Showing posts with label Cellphone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cellphone. Show all posts

February 16, 2009

BLACKBERRY PEARL FLIP 8220 (T-MOBILE)

Don't Flip Yet—This BlackBerry's Still in Beta



A rare misstep for RIM, the BlackBerry Pearl Flip 8220 combines interesting new hardware with software that's a bit underbaked. Hold off on buying a Flip until there are software revisions to fix the many bugs I encountered on my early review unit.

I question the reason for the 8220's very existence. but RIM execs insist that there are a lot of people out there who won't buy a phone that doesn't flip. So the first clamshell BlackBerry device was born. When it's closed, the Flip is about the size of a BlackBerry Pearl 8120, with a handsome black face and deep red body. There's a big external screen and a camera on the front, and various buttons and ports on the sides (including the useful BlackBerry mute button). The microSD card slot on the side even accepted the latest 16GB SanDisk card without a problem.


The crisp 2.3-inch, 320-by-240-pixel screen and a hybrid SureType keyboard were both a pleasure to use. But in terms of software, my 8220 was so buggy that it felt as if it had been released too soon. On the first call I made from a Bluetooth headset after a cold reboot, when I flipped the phone closed, a garbage message briefly appeared on the external display. When I played music, closed the flip, and hit the up and down volume buttons quickly in sequence, the external display went wacky. And at one point, the external screen clock just vanished—I could bring it back only with a cold reboot. But the biggest problem, by far, was with the Web browser, which struggled with JavaScript and loaded pages at a painfully slow pace. Wi-Fi wasn't much better. Overall, RIM has built some solid hardware here. But I can't recommend a phone that's this buggy until the kinks have been worked out,—SS



PC Magazine January 2009

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T-MOBILE G1

A Solid First Try for Google Android



The first-ever Google Android smartphone is a respectable initial effort that. given an open development platform. willgrow with time. It's missing a bunch of key features, such as a decent mediaplayer and support for corporate e-mail. But the G1, manufactured by HTC. is a quality phone with few bugs.I'm confident that more features are on the way.

The 5.6-ounce Cl looks like a grown-up Sidekick. It has a big 3.2-inch. 320-by-480-pixel touch screen that's bright and responsive. Volume and camera controls are on the sides oft he handset, and the 3-megapixel camera is on the back. Slide the screen up to reveal a comfortable little QWERTY keyboard. You get about 60MB of available space for apps and data, as well as a slot for a microSD memory card.

A quad-band EDGE. dual-band HSDPA phone (1,700/2,100 ). the GI works on T.Mobile's 2G and 3G
networks in the U.S. and on high-speed networks overseas. We achieved 6004-to-700-kilobit-per-sec-
ond speeds in the GI's browser on the 3G network which is fairly typical for a 3G phone. We also con-
nected to our WPA2-secured 802.1Ig wireless network without a problem.

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Calls on the GI sound terrific, at least to the user, the person on the other end may hear background noise. E-mail reads well, but attachment support is poor. As you might expect fro m a Google phone, the GI has one of the best Web browsers around. There are holes in the phone's media capabilities: There's no video player or video camera, for example. Nonetheless, the Cl is a phone with a bright future that's worth checking out.-Saseha San



PC Magazine January 2009

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