Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Failure Of 'Storm' Smartphone Dealt Major Blow To Blackberry: Jim Balsillie

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Jun, 2015 10:31 AM
    TORONTO — Former co-chief executive Jim Balsillie says BlackBerry's reputation was dealt a major blow by the BlackBerry Storm, a rushed attempt by the Waterloo, Ont., company to fend off Apple's iPhone with its own version of a touchscreen device.
     
    "With Storm we tried to do too much," he told the audience in a fireside chat at an Empire Club of Canada event in Toronto.
     
    "It was a touch display, a clickable display, it had new applications. It was all done in an incredibly short period of time and it blew up on us."
     
    Speaking for the first time publicly about BlackBerry since his abrupt departure from the company in early 2012, Balsillie offered his take on how the company tumbled from its perch as the global smartphone leader, pointing to patents and aggressive competition from Apple.
     
    But he said the technical problems with the phone left customers returning it to stores, and that soured BlackBerry's relationship with U.S. telecom giant Verizon, which decided to sever ties with the Canadian company.
     
    "That was the time I knew we couldn't compete on high-end hardware," Balsillie said.
     
    Sporting a more laid-back look than his days at BlackBerry, then known as Research In Motion, Balsillie arrived dressed in a salmon-coloured blazer and khakis, with no tie — a stark contrast to the traditional business attire of most attendees.
     
    Balsillie focused on his hopes for change in Canada's technology sector and called for a national lobby organization to help homebred startups get the attention they need to grow. He said industry and government need to work together if Canada is to hold its own against international competition in the tech world.
     
    "The Canadian government doesn't understand the innovation economy," he said.
     
    Balsillie pointed to successful American entrepreneurs, like Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, as examples of quality of tech leaders who could be from Canada if they were given the right environment to grow.
     
    "These guys are no smarter than Canadian entrepreneurs, but the government doesn't support them properly," he added.
     
    Without lobbyists working in their favour, the voices of Canadian tech companies are being drowned out by multinational corporations, he said.
     
    "If anybody here has a tech company, who do you join to take your voice to Ottawa or Queen's Park?" Balsillie said, referring to the Ontario legislature. "They're all dominated and populated by foreign multinationals."
     
    Balsillie suggested the government enact infrastructure and other policies to help the local tech sector, adding that political leaders need to start to seeing "how predatory this game is."
     
    Over the last few years a number of Silicon Valley giants like Google and Amazon have set up satellite offices in Vancouver, Toronto and Waterloo, in part to attract top local talent. International companies are now funnelling "big returns" out of Canada and back to their global headquarters, he said.
     
    While Balsillie has distanced himself professionally from BlackBerry in recent years, he hasn't given up on the BlackBerry brand.
     
    Asked by an audience member which phone he uses, Balsillie proudly announced it's still a BlackBerry Bold.
     
    "I love it," he said. "And you'll have to pry it out of my cold, dead hands."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    BC Regional District Won't Pay For Cleanup Of Demolished Site Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Kids

    BC Regional District Won't Pay For Cleanup Of Demolished Site Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Kids
    The Merritt, B.C., home where Allan Schoenborn stabbed his daughter and smothered his two sons has served as a loathsome reminder to the city since the killings in 2008.

    BC Regional District Won't Pay For Cleanup Of Demolished Site Where Allan Schoenborn Killed His Kids

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s
    Police say a Caledonia, Ont., man who disappeared in 1992 took the name of a dead boy and lived under the assumed name until his death 10 years later.

    Police Discover Ontario Man Used Identity Of BC Boy Who Died In 1970s

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls
    The Supreme Court of Canada has ordered a new trial in the case of two Edmonton men who made child pornography after videotaping two 14-year-old girls performing sex acts.

    Supreme Court Orders New Trial For Alberta Men Who Made Sex Tapes Of 14-Year-Old Runaway Girls

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian
    The video showing Donovan McGlaughlin's Canadian citizenship ceremony in Dawson City, Yukon, is just two minutes and 11 seconds long but the elaborate script was decades in the making.

    Decades-Long Citizenship Battle Ends For Yukon Man Donovan McGlaughlin Who's Now Officially Canadian

    Shrinking Demand For Blood Products Behind Closure Of Blood Donor Clinics

    Shrinking Demand For Blood Products Behind Closure Of Blood Donor Clinics
    Ian Mumford, the agency's chief supply chain officer, says advances in medicine have prompted Canada's hospitals to reduce their demand for blood products.

    Shrinking Demand For Blood Products Behind Closure Of Blood Donor Clinics

    P.E.I. Man Signs Peace Bond Over Ricin Allegations Made By The RCMP

    P.E.I. Man Signs Peace Bond Over Ricin Allegations Made By The RCMP
    CHARLOTTETOWN — A man accused of having enough castor beans to produce a "substantial quantity" of the deadly toxin ricin signed a 12-month peace bond Friday in Charlottetown.

    P.E.I. Man Signs Peace Bond Over Ricin Allegations Made By The RCMP