moman done u aste enn Blackberry Killer. Moris nu telman dan fatak ki dimunn finn aste Killer avan Blackberry parski Blackberry finn ariv bien apre.
Me pri lansman Blackberry inpe tro ser donk u atan. Amwin u envi showoff ek aste li pu repet tu dimumm komie un paye sa. Pa importan mem si u pa tro konn servi li. Apre Blackberry so pri bese vinn parey kuma enn Nokia u aste enn Curve. Wow! U pe gut u promye smartphone. Kapav gayn email dan u telefon, kapav surf lor internet. So lekran 19 sentimet kare (plis ki de fwa lekran 7.84 sentimet kare u Nokia ). Kapav mem bloge. Bye bye Nokia.
Letan sa Apple tir so iPhone. Tarrrrrrr! iPhone 4S ena enn voice asssitant ki apel Siri. Li simplifie enn ta zafer. So lekran 39.76 sentimet kare: de fwa pli gro ki pu Blackberry. Ek en plis li servi OS Apple. Buku pli simp, robis ek intwitif. Bye bye Blackberry. Samsung-li tir so Galaxy ki pe mars mari bien: finn ed Samsung vinn pli gran manifaktirye smartphone dan lemond. So lekran pli gran ek li mars ek Android. Kuma iPhone 5 pu ete?
Griye inpe pistas.
Mone apprecier lire sa lartik la. Li enkor plis seryer kant bizin lire li a haute voix.
ReplyDeletePur contenu la, mo ti pu azouter ki imper lannees avant, zotte tous ti p rode ene portab ki pli tipti ki pu so camarade. azordi zour, li p vine le contraire. plis ou portable gros, plis li p gagne fonctionalites et ene gros lekran.
Pou akonpagn pistas-griyé-la, ici ki bizin swiv sinéma-la.
ReplyDelete"...parski Blackberry finn ariv bien apre."
Li impé bizar ki nou otan en-rétar lor tou isi: ha-mem ki apel entrepreneur ki nou ena kom biznéss-ménn dan Dodoland? Ou-bien sé ziss dumping ki pé férr kott nou?
@Yashvin
ReplyDeleteMersi pu u komenter. Wai, anfet portab pe revinn enn tigit pli gro dan sertin dimansyon me pli mins dan lezot. Mo kwar nu pe koste ek groser optimal la: parski pli gro u tomb dan mini-tablet kuma pu Samsung-la ek kuma Apple sipozeman pu tir enn biento akoz zot finn remarke ki dimunn pa amenn zot iPad ar zot travay.
@akagugo
Dumping ase fuka ki derule isi: u paye pri gran mark pu gomon. Bann otorite ti bizin met inpe lord ladan e pa les tu kalite gonaz rant dan pei. Mauritius Standards Bureau usi ti bizin pli aktif ki sa.
Blackberry pe seye fer enn kombak.
ReplyDeleteEnn smartphone mem ha?
ReplyDeletekeyboard (QWERTY siouplé!), less-than-decent (by today's standards) camera...?
Enn husband-comeback ha!
But I guess those who were embarrassed with the previous ones will rush back, a niche market of those who like textured surfaces, ergonomic keyboards, fail-proof single-handed typing with large thumbs, and e-mail addicts.
But go figure why their own spokesperson doesn't use one herself.
Tansion lizié! Samsung S4 bordé! Enn bébétt ha!
ReplyDeleteKi grossérr? Pa koumha!
ReplyDeleteComeback or not, Blackberry is dead, as a very beautiful example of end of product life cycle.
ReplyDeleteAnd the market is alive with how to tame the newcomers to stay on Android, which IOS does magnificiently.
"Mauritius Standards Bureau usi ti bizin pli aktif ki sa"
ReplyDeleteInstead of MSB, ICTA did its job properly, with 2,300+ products now enlisted.
Haters gonna hate, proper enforcement of technical regulations is the only way of
ensuring the sustainability of our infrastructure. We can only hope that other authorities start enforcing their own existing regulations, albeit with much better communication of the purpose of the whole thing. Not like Buntipilly's fines for jaywalking.
A step in the right direction. Yep, hopefully we'll get better enforcement elsewhere. Fast.
ReplyDeleteSome who try to jump on the train too late miss it completely!
ReplyDeleteDespite giving it pride of place on one of the web's most expensive piece of real estate.
ReplyDeleteSony skips first dividend in 58 years of listing history after being squeezed in smartphones market between Apple/Samsung and lower end Chinese manufacturers.
ReplyDeleteAny size it is, it should not bend that much.
ReplyDeleteAnd slowly but surely, Apple is becoming a trend-follower, not only in the size of its phones, but also in the flaws.
What would Steve be thinking about this...?
I don't particularly like anything larger than the 4s as they don't fit nicely in the palm and offer the very convenient one-hand use.
ReplyDeleteI think there might be an Asian cultural factor going on here so Apple is just capitalising on it. But I am betting a reversion to smaller phones.
Samsung is also having problems with its smartphone strategy so that should lower the pressure on Apple to alter its DNA.
Forgot to add that Blackberry has a new phone out: Passport. Didn't browse the comparison charts yet.
ReplyDeleteUp to half-a-million rupees for this?
ReplyDeleteTheir most expensive product since the Lisa which was released in 1983 and which sold only 100,000 units.
ReplyDeleteThings are different now. All that must happen for them to sell 100,000 of that most expensive version of the Apple watch is to expect one such sale for every 7,000 iPhone ever sold (700 million and counting).
For sure they will sell millions of the entry and mid-range models. And probably show everybody what a smartwatch was meant to be. Like they did for the smartphone and the tablet.
Up to you to decide: cool or .
ReplyDelete"Ha, like buying a Ferrari* with a 1 litre fuel tank and having to buy a fuel tanker on wheels to tug behind you.", says one commenter, upon discovering Apple's "fix" for the iPhone 6s' crappy battery life.
ReplyDeleteWhich begs for the question: why don't you make the phone thicker with a decent battery life? "Because now it can sell a £79 add-on".
It seems things are going downhill for them since the iMaps episode, then the bending episode, etc...
New changes apparently on the way with iPhone 7. Including doing away with the earphone jack. Apple probably wants to improve the sound quality of their smartphones -- they have already sold a billion of them -- and make use of wireless earphones from Beats, their biggest acquisition so far.
ReplyDeleteIt has also released a security patch yesterday to fight three simultaneous zero-day attacks.
iPhone 7? With its features that starting to resemble those of its Android-based rivals (water resistance...) there's like a faint roar of laughter which will be steadily increasing as the Apple faithfuls will start realising that upgrading to the latest version does not bring any incremental comfort to the already-claustrophobic experience. Ah yes, I forgot: using these is no longer about functionality, but about the perceived value... right?
ReplyDeleteAirbuds are going to get lost for sure. But there are situations where it will be appreciated.
ReplyDeleteGiven the installed base of iPhones they will sell millions of them. If 1% of that base buys a pair every year that will add over a billion dollars to the bottom line.
The camera companies will not be laughing though.
Following Apple's acquisition of Beats, this kinda makes sense... It's buying itself a monopoly, it seems!
ReplyDeleteAttention li-dir: the brick is back!
ReplyDeleteLet's see.
ReplyDeleteHein, ala li lah! It even has a camera and a microSD slot, would you believe that? Plus one month standby time, no less - who can do better?
ReplyDeleteSurfing on such a high brand equity as the 3310 makes any compromise seem like treason.
ReplyDeleteBlackberry's KeyOne looks wow! But will we be hearing about these dinosaurs in 5 years from now?
5 years? Try 6 months.
ReplyDelete