After deciding that Sony Ericsson had made a terrible misstep with its k850i (poor plasticky construction, shockingly bad ‘touch screen’ buttons, etc) I was in the market for a new phone.
What better time to join the 3G smartphone revolution and finally have mobile internet with full email access? I am a huge Mac fan and have both a desktop and laptop Mac. I own several iPods including a touch. So, the logical thing to do would be to visit my nearest iPhone dealer and sign on the dotted line, right?
Rather surprisingly, that is not what I did. Instead, I went for the Blackberry Bold. Why did this self-proclaimed Mac fanatic purchase a be-suited road warrior’s device of choice?
The main reason was the keyboard, MMS, the ability to cut and paste and Bluetooth. I own an iPod touch and just cannot get on with the little touch-screen keyboard. It’s too fiddly and I spend too much time flicking between alphanumerics and symbols. I can jab a message out one finger at a time but the whole process is so laborious. To go back and edit text is a game of ‘place the cursor’ which gets increasingly frustrating.
The lack of MMS was another downside. I know there are many superior ways to transport information but occasionally I feel the need to ‘text’ a picture to a friends phone. Likewise, Bluetooth on the iPhone is fixed to handle headsets only. There’s no way I could pair that with my TomTom for traffic reports, etc.
The Bold, however, has full bluetooth, full MMS and a natty little keyboard. Despite its tiny size, the buttons are beveled perfectly and you miss-type infrequently after a few days with it. Also, it has a shift key, alt key and numlock allowing full use of the keyboard with minimal faffing around. The screen is very impressive with a great resolution and punchy colours. The device speakers do fairly well and it comes with a really nice pair of headphones.
Behind the exceptionally shiny exterior and new fancy icon set, designed to pull in a few would-be iPhone purchasers, beats the heart of a RIM device with all its corporate overtones. The iPhone might wear its baseball cap at a jaunty angle and its converse sneakers without laces but the Bold is buttoned up tightly. The interface lacks the sparkle of an Apple device with most menus being devoid of anything as presumptuous as colors or images preferring to rely on a simple black font on a plain white background.
There are no beveled buttons or rounded backgrounds here. Nothing so fancy to distract you while composing an email or sending a text message. But that’s OK with me.
The built in web browser does a perfectly fine job. This is, of course, an area where the iPhone excels and I’d be lying if I said the Bold does it just as well. For one, you miss the full-size screen (although not that much) and the raw speed of mobile Safari. When at home and using a wi-fi connection the browser is pretty fast. Out and about shows respectable 3G speeds. It’s not exactly instant but neither is it painstakingly slow. It’s still sensible to opt for mobile versions of sites where possible to save on bandwidth if nothing else. The mobile BBC news site opens in about a second or so whereas loading the Play.com website (110k+) can take around 15 seconds before it’s stopped loading and processing although you can interact with the page while it loads images and processes javascript.
The trackball does a fine job of pushing the cursor around the screen and the zoom button intelligently resizes to fit the content block you clicked much like the iPhone / Touch does.
There is a built in Blackberry messenger which offers a fairly simple way to IM other Blackberry owners. You can also download MSN, AIM and ICQ for it. All of which function well. There are many other apps and games to download although they are, on average, more expensive than iPhone apps.
Little touches impress; the nice graduated fade-out of the back-lit keyboard and trackball is a personal favourite. The built in light sensor to adjust the screen brightness is a nice little feature. The ‘bed side’ mode which turns the device into a little clock which progressively dims and cancels all alert tones amuses. “Holster” mode is another favourite. The device comes with a sleeve (aka holster) which not only protects the unit but also trigges ‘In Holster’ mode via a strategically placed magnet. This allows you to set up different ring tones and volumes. For example, you could choose to turn off all AIM alerts when the phone is ‘out of holster’ and turn them on to ‘loud’ when its ‘in holster’.
The Bold’s bread and butter is email and organization, all of which it does very well. Contacts, calendar, tasks, etc are all handled well. Email is ‘pushed’ to your device as soon as its received by your mail server which is great. Often, I hear my Blackberry ‘ping’ before my Mac’s Mail app does.
Synchronizing with my Mac is simple thanks to Missing Sync. It allows me to sync up my contacts and calendar as well as email, if desired and iTunes.
Overall, I’m impressed. It is a serious rival to the iPhone and one which you should consider before making Steve Jobs a little richer.
It has a mixed reaction to the folk at IPS. Josh Harris and Blake are Blackberry die-hards. Charles went out and got one to replace his iPhone only to take it back three hours later because it wasn’t “fun enough”. Lindy dropped his iPhone like a leprous lap dog for a Bold and hasn’t looked back.
Recent Comments