Free download blackberry app world 3.0
Just remember to visit this thread from your Blackberry and click the download link in my post above to download and install Appworld using your Giffgaff sim. Community Blog Labs. Self-help Ask the community Ask a giffgaff agent.
BlackBerry App World 3.0 now available in Beta
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Please can someone advise? Thanks This question has a Best Answer. Message 1 of Accepted Solutions. Best Answer set by dubourg.
- How to Install the Blackberry App World on an Older Blackberry.
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Message 11 of Have you installed the giffgaff apn app yet? Kudos me or accept as solution if you're happy with my answer. Message 2 of No I haven't installed the giffgaff apn app, what is that and how do I install it? Message 3 of Message 4 of Thanks I have looked at the link and tried everything, still no solution Message 5 of If i helped, please click the yellow star on the left of this post. BlackBerry App World currently offers no simple, PC-based method of backing up purchases or downloads.
Sure, My World is supposed to serve that purpose by utilizing "the cloud" for app backups. And crafty users can find ways to back up third-party applications on their own. I can only speak for myself, but I don't yet trust said cloud to backup my purchases, and I won't be spending any more cash on App World until RIM either convinces me that its online backups are reliable, or it offers another backup option.
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Apple lets iPhone users backup all their App Store purchases on computers via iTunes, and this seems like a much more suitable method. The names are self-explanatory, and my issue relates to the first three. As is, there's no simple way to look at separate free and "commercial," or paid, apps. Free apps are grouped alongside commercial ones, with no way to differentiate them expect the price tag.
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The Categories, Top Downloads and Search sections should all have separate Free and Commercial breakdowns, so users can easily view free and for-cost options without scrolling through pages of listings and checking prices. Such a breakdown would not only give users more control over what they're searching for, but also very likely result in the sale of more applications, which is obviously a good thing for RIM and its developer base. I honestly don't know a single developer who considers App World a true money-making opportunity, and that's largely because RIM's shoving tons of free application in users' faces while burying the paid content.
Top Downloads is very likely the spot most users pick to begin looking for apps, unless they're seeking something in particular, and the fact that there are not two Top Downloads pages--one for free apps, one for paid ones--certainly doesn't help. RIM would also do well to create some sort of section for new App World additions. It's very simple for applications to get buried in App World today, and it would be beneficial to all involved if there were some sort of "New Apps" page.
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As mentioned above, there's already a Featured Apps page, and some of those listed apps could be new. But most tend to be popular offerings or apps from large or noteworthy entities, like the Associated Press, BNet or Forbes. On that note, what better way to convince prospective app buyers to take the plunge than to offer deals, pricing discounts and more? Why do you think your local supermarket, Wal-Mart, drug-store, whatever, constantly offers up coupons and weekly specials?
Well, because people tend to purchase more goods and service if they feel as though they're getting a deal. Certain promotions can even be used to draw customers back in the future. I think offering up "Buy Two Apps, Get One Free" promotions, or something of the like, could go a long way toward boosting App World software sales, though developers would obviously have to agree with any such discounts.
If you don't already have a PayPal account, you need to set one up and tie a credit card to it before you can download commercial software. PayPal is practically a bad word in the information security world. It's the number one online payment service by a long shot. It's also the most commonly targeted online financial service by an equally significant margin. PayPal does a good job of educating its customers to the threats of phishing and identity theft related to its service--check your e-mail filter, I can practically guarantee some of them use PayPal as bait--but there's only so much it can do.
I'm not saying RIM should ditch PayPal altogether, but it should definitely offer some additional payment options, like Google Checkout, for those of use who'd rather avoid PayPal altogether. BlackBerry devices are everywhere; CrackBerry Nation spans all global boundaries. But I do know that App World could certainly benefit from a wider global users base.
More users would have access to more software. Developers would have more eyes looking at their offerings and, potentially, more wallets opening up to pay for them. And RIM would take in more profit as a result. Everyone wins. Shout out to Funaki , who's in Bahrain, but would very much like to give App World a test drive. I've been saying it since the April launch: BlackBerry App World desperately needs more flatulence-simulation applications, aka, fart apps.
RIM announces billionth download from BlackBerry App World
Right now, there are only four such apps available on App World, compared to the dozen on the iTunes App Store. Fart apps are the foundation of any quality mobile software store, and RIM and its BlackBerry developer base would be wise to ramp up production of such offerings. Note: I'm being facetious here, and I think that's clear Former CIO.