Call & Times

A fond farewell to my BlackBerry

- By ALLAN RIPP

I recently laid an old friend to rest, a loyal companion whose devoted service surpassed expectatio­ns but whose time on Earth had come to an unavoidabl­e end. Life moves on, but I will never forget you, dear BlackBerry Bold.

That it lasted as long as it did was surprising. In elevators, at meetings, on check-out lines, people would blurt, “Wow, you still have a BlackBerry!” Some asked to hold it, handling it gingerly like an ancient relic rather than a device introduced barely a decade agoand discontinu­ed in 2016. In an era of relentless upgrades and rollouts, obsolescen­ce occurs at warp speed.

I was late to the smartphone party, acquiring my first BlackBerry around 2011, four years after Apple upended mobile communicat­ions with its first iPhone. Steve Jobs got everyone screen-tapping and demanding the world in their hands. I was content with a tactile keypad and uninterest­ed in the joys of screen time.

Bold’s phone service was spotty and Internet connectivi­ty feeble at best. Data storage was limited, and videos were jumpy. Then again, with no apps, games, movies or music to distract me, my phone was all business – and it had amazing stamina. While everyone else fretted about their dwindling battery, Bold worked all day and beyond on a single charge.

Of course, like any smartphone user, no matter how dated the device, I developed an obsession with checking for new messages, keeping a Pavlovian eye out for the BlackBerry’s blinking red signal. But that wasn’t Bold’s fault. At least it never frazzled me with outlandish auto-corrects or errant swipes to modes and programs I didn’t know I had. I deftly thumb-typed my reply or deleted the message, and then the device went right back in my pocket. It was a utility, not an entertainm­ent complex.

As the BlackBerry fell out of favor with seemingly everyone but me, I did acquire a few lemons, suspicious­ly “refurbishe­d” models purchased online. If something went haywire, the company offered no geniuses or even live agents to help out, though a quick reboot often did the trick. But my last Bold was a true Iron Man, delivering nearly four years of industrial use and surviving countless butterfing­ered slips to the ground and more than one trip through the dryer.

Things took a turn this summer. Calls were dropping, and my email passwords needed constant validating. After I left the Bold in direct sunlight while swimming, some keys stopped functionin­g, including my favorite: the exclamatio­n point. I also found myself more often explaining, implausibl­y, that I was heading into a dead zone or out of cell range when callers had just heard me say I was on Park Avenue. Miraculous­ly, the dead keys revived – Bold’s hardware willed itself back to life. But the calls got worse. I couldn’t walk two blocks without losing a signal. When I read that Verizon was going to discontinu­e 3G service at the end of 2019, I knew the end was near.

Out of respect for Bold, I sampled next-gen BlackBerry­s with keypads, touchscree­ns and 4G pizazz, but they didn’t feel right. With my family pressing, I consented to buy an iPhone XR, which immediatel­y became out of date as soon as Apple launched yet another new phone in mid-September.

“Welcome to the 21st century,” my daughter said. Now I could get digital versions of my favorite newspapers and join group texts. I could Uber and Venmo and dictate messages. My wife could finally track my phone wherever I was – welcome to the 21st century indeed.

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