You are here: silicon.com > Hardware > PDAs

PDAs

RIM CEO: 'China's RedBerry is no threat'

Mike Lazaridis on the company's litigious spell and heading east...

Tags: blackberry, rim

By Jo Best

Published: 18 May 2006 15:20 BST

Time was, RIM was synonymous with dodgy thumbs and exec envy. Now it seems the Canadian company is more renowned for its lawyers' bills than its products.

Back in March, RIM finally put to bed its long-running patent dispute with NTP and all the shutdown predictions that loomed alongside. Then mobile email company Visto got in on the act and is threatening a BlackBerry shutdown if an agreement isn't reached in its patent quarrel. So has RIM had enough of being the tech industry's favourite courtroom staple?

The only thing that's similar is the name.

-- Mike Lazaridis, RIM founder and co-CEO, on Chinese rival the RedBerry

According to Mike Lazaridis, RIM's founder and co-CEO: "People are getting fed up with it."

Customers however are sticking with RIM, Lazaridis added, despite warnings from Gartner that enterprises should resist deploying the BlackBerry for mission critical applications during the NTP patent saga. "They chose wisely to stick with us... With the tests we ran and the feedback we were getting, they were less than impressed [with rivals' offerings]."

The NTP settlement may have come too early for the BlackBerry maker as it followed a ruling which found that federal courts shouldn't issue permanent injunctions against companies who have been found guilty of infringing patents (NTP's claim against RIM). The ruling was a blow to 'patent trolls' - companies which earn their crust from lawsuits predicated on patents they don't use in their day-to-day business.

Lazaridis said: "The Supreme Court ruled a little late on the substance of what we were standing up for," adding the $612m hit from the settlement was "taking one on the chin for our customers".

With a potential market of "hundreds of millions of devices" at stake, according to Brian Bogosian, head of Visto, it's no wonder the mobile email scene is so litigious.

Now RIM is hoping to engage the competition on a new front in the mobile email battle: China. RIM announced earlier this month it is planning to launch the BlackBerry service in the country with its largest operator, China Mobile.

As a recent research note from analyst house Gartner points out about RIM's Chinese ambitions: "Pricing will be an important factor in service uptake." The similarly named RedBerry service from state-owned operator China Unicom offers email for less than a dollar per month - a price RIM is likely to find hard to match.

But it's not a fair comparison, says Lazaridis. "How can you say the two things are closely related [enough] to apply apples-to-apples pricing?... The only thing that's similar is the name. [The RedBerry] is a long way from the sophistication of the BlackBerry system."

Talking of apples to apples, Gartner said in the same research note: "RIM faces strong competition in this emerging space from several vendors, including Nokia." While RIM is happy to show off analyst figures that reveal it's bossing the PDA space, isn't it time for the device manufacturer to start comparing itself and its numbers to the likes of Nokia?

After all, today's smart phone functionality will more than likely end up in tomorrow's bog-standard, ubiquitous handhelds. Does RIM have it in it to see the BlackBerry go the same way? At the moment, according to research from NPD, it's in joint ninth-place with Palm - and that's in the US, one of its strongholds.

Lazaridis said: "This class of device - whether it's BlackBerry or another device - it will happen. Consumers are demanding more functionality.

"How long will it take and who'll be the leader? It's not something that's easy to determine and it would be foolish to try."

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

  • Jobs
Data Centre Operator

ITIL foundation certification desirable Please note, this role requires you to work shift Sky delivers some of the most diverse content and services ...

1st/2nd line NOC Engineers: Nokia, UTRAN, RAN, RNC

You will have experience with Nokia kit and will have worked on support and monitoring 3G UTRAN using Nokia NetAct. TECHNOLOGIES: NOC, Network ...

PHP, MYSQL OOP Developer, Large Travel Operator, Kent

PHP, MYSQL, OOP Developers for a very large and well known tour operator based in Kent, 20 mins out of Waterloo. PHP, MYSQL, OOP Developers for ...

CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: