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BlackBerry
Curve 8310
The New Blackberry Curve 8310, The Most Functional
BlackBerry Ever!
The next-generation Curve has
arrived, now with built-in support for Telenav Maps and Telenav GPS
navigator! The BlackBerry Curve 8310 is the smallest, lightest BlackBerry
ever with a QWERTY keyboard. It features clean lines, curved edges, and
easy-to-use trackball navigation. Go global, the Curve has everything
you ever needed or wanted in a BlackBerry. Read our
Blackberry Curve 8310 Review below.
eAccess can ship your BlackBerry order on the very same day from our
in-house inventory. Click around our site to find what you need or contact
us at 1-847-991-7190 for further details about our devices and Blackberry
BlackBerry 8310 Specifications:
Memory: 64 MB flash + MicrSD Slot
Display: Full-color 320x240 light sensing display
Battery Life: 4 hours talk time, 17 days standby
Radio: Quad-band: 850, 900, 1800, 1900 & EDGE
Bluetooth Embeded: Yes
GPS:
Yes
Music Player: Yes
Size: 4.2 x 2.4 x 0.6 inches
Weight: 3.9 oz
Included Accessories: USB Charging Cable,
Travel Charger, Holster, Headset, Battery
Features:
BlackBerry Maps
GPS
Camera - 2 Mega Pixel
Media Player
Corporate Data Access
Wireless Email
Organizer
Wireless Calendar
Phone
SMS
MMS
Wireless Internet
The
BlackBerry Curve Wireless Handheld gives you the flexibility of
Email, phone, browser, SMS and organizer applications in a single,
integrated handheld! The BlackBerry Curve 8310 series is fully compatible with all
version of the BlackBerry Enterprise Server as well as many POP3, IMAP and
Webmail accounts. Noteworthy New features for the BlackBerry Curve are:
expandable memory, media player, Polyphonic and MP3 ringtones, 64MB of memory, a bright high-resolution screen and
Quad-Band/EDGE support. For a full functionality demo, visit our demo center
HERE.
Carrier International Coverage Information:
AT&T (Quad-Band+
EDGE BlackBerry Curve):
Anguilla, Antigua & Barbuda, Argentina, Australia, Austria, Barbados,
Belgium, Bermuda, Brazil, Canada, Cayman Islands, Chile, Colombia, Czech
Republic, Denmark, Dominica (Commonwealth of), Dominican Republic,
Estonia, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Grenada, Hong Kong, Hungary,
Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Japan, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania,
Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, Montserrat, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway,
Palestinian Authority, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Russia, Serbia &
Montenegro, Singapore, Slovak Republic, South Africa, Spain, St Kitts &
Nevis, St Lucia, St Vincent & the Grenadines, Sweden, Switzerland,
Taiwan, Thailand, Turkey, Turks & Caicos Islands, Ukraine, United Arab
Emirates, United Kingdom, Venezuela, Vietnam
(Typical
Cingular roaming rates at $1.29/min voice, $.0195/KB)
BlackBerry Curve Review:
When it comes to BlackBerrys, you have the really tiny
one, the one with GPS, and now you can add to that list the one that just
rocks. And we're not just talking about the Curve's music player or fully
integrated stereo Bluetooth. RIM's latest fun-loving smart phone boasts a
sharp two-megapixel camera and a much-improved multimedia software package
for taking your favorite songs, pictures, and videos to go--all without
sacrificing the long battery life that's made BlackBerry the device of
choice for e-mail addicts.
Just Right Design
It sports the kind of sleek design that will make BlackBerry Pearl owners
say "D'oh!" The Curve is just as slim as the Pearl (0.6 inches), and at 3.9
ounces it's only 0.7 ounces heavier. It slips easily into a pocket, no geeky
hip holster required. Granted, at first glance this device doesn't seem as
deserving of an iconic name as the Pearl, but the Curve's liquid-silver
finish with chrome accents and rounded edges make it an attractive
alternative to the Samsung BlackJack. More important, RIM managed to squeeze
in a full-sized backlit keyboard, one that makes the Curve noticeably wider
than but also much more reliable than the Pearl, whose not-so-SureType
keyboard doesn't always accurately guess the word you're trying to peck. In
just a few minutes we were typing e-mails and entering Web addresses at a
brisk pace, thanks to the Curve's well-spaced layout. Just like the
Pearl and the
8800, the Curve has a
trackball for simple menu navigation.
The 2.5-inch, 320 x 240-pixel display did a superb job rendering everything
from Web pages and maps to photos and videos. The rest of the design is
pretty straightforward. A standard 3.5mm stereo jack, a USB port, and a
push-to-talk key line the left side of the Curve, and the volume buttons and
camera-launch key are on the right side. The top of the device houses the
Mute button. We wish the microSD Card slot weren't located beneath the
battery, but chances are you won't be removing your card very often; the
Curve's mass-storage mode enables easy drag-and-drop file transfers.
Sharp Camera, Smarter Media Software
What separates this BlackBerry from the Pearl and the 8800 is its robust
multimedia capabilities. The Curve's 2-MP camera takes pictures good enough
for 4 x 6-inch prints. Everything from a photo of a fountain in Bryant Park
to a portrait of two children was highly detailed and richly saturated. We
like the fast shutter speed, and a built-in flash allowed the Curve to take
decent close-ups in dimly lit rooms. The Curve's inability to record video
is a bummer, however.
The robust Desktop Media Manager software is powered by Roxio's Easy Media
Creator. A split-screen interface makes dragging and dropping files to the
Curve (and from the Curve to your desktop) a cinch. If you want to take some
videos to go, the program will attempt to convert all sorts of files to
MPEG-4, including AVI, DivX, WMV, and Xvid, so long as your PC has the right
codecs loaded. Media Manager can also be used to automatically monitor
certain folders for new media files, create music playlists, and edit
photos.
Desktop Media Manager did a good job transferring MPEG-4 footage captured
with our Sanyo HD1 camcorder and a 68MB WMV clip downloaded from Microsoft's
site. But the softare had a little trouble with a five-minute MPEG-4 clip
ripped from a DVD, as the audio wasn't in sync with the video when we played
it back on the Curve. Then we tried a large AVI file of a "Heroes" TV
episode; the Curve was able to play the audio but not the video. (Roxio
claims that a successful conversion depends greatly on how a file is
encoded, so be sure that a video file can play within Desktop Media Manager
before you bother transferring it.) Music files transferred without a hitch,
but you have to add album art manually by editing the audio tags.
Media playback on the Curve was generally smooth, and the device supports a
wide range of audio (AAC, MP3, WMA) and video (MPEG-4, H.263, WMV) files
natively. The device's speaker puts out a decent amount of volume, but we
highly recommend pairing this smart phone with a Bluetooth stereo headset.
We enjoyed superb audio quality via the Curve's Bluetooth 2.0 connection
when we used the Motorola HT820. Another benefit of stereo Bluetooth is that
you can remotely skip tracks with a simple press of the Fast-Forward button
on a headset, as opposed to the two-step process of hitting the Menu key and
then selecting Next Track on the Curve. The device also supports AT&T Music
services streaming XM radio ($9.99 per month), but the application was not
yet activated during our testing.
Long-Distance Sprinter
Despite its multimedia prowess, e-mail is this (and every) BlackBerry's
killer app. We had no problems setting up a Gmail account using the setup
wizard (the device supports ten personal and corporate accounts), and we
appreciated the new spell-checker function, complete with a customizable
dictionary. Similar to the
BlackBerry Pearl and
BlackBerry 8800, the
BlackBerry Curve lets you view Word,
Excel, PDF, and JPEG attachments. Overall performance was just as fast as
other BlackBerrys; the only time the Curve slowed down a bit was when we
streamed music over Bluetooth while trying to surf the Web.
Speaking of which, the Curve's Web-browsing performance was pretty snappy
over its EDGE connection. (Yes, without HSDPA or Wi-Fi.) We could start
reading most sites within 7 to 10 seconds, and images filled in 10 to 20
seconds later. Call quality was generally good, but as with the
8800, we wish we could get
more volume out of the Curve's earpiece. More disconcerting were the two
occasions when we couldn't get through to the number dialed on the first
try. On the plus side, the Curve delivered excellent endurance on our tests,
with the battery lasting four days with periodic use. You get only four
straight hours of talk time versus five for the
8800, but that's still
half an hour more than the
Pearl.
The Curve's biggest competition isn't other BlackBerrys but the
Samsung BlackJack. The
BlackJack's 3G data connection is only a moderate advantage because of
Windows Mobile's slower browser, but its built-in camcorder and support for
Cingular Video are definite pluses. On the other hand, the Curve offers a
better e-mail experience, a sharper camera, and much longer battery life.
Despite a few drawbacks, this is the best BlackBerry--and one of the most
well-rounded smart phones--money can buy.
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