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BlackBerry Tips: Delete Carrier Crapware, Icons

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April 27, 2009, 08:42 AM —  CIO.com — 

Every so often, wireless carriers take it upon themselves to push out their own branded, or at least sanctioned, applications and services to BlackBerry users in the form of "service book" updates--regardless of whether or not said users actually want them. AT&T seems to be particularly fond of the practice, and this weekend it not only pushed out a dozen or so new link-icons to its BlackBerry customers' devices, but also delivered a new version of its own "app store," Media Mall 2.0.

Keep in mind that with the recent launch of Research In Motion's (RIM) BlackBerry App World mobile software store, it has never been easier to locate and obtain great apps for your BlackBerry device. Conversely, AT&T's poorly formatted, over-priced Media Mall, along with the completely random apps it occasionally delivers via service book updates, merely clutters customers' devices.

Wireless carriers push out service book updates to their BlackBerry users all the time, and those updates are often meant to improve the performance of your device; however, some carriers take the opportunity to distribute apps, or links to download full--and not always free--versions of programs, along with the legitimate updates. AT&T's not the only culprit, either, though it appears to push out more of these "updates" than any other U.S. carrier, at least in my experience.

Thankfully, there's a simple way to ditch apps that you don't want, though you need to repeat the process every time you reboot if you want to ensure all those apps remain deleted. Not up for deleting after every hard- or soft-reset? No problem; there's an even easier way to simply hide those pesky apps. Out of sight, out of mind, right?

How to Remove Carrier-Supplied Apps, Services

The new AT&T applications and services, which include such annoying exciting titles as Brain Challenge Vol. 2, Mobile Banking, Make-UR-Tones and WikiMobile, "magically" appeared in most AT&T BlackBerry users' Downloads folder last weekend.

To delete them, open your BlackBerry Options, scroll to Advanced Options and click it. On the following page, scroll to Service Book and open that menu.

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