BlackBerry, based in Waterloo, Ontario, once dominated the smartphone market but put itself up for sale after being overtake by Apple's iPhone and devices using Google Inc's Android operating system.
The largest investor in BlackBerry has said hat he will stick with the company despite Mike Lazaridis's decision to leave.
BlackBerry inventors Mike Lazaridis and Doug Fregin are pairing again to launch a USD 100-million fund to incubate and commercialise quantum science technologies capable of spearheading the next wave of computing.
Former Research In Motion co-chief executive Jim Balsillie sought to reinvent the BlackBerry smartphone maker with a radical shift in strategy before he
Evidently, RIM has been struggling. Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie have now stepped down as the co-CEOs ...
Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie, the tandem who led the company that makes the BlackBerry smartphone for two decades, have stepped down as co-CEO and co-chairman of Research In Motion.
Research In Motion's Mike Lazaridis and Jim Balsillie have resigned as co-CEOs and co-chairmen, handing the top job to an insider with four years at the struggling BlackBerry maker.
Lazaridis and Balsillie are currently in the unusual position of sharing the two top-tier positions, as chairman and as CEO.
RIM has been counting on the BBX, oops we mean the BlackBerry 10, to be a game changer for them in the mobile ...
BlackBerry maker Research In Motion is investigating reports some users are experiencing delays, but it said on Wednesday that it is not fighting a outage similar to the one ...
The company that makes the BlackBerry has a short window to revive its sagging share price and shake up its business, or risk the escalation of a dissent movement ...
RIM is hoping executives who rely on its secure email service forget the latest hiccup.
An activist shareholder in Research In Motion says holders of at least 8% of the BlackBerry maker's stock back its calls for a sale of the company or at least a radical corporate reshuffle.
Research In Motion executives deflected criticism from investors who complained the BlackBerry maker has been mismanaged and marketed poorly as rivals Apple and Google steal its market share.