Blackberry (page: 2)

BlackBerry shares have jumped 10 percent today and are now up 82 percent in the last two months, following more good news from the struggling smartphone maker.

BlackBerry's interim CEO John Chen has become the permanent chief executive at the struggling smartphone maker.

Earlier this year, when the struggling smartphone maker put itself up for sale, BlackBerry co-founders Michael Lazaridis and Douglas Fregin indicated they may want to put in a bid to purchase the company and take it private.

BlackBerry yesterday reported their quarterly earnings, taking yet another massive writedown and awful results.

President Barack Obama may be the last person still using a BlackBerry.

According to IDC's new Worldwide Quarterly Mobile Phone Tracker, Android has surpassed 80 percent of the global smartphone market.

BlackBerry's board of directors rejected any proposals that required the company to be broken up, as it does not believe a breakup is in best interest of the company or investors.

Lenovo, the world's biggest PC maker, actively tried to bid for BlackBerry, but the Canadian government told them it would not accept a Chinese takeover due to national security concerns.

The BlackBerry circus continues.

Three potential bidders are considering joining together for a bid for the struggling smartphone maker, BlackBerry.

BlackBerry executives recently met with Facebook to see what kind of interest there was for a potential bid for the company.

PC giant Lenovo has signed an NDA to examine BlackBerry's books, as it looks to purchase parts of the company.

Although we have the letter available online, BlackBerry will post a message to its loyal users in 30 major news publications tomorrow spanning 9 countries.

BlackBerry co-founders Mike Lazaridis and Douglas Fregin might be considering a bid for the seriously troubles company.

An angry shareholder has filed a class action lawsuit against BlackBerry, claiming that the company misled its investors about the future.

BlackBerry, which recently received a $4.7 billion offer sheet, has also been in talks with Cisco, Google and SAP about bids for either the entire company or parts.

As the company continues to prove that it can do nothing right, BlackBerry has announced that it is still committed to releasing BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) for Android and iOS despite a failed launch a week ago.

Sprint CFO Joe Euteneur says the company is taking a wait and see approach in regards to BlackBerry and whether it will follow rival T-Mobile in its strategy of removing BB devices from its retail stores.

T-Mobile US has revealed it will no longer stock smartphones made by BlackBerry in its stores.

Canadian smartphone maker BlackBerry has agreed in principle to a $4.7 billion takeover deal led by Fairfax.
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