His heart dropped.
"This is unacceptable," he muttered, polishing the stainless steel bezel on his shirt sleeve.
The search wheel spun. And spun. And spun.
Rajiv stared at his BlackBerry 9900. The battery was at 67%—which meant he had at least three more hours of life. But something was missing. Something fundamental.
He turned to his laptop—an old Dell from 2012 that still ran Windows 7. He opened a browser and typed the forbidden URL: m.facebook.com .
He typed into the search bar: Facebook .
It asked for login. He typed his email—slowly, deliberately, feeling each key click under his thumb. His password. Two-factor authentication? No. This was 2014-era code. It just… worked.
The BlackBerry 9900 was a masterpiece. A perfect keyboard. A crisp, bright 2.8-inch display. That satisfying click when you pressed a button. But its soul—the BlackBerry 7 OS—was getting lonely. App World had become a ghost town.
It was 5:47 PM on a Tuesday, and the world was ending. Not with a bang, but with a spinning clock icon.
BlackBerry asked: "Allow application permissions?"
The news feed loaded.