BlackBerry and its faithful had high hopes for BlackBerry 10. After all, the company that developed the operating system, QNX, received high marks for its work on the BlackBerry PlayBook tablet. BlackBerry was so impressed that it bought the company and had it get right to work on its next-gen operating system for smartphones, later dubbed BlackBerry 10. While the gesture based OS shared some of its capabilities with webOS, and there were some who loved the software, the hardware was a let down for many.

Instead of offering top-shelf handsets to compete with Apple and Samsung, BlackBerry produced mid-range models that left a wide gap in performance. And speaking of gaps, BlackBerry users had to contend with the huge app gap as many popular Android apps were not developed for BlackBerry 10. One that was made available for BB10 users, the New York Times app, will no longer enjoy BlackBerry 10 support beginning next month. If you own a BlackBerry 10 powered handset, and that includes the BlackBerry Passport, you'll have to turn to the mobile web version to catch all the news that's fit to print.

The mobile web version of the New York Times includes the same content and design as the BlackBerry 10 app, but features a more interactive home page. Home delivery and digital subscribers will still have the ability to read an unlimited number of stories, while non-subscribers receive a certain number of free stories each month. In addition to the New York Times, popular messaging app WhatsApp will also lose support for BlackBerry 10 starting on January 1, 2018.

"Dear Readers:

Beginning in January, The New York Times will no longer support the NYTimes app for BlackBerry. You can access a more complete New York Times experience through our mobile site (mobile.nytimes.com) from your phone's browser.

The mobile website includes all of the same content and sections as the BB10 App, plus it has a more interactive and modern home page that is similar to our other digital experiences. All New York Times home delivery and digital subscribers have unlimited access to both our mobile and desktop sites. Nonsubscribers will continue to receive to a number of free articles per month.

Thank you for reading The New York Times, in all its forms."-New York Times

Those rockin' the BlackBerry KEYone or BlackBerry Motion, or even the BlackBerry Priv don't have to worry about such things since the trio run on Android, and use Android apps found in the Google Play Store. Both the New York Times and WhatsApp have apps that support the Android operating system and can be found in the Google Play Store.