Sunday, November 7, 2010

BlackBerry Style Review: A Phone You Could (Almost) Flip Over

In the past, you've been able to get a BlackBerry smartphone with a full QWERTY keyboard, or a BlackBerry smartphone that comes in a convenient flip-style form factor. But you haven't been able to get one that offers both -- until now. RIM and Sprint have announced the BlackBerry Style 9670 smartphone, the first flip-style BlackBerry to offer a full QWERTY keyboard.

Price and Availability

The BlackBerry Style will be available from Sprint on October 31 for $99.99 when you sign a two-year service agreement. That price is very low compared to what you'll pay for some of today's best smartphones, as most of those cost about $200. Keep in mind, though, that Sprint's price factors in a $100 mail-in rebate.

Design

The BlackBerry Style's design has its plusses and minuses. It's convenient, certainly -- clamshell-style phones generally are comfortable to hold when typing and when making calls. But it's also a bit retro, and not necessarily in a hip way. The Style is a bit bulky when compared to some of today's sleeker smartphones, especially those with touch screens, like the Apple iPhone 4 or most of the new Android devices.

Making Calls

While the Style may look a bit bulky and old school when flipped open, it is excessively comfortable to hold during calls. You can easily cradle the phone between your neck and your ear if necessary, and holding it in your hand is just as comfortable.

Voice quality in my test calls made on Sprint's network varied from excellent to fair. I occasionally noticed some garbled voices and background noise, but most of the time, I could hear callers very well and vice versa. The volume level was very good, too.

Software

The BlackBerry Style is the second phone after the BlackBerry Torch to offer the all-new BlackBerry 6 OS. The Style is not a touch-screen phone, though, unlike the Torch. I found that using the touch screen to interact with the BlackBerry OS was a more pleasing experience, but using the BlackBerry 6 OS on a non-touch screen device is still a much better experience than using the older BlackBerry 5 OS.

BlackBerry 6 OS also features a new universal search that can locate results both on and off your phone; begin typing, and the universal search feature automatically looks on the phone, in RIM's BlackBerry App World, on Google, and in installed apps. In addition, you get a universal inbox that catalogs not just e-mail, but also information from services like Facebook, Twitter, and BlackBerry Messenger.

Browsing the Web

The new BlackBerry 6 OS comes with an all-new WebKit-based browser, which is designed to offer faster and "more robust" performance. I tested the new browser side-by-side with an older version of BlackBerry's browser on a Curve 8530 smartphone, and the new browser was noticeably faster. Pages rendered much more quickly, and displayed more accurately.

The Blackberry Style supports Sprint's high-speed 3G network, as well as 802.11b/g/n wireless networks, so you have plenty of options for speedy Web access and downloads.

Messaging

The Style retains the excellent messaging features and e-mail handing found on previous BlackBerry phones. Corporate users will like the familiar ability to sync with BlackBerry Enterprise Server, while home users will like the ability to sync up to ten business or personal POP3 or IMAP4 e-mail accounts using BlackBerry Internet Service. You get both a unified inbox, as well as individual inboxes for each account.

RIM has upgraded its text messaging interface, too, as the Style offers a threaded view for reading SMS and MMS messages. In addition, the Style comes with several instant messaging options, including BlackBerry Messenger, AIM, Google Talk, Windows Live Messenger, and Yahoo Messenger.

Camera

The BlackBerry Style features a 5-megapixel camera with some advanced features, including a flash, auto-focus, zoom, scene modes, and image stabilization. The camera will capture video clips at resolutions up to 640 by 480 pixels. My test photos looked very good for the most part, with bright, vibrant colors. Outdoor shots looked noticeably better than indoor shots, though.

Multimedia

BlackBerry 6 OS is supposed to offer an enhanced multimedia experience, according to RIM, and it mostly delivers. The Style features a better music and video player than past BlackBerry phones offered, though its interface is still a bit bland. You also get a built-in YouTube video app, as well as access to many of Sprint's video offerings, including Sprint TV, which offers a mix of live and pre-packaged TV shows, and Sprint Football Live, which lets you view NFL games on the phone.

Bottom Line

The BlackBerry Style is not as high-style as its name would imply; it's actually more of an old-fashioned-looking phone. But that's not a bad thing. It may not boast a cutting-edge touch screen or a big, giant display, but the Style's style makes it an eminently usable phone.



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