Struggling smartphone manufacturer RIM has suffered yet another blow, after a US government agency announced it is going to ditch BlackBerry in favour of the iPhone.
The US Immigration and Customers Enforcement Agency (ICE) will end its contract with RIM and supply its 17,600 employees with iPhones in an order estimated to be worth around $2.1 million.
ICE said that although it had relied on RIM for eight years, the BlackBerry platform was no longer suitable for its needs. The iPhone was chosen as it offers a secure and manageable platform with tight controls on the operating system, according to ICE.
The General Services Administration, the US government’s main procurement agency, said in February that it was going to offer iPhone and Android devices to its employees alongside BlackBerry products, in order to reduce its reliance on RIM.
The same security and management features of the BlackBerry also appealed to corporate IT managers, but they too have begun to desert the platform. Only last month, Yahoo said it was going to offer users a choice of iOS, Android and Windows 8 smartphones to its employees instead of BlackBerrys.
Hopes for a RIM revival rest on smartphones running the perpetually-delayed BlackBerry 10 operating system, but yet another hitch has seen their debut put back until March 2013 at the earliest.
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