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by thedrbrian
1634 days ago
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> The older Blackberries relied on a centralized server for configuration and setup of both public and corporate settings.
The devices _should_ be able to make calls and text (baseline SMS), but they might error out in various things (browser dead, contacts gone, even some menus dead or stalling) and if they are reset you might not be able to get texting back (since it _might_ not rely on the SIM card to set the SMS message center, etc.) I’m not a programmer , I deal with oily things, but why the hell would you rely on a central server for basics like SMS?
Surely it should have some basic SMS ability if only to background text the network for the proper SMS setup. It feels like baked in obsolescence or supreme confidence that you’ll be around forever to send out the settings. |
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Please pass that message to RIM/BlackBerry. And yes, they did feel like that, until Apple have attacked.
As an aside, Most Android phones below ICS are now also "dead" (https://support.google.com/android/answer/10313246?hl=en, note that Honeycomb do not have phone services baked in) and cannot be provisioned even for very basic service (except for emergency calls).