We became a perfect batch of new BlackBerry users. Through BBM, those individual text messages soon morphed into elaborate, endless group chats. Some people got new devices from their parents as birthday gifts, others used old recycled phones. My friends and I texted every single day and night. I was in the 10th grade and, like everyone else, my life revolved around my phone.
Despite BBM’s weaknesses, it became the app that defined my early high school experience for two main reasons: group chats and a striking similarity to desktop IM platforms like AIM. The text bubbles were cluttered, the user interface felt clunky when navigating between messages, and if the wheel on your BlackBerry got stuck, good luck scrolling through messages.
BBM looked like an early version of Facebook’s WhatsApp. BBM managed to take traditional desktop messaging and translate it to the tiny computers in our pockets. People could choose to use a BBM account tied to their unique BlackBerry Pin rather than send a standard text message. Today, after years of dwindling usage and financial woes from BlackBerry developer RIM, BlackBerry Messenger is going away for good.īlackBerry Messenger (better known as BBM) was one of the first instant messaging (IM) platforms that arrived on mobile devices in 2005. It became a defining characteristic on BlackBerry devices and forever changed how business and casual conversations were held by phone users. But it had one thing the iPhone 3G didn’t: BlackBerry Messenger. Unlike the iPhone 3G, which touted a revolutionary design when it was announced just a month later in 2008, the BlackBerry Bold wasn’t super flashy. My favorite phone of all time is the BlackBerry Bold 9000.