20 years ago in the sleepy Canadian city of Waterloo,
engineer Mike Lazaridis founded a small enterprise called Research
In Motion (RIM). With the goal of devising innovative products and
solutions for large corporations, RIM started a revolution and quickly
became a pioneer in the age of Information Technology.
By the mid 1990s, RIM anticipated wireless devices as the next
big thing in computing and the need for wireless e-mail. RIM's 'radical'
idea was an integrated system bundled with service from a wireless
carrier.
After several years of planning, research and development, RIM
incorporated additional features to its then-unnamed wireless prototype.
This device could access an extensive range of applications including
email, telephone, intranet, internet and SMS.
And so the BlackBerry® was born - allowing users to easily
manage all personal, work-related information and communications
from a single, integrated hand-held device, virtually anytime, anywhere.
Today it has changed the way people communicate.
|