Sprint is doubtful that struggling Canadian smartphones and tablets maker Research In Motion (RIM) will ever go back to the same height it achieved two years ago.
Furthermore, the US mobile carrier through a spokesperson said that the company is now trying to figure out where RIM devices will fit in the future Sprint
RIM CEO Thorsten Heins has admitted that the company took a hard look at Android and whether or not the company’s best interest was to abandon its own proprietary system and migrate to other platforms.
In an interview with the British publication The Telegraph, the CEO of the embattled tech company conceded that RIM “took the conscious decision not to go Android.”
The CEO also clarified his vision for RIM, what the company needs to do and the possibility that the future may hold …












