11
Mar

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I am suffering from geek envy. I have a Blackberry Pearl. I used to love it. I still love it to some degree although lately I am falling out of love with it.

Its great for reading my emails. It is good for texting. It takes OK photos. But its devoid of fun. Its a corporate device. It has very limited multimedia player functions. I can’t listen to podcasts on it. I can’t watch videos from YouTube on it. It has no instant messenger. I see my husband’s one-year old Nokia N95 which does all of these things and more, and I am suffering from geek envy.

He shows me videos of our son on his phone. He shows me nostalgic 80′s pop videos (sadly i remember dancing around my living room to Bros). He chats to me on instant messenger while he is on the move.

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But I tell him, the N95 is not sleek and sophisticated like my piano black Pearl. It looks out of place in the office – it’s just a bit plastiky. Unfortunately this argument will seem redundant in a few months. The N96 (the upgrade from the N95) keeps Nokia’s technical lead but borrows some of the iPhone’s good looks.

Its already set mobi-geeks into quite a frenzy. And got the Mobile World Congress buzzing. This tiny box of tricks seems to support every current standard of communication, entertainment & media on the market today.

Clearly Nokia are trying to out iPhone the iPhone. The first thing they fixed is it’s appearance. I’m not complaining about the N95′s looks (well I am actually as its boxy and chunky) – on the other hand the N96 is a great deal prettier. It has an impressive 16GB internal memory – that’s the same as the current generation of iPhones, however unlike the iPhone it supports removable memory which effectively allows users to double their storage of music and movies. Check it out on YouTube.

It’s also got something called DVB-H – a standard that allows users to receive live television, I’m not convinced that anybody wll actually bother with this one.

As an earlier post on Lady Geek highlighted, most people use their mobile phones to stay in touch with family and friends while at work. Instead of letting work into their private life, people seem to bring their private life to work. Many of the problems people face at work are related to that they cannot express part of their personality at work and have to be someone they do not want to be. This is particularly an issue for women.

Blackberry needs to realise that the boundaries between home and work life are blurred. Women want a fluid device that is not just a ‘tool’ as many previous research studies claim. Women want technology to be fun. They want something that will make them smile, stay connected and that they can play with during meetings. Women don’t only want technology for the boardroom, they want technology to enhance their life. With the iphone and N96 as strong contenders for the female pound, Blackberry needs to take themselves a little less seriously.

Category : Mobile Phones

One Response to ““Take me seriously” screams the Blackberry”


Sally March 11, 2008

I’m looking forwards to the N96 – it does not do a whole lot that the N95 cannot do, however I expect that features which were considered highly experimental in the N95 (e.g. the GPS which barely works) ought to be highly polished after a year of R&D.

I’m not sure what good DVB will be even if it is well supported in the UK – do people really need / want to watch TV on their mobile phones? I’d imagine that soap-opera obsessives and football fans might, but then don’t these people have PVRs and big TVs at home?

On the other hand, the complete list of features really does impress – if they can get all that stuff even 90% as well orchestrated as Apple’s iPhone then the N96 will cause Apple some real trouble.