Even before its current service problems, Research In Motion was in something of a quandary. The company that helped pioneer the whole concept of a smartphone, and which retains an audience of loyal users within businesses worldwide, is under marketplace assault from a legion of determined competitors: not only Apple’s iPhone, which is rapidly working its way into corporate life, but also a rising tide of increasingly sophisticated Google Android devices.
The wild card in this particular poker game is Windows Phone, which can draw from the combined resources of both Microsoft and Nokia, and has the potential to make a substantive enterprise play of its own.
In the interim, as a sort of stopgap measure, RIM is pushing a line of BlackBerry devices running its new BlackBerry 7 OS. These include the BlackBerry Bold 9900/9930, the BlackBerry Torch 9810 with a sliding keyboard, and the touch-screen-only BlackBerry Torch 9850/9860. Sprint recently gave eWEEK a BlackBerry Bold 9930 unit.
If you’re a RIM fan who’s in the market for a BlackBerry with a physical QWERTY keyboard, and don’t really care if the smartphone’s operating system is a radical departure from your old BlackBerry, then the Bold 9900/9930 could be your huckleberry.
RIM claims the new Bold is its thinnest smartphone ever, and at 0.41 inches deep it certainly does present a slim profile. It feels comfortable in the hand, substantial yet not heavy (it weighs 4.59 ounces). Moreover, the body is well-built: there’s nary a wiggling keyboard or back panel threatening to pop loose, unlike some of the high-priced Android smartphones on the market. You can argue whether the exposed metal rim along the outside of the Bold is a design cue borrowed from the iPhone 4, but you can’t deny that RIM put a lot of thought and care into the look of this thing.
Between the trackpad and the keyboard, the 2.8-inch screen’s touch capacity feels almost superfluous. That being said, RIM has taken drastic steps to improve its touch experience, making it responsive and accurate. The screen’s VGA 640 x 480 resolution is adequate for playing video and Web-cruising, although its relatively small size means that, if you’re purchasing a smartphone solely as a multimedia device, you might want to cast your eye elsewhere.
continued on page 2
Page: 1 2
Digital transformation is an ongoing journey, requiring continuous adaptation, strong leadership, and skilled talent to…
Australian computer scientist faces contempt-of-court claim after suing Jack Dorsey's Block and Bitcoin Core developers…
OpenAI's ChatGPT gets search features, putting it in direct competition with Microsoft and Google, amidst…
New Google Maps allows users to ask for detailed information on local spots, adds AI-summarised…
US-sanctioned Huawei sees sales surge in first three quarters of 2024 on domestic smartphone popularity,…
Apple posts slight decline in China sales for fourth quarter, as Tim Cook negotiates to…
View Comments
I have a 9930. If I unplug at 800am and use only minimal use off phone email and Bluetooth for hands free in the car, the phone needs power by late evening. If I don't plug in its dead at 700am next day. No way for 2 days without power plug for me.
This comment has been posted from eWeek UK iPhone app