BlackBerry services may be back, but has RIM done enough to placate disgruntled users?
Angry BlackBerry users feel cheated and expect RIM to make it up to them.
The operator's overall subscriber base grew 86.3%, to 882 235 revenue-generating customers from the start of the financial year.
The three-day BlackBerry drought appears to be over, but the air is still thick with speculation.
Mobile operators argue that including wireless networks in the unbundling process would delay implementation.
The number of wireless connected devices is expected to more than double from nine billion today, says GSMA.
Freeing the last mile opens an opportunity to develop new enterprises in rural areas, says the operator.
Resentment is rife surrounding the protracted outage of BlackBerry services and lack of communication by its manufacturer.
Users have been hit with another major outage just hours after RIM announced services had been restored.
The telco argues there is no legal basis to force operators to unbundle the last mile.
As frustration and speculation mount, the smartphone maker remains elusive on questions surrounding the future of BlackBerry.
About 75% of respondents to a UNICEF survey talk to strangers at least once a week on MXit.
The operator teams up with First National Bank to offer prepaid users an extra channel to purchase airtime.