1
Also consider HTC S620 (aka the T-Mobile MDA Mail, BT Office) is a Windows-powered messaging device with a full QWERTY keyboard. It does have the bonus of Wi-Fi and faster EDGE capabilities, but falls short in the camera department with a 1.3- megapixel shutterbug. fellow Berrys like the 8700 and recent 8800, it’s incredibly compact. Of course, this size reduction means there is less space to fit the full QWERTY keyboard, but RIM has done a sterling job to keep the key size manageable. It isn’t a perfect compromise and the fat-fingered fraternity may struggle, but it’s still very usable. On the ball Navigation is centred around the trackball, which first appeared in the Pearl and subsequently the 8800. RIM ditched the side jog-wheel in favour of the trackball and the transition has worked well. You can tailor the ball’s sensitivity to suit your preferences (70% feels like the right balance between speed and control) and once you’ve gauged its mood, the trackball is incredibly lucid to thumb. Alpha mail Despite the new multimedia injection, BlackBerry’s famed email performance is still at the core of the Curve. Setting up email is a cinch and you can add a further 10 email accounts, including most popular ISP clients, online. We easily integrated our Google Mail and Madasafish accounts just by giving up our email address and password. If you own the Curve through work, then the handset is able to hook up with the dominant email exchange server solutions like BlackBerry Enterprise IBM, Lotus Domino, Microsoft and Novell GroupWise. Full HTML web browsing and emails arrive over a GPRS connection and RIM strangely continues to shun 3G and Wi-Fi. GPRS speeds are just about sufficient (web page loading was sluggish), but the Curve could have been elevated in our estimation if 3G and Wi-Fi connections were present. Tutti frutti An integrated 3.5mm headphone jack and bundled Roxio Easy Media Creator 9 software indicate RIM is serious about making the Curve multimedia potential. The convenient headphone jack is a real boon, while the Roxio desktop music software is pretty straightforward. You get access to your PC’s existing digital library and you can drag and drop your tunes into the Curve’s memory card folder. You even get the choice to encode your files for optimum playback on the Curve or keep it in its native format state. The Roxio software will even tag your tunes via the online Gracenote CD database, while you can manage your videos and photos via the software. A microSD card slot sits under the rear bonnet and is on hand to store all your multimedia gubbins. The music player itself is pretty basic. It’s bereft of any sound enhancements or equaliser (repeat and shuffle functions are your lot), while controlling the player is a bit disjointed (a combination of the trackball, letters ‘N’ and ‘P’ on the keyboard, side volume keys and the top mute button deal with play, stop, pause and skip tracks). The audio quality just about makes up for these disappointments and sounds quite dynamic, especially through a pair of Sennheiser headphones. Alternatively, you could hook up the Curve with a pair of Bluetooth headphones for wireless music streaming. Camera two The Pearl was the first BlackBerry to sport a camera, but its 1.3- megapixel lens felt timid in today’s camera phone climate. The Curve ups the ante to two megapixels, but again, even this falls short of our expectations. While it may lack auto-focus and a Xenon flash (it does pack a crude LED light), it still takes decent enough snaps in a 1600x1200-pixel resolution. Sadly, like the Pearl, the camera lacks a video-recording facility, which is disappointing considering it promotes video playback (MPEG4, WMV and H.263 formats are supported) in multimedia mode. Verdict The Curve is a mixed multimedia bag. It is undoubtedly the best BlackBerry to date, but RIM still hasn’t advanced enough to really excite and rival other top multimedia smartphones. A BlackBerry with 3G and Wi-Fi should be next on the agenda, please RIM. Nick Renshaw [email protected] From free with contract www.blackberry.com www.rim.com BlackBerry Curve Features Full QWERTY keyboard Two-megapixel camera Push-email capabilities Full HTML web browser Integrated 3.5mm headphone jack Pros The Curve still retains what makes BlackBerry so successful: ease of use, email on the move and a great QWERTY keyboard. Cons BlackBerry continues to give 3G and Wi-Fi a wide berth and, while the multimedia presence is welcome, it’s not the most realised. Curve ball The BlackBerry has thrived solely on its slick mobile email and messaging capabilities. But as its latest model, the Curve, suggests, it’s time to embrace the mobile multimedia world it has so far neglected T HE story of how Research in Motion (RIM) has sewn up the mobile email market with its BlackBerry devices and slick push-email solutions is well told. Any business bod wanting to access email on the fly chose BlackBerry because it was easy to set up, user friendly and messages were sent straight to the handset. But a new chapter in its evolution is about to begin. BlackBerry is finally trying to find its mobile multimedia mojo. It started with the recent launch of the stylish slimline BlackBerry Pearl 8100, signalling RIM’s intentions of grabbing a slice of the consumer mobile market and taking BlackBerry into a new direction. This handset was born from ‘CrackBerry’ addicts finally demanding more from their device than just email and PIM functionality. Others were having fun with their stylish multimedia smartphones – listening to music, taking photos and playing videos – and BlackBerry users wanted to do the same. While the Pearl looked gorgeous, it was far less convincing as a multimedia device. You could tell that RIM, forever entrenched in a business email mindset, hadn’t got its head around the whole mobile multimedia thing. Its latest model, the Curve 8300, takes the BlackBerry to the next level. Nice curves Dubbed the Curve for its shapely silhouette, this moniker is perhaps a little misleading. Its newfound curves and ever-so-slightly bowed torso are very subtle and, to be honest, don’t deviate much from previous BlackBerry designs. However, it is the smallest and lightest full QWERTY BlackBerry to be released and compared with More reviews online at www.mobilechoiceuk.com Review More reviews online at www.mobilechoiceuk.com Stats OS: BlackBerry Size: 107x60x15.5mm Weight: 111g Display: 65,000 colours Resolution: 240x320 pixels Camera: Two megapixels Video recording/ playback/streaming: No/ yes/no Audio playback: MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA Ringtones: Polyphonic, MP3 Radio: No Connectivity: Bluetooth, USB, A2DP Internal memory: 64MB Memory card slot: microSD Messaging: SMS, MMS, IM Internet browser: WAP, xHTML, HTML Email client: POP3, SMTP, IMAP4 Java: Yes Games: BrickBreaker GPRS: Yes + EDGE Frequency: Quad-band Talktime: 240 mins Standby: 408 hours Verdict The Curve brilliantly continues the BlackBerry tradition in a more compact form, but falls short in the multimedia stakes. THUMBS UP 86%

Curve ball - O2 · 2020. 5. 4. · and BlackBerry users wanted to do the same. While the Pearl looked gorgeous, it was far less convincing as a multimedia device. You could tell that

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Page 1: Curve ball - O2 · 2020. 5. 4. · and BlackBerry users wanted to do the same. While the Pearl looked gorgeous, it was far less convincing as a multimedia device. You could tell that

Also considerHTC S620 (aka the T-Mobile MDA Mail, BT Office) is a Windows-powered messaging device with a full QWERTY keyboard. It does have the bonus of Wi-Fi and faster EDGE capabilities, but falls short in the camera department with a 1.3-megapixel shutterbug.

fellow Berrys like the 8700 and recent 8800, it’s incredibly compact. Of course, this size reduction means there is less space to fit the full QWERTY keyboard, but RIM has done a sterling job to keep the key size manageable. It isn’t a perfect compromise and the fat-fingered fraternity may struggle, but it’s still very usable.

On the ballNavigation is centred around the trackball, which first appeared in the Pearl and subsequently the 8800. RIM ditched the side jog-wheel in favour of the trackball and the transition has worked well. You can tailor the ball’s sensitivity to suit your preferences (70% feels like the right balance between speed and control) and once you’ve gauged its mood, the trackball is incredibly lucid to thumb.

Alpha mailDespite the new multimedia injection, BlackBerry’s famed email performance is still at the core of the Curve. Setting up email is a cinch and you can add a further 10 email accounts, including most popular ISP clients, online. We easily integrated our Google Mail and Madasafish accounts just by giving up our email address and password. If you own the Curve through work, then the handset is able to hook up with the dominant email exchange server solutions like BlackBerry Enterprise IBM, Lotus Domino, Microsoft and Novell GroupWise.

Full HTML web browsing and emails arrive over a GPRS connection and RIM strangely continues to shun 3G and Wi-Fi. GPRS speeds are just about sufficient (web page loading was sluggish), but the Curve could

have been elevated in our estimation if 3G and Wi-Fi connections were present.

Tutti fruttiAn integrated 3.5mm headphone jack and bundled Roxio Easy Media Creator 9 software indicate RIM is serious about making the Curve multimedia potential. The convenient headphone jack is a real boon, while the Roxio desktop music software is pretty straightforward. You get access to your PC’s existing digital library and you can drag and drop your tunes into the Curve’s memory card folder. You even get the choice to encode your files for optimum playback on the Curve or keep it in its native format state. The Roxio software will even tag your tunes via the online Gracenote CD database, while you can manage your videos and photos via the software. A microSD card slot sits under the rear bonnet and is on hand to store all your multimedia gubbins.

The music player itself is pretty basic. It’s bereft of any sound enhancements or equaliser (repeat and shuffle functions are your lot), while controlling the player is a bit disjointed (a combination of the trackball, letters ‘N’ and ‘P’ on the keyboard, side volume keys and the top mute button deal with play, stop, pause and skip tracks). The audio quality just about makes up for

these disappointments and sounds quite dynamic, especially through a pair of Sennheiser headphones. Alternatively, you could hook up the Curve with a pair of Bluetooth headphones for wireless music streaming.

Camera twoThe Pearl was the first BlackBerry to sport a camera, but its 1.3-megapixel lens felt timid in today’s camera phone climate. The Curve ups the ante to two megapixels, but again, even this falls short of our expectations. While it may lack auto-focus and a Xenon flash (it does pack a crude LED light), it still takes decent enough snaps in a 1600x1200-pixel resolution. Sadly, like the Pearl, the camera lacks a video-recording facility, which is disappointing considering it promotes video playback (MPEG4, WMV and H.263 formats are supported) in multimedia mode.

VerdictThe Curve is a mixed multimedia bag. It is undoubtedly the best BlackBerry to date, but RIM still hasn’t advanced enough to really excite and rival other top multimedia smartphones. A BlackBerry with 3G and Wi-Fi should be next on the agenda, please RIM.

Nick [email protected]

From free with contractwww.blackberry.comwww.rim.com

BlackBerry Curve

Features■ Full QWERTY keyboard■ Two-megapixel camera■ Push-email capabilities■ Full HTML web browser■ Integrated 3.5mm headphone jack

Pros■ The Curve still retains what makes BlackBerry so successful: ease of use, email on the move and a great QWERTY keyboard.

Cons■ BlackBerry continues to give 3G and Wi-Fi a wide berth and, while the multimedia presence is welcome, it’s not the most realised.

Curve ballThe BlackBerry has thrived solely on its slick mobile email and messaging capabilities. But as its latest model, the Curve, suggests, it’s time to embrace the mobile multimedia world it has so far neglected

THE story of how Research in Motion (RIM) has sewn up the mobile email market with

its BlackBerry devices and slick push-email solutions is well told. Any business bod wanting to access email on the fly chose BlackBerry because it was easy to set up, user friendly and messages were sent straight to the handset. But a new chapter in its evolution is about to begin. BlackBerry is finally trying to find its mobile multimedia mojo.

It started with the recent launch of the stylish slimline BlackBerry Pearl 8100, signalling RIM’s intentions of grabbing a slice of the consumer mobile market and taking BlackBerry into a new direction. This handset was born from ‘CrackBerry’ addicts finally demanding more from their device than just email and PIM functionality. Others were having fun with their stylish multimedia smartphones – listening to music, taking photos and playing videos – and BlackBerry users wanted to do the same.

While the Pearl looked gorgeous, it was far less convincing as a multimedia device. You could tell that RIM, forever entrenched in a business email mindset, hadn’t got its head around the whole mobile multimedia thing. Its latest model, the Curve 8300, takes the BlackBerry to the next level.

Nice curvesDubbed the Curve for its shapely silhouette, this moniker is perhaps a little misleading. Its newfound curves and ever-so-slightly bowed torso are very subtle and, to be honest, don’t deviate much from previous BlackBerry designs. However, it is the smallest and lightest full QWERTY BlackBerry to be released and compared with

More reviews online atwww.mobilechoiceuk.comReview

More reviews online atwww.mobilechoiceuk.com

Stats■ OS: BlackBerry■ Size: 107x60x15.5mm■ Weight: 111g■ Display: 65,000 colours■ Resolution: 240x320

pixels■ Camera: Two megapixels■ Video recording/

playback/streaming: No/

yes/no■ Audio playback: MP3,

AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA■ Ringtones: Polyphonic,

MP3■ Radio: No■ Connectivity: Bluetooth,

USB, A2DP■ Internal memory: 64MB■ Memory card slot:

microSD■ Messaging: SMS, MMS,

IM■ Internet browser: WAP,

xHTML, HTML■ Email client: POP3, SMTP,

IMAP4■ Java: Yes■ Games: BrickBreaker■ GPRS: Yes + EDGE■ Frequency: Quad-band■ Talktime: 240 mins ■ Standby: 408 hours

VerdictThe Curve brilliantly

continues the BlackBerry

tradition in a more compact

form, but falls short in the

multimedia stakes.

THUMBS UP

86%