There are many of us who remember a time when the BlackBerry phone was so cool that people called it a βCrackberryβ to indicate its more addictive qualitiesβ¦ like email and internet access.
And then the iPhone came along and made short work of BlackBerryβs sales, and, our collective memories of the full keyboard.
In 2016, amid severely waning phone sales, BlackBerry announced that it would no longer manufacturer its own devices, rather would shift its focus to software and contract out the production of its phones to an Indonesia telecom company called TCL Communications.
TCL announced Monday that its contract with BlackBerry has come to an end and that it is no longer licensed to produce or sell BlackBerry devices. TCL says it will still support existing devices until 2022, but thatβs about it.
So what does it mean for the BlackBerry? According to CNN Business, BlackBerry didnβt immediately respond to a request for comment and its uncertain, at this time, whether the company has plans to resurrect device manufacturing with another partner.
But if you look at the BlackBerry of today, it wouldnβt be a stretch to think the company could exit the smart phone game altogether. CEO John Chen has been working for the better part of a decade to pivot the company towards software products with a focus on security and IoT β and heβs had some success, though the companyβs stock price is still a fraction of where it was ten or 15 years ago. Despite this, some experts believe that BlackBerryβs repositioning itself is a solid approach, and the company has a lot of growth ahead of it. Just probably not from selling Crackberries.