The company’s net loss of $125 million is thanks to two major charges: $346 million in after-tax charges related to goodwill reductions (typically employed when the value of an acquired asset no longer holds as much water) and $197 million in after-tax charges related to the BlackBerry 7 inventory write-offs, which is a big problem. It’s going to be a long time before RIM has new handsets for consumers, and the inventory write-off suggests that nobody is buying RIM’s current products. Excluding the charges, net income was $418 million, or $0.80 a share. Analysts wanted $0.81 a share.