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2013-09-27
, 12:05
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Joined on Mar 2010
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#2
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2013-09-27
, 14:03
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Posts: 163 |
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Joined on May 2010
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#3
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Echoing Microsoft's catastrophic write-down due to unsold Surface RT inventory, this single loss was enough to wipe out much of the company's quarterly revenue of $1.6 billion. When added to a further loss due to corporate restructuring, it resulted in a final GAAP loss for BlackBerry of $965 million.
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2013-09-27
, 14:23
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#4
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2013-09-27
, 15:17
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Posts: 1,048 |
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@ SF Bay Area
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#5
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to uvatbc For This Useful Post: | ||
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2013-09-27
, 16:17
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Posts: 662 |
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#6
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Reffyyyy For This Useful Post: | ||
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2013-09-27
, 16:42
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Posts: 1,839 |
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#7
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The Z10 wasn't a bad phone, scratch that it isn't a bad phone.
It just needed more consumer mindshare in my humble opinion.
This means bad news. The third place runner has fallen. Nokia too.
Basically the state of the smartphone market is a duopoly between Samsung and Apple. Samsung has the larger marketshare, Apple has the larger profits. Both have equal influence on the market and each other.
The Following 3 Users Say Thank You to tissot For This Useful Post: | ||
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2013-09-27
, 16:57
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#8
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to For This Useful Post: | ||
Tags |
bbz10, berry sad, blame canada, blame elop |
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BlackBerry has just reported a $935 million hit in Q2 due entirely to what it's calling a "Z10 Inventory Charge" -- in other words, a charge against inventory and supply commitments for a flagship handset that is failing to sell. Echoing Microsoft's catastrophic write-down due to unsold Surface RT inventory, this single loss was enough to wipe out much of the company's quarterly revenue of $1.6 billion. When added to a further loss due to corporate restructuring, it resulted in a final GAAP loss for BlackBerry of $965 million.