BlackBerry
has announced that its popular messaging system BBM, or BlackBerry
Messenger, would now be open to those using the Windows Phone platform, a
move that potentially makes the messaging service more appealing to its
enterprise clients. It is now available to download for free from
Windows Phone store.
BlackBerry,
which is seeking to reinvent itself as a more software and services
driven company as its smartphone market share has dwindled, has been
lately touting new BBM features in a bid to make it a more viable
messaging tool for clients such as corporations and government agencies
that are on the lookout for a secure messaging service.
The
company, last year, opened the service to phones powered by Google’s
Android operating system and Apple’s iOS platform. The rollout to the
Windows phone platform means the service is now available on all major
smartphone platforms, making it a more viable option for those clients
that are considering using it as a communication tool.
BBM
was a pioneering mobile-messaging service, but its user base has failed
to keep pace with those of WhatsApp and other rivals, in part because
BlackBerry had long refused to open the program to users on other
platforms.
While
the messaging service still has over 85 million active users,
BlackBerry in a bid to boost its relevance and cater to the needs of its
core enterprise audience is now marketing it as a secure communications
tool for government agencies and regulated sectors, such as financial
services.
Last
month, BlackBerry began to roll out BBM Protected, a secure messaging
service tailored specifically to the needs of companies in regulated
sectors.
The
move is part of a broader push that has also seen BlackBerry widen its
device management capabilities to include devices that are powered by
the Android, iOS, and Windows platforms.
A move to bring BBM to desktops is still a ways off.
“I
can’t tell you whether we are going to do BBM on desktop. That is a
collaboration we have to have between us and Microsoft and I wouldn’t be
able to comment on that, because we certainly have the desire, but
between that and getting it done there is still a gap,” said BlackBerry
Chief Executive John Chen, in an interview with Reuters earlier this
week.
Earlier
this year, Chen had said that BlackBerry was looking into the
possibility of bringing BBM to desktop computers, thus allowing
employees of companies and government agencies to go mobile on group
chats started on their computers without missing a beat.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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