TO BB OR NOT TO BB, THAT IS THE QUESTION!

It has come to my attention and if recent history is anything of a guide, a lot of the people who are snapping up BlackBerrys tend to put them into their handbag. Yes us women a lot of my fellow colleague teachers are using them as they are a very practical way to schedule our classes, keep in contact with other teachers and students. The use of instant messaging services and social networks keep us very much up to date and more so than the students. My students tell me that I am such a technological teacher ha ha…
It is no secret that I’m a bit of a BlackBerry addict, but I was pleased to come across a fairly new website for women BlackBerry users www.blackberrychick.com. This is how they introduce themselves “BlackBerry Chick” is an organization for young women created to inspire Strong Values and Success in the world of BlackBerry. Established in 2008, BlackBerry Chick is amongst the first sites to focus on BlackBerry devices by women. Articles/Post are written by women who just adore their BlackBerry devices. We also feature guest writers who are recognized experts in their fields and who act as advisers for various BlackBerry related sites. By the way guess who is moderating their forum?
So what are some of the reasons behind the success of BlackBerrys for women? Smartphones are cheaper now — as little as $99 for the petite BlackBerry Pearl — and are better designed. Women have been using them for years in business, of course, but many are finding that the phones can also help manage their families’ hectic schedules and keep them in touch with friends.
“You are not seen as a geek anymore if you have a smartphone,” said Carolina Milanesi, research director at Gartner Group, a research firm. “Women, including wives and mothers, need to keep track of their busy lives, too.”
The phone makers and service providers increasingly see women as the path to the entire household. According to Verizon Wireless, 71 percent of women make the decision about their family’s wireless choices, including phones and service plans. (Smartphones require data plans that can cost $30 or more a month.)
As a result, smartphone makers are beginning to market specifically to women. Research in Motion, based in Waterloo, Ontario, has taken out ads for its BlackBerry phones in Elle, Martha Stewart Living and Oprah Winfrey’s magazine O.
| BlackBerry Vocabulary |
APN
This is an acronym for Access Point Name. This is used for the TCP/IP stack. This is a kind of a gateway between the mobile network and the Internet network. To gain access to always-on Internet from a mobile phone, such as instant messaging, it goes through an APN. Some mobile phones, such as BlackBerry uses multiple APN’s. The main APN is blackberry.net for the BlackBerry emails, but there are other APN’s that are carrier-specific for getting Internet access such as Verichat, etc.
BES
This stands for BlackBerry Enterprise Server. BES turns a BlackBerry into a powerful government-quality secure email system with full wireless email and PIM synchronization, including email folder structure, moves between folders, deletions, unread/read indicators, etc. An administrator can even kill a BlackBerry remotely through BES when it gets stolen too. BES also provides MDS capability, which is generally higher-reliability than the recently available TCP/IP stack found on BlackBerries.
BIS
Stands for BlackBerry Internet Service. This is your @blackberry.net email account, which you can access via a web browser, in order to configure your BlackBerry through a web-based interface. You can also read your blackberry.net emails on your BIS account. This is the new name for the BlackBerry Web Client (BWC).
BWC
BWC is an abbreviation for BlackBerry Web Client. This is the old name for “BlackBerry Internet Service”. See BIS.
DM
Desktop Manager is the software application used by a BlackBerry to communicate with your PC for synchronizing data in your calendar, address book, tasks and memos. Other applications included in recent versions of DM include a Switch Device Wizard used for moving or upgrading from one BlackBerry to another and other phone models/manufacturers to a BlackBerry; Media Manager, used for transferring media content (music files, pictures, ringtones, etc.); Application Loader, for loading additional or third-party software to your BlackBerry; and Backup/Restore, used to backup the data content on your BlackBerry and likewise to restore content from your backup to the BlackBerry.
HTML
Hyper Text Markup Language. This is the format of a document in a web browser. Same thing as in your desktop web browser, such as Internet Explorer. Recent BlackBerry devices can now display HTML too.
MDS
This stands for Mobile Data Service. It’s a method of Internet connectivity for a BlackBerry. that is provided by a BlackBerry Enterprise Server. In the past, BlackBerry devices required MDS to run most kinds of third-party Internet software.
MMS
Multimedia Message Service is similar to SMS (see definition below) but allows attachment of certain images, address book entries, and other media.
OS
Operating System is the core operating software that is the engine of your BlackBerry. There are various OS versions developed by RIM and released by carriers to their users. Find your OS on your BlackBerry by (on the BB) clicking Options or Tools, and clicking About.
PIM
This stands for Personal Information Management. A PIM handles your address book, calendar, tasks, and notes. A BlackBerry has PIM because it has these. A PalmPilot has a PIM too. And your desktop Microsoft Outlook is a PIM software program. So is Palm Desktop too. Macintosh users have Entourage, as well as simpler PIM components such as iCal. PIM’s are frequently designed to synchronize to each other, such as between a BlackBerry and Microsoft Outlook.
PIN
Each Blackberry has a unique PIN. This is not your 4-digit PIN for your SIM card, but an 8 character long hexadecimal value that is used to identify your device against the BlackBerry Enterprise Server. So this PIN is not used in the common understanding of “PIN” for logging in, like your using phone SIM card, ATM card, Online banking.
PIN Messaging
Sending private emails only between BlackBerry devices. A BlackBerry PIN is a special address code similar to a postal code or phone number, for sending emails only to other BlackBerry devices. This is not compatible with phone numbers or emails or SMS. It is an entirely different kind of an address. Not every BlackBerry user needs to use PIN Messaging, but this feature is there if you love it! BlackBerry_PIN
Push Email
Push Email describes any system where message delivery to a wireless device is accomplished by a server initiating communication with the end unit. Push Email is often misunderstood as any system with “immediate” mail deivery. While BlackBerry devices are well known for having nearly immediate mail delivery, the timing has, in fact, very little to do with determining whether a system is push email. The key to push mail is the responsibility of the end client in the mail delivery process. A BlackBerry device never initiates the mail delivery process, which is what makes it a push system. BES, BIS and Desktop Redirector are all push mail systems which integrate with the BlackBerry device.
RIM
Stands for Research In Motion, the company that manufactures BlackBerry devices and develops software products for it, such as BES.
Service Book
Service Books on your BlackBerry enable various services to be rendered to your BlackBerry, such as email configurations, the browser and attachment services.
SMS
This stands for Short Message Service. This is a method of sending small text messages between mobile phones, usually up to 160 characters of text. This behaves like an email, except the address is simply the phone number of your recipient mobile phone or BlackBerry. SMS is very popular in some countries such as UK, and especially popular with the young urban crowd in developed countries. SMS is also a popular substitute for email in areas where email is used less frequently.
Sync
Short for Synchronization or Synchronize. This allows your BlackBerry to have identical PIM information as your Microsoft Outlook. New items added to your BlackBerry gets added to your Microsoft Outlook automatically, and new items added to your Microsoft Outlook gets added to your BlackBerry.
TCP/IP Stack
This is a protocol that allows all computers and handhelds to connect to the Internet. If you are reading this article, you are already using a TCP/IP stack that is built into your computer or handheld’s operating system. TCP/IP stands for “Transmission Control Protocol / Internet Protocol”. Recent BlackBerry devices include TCP/IP capability, so you can run Internet software on a BlackBerry.
Source www.blackberrychick.com www.nytimes.com















maybe it’s a teacher thing
I love my Blackberry Curve
I have questions about two sentences in the first paragraph of this post. Here are the two sentences: “It has come to my attention and if recent history is anything of a guide, a lot of the people who are snapping up BlackBerrys tend to put them into their handbag. Yes us women a lot of my fellow colleague teachers are using them as they are a very practical way to schedule our classes, keep in contact with other teachers and students.”
I’d like some guidance. Why isn’t the word “handbag” made plural in this instance?
The second sentence seems to be missing punctuation. Is it not?
I’m just curious and wondering about the rules.
Hi Sherry thanks for your comments, well I am referring to “handbag” as we women would put our BB’s into a handbag singular unless we were using more than one and then it would of course be plural as in handbags, not sure as to which other sentence you were referring to..
How about this:
Yes, we women - a lot of my fellow colleague teachers -are using them as they are a very practical way to schedule our classes, keep in contact with other teachers . . .
I’ve changed punctuation and one word. This is the way I would have written it; what am I doing wrong?
Thanks, teacher!
It still seems that handbag ought to be handbags. Several women do not share one single handbag. Instead, the women have handbags among them.
Just wondering.
Hi again Sherry, I’m with you now, regarding hyphens not my favourite pastime so I omitted
The handbag(s) I now see your point, I was thinking of it as singular but may have overlooked your point, thanks for spotting, perhaps I’ll let you check my next post
Lots of folks don’t like hyphens. However, it seemed that something was needed to set off that phrase. Likewise, I added a comma after the initial “yes” and changed the word “us” to “we.”
Can anyone tell me how to actually upgrade just the IM clients?