The Blackberry is definitely a very stable platform at this point, but I'll 
just make a plug for Windows Mobile, which I switched to recently.  It has tons 
of third-party applications - multiple in each category.  It's also stable at 
this point with devices from Palm and many other manufacturers (Palm, Motorola, 
HTC, etc), kind of like WinPC development.  I don't know how easy it is to get 
third-party apps on the BB, but you might want to research that a little 
because when I was seriously looking at the blackberry 3-4 years ago, most of 
these apps were geared towards business people and thus they charged a premium. 
 That very well could have changed, I don't know.  Also, check out the cost of 
the Blackberry plan.  I found out for me on Sprint I would have to pay an 
additional amount - actually $40/month more!  That might be because I have a 
special plan (SERO) that is already very discounted, but still it made the BB 
not an option for me.  I posted a few days ago about this, but so far my 
experience with WM has been very positive, and it syncs perfectly with Exchange 
accounts and Outlook - it should, since MS developed all of them!

Levi

> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> srivaths srinivasan
> Sent: Saturday, October 06, 2007 10:12 PM
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: Re: [Treo] Fwd: I'm leaving the Palm OS behind
>
> I think I am in the same boat as you.  The Palm/Treo have not kept up
> with
> the times. The BB appears to be a device that is integrated and does
> the
> PIM/phone functions well.  The issue is the 3rd party apps as you
> raised
> and  it appears that there is now a growing market for those.  I for
> one am
> tempted by the iPhone and would like to switch to that (not enough 3rd
> party
> apps for that also, but I am guessing that this will change quickly...)
>

Reply via email to