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2010-01-06
, 06:50
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Posts: 4,672 |
Thanked: 5,455 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Springfield, MA, USA
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#2
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2010-01-06
, 09:34
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Posts: 76 |
Thanked: 33 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Portland, Or
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#3
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2010-01-06
, 09:38
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Posts: 365 |
Thanked: 98 times |
Joined on Nov 2009
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#4
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2010-01-08
, 18:49
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Posts: 4,783 |
Thanked: 1,253 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ norway
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#5
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2010-01-08
, 19:01
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Moderator |
Posts: 7,109 |
Thanked: 8,820 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
@ Vancouver, BC, Canada
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#6
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2010-01-08
, 19:56
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Posts: 4,783 |
Thanked: 1,253 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ norway
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#7
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"U.S. wireless carrier Verizon wants its BlackBerry customers to employ Microsoft's Bing search engine, and it's not-so-subtly pushing some of its users in the Bing-direction by removing all other default search-engine options from their BlackBerry Browsers' "Start" or "Go to" pages.
Gone are the Google (GOOG), Yahoo (YHOO) and Wikipedia options that were available just days before--though Verizon BlackBerry users can still manually access any search engine they please by typing the corresponding URL into the BlackBerry Browser.
The oft-criticized BlackBerry Browser launches with what BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion (RIM) has labeled a "Go to" screen. The BlackBerry Go to screen is a home page of sorts, with an option to search the Web directly from the page, along with both BlackBerry Bookmarks and Internet navigation History.
Typically, BlackBerry users can select their own search engines of choice from the BlackBerry Go to pages and search the Web from there. But as of last week, Verizon decided to eliminate all the search options and now a number of its wireless customers are, in effect, being force-fed Microsoft's (MSFT) Bing. "
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This is the kind of crap I don't want to see from Nokia and if the google search url bar and unremovable ovi is any indicator they seem to be headed that route. So I am bing vocal in my opposition of this behavior.