Monday, 18 March 2013

5 THINGS YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT THE NEW BLACKBERRY: Z10

BlackBerry has completely reinvented itself with a brand-new operating system and two killer-looking new phones. Here's what you need to know about them.

The Blackberry Z10 Smartphone is mostly referred to as Zee Ten or Zed Ten in the English-speaking countries around the world.

1. BlackBerry is now called BlackBerry. The company used to be called Research in Motion, or RIM, which most people did not know and was confusing. Now it's just BlackBerry. 

2. There are two new phones, running one new operating system. The operating system is called BlackBerry 10, and it's completely new--has basically nothing in common with any old BlackBerry system besides a few features (BBM is still around). The first phone, probably the flagship, is the Z10, an all-touchscreen device with a 4.2-inch, very high-resolution screen (at 356 pixels-per-inch, it should have the clarity of the iPhone or any high-end Android phone), a dual-core processor, and all the sensors you'd expect. It'll have 16GB of storage built-in, though you can expand that with a microSD card. Interestingly, it has only one button, a power/hold trigger on the top of the phone--you navigate with taps and gestures rather than buttons. 

The other phone is the Q10, which looks more like a typical BlackBerry--meaning, it has a hardware keyboard. We don't know much about it, really; we know it also has a dual-core processor, that the screen is a 3.1-inch AMOLED (which should give it nice vivid colors), that the keyboard is the widest BlackBerry keyboard ever, that the battery is the biggest BlackBerry battery ever, and that it has 4G. That's about it!

3. BlackBerry 10 is completely new, making BlackBerry the latest in a long line of historically strong companies to completely toss out their smartphone platform in order to compete with iOS and Android. And it looks pretty nice! It has a few key ideas that inform the way you use the phones. The first is gestures. There's no home button at all: you swipe up from the bottom to access your "home screen," such as it is. That'll give you access to your eight most recently used apps, your favorite apps, and a list of all apps. 

BlackBerry 10 also groups all of your messages together. And that means all of your messages. Like, email, sure, but all of your email accounts, plus text messages, plus BlackBerry Messages, plus Twitter and Facebook and Foursquare and lord knows what else. It's an interesting idea, having a completely unified inbox--I imagine whether that's a better system will depend on the particular user. It's called BlackBerry Hub.

4. TimeShift is this new camera thing BlackBerry is very excited about. It's basically a burst mode: instead of taking one picture, the camera will take a whole bunch of pictures, and then you can pick which frame is the best/most flattering shot. Samsung has about 16 different apps that do variations of this, but the interface (a little ring that you scroll around) seems nice.

5. It has lots of apps! BlackBerry says it'll have 70,000 at launch, but the dirty secret about big numbers like that is that 99.9% of all apps are garbage that nobody uses. That said, BlackBerry does have some key ones lined up: Facebook, Twitter, Angry Birds, Rdio, Foursquare, LinkedIn, Evernote, that kind of thing. But it doesn't have Instagram or Snapchat or Vine, and its game selection will probably be limited.

Should you buy the BlackBerry Z10? This is a question you alone can answer. If you want the best BlackBerry out right now, it is the Z10. Go ahead and get yourself one. If you want a bit of fresh air, or want to explore the world of BlackBerry for the first time, come on board and get yourself the Z10. If you are on Android or iOS, the Z10 may not blow your mind completely as there are still some apps that haven’t made it there yet. If managing, editing, sharing of documents is your thing and you are always doing emails on the fly, the Z10 will come in handy.

All in all you have reasons to be optimistic about BlackBerry 10, because any competition is good competition, and first reactions from the Z10 users seem very positive. You can be hopeful to get a full review soon as I wish to dive into the hardware and software and see how it feels when it is used on a daily basis.

Meanwhile, I expect BlackBerry to evolve the BlackBerry 10 quickly based on the feedback that the early adopters are supplying and hopefully they will be back in the game.

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