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Entries for the ‘Blackberry Storm’ Category

Bell to release Self Serve app for webOS

BellSince launch day, every Palm Pre and Pixi on Sprint has come with a little app that launches into a custom Sprint portal with news and links to information about your account. It looks as if Bell is going to follow the same route, though their app will be of the optional App Catalog variety. As reported over at Mobile Syrup, Bell is releasing a “Self Serve” app that will do the same for owners of Palm Pre phones on Bell. Self Serve the app will give Bell customers one-click access to Self Serve the website, where users can manage their accounts and track minute, text, and data usage. webOS users won’t be the only ones getting in on the action, as Bell is also releasing the app for the BlackBerry Storm and Tour (through BlackBerry App World).

Thanks to mtsem for the tip!

BlackBerry 9700 and BlackBerry Storm2 Review — Smartphone Round Robin

RIM has one of the oldest OS platforms in the 2009 Smartphone Round Robin, but unlike Nokia’s S60 (reviewed here last week), CrackBerry.com’s signature BlackBerry Bold 9700 and BlackBerry Storm2 enjoy huge popularity in North America, a seemingly unbreakable hold on the Enterprise market, and an ever-increasing focus on consumers.

Last year, Dieter likened the previous [...]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

BlackBerry 9700 and BlackBerry Storm2 Review — Smartphone Round Robin

BlackBerry Bold 9700, Storm2 Hands-on Video, Smartphone Round Robin

Week 2 of the 2009 Smartphone Round Robin sees me take on TiPb’s Public Frenemy #1, the almost-diametrically opposed BlackBerry — or is it? This year in addition to the new flagship BlackBerry Bold 9700, we officially have an actual touch-screen ‘Berry in the ‘Robin — the Storm2. What’s an iPhone blogger to do?

Lucky for [...]

This is a story by the iPhone Blog. This feed is sponsored by The iPhone Blog Store.

BlackBerry Bold 9700, Storm2 Hands-on Video, Smartphone Round Robin

Round Table: Six months with the Palm Pre and webOS

Round Table

Welcome to Round Table, which is in fact not a table at all. Round Table is a continuing series on PreCentral where we pose a question to the staff and they provide their thoughts and insights. The question could be something simple like “what’s your favorite webOS app?” or something a bit more complicated, like “what do you want from the next Palm device?” Or maybe we’ll just end up chatting about our favorite sandwiches, you never know. This time around we’re looking back at six months of life with the Palm Pre and webOS.

Check it all out after the break: What was the most important event for Palm in the last six months, and what will be the most important in the next six months?

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BlackBerry Storm 2 Review: Improving, But Still Mostly Cloudy [Review]

Take the BlackBerry Storm. Now imagine a phone that’s basically exactly the same, but does everything better. That’s the Storm 2.

It’s the same phone, essentially, just refined in nearly every way. It’s not the Storm reinvented, it doesn’t shoot lasers, and it’s not going to kill anything. It’s just better than before.

Sure, Press Me Anywhere

SurePress, RIM’s “the whole screen’s a button!” touchscreen technology, lives on. But now it’s four buttons. Four piezo-electric buttons that live under the screen, to be precise. What that means for you is that wherever you press on the screen, it feels way more localized, like the screen’s only being pushed in exactly where you click it. Before, it was like the whole screen was on a see-saw.

The re-balancing of the screen lets you go far more smoothly and efficiently from one letter to another while typing, rather than waiting for it to pop back up every time. A software change—which is available for the first Storm too—enables true multitouch typing (for two fingers, but that’s enough). You can actually take advantage of the new screen and type much faster than you could on the original Storm. In other words, the mechanics of SurePress actually work now.

The entire build of the mechanism is less janky too—the giant chasms between the screen and the rest of the phone begging for turkey jerky bits to get sucked like a gaping maw have been closed, and the four main buttons are now a seamless part of pushscreen. Oh, and one clever touch is that the screen’s dead stiff whenever the phone’s off—if it doesn’t press down, you can tell the phone’s off (though it does mean one less thing to fiddle with).

SurePress, while vastly more usable and comfortable now, is still flawed as a touchscreen navigational concept: It’s predicated on literally putting an obstacle in front of you that has to be smashed in every time you want to do something. It’s not an optimal experience. And it ultimately fails in what it supposedly sets out to do by “separating navigation from confirmation,” to use RIM’s verbiage: To make you type more accurately. It just makes you type slower and wonder why you can’t use the Storm’s quite dandy touchscreen like any other touchscreen, since the keyboard and screen are otherwise great.

Speed Isn’t Everything

The Storm 2 is quicker all around. The response of nearly every element is just so much springier than the first Storm—I’m talking versus the launch software to be clear, since frankly, that was the last time I used the Storm. Apps pop up instantly most of the time, hang-ups are a rare occasion, the accelerometer kicks in quickly to rotate the keyboard, and it moves with the kind of speed you expect it to. The phone feels way more like it should. This extends in some respects to the browser, too, which seems a little more capable—though by no means as stacked as a WebKit browser. I wish the camera was faster to start up though; it’s still sluggish most of the time.

There are a few slight visual tweaks to the OS since last year as well that make it more look more polished (I’m very surprised I noticed). For instance there’s a more matte, almost Apple-like gradient for highlighted items, like in Messages. Icons are a little more sober, which reflects the darker, slightly more understated look of the phone itself. My favorite software tweak is probably the true QWERTY keyboard in portrait mode, instead RIM’s SureType system that previously foisted in front of your thumbs. It’s better than Android’s—and HTC’s reskin of Android’s on the Hero—though not quite as good as the iPhone’s.

While it’s got a speed boost and a bit of extra iconographic spitshine, it is still fundamentally the same experience—the Storm 2 touchscreen interface still feels like it was designed by people with physical keyboards soldered into their brains. From the grand scheme of the UI, the standard BlackBerry setup re-jiggered for touch rather than a ground-up design, to the BlackBerry apps that clearly aren’t designed with Storm in mind, there’s a definite sense of non-belonging with the Storm 2, like when all of the puzzle pieces don’t quite fit together and you jam them together to make it work anyway. In other words, it tries real hard to be a touch phone and a BlackBerry, but it doesn’t do either of them exceptionally well.

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The Storm 2 is where the Storm should’ve started, but at the same time, it’s coming into a different world than a year ago—even on its own carrier—where not breaking new ground is simply moving too slow. More than that, while the Storm is overall a good phone, unless you have a very specific set of criteria for your phone—that is, a touchscreen BlackBerry—you probably shouldn’t settle for a phone that doesn’t do the touch or BlackBerry aspects (read: typing) spectacularly. There are phones that do each of those things better. If you want a BlackBerry on Verizon, get a BlackBerry Tour, which has an awesome keyboard, if a few trackball problems. If you want a touchscreen smartphone on Verizon, you should get a Droid. At least, that’s how it’s looking so far—come back early next week for our full in-depth Droid review.

SurePress actually works now

Wi-Fi!

It’s pretty quick, most of the time

SurePress is still a mediocre concept, at best

Still doesn’t fit in as a BlackBerry

There are phones that do what it’s good at much better



Still Want a BlackBerry Storm 2 Review? [BlackBerry]

Hey guys and gals, we just got a BlackBerry Storm 2 loaner—and an explanation for the delay. Still interested in a review?

Apparently, midway through pre-briefing reporters and handing out review units, there was a disagreement between Verizon Wireless and RIM over the readiness of the phone (which Verizon just “announced“). We can’t discuss details, but the communication breakdown—which involved a few days of unanswered emails—had nothing to do with dissing you readers. The phone, Matt Buchanan says, is far better than the Storm 1, which makes me think its still worth a review despite it being very late, but you get the final say. What do you think?

Do you still want us to review the Blackberry Storm 2?(opinion)



BlackBerry Storm2 Arrives at Verizon on October 28th

Are you excited about the upcoming BlackBerry Storm2? If you’re a Verizon Wireless customer, you won’t have to wait much longer, as Verizon and RIM have officially announced that the Storm2 will be released on October 28th.

The newest iteration of the touchscreen BlackBerry includes Wi-Fi, a software-based clickable display (no more mechanical weirdness) and a faster processor with more device memory.

Other features include:

3.2 megapixel camera with auto-focus

Built-in GPS

V Cast Music with Rhapsody

BlackBerry OS 5.0

Support for Verizon Wireless’ Broadband Connect tethering service

Original BlackBerry Storm Owners

Existing BlackBerry Storm customers can upgrade their devices to OS 5.0 beginning today via either www.verizonwireless.com/storm or www.blackberry.com/update for free. That will bring all the new OS-based enhancements to your existing phone.

Pricing and Availability

The Blackberry Storm2 will be available online, in Verizon retail stores and through Verizon business channels on Wednesday. The Blackberry Storm2 will be priced at $179.99 after a $100 mail-in-rebate with a new two-year agreement (on a plan that either offers Email and Web or Email and Web for BlackBerry).

What do you think about the new BlackBerry Storm? How do you think it measures up against the iPhone or the upcoming Motorola Droid?

Reviews: Rhapsody

Tags: blackberry, blackberry storm, blackberry storm 2, blackberry storm2, verizon

Blackberry Storm OS 5.0 Update Coming Tomorrow [BlackBerry]

Storm owners—head here tomorrow for the latest OS update. No OTA option, you’ll have to go through the website or Desktop Manager. Expect some new features on top of the kicker: better text input. [Erictric via Unwired View]



BlackBerry Storm 2 to Feature WiFi, More Memory, Improved Touchscreen

When the BlackBerry Storm was released last November, RIM was hoping that the first touch-screen BlackBerry would set the world on fire. It didn’t.

Now the Canadian smartphone company is looking for a second-chance at touch-screen bliss with the BlackBerry Storm 2. Verizon is bringing the Storm 2 to the United States and Vodafone will be a carrier in seven European countries as well as South Africa.

The Wall Street Journal’s Walt Mossberg gives an overview of the new BlackBerry Storm 2 (on Verizon) in his column and hints that the phone should be coming out sometime in November for around $200.

On the specifications side, the BlackBerry Storm 2 has more memory, will take up to a 32GB microSD card, includes a 3.2 megapixel camera, and now includes WiFi. The biggest change is in the keyboard — gone is the mechanical “button” keyboard from the original BlackBerry Storm — the new model will be fully electronic (so the screen won’t shift when you type) and will sport a full-width keyboard while in landscape mode.

Will these changes be enough to counter the other touch-screen smartphones storming the marketplace? Only time will tell. What do you think about the new BlackBerry Storm 2? Are the new features enough to make you consider switching over or are you a physical keyboard BlackBerry diehard for life? Let us know!

Tags: blackberry, blackberry storm, blackberry storm 2, smartphones

The Competition: CrackBerry.com Reviews the Storm2; Moto Cliq Around the Web

What, you thought the Palm Pre and webOS were going to be the ‘latest and greatest’ in perpetuity? Nope, we’re going to take a quick break from our ‘all-Pre, all-the-time’ coverage to point out that there are two big competitors landing on the scene tonight with reviews aplenty.

First up, CrackBerry.com’s Kevin Michaluk comes in with a full review of the BlackBerry Storm2. The first Storm was disappointing to most, but does the Storm2 redeem? Kevin is optimistic:

The Storm2 fixes many of the BlackBerry Storm’s outstanding issues and makes a ton of incremental improvements, all of which add up to something that feels noticeably better. In a way that never quite applied to the original Storm, the Storm2 could legitimately be called the flagship BlackBerry.

You can find Storm2 Features and Specs broken down here.

Meanwhile, reviews of the Motorola Cliq with it’s Synergy-competitor MotoBlur service have hit the web, at Engadget, Gizmodo, Phonescoop, and Techcrunch to name a few. It looks like battery life is a problem and while MotoBlur has a leg up in that it can pull in statuses on top of what Synergy can handle, the consensus seems to be that all that information isn’t filtered very well. Update: Sister Site AndroidCentral has a nice roundup of the money quotes from the various reviews.

How do you think they stack up against the Pre?