Wednesday, 30 March 2011


BlackBerry Storm

 
Blackberry Storm.JPG
ManufacturerResearch In Motion
Availability by countryNovember 14, 2008 (U.K.)
November 21, 2008 (U.S.)
December 4, 2008 (Australia)
December 11, 2008 (Canada)
SuccessorBlackBerry Storm 2
Form factorCandybar smartphone
Dimensions112.5 mm (4.43 in) (h)
62.2 mm (2.45 in) (w)
13.95 mm (0.549 in) (d)
Weight155 g (5.5 oz)
Operating systemBlackBerry OS 5.0.0.419
CPU528 MHz Qualcomm processor[1][2]
StorageFlash memory:
  • 128 MB application memory
  • 1 GB device memory[3]
microSDHC slot: supports up to 32 GB
Battery3.7 V 1400 mAh
Internal rechargeable removable lithium-ion battery
Talk time: 330 min
Standby time: 360 hours
Data inputsMulti-touch touchscreen display with haptic feedback, volume controls, proximity and ambient light sensors, 3-axis accelerometer[3]
Display360 x 480 px, 3.25 in (83 mm), HVGA, 65,536 color LCD[3]
Rear camera3.2 megapixel with video at 480 x 352 px, flash, and autofocus[3]
ConnectivityBluetooth 2.0+EDR,[3] Micro-USB, A-GPS, Quad band GSM 850 900 1800 1900 MHz GPRS/EDGE and Uni band UMTS/HSDPA 2100 MHz
CDMA version (9530) adds: Dual band CDMA2000/EV-DO Rev. A 800 1900 MHz[3]
Hearing aid compatibilityM3[4]
The BlackBerry Storm is a touchscreen smartphone developed by Research In Motion (RIM). A part of the BlackBerry 9500 series of phones,[5] it is RIM's first touchscreen device, and its first without a physical keyboard. It features a touchscreen which reacts physically like a button via SurePress, a Research In Motion patented technology of providing haptic feedback. It is intended to be a direct competitor to Apple iPhone 3G, the Palm Pre, the T-Mobile G1 by HTC[6] and the HTC Touch family.
The Storm has received mixed reviews from critics, with some finding the Storm's touchscreen difficult to use or discovering bugs and glitches with the phone's software, but some have praised the Storm for its call quality and its business-oriented features.

Contents

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 Availability

The BlackBerry Storm is available through Vodafone in the UK, Germany, France (SFR), Italy, Ireland, Australia, South Africa (Vodacom), The Netherlands and India;[7] Verizon Wireless in the United States; Telus, Bell, and SaskTel in Canada; Iusacell in Mexico.[8] and on lime and Digicel in parts the Caribbean.[9]
The BlackBerry Storm 9530 is an international and worldwide electronic communicating device, featuring CDMA with EV-DO Rev. A data, UMTS with HSDPA, and quad-band GSM with EDGE data access speed. The BlackBerry Storm 9500 does not include the CDMA module and is destined for use outside North America. However, the BlackBerry Storm only has European, Oceania, Asia and Brazil UMTS and HSDPA frequency bands. Therefore if the BlackBerry Storm is used with GSM wireless carriers in North America, the BlackBerry Storm will only be able to access wireless internet at EDGE data speed maximum. This is because GSM carriers in North America, namely AT&T, T-Mobile, Rogers and Fido do not operate on the same frequency bands for 3G as the rest of the world. If BlackBerry Storm is used in Europe, Africa, Asia, Oceania or Brazil, HSDPA wireless data speed can be achieved, provided that the local GSM network supports it.[10] The phone will use the primary network technology of its intended carrier (Verizon) when traveling domestically in the US, and rely upon the GSM/UMTS/HSDPA networks of Vodafone mainly when traveling abroad. There are currently no unlocked and unbranded versions available for the GSM Blackberry Storm however unlocking the phone will allow it to be used with any GSM service provider.[11]

Hardware

The Storm utilizes the MSM7600 from Qualcomm[1] a dual core CPU with ARM11 400 MHz and ARM9 274 MHz. The device features 1GB of onboard memory, 128MB of NVRAM and an expandable memory slot support for a microSD card of up to an additional 32GB. Verizon Wireless, Bell Mobility and Telus Mobility include a preinstalled 8 GB microSD card onboard.

 Screen and input

The Storm utilizes a 3.25 in (8.3 cm) TFT-LCD capacitive touchscreen with 360x480 pixel resolution, able to display 65,536 colours. The screen itself also provides haptic feedback.
It also implements a virtual keyboard on its touchscreen. Using its accelerometer allows the user to switch between a virtual SureType keyboard when held in portrait mode, and in a full QWERTY keyboard in landscape mode. when using the Storm, you can highlight the chosen button before actually pressing it. Newer versions of the operating system also allow for a full QWERTY keyboard while in portrait mode. The device has an automatic spell check correction, and the SureType keyboard configuration has predictive text. Firmware package 4.7.0.203 (Verizon Wireless) removes the predictive text feature from the multi-tap keyboard configuration; the feature was reinstated in later updates. there has been reviews on reports of screen difficulties such as freezing and wrong buttons loading.
The device features a built-in 3.2 megapixel camera located on back which features a flash, autofocus, and has video recording capabilities with a maximum resolution of 480 x 352 pixels.

Connectivity

The Storm supports CDMA with EV-DO Rev. A data, UMTS with HSDPA, and quad-band GSM with EDGE data access speed. The BlackBerry Storm 9500 has a firmware-disabled CDMA module and is destined for use outside North America. However, the BlackBerry Storm only has European, Oceania, Asia and Brazil UMTS and HSDPA frequency bands. Therefore if the BlackBerry Storm is used with GSM wireless carriers in North America, the BlackBerry Storm will only be able to access wireless internet at EDGE data speed maximum. This is because GSM carriers in North America, namely AT&T, T-Mobile, Rogers and Fido do not operate on the same frequency bands for 3G as the rest of the world. If BlackBerry Storm is used in Europe, Africa, Asia, Oceania or Brazil, HSDPA wireless data speed can be achieved, provided that the local GSM network supports it.[10] The phone will use the primary network technology of its intended carrier (Verizon) when traveling domestically in the US, and rely upon the GSM/UMTS/HSDPA networks of Vodafone mainly when traveling abroad. There are currently no unlocked and unbranded versions available for the GSM Blackberry Storm however unlocking the phone will allow it to be used with any GSM service provider.[11] The device also supports Bluetooth v2.0, Bluetooth Stereo Audio via A2DP and AVCRP.

Supported media formats

[12]
File Format / ExtensionComponentCodecNotesRTSP Streaming
MP4
M4A
3GP
3GP2
VideoH.264Baseline Profile, 480x360 pixels, up to 2 Mbit/s, 30 frames per secondSupported
MPEG4Simple Profile Level 3, 480x360 pixels, up to 2 Mbit/s, 30 frames per secondSupported
H.263Profile 0 and 3, Level 30Supported
AudioAAC-LC, AAC+, eAAC+Supported
AMR-NBSupported
QCELP EVRC
AVIVideoMPEG4Simple Profile Level 3, 480x360 pixels, up to 2 Mbit/s, 30 frames per secondSupported
AudioMP3
ASF
WMV
WMA
VideoWindows Media Video 9WMV3, Simple Profile, 480x360 pixels, 30 frames per second
AudioWindows Media Audio 9Supported
Windows Media 10 Standard/ProfessionalSupported
MP3AudioMP3

Critical reception

The Storm was met with generally mixed reviews, some focusing on serious usability problems in particular. Many gadget reviewers, including Bonnie Cha of CNET,[13] Joshua Topolsky of Engadget[14] and Sascha Segan from PC Magazine[15] noted the Storm's much-improved web browser and impressive call quality, while also deeming the SurePress touchscreen difficult to learn and a hindrance to fast typing. Several reviews also noted that the web browser was still unable to handle complex webpages correctly, saying that the iPhone's MobileSafari is still a better mobile browser. A number of reviewers also ran into multiple software glitches during their testing, such as lockups, sluggish performance and refusal to switch orientation.[16] The lack of Wi-Fi support also irked a few reviewers, but as noted by Jeff Rauschert of MLive, Verizon's wireless network somewhat makes up for this.[17] David Haskin of the Reseller News noted that BlackBerry's major business features, such as enterprise e-mail integration and Microsoft Office document editing capabilities were on par with BlackBerry's previous offerings, noting that these features would likely make the Storm more popular with the business crowd.[18] David Pogue of the New York Times bashed the BlackBerry Storm calling it the BlackBerry Dud, particularly for lacking Wi-Fi and being prone to too many glitches.[19]

Sales

Blackberry Storm sales figures were 500,000 in the first month of release and an additional 1 million were sold in the month of January.[20] In comparison, the original iPhone sold 2.4 million devices in its first quarter of release.

 Software updates

Ongoing firmware updates have been released since 5 December 2008 that addressed most of these issues; updates can be downloaded online or over-the-air, and can be installed by the user. The most current (official) software to date is:
Device↓Carrier↓Package Version↓Applications↓Software Platform↓
BlackBerry Storm 9530MTS Mobility5.0.0.8085.0.0.4194.2.0.179
BlackBerry Storm 9530Verizon Wireless ?5.0.0.3284.2.0.128
BlackBerry Storm 9530Telus Mobility5.0.0.4195.0.0.4194.2.0.179
BlackBerry Storm 9530Bell Mobility5.0.0.4195.0.0.4194.2.0.179
BlackBerry Storm 9530Iusacell4.7.0.2084.7.0.1514.0.0.186
BlackBerry Storm 9500Vodafone AU5.0.0.7425.0.0.4514.2.0.198
Note: Unofficial OS updates are leaked from time to time, leading some users to possess newer builds than are officially available.[21]

SIM lock

The BlackBerry Storm by default is SIM locked, and can be subsequently unlocked on both the 9500 & 9530 Storm editions to use on any GSM network if the code is obtained from the respective provider. The 9530 is not compatible with AT&T Mobility's 3G UMTS/HSDPA network because its UMTS transceiver only works at 2.1 GHz which is a frequency not used in the United States for UMTS, but the BlackBerry Storm will still work over the slower EDGE network in the United States and respective EDGE network from Rogers Communications in Canada.

 References

  1. ^ a b "BlackBerry Storm". Phonewreck. http://www.phonewreck.com/wiki/index.php?title=BlackBerry_Storm. Retrieved 2009-08-24. 
  2. ^ Multi-touch support
  3. ^ a b c d e f Research In Motion. "BlackBerry Storm Specs". http://www.blackberry.com/blackberrystorm/specifications.shtml. Retrieved 2008-10-12. [dead link]
  4. ^ "Official Specification of Blackberry Storm (VZW)". http://www.iphonekiller.com/official-specification-of-blackberry-storm-vzw/. Retrieved 2009-10-21. 
  5. ^ The Boy Genius (2008-08-08). "BlackBerry Thunder gets 9530 model designation on Verizon, October 13th release date?". The Boy Genius Report. http://www.boygeniusreport.com/2008/08/08/blackberry-thunder-gets-9530-model-designation-on-verizon/. Retrieved 2008-08-10. 
  6. ^ Hamilton, Anita (2008-10-07). "BlackBerry's Storm Aims to Blow the iPhone Away". Time. http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1847791,00.html. Retrieved 2008-10-19. 
  7. ^ Vodafone Australia. "BlackBerry Storm Pre-register Vodafone Australia". http://www.vodafone.com.au/personal/blackberrystorm/index.htm?pid=vca:home:1-4. Retrieved 2008-12-10. 
  8. ^ The Boy Genius (2008-05-13). "BlackBerry Thunder, the touchscreen BlackBerry we've all been waiting for". The Boy Genius Report. http://www.boygeniusreport.com/2008/05/13/blackberry-thunder-the-touchscreen-blackberry-weve-all-been-waiting-for/. Retrieved 2008-08-10. 
  9. ^ Deborah Hoyte (2009-05-01). "Research In Motion introduces the Blackberry Storm to Barbados". Barbados Advocate. http://www.barbadosadvocate.com/newsitem.asp?more=business&NewsID=3368. Retrieved 2009-05-01. "Yesterday officials from Research In Motion (RIM) launched the BlackBerry Storm smartphone in Barbados at the Hilton Hotel, Needham’s Point. The stylish BlackBerry Storm is expected to be available from May by both of the major cellphone providers in Barbados. “We are very pleased to introduce the BlackBerry Storm in this country”, commented Mark Guibert, Vice President of Corporate Marketing at RIM." 
  10. ^ a b Arar, Yardena (2008-10-13). "BlackBerry Storm: RIM's Un-iPhone". The Washington Post. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/10/08/AR2008100800105.html. Retrieved 2008-10-19. 
  11. ^ a b "BlackBerry Storm Info". http://www.blackberry9500.us. 
  12. ^ Research In Motion. "Media types supported on the BlackBery smartphone". http://www.blackberry.com/btsc/viewContent.do?externalId=KB05482. Retrieved 2009-10-01. 
  13. ^ "RIM BlackBerry Storm (Verizon Wireless) Smartphone reviews - CNET Reviews". http://reviews.cnet.com/smartphones/rim-blackberry-storm-verizon/4505-6452_7-33311850.html. Retrieved 2008-11-22. 
  14. ^ "BlackBerry Storm reviews - Engadget". http://www.engadget.com/2008/11/19/blackberry-storm-review/l. Retrieved 2008-11-23. [dead link]
  15. ^ "T-Mobile's G1 vs. the Smartphone Heavyweights - RIM BlackBerry Storm 9530 - At A Glance - Reviews by PC Magazine". http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2331977,00.asp. Retrieved 2008-11-23. 
  16. ^ "BlackBerry Storm Review (Verdict: Not Quite a Perfect Storm)". http://gizmodo.com/5093715/blackberry-storm-review-verdict-not-quite-a-perfect-storm. Retrieved 2008-11-22. 
  17. ^ "BlackBerry Storm review: Inelegant touch screen doesn't live up to the hype - The Flint Journal Online News - Michigan Newspaper - MLive.com". http://www.mlive.com/flintjournal/index.ssf/2008/11/blackberry_storm.html. Retrieved 2008-11-23. [dead link]
  18. ^ "BlackBerry Storm: not just an iPhone wannabe". http://reseller.co.nz/reseller.nsf/review/7F78D2F9888806D4CC25750A006EE311. Retrieved 2008-11-24. 
  19. ^ Pogue, David (2008-11-27). "No Keyboard? And You Call This a BlackBerry?". The New York Times. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/27/technology/personaltech/27pogue.html?pagewanted=2&_r=2&em. Retrieved 2010-04-26. 
  20. ^ Template:Url=http://www.rimarkable.com/blackberry-storm-doing-better-than-we-thought
  21. ^ BlackBerry OS | CrackBerry.com

External links



BlackBerry Pearl

Pearls 002.jpg
Compatible networksCDMA (8130 only), EDGE (GSM models), GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 (8100, 8110, 8120, 8220), Wi-Fi (8120 and 8220 only)
Form factorBar (8100 series),
Flip (8200 series)
Dimensions107 × 51 × 15 mm
Weight90.7g
Memory64MB (8100 series) or 128MB (8220) Internal, MicroSD slot
Display240x260 pixel, 57 mm (2.25 in) diagonal, 62 pixels/cm (157 ppi), 65536 colors (16-bit) TFT LCD (8100 series)
240x320, 66 mm (2.6 in) diagonal, 61 pixels/cm (154 ppi), and 128x160, 41 mm (1.6 in), 50 pixels/cm (128 ppi) TFT LCDs (8200 series)
Ringtones & notificationsPolyphonic Sound (72 voices), Real tones (MP3)
ConnectivityBluetooth, USB (with Mass Storage Mode support)
The BlackBerry Pearl (8100 / 8110 / 8120 / 8130 / 8220 / 8230 / 9100) is a smartphone developed by Research In Motion the first BlackBerry device with a camera and media player. It was originally released on September 12, 2006. T-Mobile was the first US carrier to release the phone as a carrier device.

Contents

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Specifications

  • Dimensions (W × D × H): 2 in × 0.6 in × 4.2 in
  • Weight: 3.2 oz
  • Talk Time: Up to 210 Minutes (3.5 hours)
  • Standby time: Up to 360 hours (15 days)
The Pearl comes with the following standard features:[1]
  • 1.33 (8100) or 2.0 (8110/8120/8130) megapixel camera with flash, self portrait mirror, and 5x digital zoom
  • Media player with support for MP3, AAC, AMR, polyphonic MIDI and WAV sound formats
  • Media player with support for MPEG-4 and H.263 video formats
  • Bluetooth 2.0
  • Wi-Fi Access (only for 8120 & 8220)
  • UMA support (only for 8120 & 8220)
  • High-Speed Westbridge USB (8110, 8120 and 8130)
  • Address book and calendar
  • HTML Web browser
  • GPS assisted BlackBerry Maps (8130, 8230)
  • Push e-mail
  • Voice Dialing
  • Speakerphones
  • SMS and MMS text messaging (However, MMS requires WAP service)
  • Instant messaging
  • Supports up to 8GB MicroSDHC with handheld code 4.5
The BlackBerry Pearl is aimed towards both business users and consumers. Its advertising campaign features several people including Mariska Hargitay and Douglas Coupland.
The BlackBerry Pearl provides Quad-Band network support on 850/900/1800/1900 MHz GSM/GPRS and EDGE networks to allow for international roaming between North America, Europe and Asia Pacific. The BlackBerry 8130 includes EV-DO high speed CDMA data capabilities and the BlackBerry 8120 is the first Pearl model to support Wi-Fi.
BlackBerry Pearl 8110, 8120 and 8130 use the Antioch chip from Cypress Semiconductor, a Westbridge peripheral controller enabling "direct connection between peripherals, creating ultra-fast transfers".[2] This upgrade from 8100 provides faster USB sideloading than older phones, and fast connection to the microSDHC card, capable of transferring 1GB file in less than 70 seconds - over 16Mbyte/s transfer rate. This speed significantly surpasses that of the earlier iPhone, Motorola RAZR or Sony Ericsson Walkman. In mid 2010, the Pearl 81xx will have a successor with 3g capabilities- 9100.

 Pearl 8130

Size & Weight:
  • Length:-4.2" (107mm)
  • Width:-1.97" (50mm)
  • Depth:-.55" (14mm)
  • Weight:-Approximately 3.4 oz (96g)
  • Dual-band 800/1900 MHz CDMA2000 1X Ev-DO networks
  • Password protection and keyboard lock
  • Support for AES or Triple DES encryption when integrated with BlackBerry Enterprise Server

BlackBerry Pearl 8220

The BlackBerry Pearl 8220 is RIM's first flip phone.[3][4][5] It is thus often referred to as the "Pearl Flip" or "BlackBerry Flip".
The Pearl Flip is available in the United States through U.S. Cellular , T-Mobile , Verizon and Cellular South and in the UK through O2, in Indonesia through Indosat, and in Canada through Rogers, Telus, and Bell Mobility. The phone has been known by many names, from the original codename BlackBerry "Kickstart" name to the current BlackBerry Pearl 8220 Smartphone name. A CDMA version is available for Verizon and Alltel known as the 8230.
The Pearl Flip is very similar to the original Pearl and uses the same predictive text input that the Pearl uses. It has a 2.0 Megapixel camera and video recording. It is the first BlackBerry to feature Wi-Fi and mobile calling in a new flip design.[citation needed]
  • Games - Yes
  • Picture Messaging - Yes
  • Video - Yes
  • Internet - Yes. HTML Browser
  • Voice Memo - Yes
  • Voice Dialing - Yes
  • Bluetooth - Yes (Media files,Headset and Name Card only)
  • Music Player - Yes
  • Three-Way Calling - Yes (Network Dependant)
  • Call Waiting - Yes (Network Dependant)
  • SD Card - Yes. 16 GB
  • SIM Card - Yes (No if using CDMA version)
  • Polyphonic Ringtones - Yes
  • Real Ringtones - Yes. Any song on the phone can be used.
  • GPS - Yes (Location chip must be turned on for use and you must subscribe to use VZ Navigator if Verizon. Blackberry Maps will work fine without VZ Navigator subscription)

 Comparison with other BlackBerry devices

Most BlackBerry devices have a full keyboard. The Pearl uses a modified QWERTY layout on a 4-row, 5-column keypad, with a proprietary predictive input algorithm called SureType. The Pearl supports the full range of BlackBerry enterprise functionality.
Unlike previous BlackBerry devices, the Pearl includes a music player, camera, as well as other multimedia functions. It requires the purchase of a MicroSD memory card to support storage of multimedia files beyond the 64MB provided internally.
Most notably, the Pearl uses a translucent trackball (the "Pearl"), which facilitates horizontal and vertical scrolling, instead of the traditional BlackBerry scroll wheel. The backlit color of the 8100 trackball is controlled by a series of LEDs and may be changed by software loaded on the phone; the 8110, 8120 and 8130 models trackball is lit only in white.[6] The color customization capabilities also extend to the notification LED in the top right corner of the device. This LED can be programmed to blink different colors depending on which contact has called, texted or emailed[7].

Availability

The Pearl is currently available with Entel PCS in Chile, Cellcom, Sprint, T-Mobile, AT&T Mobility, Cincinnati Bell Wireless, Verizon Wireless, Alltel, US Cellular, Centennial Wireless, MOSH Mobile, nTelos, Cellular One and Cellular South in the United States; TIM, Vodafone and Wind in Italy; Turkcell and Avea in Turkey; Claro, Viva in Brazil, Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico; Airtel, Vodafone and Reliance Communications in India, Vodacom and MTN in South Africa; Iusacell, Telcel and Movistar in Mexico; Rogers Wireless, Telus, SaskTel, MTS, TBayTel, Bell Mobility, Wind Mobile, and Virgin Mobile Canada in Canada; Telstra, Optus and Vodafone in Australia; Indosat in Indonesia; KPN and Vodafone in the Netherlands; Globe Telecom in the Philippines; Grameenphone in Bangladesh; Vodafone in New Zealand; SingTel in Singapore; Mobilink in Pakistan and all networks in the UK; MTN, Globacom and Zain in Nigeria. tigo, Comcel in Colombia; Movistar, Digicel, Claro and Cable & Wireless in Panama

See also

 References

 External links