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Thursday, May 17, 2012
RIM Blackberry Bold 9790 review
With the RIM BlackBerry Bold 9900, RIM tried to combine the best of both worlds: a top-notch keyboard and a touchscreen interface. With the Bold 9790 RIM has taken the same idea, but in a smaller, slimmer body that's arguably easier to carry around with you.
In addition to the keyboard and touchscreen, there's an optical trackpad button. It's a little sensitive at first, but once you get used to it, it's a great way to scroll through a large list of emails and select menu options.
One of the big changes from the Bold 9900 is that the 9790 has a slightly slower single-core processor: 1GHz versus 1.2GHz. It's fine for most uses of the OS, but we found that pressing and holding the menu button to bring up BlackBerry 7's task switching could bring the phone to halt. This was particularly true if a busy application is running in the background, such as the app update process, brings up the clock icon halting you from doing anything else.
Build quality is great, as we'd expect from a BlackBerry. The matt, rubberised back feels tough and secure, but it's easy to slip off if you need to get to the battery compartment and SIM card slot. The rear also houses the lens for the 5-megapixel camera.
This takes crisp shots with little noise. It's nice to see an LED flash, which can help illuminate dark areas, letting you use the Bold 9790 to take shots in pretty much any conditions. A dedicated camera button sits on the side of the phone underneath the volume rocker switch. It's useful if you turn the phone on its side, although the screen orientation means that you're taking pictures in portrait mode. For landscape shooting we found it easier to hold the phone normally and use the trackpad button, particular as swiping up or down on this zooms in and out.
Video can also be shots at 640x480. Again it looked crisp and the results were smooth, but the quality and resolution lags behind the best smartphones, such as the Apple iPhone 4S.
Fitting a keyboard means that there's less room for a screen than on a traditional smartphone. However, with a resolution of 480x360 the pixel density is pretty high, and text and images look sharp and clear. There's no getting round the fact that web browsing demands a lot of scrolling around, so this is a handset that's better suited to text-based applications.
That's where this phone really starts to shine. Thanks to the famous BlackBerry keyboard it's incredibly easy and fast to type long messages. The keyboard's moulded keys are small but shaped in such a way that you rarely manage to miss-hit or press two keys at once.
BlackBerry OS has improved drastically over the last couple of years, and now includes more social aggregation as standard. You can now add Facebook and Twitter feeds to your inbox, along with text messages and emails, and in addition to BBM you get Google Talk and Windows Messenger clients built-in.
Of course, email is the thing that you're most likely to want to use this handset for. It arguably works best in corporate environments where the RIM server is installed, but the phone will connect to an Exchange account with Outlook Web Access enabled, as well as standard email accounts, such as Gmail. However, it's a little fiddly to setup and BlackBerry OS lacks the simple menus of Android and iOS.
Hardware wise, the Bold 9790 is bang up-to-date, with NFC and 5GHz 802.11n Wi-Fi built in. There's little support for NFC at the moment, but 5GHz wireless may be useful if you've got a posh router and want the best wireless speeds.
Where the Bold 9790 falls down, though, is with App support. BlackBerry App World has got better, but it lacks official apps from a lot of big companies, there are fewer apps than available for Android and iPhone and less quality control.
Given the small screen and lack of apps, the Bold 9790 is only of interest for corporate environments or if you want its excellent email handling and keyboard. We'd rather spend the money on a phone with a larger touchscreen, such as the excellent Sony Ericsson Xperia Arc S.
HTC One X review
HTC's One X is a collection of firsts. It's the first HTC handset with
Android 4.0 Ice Cream Sandwich, the first with a 720x1,280-pixel screen,
and the first with a quad-core processor;
its Nvidia Tegra 3 chipset even includes a GeForce graphics core and a
"companion core" - a fifth processor core that takes over essential
functions when the phone is idle to save power.
The huge 4.7in screen's IPS panel is bright and colourful, if not quite as punchy as the OLED screens on the Motorola RAZR or Samsung Galaxy Nexus. The screen's contrast also can't match that of its rivals. Blacks weren't as deep and whites not as bright in our side-by-side tests with those phones. Colours were on the vibrant rather than accurate side, although you may prefer this for gaming and reading websites. The 720p resolution is ideal for web browsing; we could easily read headline and summary text on the BBC News homepage in landscape mode, and then double-tap to zoom in to individual stories.
The One X's screen is rounded at the edges and sits proud of its white surround. There's very little space around the screen, except at the bottom where three touch-sensitive buttons handle Back, Home and the new Open Tasks function, which shows which apps are currently running. The handset is light and comfortable to hold, with the matt-white plastic providing adequate grip.
The phone's 1.5GHz quad-core processor makes it run smoothly, although we still noticed some jerkiness and lag when under heavy load - swiping through the home screens still isn't as buttery smooth as on the iPhone. The One X has no problems coping with heavy loads - we tested a few games and they all played smoothly, although the phone can get hot at the rear. In the JavaScript Sunspider benchmark it scored 1,746ms, that's around 100ms quicker than the Tegra 3-equipped Asus Transformer Prime, probably due to a higher clock speed.
With the Android 4.0 operating system comes HTC's own Sense 4.0, a collection of apps, widgets and customisations designed to improve on Android's own interface. We've mentioned previously how manufacturers and network operators often load phones with software that can't be uninstalled, and which duplicates or even removes Android's own functions, but Sense has always been one of the less intrusive examples. Sense 4.0 adds features that complement Android's own software.
For a start, Sense beefs up the camera app, adding plenty of extra features that take advantage of the One X's dedicated imaging chip. There's a fast multi-capture mode which you access by holding down the shutter button, and it saves these pictures as a collection so you can browse for the best one. Pictures can be snapped in 0.7 seconds, with a 0.2 second auto-focus, and you can go straight to the camera from the lock screen to speed things up.
This may be the first phone that gives compact digital cameras a run for their money. It's got more options that we're used to seeing on a smartphone camera: face detection, auto smile capture (which works quite quickly), manual ISO settings and continuous shooting. You can adjust exposure, contrast, saturation and sharpness using sliders from the options menu, and you can even snap a quick shot while recording video.
Our test shots were some of the best we've seen from a smartphone camera. There was bit of noise in our outdoor shots but details are reasonably smooth, without the smudged look you can get from heavy noise reduction. The fairly large-aperture f/2.0 lens helps indoors, and low-light shots without the flash were astoundingly good, with sensibly chosen settings (1/15s at ISO 1250) and noise kept reasonably in check for such a fast ISO speed. It's on par with a decent mid-price compact camera.
Sense also beefs up the music player, although here we're not so keen on its changes. It adds HTC's own Beats Audio processing and changes the default music player, adding links to the 7digital music store, the Soundhound music recognition service and the TuneIn internet radio app. You can click the Soundhound icon while listening to a song in TuneIn Radio to identify it, which is useful.
Beats is less impressive: sound quality was good enough without it, and we found it made the bass too boomy, although it also did a good job of brightening up mid-range sounds. As well as Beats, you can choose from a list of more traditional effects, such as Bass Boost or Live, and unlike on previous Beats-branded phones, you can use non-Beats headphones and still take advantage of the Beats effects. However we would have preferred more fine control over the effects rather than this all-or-nothing approach.
Another Sense addition is the Car app. This interface shows the functions you might want while driving - phone, music player, internet radio and navigation - in a large format that's easy to access whilst keeping your eyes on the road. All menus and text are in a larger font for visibility, and there are larger icons and buttons too. The phone interface is designed for ease of use, with a large photo of the caller that you can swipe either left to decline the call, or right to answer. You can even customise which navigation app and music player to use.
The huge 4.7in screen's IPS panel is bright and colourful, if not quite as punchy as the OLED screens on the Motorola RAZR or Samsung Galaxy Nexus. The screen's contrast also can't match that of its rivals. Blacks weren't as deep and whites not as bright in our side-by-side tests with those phones. Colours were on the vibrant rather than accurate side, although you may prefer this for gaming and reading websites. The 720p resolution is ideal for web browsing; we could easily read headline and summary text on the BBC News homepage in landscape mode, and then double-tap to zoom in to individual stories.
The One X's screen is rounded at the edges and sits proud of its white surround. There's very little space around the screen, except at the bottom where three touch-sensitive buttons handle Back, Home and the new Open Tasks function, which shows which apps are currently running. The handset is light and comfortable to hold, with the matt-white plastic providing adequate grip.
The phone's 1.5GHz quad-core processor makes it run smoothly, although we still noticed some jerkiness and lag when under heavy load - swiping through the home screens still isn't as buttery smooth as on the iPhone. The One X has no problems coping with heavy loads - we tested a few games and they all played smoothly, although the phone can get hot at the rear. In the JavaScript Sunspider benchmark it scored 1,746ms, that's around 100ms quicker than the Tegra 3-equipped Asus Transformer Prime, probably due to a higher clock speed.
With the Android 4.0 operating system comes HTC's own Sense 4.0, a collection of apps, widgets and customisations designed to improve on Android's own interface. We've mentioned previously how manufacturers and network operators often load phones with software that can't be uninstalled, and which duplicates or even removes Android's own functions, but Sense has always been one of the less intrusive examples. Sense 4.0 adds features that complement Android's own software.
For a start, Sense beefs up the camera app, adding plenty of extra features that take advantage of the One X's dedicated imaging chip. There's a fast multi-capture mode which you access by holding down the shutter button, and it saves these pictures as a collection so you can browse for the best one. Pictures can be snapped in 0.7 seconds, with a 0.2 second auto-focus, and you can go straight to the camera from the lock screen to speed things up.
This may be the first phone that gives compact digital cameras a run for their money. It's got more options that we're used to seeing on a smartphone camera: face detection, auto smile capture (which works quite quickly), manual ISO settings and continuous shooting. You can adjust exposure, contrast, saturation and sharpness using sliders from the options menu, and you can even snap a quick shot while recording video.
Our test shots were some of the best we've seen from a smartphone camera. There was bit of noise in our outdoor shots but details are reasonably smooth, without the smudged look you can get from heavy noise reduction. The fairly large-aperture f/2.0 lens helps indoors, and low-light shots without the flash were astoundingly good, with sensibly chosen settings (1/15s at ISO 1250) and noise kept reasonably in check for such a fast ISO speed. It's on par with a decent mid-price compact camera.
Sense also beefs up the music player, although here we're not so keen on its changes. It adds HTC's own Beats Audio processing and changes the default music player, adding links to the 7digital music store, the Soundhound music recognition service and the TuneIn internet radio app. You can click the Soundhound icon while listening to a song in TuneIn Radio to identify it, which is useful.
Beats is less impressive: sound quality was good enough without it, and we found it made the bass too boomy, although it also did a good job of brightening up mid-range sounds. As well as Beats, you can choose from a list of more traditional effects, such as Bass Boost or Live, and unlike on previous Beats-branded phones, you can use non-Beats headphones and still take advantage of the Beats effects. However we would have preferred more fine control over the effects rather than this all-or-nothing approach.
Another Sense addition is the Car app. This interface shows the functions you might want while driving - phone, music player, internet radio and navigation - in a large format that's easy to access whilst keeping your eyes on the road. All menus and text are in a larger font for visibility, and there are larger icons and buttons too. The phone interface is designed for ease of use, with a large photo of the caller that you can swipe either left to decline the call, or right to answer. You can even customise which navigation app and music player to use.
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