BlackBerry Curve

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Although it doesn't have Wi-Fi or 3G support, the BlackBerry Curve offers a best-of-breed design and a well-rounded set of features to make it an attractive device for consumers and mobile professionals alike.… Read full review

Editors' rating:
  • 8 out of 10
8 out of 10

Pros

  • Slimline design with an improved full QWERTY keyboard
  • 2-megapixel camera, Bluetooth and a media player
  • Spell-checker for email and memos
  • Auto-adjusting call volume in noisy environments

Cons

  • Lacks integrated Wi-Fi and 3G support
  • Camera does not support video recording
  • Call quality sounded a bit hollow

We'd hate to be a BlackBerry 8800 owner right now. Just months after the 8800's release, Research in Motion (RIM) has released a sleeker and sexier model that'll make you wish you had waited a while longer — the world of technology can be so cruel. The BlackBerry Curve (also known as the BlackBerry 8300) is the smallest and lightest full-QWERTY BlackBerry to date, and we love the design. It feels more like a mobile phone with the compact dimensions, yet you still get the advantage of a full keyboard for easy messaging. We want to be clear that the BlackBerry Curve is more about the revamped design, rather than new features. The device does offer a few improvements, such as a spell-checker for email and an upgraded 2-megapixel camera, but it still lacks the big items on a our wish list, namely Wi-Fi and 3G support. And to be fair, the BlackBerry 8800 may still be a better fit for power business users with its integrated GPS functionality and lack of a camera (an increasing security concern at workplaces). That said, for consumers and mobile professionals, the BlackBerry Curve is a beautifully designed and well-rounded device that delivers great email functionality, a little multimedia fun and solid performance.

The BlackBerry Curve will be available through UK mobile operators but unfortunately, pricing and availability date had not been finalised at the time of this writing. We will, of course, keep you updated as we get more information. Hopefully you won't have to wait too long.

Design

Simply put, it was love at first sight. Although we don't fully understand the name — it's no curvier than the BlackBerry Pearl or any of the other latest BlackBerrys — the BlackBerry Curve offers a best-of-breed design that beautifully combines a full QWERTY keyboard into a sleek and compact form factor. The silver-and-black colour scheme is standard but attractive nonetheless. We'll admit there's a slight resemblance to the Palm Treo 680 from the front, but it's much thinner and more manageable in terms of size. In fact, it's the smallest and lightest full QWERTY BlackBerry to date at just 60mm wide by 107mm deep by 15.5mm high and 111g. By comparison, the BlackBerry 8800 measures 66mm by 14mm by 114mm and weighs 134g, while the Treo 680 measures 58mm by 111mm by 21mm and weighs 157g.

With such a slim profile and small weight, the Curve is comfortable to hold and use as a phone, even though it has a wider body than regular mobiles. The outer edges also have a soft-touch finish to give it a rubbery texture, making it easier to grip. In general, the device has a solid construction, but we did notice the slightest separation between the front faceplate and the phone's body on the left side of our review sample. However, we're not concerned that this is something that will cause the phone to break.

On front of the device, there's a 2.5in. diagonal, 16-bit-colour screen with a 320 by 240 pixel resolution. The display features a light-sensing technology that automatically adjusts the backlighting of the screen as well as the keyboard, based on your environment (indoors, outdoors, a dark room and so forth). In addition, you can customise the screen with various themes and wallpapers, as well as adjust the font size, family and style. We didn't have any problems reading the contents of the screen under various lighting conditions, and both text and images were sharp and vibrant.

Like all BlackBerry models, the Curve lacks a touch-screen, but we still found the device easy to use and navigate with the provided controls. You'll find these controls beneath the screen; they include the Talk and End/power buttons, a Menu shortcut, an Escape key, and the trackball navigator. You can adjust the sensitivity of the latter under the Settings > Screen/Keyboard menu. Along the right side, there is a volume rocker and a user-defined launch button that's set to activate the camera by default. The left side holds a mini-USB port as well as another programmable convenience key, and — good news — the BlackBerry Curve is equipped with a 3.5mm headset jack, so you can plug in Walkman-style headphones.

Fortunately, the QWERTY keyboard on the BlackBerry Curve (also known as the 8300) is much improved over that of the 8800. It reverts back to the styling of past models, with more spacing between the keys for easy typing.


One of the biggest complaints about the BlackBerry 8800 was its keyboard. RIM switched up the layout and feel of the keyboard on the 8800, and many users found the buttons to be slippery and cramped. Happily, the BlackBerry Curve's full QWERTY keyboard offers a better typing experience, as it reverts back to the styling of the keys found on the BlackBerry 8700g and 8700c. This means you get more spacing between the buttons, and they're tactile and less slick.

Finally, the camera lens, flash and self-portrait mirror are on the back of the device, with a mute button is located on top. The 8300 is equipped with a microSD slot, but it's inconveniently located behind the battery. The BlackBerry Curve ships with a travel charger, a USB cable, a wired stereo headset, a belt holster and reference material.

Features

The BlackBerry Curve doesn't offer anything revolutionary in the features department (read: no Wi-Fi or 3G support), but as mentioned previously, there are some slight enhancements. First, the Curve adds a new spell-check functionality for emails. As you would expect, the feature will look for any spelling errors in your messages before they're sent and offer alternatives to misspelled words. Spell-check is also available for memos, but not for text messages. You can turn this feature on under the Options > Spell Check menu, where you can also find settings to ignore acronyms, words with numbers, add words to a custom dictionary and more. During our review period, the feature worked great, and it definitely comes in handy — especially if you're sending messages to clients, your boss and other professionals.

The BlackBerry Curve is compatible with your company's BlackBerry Enterprise Server with support for Microsoft Exchange, IBM Lotus Domino or Novell GroupWise to deliver corporate email in real time. In total, the device can support as many as 10 accounts, including POP3 or IMAP4 email accounts, and there is an email wizard on the device to guide you through the setup process. An attachment viewer is also onboard to open popular file formats, such as Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Corel WordPerfect, PDFs, JPEG, GIF and more, and we were able to receive and open all files. Other messaging options include text, multimedia and instant messaging, although the latter is limited to the proprietary BlackBerry Messenger client.

As for voice features, the Curve is a quad-band GSM phone offering a speakerphone, voice-activated dialing, smart dialing, conference calling and speed dial. In addition, the phone features advanced audio technology that's supposed to cancel out background noise and echoes and will automatically increase the volume when you're in a noisy environment (see the Performance section below for more on call quality). The BlackBerry Curve's phone book is limited only by the available memory — the SIM card holds an additional 250 contacts — with room in each entry for eight phone numbers, email addresses, work and home addresses, job title and more. For caller ID purposes, you can assign a photo to a contact as well a group category — business or personal — or one of 45 polyphonic ring tones. The Curve also supports MP3 and MIDI ring tones.

Once again, wireless options on this BlackBerry are pretty disappointing. There's no integrated Wi-Fi, nor is there 3G support. You're reduced to surfing the Web at GPRS or EDGE speeds, which aren't that slow but also aren't very fast. Also, unlike the BlackBerry 8800, the Curve doesn't include a GPS receiver. Instead, you'll have take advantage of the device's integrated Bluetooth and add this functionality via a Bluetooth GPS unit. Other supported profiles include wireless headsets, handsfree kits, dial-up networking, object exchange and A2DP for stereo Bluetooth headsets.

The BlackBerry Curve gets a camera upgrade with a 2-megapixel sensor and a 5x zoom lens.


One-upping the BlackBerry Pearl's 1.3-megapixel camera, the Curve boasts a 2-megapixel unit with a 5x zoom and a built-in flash; unfortunately, there are still no video-recording capabilities. You do get three picture sizes (1,600 by 1,200, 1,024 by 768 and 640 by 480) and three quality options (superfine, fine and normal). You can also tweak the white balance and add colour effects. That said, we were pretty disappointed by the quality of the pictures. The images had sharp definition, but the colours were off and had a grey overtone.

The Curve produced clear pictures, but the colours were off, not to mention being ruined by a grey overtone.


For more entertainment, there's also a media player onboard that supports MP3, AAC, MIDI and WAV music files plus AVI, MP4, MOV and 3GP video formats. There's 64MB of flash memory, but you should store multimedia files on a microSD card since they tend to be large. The music player is pretty rudimentary, but it displays some track information such as title, artist and album art, and you can create playlists as well as shuffle and repeat songs. You can have music play in the background while you use the device's other applications, and if there's an incoming call, the Curve will pause the music, then resume the track after you hang up. One notable improvement to the video player is the support for full-screen mode, so you can take advantage of the entire screen's real estate. The 3.5mm headset jack is also a boost, since it gives you the ability to plug in a better set of headphones or earbuds.

Finally, the BlackBerry Curve includes a number of PIM tools, such as a calendar, a tasks list, a memo pad, an alarm, a calculator and the BlackBerry Maps application. The latter is particularly useful, as it gives you maps as well as text-based driving directions — great for mobile professionals. Of course, you can always download more applications.

Performance

The quad-band (GSM 850/900/1800/1900; EDGE) BlackBerry Curve was tested in San Francisco using the Cingular service, and call quality was just OK. We had no problems hearing our callers, but there was a slight hollowness to the overall sound. In addition, our friends reported an echo on their end. As we mentioned earlier, the Curve features an audio technology that's supposed to block background noise and echoes, but we didn't really find that to be the case. We did notice, however, that the call volume automatically increased when we were talking in noisy surroundings, such as a busy street corner. It's a bit alarming at first, since you're not expecting it, but it does help to hear your callers. Speakerphone quality was good, and we were able to connect to the BlackBerry with the Logitech Mobile Traveller Bluetooth headset.

General performance was snappy. Despite the occasional 'loading' message when trying to view photos in slide-show mode, we didn't run into too many delays when opening or working in various applications. Music playback through the device's speakers was impressive for a mobile phone, with fairly full sound and decent balance, but we could have done with a little more bass. Watching video was smooth overall. Audio and video were synchronised, but as expected, there was some pixelation of the picture during action sequences. Web-browsing definitely could have used a boost from 3G speeds, as we got a little impatient waiting for pages to load. The BlackBerry Curve is rated for 4 hours of talk time and as long as 17 days of standby time. In our battery tests, we were able to get 8.5 hours of talk time on a single charge. According to FCC radiation tests, the BlackBerry 8300 has a digital SAR rating of 1.51 watts per kilogram.

 

Specifications

Camera
Flash Yes
Video recording No
Max still image size 1600x1200 pixels
Camera resolution 2 megapixels
Zoom 5 x
Connectivity / expansion
Docking cradle No
Wired connections USB
Wireless PAN Bluetooth 2.0+EDR
Expansion slot microSD
Display
Second (external) screen No
Display type TFT
Display size 2.5 in
Native resolution 320x240 pixels
Colour depth 16 bits
General
Built-in devices camera
Form factor candy bar
Dimensions (W x H x D) 60x15.5x107 mm
Weight 111 g
Memory
Memory expansion MicroSD
On-board memory 64 MB
Messaging & data
Messaging services supported SMS, MMS
Internet browser Yes
Email client Yes
Email protocols supported POP3, IMAP4
Java Yes
Miscellaneous
Accessories travel charger, USB cable, wired stereo headset, belt holster, reference material
Networks
2G GSM 850, GSM 900, GSM 1800, GSM 1900
2.5G GPRS, EDGE
OS & software
Operating system RIM OS
Software included BlackBerry Maps, Multi-Media Player, Wireless Email, Organiser, Browser
Synchronisation software yes
Desktop software BlackBerry Desktop
Phone
Ringtones real music
Vibrating alert Yes
Built-in phonebook Yes
Calendar Yes
Alarm clock Yes
Speakerphone Yes
Voice dialling Yes
Voice recording Yes
Power
Battery type Li-ion
Talk time 4 h
Standby time 408 h
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