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BlackBerry Curve 8320 Phone Pale Gold T Mobile

June 25th, 2009 Cellphone Review No comments

BlackBerry Curve 8320 Phone Pale Gold T Mobile




Adding a fashionable touch to Research in Motion’s formidable arsenal of telephonic, PIM, and media tools, the BlackBerry 8320 Curve for T-Mobile is also the smallest, lightest BlackBerry phone that includes a full QWERTY keyboard. This amalgam of the svelte BlackBerry Pearl and the more business-oriented 8800 combines RIM’s long-valued corporate email and messaging platform with a host of advanced multimedia features, including a 2-megapixel camera and stereo Bluetooth (for listening to music via wireless headphones). In addition to its quad-band GSM and EDGE connectivity, it also offers Wi-Fi connectivity for access to the Internet and email as well as access to T-Mobile’s Hotspot @Home service. This version comes in pale gold, but it’s also available in titanium.

The Curve’s full QWERTY keyboard and the innovative trackball navigation system (placed above the keyboard) makes accessing your data and writing email a breeze..

The 2-megapixel camera makes it easy to capture pictures to send via email or upload to your online photo collection.

T-Mobile Service Options
With T-Mobile HotSpot @Home service, you’ll effortlessly transition between Wi-Fi calling and T-Mobile’s wireless network while you talk. You can get unlimited nationwide calls over Wi-Fi–at home via your wireless router or at any U.S. T-Mobile HotSpot. You can also use the HotSpot @Home service via most open, or unsecured, wireless routers, as well as any secured wireless router for which you have access to the password from the owner. This phone is compatible with the 802.11b/g Wi-Fi standard as well as the following wireless security protocols: WEP, WPA (TKIP), WPA2 (AES-CCMP), LEAP, PEAP, EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, EAP-FAST, EAP-SIM, EAP-AKA. Whenever you’re not using a Wi-Fi network, the Curve works just like a regular mobile phone, using your Whenever Minutes under your T-Mobile voice plan.

This phone also includes compatibility with T-Mobile’s myFaves service, which allows you to call up to five of your most common contacts–on any network, even landlines–without using any of your minutes. Learn more about myFaves from T-Mobile.

Staying Connected
With BlackBerry’s push email technology, your email will find you without having to initiate a connection. BlackBerry devices are designed to remain on and continuously connected to the wireless network, notifying you as new email arrives. In addition to the text, you can also receive and view attachments in a wide range of popular file formats, including Microsoft Office, Corel WordPerfect, and Adobe PDF.

Browse the web with the integrated, full-featured browser, which quickly and efficiently displays HTML pages as well as enables you to set up RSS feeds to stay connected to up-to-the-minute news and blog posts. And keep up with your contacts using a variety of instant message (IM) networks, including the integrated Blackberry Messenger as well as downloadable clients for Google Talk, Yahoo! Messenger, and Lotus Sametime.

For corporate users, the Curve delivers all the enterprise email and messaging capabilities you’ve come to expect. It’s supported on BlackBerry Internet Service, giving you access to up to 10 work or personal email accounts (including most popular ISP email accounts), as well as BlackBerry Enterprise Server, enabling advanced security and IT administration within IBM Lotus Domino, Microsoft Exchange and Novell GroupWise environments.

Phone Features

Click for larger view.

The Curve is fashioned in a liquid silver finish with chrome highlights and subtly curving corners. Measuring 4.2 x 2.4 inches, the Curve is just as slim as the Pearl (0.6 inches) and weighs in at 3.9 ounces–just 0.7 ounces heavier than its predecessor. It features a bright 2.5-inch color TFT screen that provides 65,000 colors and a 320 x 240-pixel resolution, and it includes a light-sensing feature that automatically adjusts backlighting for indoor, outdoor and dark environments. Like the BlackBerry 8800, the Curve includes a trackball navigation system located on the top of the QWERTY keypad, and it also features an integrated spell checker with a customizable dictionary to help maintain accuracy while on the go. It has 64 MB of internal ROM memory, and is expandable using MicroSD memory cards. The battery provides up to 4 hours (240 minutes) of talk time and up to 17 days (408 hours) of standby time.

You can snap vivid photos (though no video) using the 2-megapixel camera on the back of the Curve, which also features a 5x digital zoom, built-in flash, self-portrait mirror and full screen viewfinder. It can capture images in up to three picture quality and size resolutions that can be shared instantly by email, MMS or BlackBerry Messenger, or even uploaded to your Flickr account with the Yahoo! Go service. Photos can also be immediately set as a unique caller ID or Home Screen image. You can edit photos and create albums within the Curve using the PhotoSuite application. Pictures can be cropped, rotated and straightened, and flaws can be fixed by removing redeye or changing the brightness, contrast, and saturation levels.

Listen to your favorite music and watch downloaded videos using the included stereo headset, or use an optional wireless headphone thanks to the Curve’s support for the Bluetooth stereo audio profile (A2DP/AVRCP). The Curve is compatible with a wide variety of file formats, including MP3, WMA and AAC/AAC+/eAAC+ audio and WMV, MPEG4 and H.263 video. Dedicated volume controls are conveniently located on the side of the handset.

With the Voice-Activated Dialing (VAD) feature, you can initiate a call just by telling the Curve who to call from your contact list–either via the integrated speakerphone or using an optional Bluetooth wireless headset. Other advanced phone features include advanced sound technology that cancels out background noise and echo, dedicated volume and mute keys, and the ability to customize the Curve with polyphonic and MP3 ringtones.

Vital Statistics
The Blackberry Curve 8320 weighs 3.92 ounces and measures 4.2 x 2.4 x 0.6 inches. Its lithium-ion battery is rated at up to 4 hours of talk time, and up to 408 hours (17 days) of digital standby time. It runs on the 850/900/1800/1900 GSM/GPRS/EDGE frequencies.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Blackberry Curve 8320 T-Mobile – Loving it….. still!!!!!,
This is by far the coolest phone I’ve had! I love the ease of set up – I have yet to even glance at the manual. Before I knew it, I was surfing the internet and dowloading Google Maps (a must have for every blackberry user – the satellite views are amazing)! Camera is the best I’ve seen on any cellphone thus far. With a memory card you could load up to 2GB (unsure if a larger card will work) of music, ringtones, videos, and pictures. The screen is beautiful! Very impressive Blackberry.

The only negative aspect that I could find, was the fact that T-Mobile’s version does not have GPS (AT&T does). But this flaw can easily be overcome by buying an optional portable GPS receiver that costs anywhere from $45 – 100 bucks.

Overall – this is one awesome phone!

4 Stars Powerful,Great Quality/Design,not easy to configure
(Note: long review)

I was shopping for a phone (not a PDA) when I decided to buy the Blackberry Curve 8320. My top priorities were:

* to eliminate my need for an office landline by using an inexpensive cell phone plan and a phone with maximum coverage options

* great call quality

* ease of use and configuration

* good headset features that would allow me to easily talk while using my computer

Less important but desirable were:

* Bluetooth so I could occasionally use my Garmin Nuvi 660 for hands free phone use and POI dialing.

* a media player (but not if it got in the way of phone use)

The service provider was more important than the phone, and that led me to T-mobile, which offers good coverage in my area, the best prices, great service, and Hotspot@home which increases coverage to anywhere with open WiFi.

So my perspective is that of a solo consultant who chose a Blackberry Curve over other, less complex, T-mobile Hotspot@home compatible phones (the other choices were Nokia 6086, Samsung Katalyst, and Samsung t409).

Pros:

Call quality when using included headset (and T-mobile network) is the best I’ve ever experienced with any kind of phone, cell or otherwise.

3.5mm jack means many options for headsets of any type/quality/price.

Very stable: The PDA and media functions don’t crash the phone or get in the way of phone use. So this model works for those who want a phone first and foremost without any compromises (though there are a couple minor quirks mentioned below).

Having WiFi as an option is great, though I don’t need it at home or at my office thanks to good T-mobile reception. I want this option not in order access the web or to save money (1000 minutes per month is plenty for me), but rather to increase call quality in situations where the network signal is weak or not present.

Has many physical design features that are very well thought out: user assignable buttons, a surprisingly usable keyboard despite the tiny size, a standby mode button (prevents accidental key presses) – all in an attractive yet solid form factor – and there are many accessories available to augment use of the phone. The more I use it, the more impressed I am with the physical design.

Volume control is superb – can go up loud enough to be able to use in very noisy conditions – and if there is a risk of ear damage from excessive volume, a warning pops up.

Even if you never send emails from the phone, having a well designed keyboard makes for a better phone: It makes dialing contacts fast, means 26 speed dial keys (letters are easier to remember than numbers), and typing in a new contact is faster than with numeric keypad phones.

The address book is very nicely integrated with the phone in a way that makes it fast and easy to dial contacts even if they are not on speed dial – just dial the first couple letters of anyone’s first or last name and you’ll then be able to use track ball to pick out the contact. It was easy to install and use the software on my computer that enabled me to transfer my 150 contacts from MS Outlook.

The “Send Voice Note” feature lets me send myself (or anyone) a voice note, usually in less than 10 seconds. Never imagined wanting such a feature but now that I have it I love to use it to send myself reminders or cash expense notes for later entry into Quicken.

Battery life is good if used primarily as a phone.

In March, 2008, the phone cost only fifty (after rebate) when purchased with a 2 year contract commitment through Amazon. This was relevant as the other phone I considered was the Nokia 6086 – which would have been free through the same source. Purchased direct from T-mobile the 8320 costs two hundred additional which was a big enough difference that I didn’t even consider the 8320 at first. Even though I wasn’t shopping for a PDA, the modest extra cost was well worth it for a couple of nonPDA features – and I get to see for a modest cost if using as a PDA makes sense for me.

T-mobile’s pricing plans are the least expensive available for national service plans – the 39.99/month for 1000 anytime minutes and unlimited weekends/nights is just what I need. For another 9.99/month I got BB E-mail, as required by the Amazon offer. The additional cost of 15 cents per MMS message is fine if you send just a few MMS each month like me.

T-mobile’s customer service is the best I’ve ever experienced from a phone company.

Blackberries are popular so that means lots of options for support and Accessories, and integration with other systems. For example, users of Gmail and Google Apps will like that Google has already provided some integration tools and integration is likely to greatly improve by the end of the year.

Cons:

Complexity of interface and scattered options/help screens leads to many hours of figuring out how to configure the phone – or finding out something can’t be done. Discovering some of the answers required use of online forums or calls to T-mobile.

The default settings were a bit different from typical cell phone settings. It is time consuming and tedious to configure the 8320 to act like a normal cell phone (though you can do it in less than half an hour with a new phone once you finish learning where all the settings are). I wish I had discovered sooner that the majority of changes a basic user would want to make are buried in two applications if you study them carefully:

Profiles/Advanced/Normal/Phone and Options/Screen/Keyboard.

Some things that are standard on most phones cannot be done (or in some cases additional effort is required to download/install an application).

Examples of missing standard phone functions are:

1) cannot ring/vibrate simultaneously

2) no sustained flashing LED when there’s a voice mail (it does for a few minutes but then it stops – so if you happen to miss a call and not be near your phone for the next 15 minutes, you won’t know you got a call unless you look at the screen).

When not using the headset, your ear must be in the proper place for good quality. If your natural inclination is to place your ear close to the phone and just above it, you’ll hear a low level hiss from the speaker (true with both phone or media player use). This is minor if you learn to hold the phone differently and/or primarily use with headset.

A little uncomfortable to hold this wide phone for calls of more than a few Minutes. Avoid this phone if you have small hands and/or plan to spend many hours per week using as a phone without headset.

Too little memory (or is it bad memory management?). I am not (nor do I want to become) a power user but yet will need to do a battery pull every few weeks (Update: there is a way to do a soft reboot. Alt-Right Shift-Delete). It starts with around 21MB free but just checking out the various applications and settings and using the media player without even enabling email dropped it to 16MB. A battery pull bumped it back up to 21MB. With memory so cheap it seems bizarre that it comes with so little.

Having expandable SD memory is great but the Curve is very slow and sometimes awkward in how it accesses the SD memory. For example, for music albums with many short tracks, it can take over 30 seconds to open the album and begin to play music when loaded first time. It is also slow to display the names of albums from the SD card after each time the phone connects to a computer.

Having WiFi accessibility is great but in many cases requires changes to the router configuration. Would rather this worked with any open router without having to reconfigure – or if reconfiguration is required, then make it easy to do. On the bright side, T-mobile offers pre-configured routers for $50 for those who don’t want to go through the reconfiguration hassle. Would like it even better if they sold a portable gadget that simply took any open WiFi signal and converted it into a format that works fine with my phone.

Having Bluetooth compatibility with my Garmin 660 is nice but if not for a terrific post on the blackberryforums.com web site by ggraves, I’m not sure I ever would have been able to get it working properly. Garmin tech support did not know what needed to be done to get the 660 working with the Blackberry Curve. Connecting properly should not be so complicated or required making a change to the Garmin operating system.

It’s a finger controlled PDA. It is time consuming to figure out how to work all the functions of the device and this can be a distraction from getting work done. This has happened to me, as I am one of those people who gets sucked into checking out the capabilities of a new electronic gadget.

I owned one of the first Palm-based PDA cell phones and experienced the same thing – I wasted more time trying to figure things out then I saved by being able to browse or have my contacts on a phone instead of on a printout (and struggled to learn the custom alphabet). I turned away from PDA phones after that experience and figured I’d wait until intelligent voice interfaces were standard for these things but here I am wasting time again.

I’ll gladly ditch this phone the year an affordable, intelligent, voice controlled cell phone comes out.

The process for buying this phone through Amazon was unwieldy – was not able to get hotspot@home for Amazon and am not able to add it for 6 months without incurring a penalty (so says an Amazon rep – T-mobile reps say you can add hotspot@home without penalty but I don’t want it enough to risk a $250 penalty). When I checked the status of my phone order on Amazon, it wanted me to revise it but didn’t tell me how – so I called a phone rep to be told that I didn’t need to revise it. And I was supposed to get free 2-day shipping but got charged shipping because I bought a microSD card along with the order. Also unclear who to contact – Amazon or T-mobile – about certain issues – and one issue wasted a bit of my time because of that. If $200 doesn’t matter to you, I would recommend buying from T-mobile for $249 instead of $49 from Amazon to get the best possible customer service and the flexibility to change plans at will.

Summary:

In sum – once setup and customization is complete, it’s a very good phone, but learning how to set it up and use the rich feature set to best advantage takes too long, and managing memory is a nuisance. This has the feel of an “early adopter” type of devise that requires a certain level of dedication to harness all the power. This may be a non-issue if the IT department of your employer sets up the phone for you and helps get you started.

Buying it from Amazon turned out to be enough of a hassle that I question whether it was worth saving $200.

Now that I’ve bought the phone and spent the time learning how to best use it, I’ll stick with it. But it would have worked out much better for me if the defaults were very similar to a regular cell phone – or it had a way to easily make it like a regular cell phone (perhaps the setup up process could have offered three choices like – what kind of user will you be – simple phone user, moderate communicator, power user – and then it configures with default settings that make the most sense for that type of user).

It was tough to choose between the Blackberry Curve 8320 and the Nokia 6086, but the deciding factor turned out to be the 3.5mm jack (I didn’t like the two Samsung models because I find real keys easier to use than membrane keys).

The Nokia 6086 had equivalent call quality (with no hiss) in my 5 minute in-store test. If it had including a 3.5mm jack and identical bundled headset, then that probably would have been a better choice for me. But I am satisfied with the 8320 and will probably stick with it for years – and I am using functions (some useful, some fun) that are not available on the 6086. I just hope I have the discipline to use it as a phone, not a time draining toy.

5 Stars Real Estate Must Have!
This phone was the answer to almost all of my needs! Being in the Real Estate Industry, I rely on always being available…..and when I cannot be available I must still be in contact with the working world. This phone lets me keep up on employees and others I work with while I am out. Responding to clients needs is very simple and they appreciate me being able to get a hold of them and to respond to requests in minutes! Taking a few hours off to golf and not feeling guilty! I am literally still in the office with full access to all of my documents, contacts, tasks, calendars and more!

The camera on this is great. Not close to a Nikon and definitely would not use for property photos for advertising, but driving by a smoking deal and being able to send the mls info and some “decent” quality pictures to a client to get the “OK” is priceless.

For those whom have primarily EMAIL needs, do not even try others. Blackberry has nailed it as they always have. I have been through countless Blackjacks, Dash’s, Wizards, Pocket Pc’s, Treo’s and others and no one can compare to Blackberry’s instant email push. Don’t hesitate; the only decision is what blackberry you want.

3 Stars Blackberry vs. Treo
Pros of Blackberry: WiFi usage. My old phone (Treo 600 from Sprint) couldn’t pick up cell reception in my apartment. With Blackberry Curve 8820 I can talk all I want at home. (I’m using my WiFi connection but still get charged for cell minutes; you don’t need to buy the WiFi router, it’ll detect any WiFi in your neighborhood.)

Cons: I miss my Treo! The Treo seemed more user friendly. Some things I miss on my Treo: 1) instant ringer off with button on top of phone. With the Blackberry, you have to go in the interface and select ringer off. This can be a pain if you’re in the movie theater and at the last moment have to turn your ringer or phone off. 2) The Treo had a vibrate and ring option. With the BB, you can only choose vibrate or sound. There is no dual function. 3) Ring tones. Both phones come with ring tones but in the Treo, you could select it from the menu when you were in the phone book interface. With the BB, you can select volume only. The ring tones aren’t in the preferences either. Its hidden down deep in the menu after about 6 click strokes. 4) Treo has touchscreen interface, BB does not. The touchscreen is a real nice option when you’re fed up with the BB trackball. 5) The Treo comes with a nice user manual about 100 pages. The BB comes with a 1 page folding user guide. You have to go find the manual elsewhere (I use TMobile’s BB manual online ~ so that means I have to be connected to the internet to figure something out. 6) Synching. Treo has the nice Desktop software so if you have to make massive revisions or want to copy something from the internet straight to your Palm, you can do it via the Palm Desktop software. The BB software is just a synch manager. Its not a real desktop software. You HAVE to use a third party software such at Outlook (doesn’t work with Outlook express), Yahoo, Google, or other. Since I’m a student and don’t have access (nor money) to buy the Microsoft office suite, I’ve had a heck of a time synching my BB to Yahoo and its a pain to have to do everything in Yahoo (I miss the Palm Desktop software because it was like the Palm but on your desktop so the learning curve was low).

The BB is great for business professionals who have Outlook and BB has push technology so you can read up to 10 email accounts on your BB. This is a cool function (but quickly gets out of hand because now your interface has email, SMS, and in/outgoing call logs). You can set it show it only shows up one or the other but then you’ve just paid for push technology (about $30) and now aren’t using it.

Too bad Palm isn’t catching up as fast as BB because I think its more user friendly.

However, once you get use to digging in the menu options in the BB, its not too bad. PS – another note on the sparse user manual in the BB, you have to play around with the menu and you’ll find alot of undocumented shortcuts. I wish they would just document these up front!

2 Stars defective software
I bought the blackberry in December 2007. Within a month, there were problems with memory, recalling numbers, keypad etc.

In March, I spent much time with T-Mobile technical support to fix these issues. They suggested I needed a memory card even though I was emailing very little and was not downloading applications, data … I have been erasing all calls, texts etc every day since. The problems have continued.

It is now June 1, 2008, I am demanding that T-Mobile replace an obvious defective handset and I am being met with resistance. They want me to buy a memory card and I am refusing. ( Two other family members have this same Curve and use it to collect data much more than I do and have had not issues)

I would suggest to all buyuers to go with another carrier to avoid the problems I am having.

Buy/More Info

BlackBerry Curve 8320 Phone Sunset T Mobile

June 23rd, 2009 Cellphone Review No comments

BlackBerry Curve 8320 Phone Sunset T Mobile




Adding a fashionable touch to Research in Motion’s formidable arsenal of telephonic, PIM, and media tools, the BlackBerry 8320 Curve for T-Mobile is also the smallest, lightest BlackBerry phone that includes a full QWERTY keyboard. This amalgam of the svelte BlackBerry Pearl and the more business-oriented 8800 combines RIM’s long-valued corporate email and messaging platform with a host of advanced multimedia features, including a 2-megapixel camera and stereo Bluetooth (for listening to music via wireless headphones). In addition to its quad-band GSM and EDGE connectivity, it also offers Wi-Fi connectivity for access to the Internet and email as well as access to T-Mobile’s Hotspot @Home service.

The Curve’s full QWERTY keyboard and the innovative trackball navigation system (placed above the keyboard) makes accessing your data and writing email a breeze.

The 2-megapixel camera makes it easy to capture pictures to send via email or upload to your online photo collection.

Click for larger view.

T-Mobile Service Options
With T-Mobile HotSpot @Home service, you’ll effortlessly transition between Wi-Fi calling and T-Mobile’s wireless network while you talk. You can get unlimited nationwide calls over Wi-Fi–at home via your wireless router or at any U.S. T-Mobile HotSpot. You can also use the HotSpot @Home service via most open, or unsecured, wireless routers, as well as any secured wireless router for which you have access to the password from the owner. This phone is compatible with the 802.11b/g Wi-Fi standard as well as the following wireless security protocols: WEP, WPA (TKIP), WPA2 (AES-CCMP), LEAP, PEAP, EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, EAP-FAST, EAP-SIM, EAP-AKA. Whenever you’re not using a Wi-Fi network, the Curve works just like a regular mobile phone, using your Whenever Minutes under your T-Mobile voice plan.

This phone also includes compatibility with T-Mobile’s myFaves service, which allows you to call up to five of your most common contacts–on any network, even landlines–without using any of your minutes. Learn more about myFaves from T-Mobile.

Staying Connected
With BlackBerry’s push email technology, your email will find you without having to initiate a connection. BlackBerry devices are designed to remain on and continuously connected to the wireless network, notifying you as new email arrives. In addition to the text, you can also receive and view attachments in a wide range of popular file formats, including Microsoft Office, Corel WordPerfect, and Adobe PDF.

Browse the web with the integrated, full-featured browser, which quickly and efficiently displays HTML pages as well as enables you to set up RSS feeds to stay connected to up-to-the-minute news and blog posts. And keep up with your contacts using a variety of instant message (IM) networks, including the integrated Blackberry Messenger as well as downloadable clients for Google Talk, Yahoo! Messenger, and Lotus Sametime.

For corporate users, the Curve delivers all the enterprise email and messaging capabilities you’ve come to expect. It’s supported on BlackBerry Internet Service, giving you access to up to 10 work or personal email accounts (including most popular ISP email accounts), as well as BlackBerry Enterprise Server, enabling advanced security and IT administration within IBM Lotus Domino, Microsoft Exchange and Novell GroupWise environments.

Phone Features
The Curve is fashioned with subtly curving corners and chrome highlights. Measuring 4.2 x 2.4 inches, the Curve is just as slim as the Pearl (0.6 inches) and weighs in at 3.9 ounces–just 0.7 ounces heavier than its predecessor. It features a bright 2.5-inch color TFT screen that provides 65,000 colors and a 320 x 240-pixel resolution, and it includes a light-sensing feature that automatically adjusts backlighting for indoor, outdoor and dark environments. Like the BlackBerry 8800, the Curve includes a trackball navigation system located on the top of the QWERTY keypad, and it also features an integrated spell checker with a customizable dictionary to help maintain accuracy while on the go. It has 64 MB of internal ROM memory, and is expandable using MicroSD memory cards. The battery provides up to 4 hours (240 minutes) of talk time and up to 17 days (408 hours) of standby time.

You can snap vivid photos (though no video) using the 2-megapixel camera on the back of the Curve, which also features a 5x digital zoom, built-in flash, self-portrait mirror and full screen viewfinder. It can capture images in up to three picture quality and size resolutions that can be shared instantly by email, MMS or BlackBerry Messenger, or even uploaded to your Flickr account with the Yahoo! Go service. Photos can also be immediately set as a unique caller ID or Home Screen image. You can edit photos and create albums within the Curve using the PhotoSuite application. Pictures can be cropped, rotated and straightened, and flaws can be fixed by removing redeye or changing the brightness, contrast, and saturation levels.

Listen to your favorite music and watch downloaded videos using the included stereo headset, or use an optional wireless headphone thanks to the Curve’s support for the Bluetooth stereo audio profile (A2DP/AVRCP). The Curve is compatible with a wide variety of file formats, including MP3, WMA and AAC/AAC+/eAAC+ audio and WMV, MPEG4 and H.263 video. Dedicated volume controls are conveniently located on the side of the handset.

With the Voice-Activated Dialing (VAD) feature, you can initiate a call just by telling the Curve who to call from your contact list–either via the integrated speakerphone or using an optional Bluetooth wireless headset. Other advanced phone features include advanced sound technology that cancels out background noise and echo, dedicated volume and mute keys, and the ability to customize the Curve with polyphonic and MP3 ringtones.

Vital Statistics
The Blackberry Curve 8320 weighs 3.92 ounces and measures 4.2 x 2.4 x 0.6 inches. Its lithium-ion battery is rated at up to 4 hours of talk time, and up to 408 hours (17 days) of digital standby time. It runs on the 850/900/1800/1900 GSM/GPRS/EDGE frequencies.

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars A Giant Leap Forward if you are not used to Smart Phones
I resisted a Blackberry for years because I didn’t want my email following me everywhere. Finally broke down and got this Curve 3 weeks ago. It truly lives up to its name as a “smart phone.”

The Good:

1–The preloaded applications. I LOVE having mapping and search technology right on my cellphone! No more wondering where the nearest Wells Fargo or Pinkberry is. No more wasting time in the doctor’s waiting room. I can check/respond to email or better yet, play tetris or brickbreaker.

2 –Multi-Tasking. If you are in the middle of one app (e.g., entering an address) and a call comes in, when the call is finished, the screen goes back to what you were doing instead of losing all the data you just entered. Coming from regular phones, this is a HUGE time-saving improvement for me. Also, if you are on the phone with someone and you want to look up a number or an email or a calendar event on your phone, you can click a button and search for the info, all while continuing your convo with the caller. How novel that technology should actually work the way common sense dictates. I uploaded a software called Mobile Tracker that works with a GPS to track my movements (which I can later upload in a file and watch on Google Earth) and the tracking is done in the background all while I continue to make and receive calls, check email, etc. Love that!

3–The Keyboard (Characters). I love that all the letters, numbers and common symbols are on one keyboard instead of my having to scroll thru multiple screens like most other phones.

4–Phone quality. Speakerphone is crisp and clear. Phone can hold a signal even in certain dead spots.

The Bad:

1– Battery life is not great. Requires daily charging but I use it quite intensely. Easily solved with a car charger.

2– Browser is sometimes a little too slow for my taste. This may be the phone or it may be t-mobile. I haven’t tested to know whether wi-fi makes the browser go faster than being on the EDGE network. Also, could be slower when there are multiple applications working in the background.

The Ugly:

1–The keyboard (surface). Not crazy about the texture. I prefer the feel of the Bold’s keyboard but I’m not going to switch carriers for it.

2–So incompatible with Mac it’s not funny. After 3 days of trying different alternatives (the free pocketmac from blackberry froze my computer), I had to pay $40 for Missing Sync software to make the phone play nice with Mac, and even then there are issues. If you have a windows pc, you won’t have this issue. If you have a Mac, be prepared to accept less than accurate syncing.

3–The manual. It’s beyond useless. Doesn’t tell you anything about this phone which has menus within menus within menus. There are a lot of features and you really need to take it out on a date and get to know it intimately. I have started to create my own little “how-to” file to keep track of how to do everything on this phone.

If you are new to smartphones, you will really enjoy this phone, not just for the email but for the constant access to the internet which is great for having information at your fingertips when you’re away from your computer.

NOTE: A week or so after getting the phone, I also experienced the problem mentioned by the reviewer below with the phone locking up and the interminable hourglass. When I went in to each of the programs on the phone I had opened (maps, browser, weather channel, missing sync, brickbreaker, etc) and selected Close or Quit from the menu, this problem went away. I guess what makes this a smart phone is that hitting the back button on the phone just takes you to the previous screen but it doesn’t automatically close out the application you are working in. You have to do that manually.

1 Star Dont buy Blackberry
Blackberry does not honor their warranty. If you must get one, buy insurance. The USB connection breaks because of poor design. I have had two fail. One had insurance, the other did not. Blackberry claims that this does not happen and WILL charge you $180. There is no escalation. I got the device back with a broke screen and no battery (new one too). Poor design, poor software, and the worst customer support. You have been warned.

2 Stars Do not bother
The curve is a downgrade from previous models. WiFi and gps barely work. You need a very strong signal for wifi. No 3G. The most annoying part is that you will have to change all your chargers and adapters because they changed the connector. The old mini-USB cable was very handy because it is shared by many manufactures so it was very easy to find someone to help you out in case you run out of battery on the road. Not anymore. Do not waste your money.

5 Stars very please with my blaclkberry.
I to am please with my black berry. its my first and a upgrade from my regular phone and I love it I can access my email while relaxing, I love to send and recieve text it,s easy to do before with my regular phone I didn”t know how on my regular phone to complicated. it takes beautiful pictures, I’m learning how to use more technology with this blackberry. thanks t mobile.

5 Stars Perfect
I love this phone. It suites all my needs, has a camera, calender, MAPS, email, voice recording, it also has facebook already installed & you can download the myspace application later. I also love the color. I’m very satisfied :)

Buy/More Info

BlackBerry Curve 8330 Phone Silver Verizon Wireless

June 20th, 2009 Cellphone Review No comments

BlackBerry Curve 8330 Phone Silver Verizon Wireless




Adding a fashionable touch to Research in Motion’s formidable arsenal of telephonic, PIM, and media tools, the BlackBerry 8330 Curve for Verizon is also the smallest, lightest BlackBerry phone that includes a full QWERTY keyboard. This amalgam of the svelte BlackBerry Pearl and the more business-oriented 8800 combines RIM’s long-valued corporate email and messaging platform with a host of advanced multimedia features, including a 2-megapixel camera and stereo Bluetooth (for listening to music via wireless headphones). It also offers GPS navigation capabilities for accessing the optional VZ Navigator turn-by-turn direction service.

The Curve’s full QWERTY keyboard and the innovative trackball navigation system (placed above the keyboard) makes accessing your data and writing email a breeze.

Verizon Service
Getting on the Internet is easy using Verizon’s Mobile Web 2.0 package, which allows you to read and send e-mails, exchange instant messages and view your favorite web content on your phone. Verizon’s Get It Now wireless download service is also fully compatible with this phone. This pay-per-download service features application downloads, games and productivity tools. You can also personalize your handset with ringtone downloads using the Get It Now service.

Get to any location with audible turn-by-turn directions from the optional VZ Navigator service.

With this GPS-enabled phone, you’ll be able to access Verizon’s VZ Navigator service (additional charges applicable) for voice-prompted turn-by-turn directions, heads-up alerts, local search of nearly 14 million points of interest in the US (such as landmarks, restaurants and ATMs), and detailed color maps.

With BroadbandAccess Connect (subscription required), you can use your smartphone as a modem for your notebook when you connect the two using a USB cable–or open a Bluetooth connection–enabling you to access the Internet or your company intranet. The tethered modem capability is ideal when you’re traveling and need to use your notebook to check email, access corporate networks, or download large files like presentations and reports. And with BroadbandAccess Connect, you won’t have to buy an extra PC Card or other devices. Staying Connected
With BlackBerry’s push email technology, your email will find you without having to initiate a connection. BlackBerry devices are designed to remain on and continuously connected to the wireless network, notifying you as new email arrives. In addition to the text, you can also receive and view attachments in a wide range of popular file formats, including Microsoft Office, Corel WordPerfect, and Adobe PDF.

Browse the web with the integrated, full-featured browser, which quickly and efficiently displays HTML pages as well as enables you to set up RSS feeds to stay connected to up-to-the-minute news and blog posts. And keep up with your contacts using a variety of instant message (IM) networks, including the integrated Blackberry Messenger as well as downloadable clients for Google Talk, Yahoo! Messenger, and Lotus Sametime.

For corporate users, the Curve delivers all the enterprise email and messaging capabilities you’ve come to expect. It’s supported on BlackBerry Internet Service, giving you access to up to 10 work or personal email accounts (including most popular ISP email accounts), as well as BlackBerry Enterprise Server, enabling advanced security and IT administration within IBM Lotus Domino, Microsoft Exchange and Novell GroupWise environments.

Phone Features
The Curve 8330 is fashioned with subtly curving corners and chrome highlights. Measuring 4.2 x 2.4 inches, the Curve is just as slim as the Pearl (0.63 inches) and weighs in at 4 ounces. It features a bright 2.5-inch color TFT screen that provides 65,000 colors and a 320 x 240-pixel resolution, and it includes a light-sensing feature that automatically adjusts backlighting for indoor, outdoor and dark environments. Like the BlackBerry 8800, the Curve includes a trackball navigation system located on the top of the QWERTY keypad, and it also features an integrated spell checker with a customizable dictionary to help maintain accuracy while on the go. It has 96 MB of internal ROM memory, and is expandable using MicroSD/MicroSDHC memory cards (up to 8 GB in size).

You can snap vivid photos (though no video) using the 2-megapixel camera on the back of the Curve, which also features a 5x digital zoom, built-in flash, self-portrait mirror and full screen viewfinder. It can capture images in up to three picture quality and size resolutions that can be shared instantly by email, MMS or BlackBerry Messenger, or even uploaded to your Flickr account with the Yahoo! Go service. Photos can also be immediately set as a unique caller ID or Home Screen image. You can edit photos and create albums within the Curve using the PhotoSuite application. Pictures can be cropped, rotated and straightened, and flaws can be fixed by removing redeye or changing the brightness, contrast, and saturation levels.

Listen to your favorite music and watch downloaded videos using the included stereo headset, or use an optional wireless headphone thanks to the Curve’s support for the Bluetooth stereo audio profile (A2DP/AVRCP). The Curve is compatible with MP3 and WMA audio files, and dedicated volume controls are conveniently located on the side of the handset.

With the Voice-Activated Dialing (VAD) feature, you can initiate a call just by telling the Curve who to call from your contact list–either via the integrated speakerphone or using an optional Bluetooth wireless headset. Other advanced phone features include advanced sound technology that cancels out background noise and echo, dedicated volume and mute keys, and the ability to customize the Curve with polyphonic and MP3 ringtones. Other features include:

  • Works with the BlackBerry Enterprise Solution (BES) to provide functionality such as single mailbox integration, remote address book look-up and more
  • BlackBerry 4.3 Desktop Software. Integrated Email, Phone, SMS, Browser, Calendar, Address Book, and additional organizer applications
  • Music playback: MP3, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA
  • 96 MB Flash Memory/32 MB RAM
  • Bluetooth version 2.0 with the following profiles: A2DP (stereo music streaming), AVRC (remote control), HFP (hands-free car kits), HSP (communication headsets)

Vital Statistics
The BlackBerry Curve 8330 weighs 4 ounces and measures 4.2 x 2.4 x 0.63 inches. Its 1150 mAh lithium-ion battery is rated at up to 4.3 hours of talk time, and up to 264 hours (11 days) of digital standby time. It runs on the 800/1900 CDMA/EV-DO frequencies (not Rev. A Upgradeable).

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars The Best Phone I Have Ever Owned
I got the Blackberry 8330 (my color is pink) at the end of December (after I saw my daughter’s phone same model, black color) This phone is terrific! It does take a little time to find out everything it does (I’m still learning), but it is worth it! This is my first venture with texting. The buttons are a little small, but once you get used to them, there is no problem. I love the trackball, which makes going from one app to another very easy. The address book is easy to set up. The camera is not too bad and it has a flash. I’ve send pictures to others and it was so simple. The sound is clear and volume is easily adjustable. It is very easy to surf the web using Google. I used to think, why would you need to surf on your phone when you have a computer/laptop. I had major surgery in December and had to go to a physical therapy rehab nursing facility and they did not have internet service (I could not believe it. There wasn’t even the dreaded dial-up). My husband gave me the Blackberry and it was great. Also several times when there is a disagreement on when you are with friends and you can just Google it and all is well. It is somewhat annoying that you have to go under the battery to get to the micro s/d card, but if you have more GB (takes up to a 8GB s/d) that should not be a problem. There are the usual calendar, alarm clock, voice recorder and message pad. With the icons they are very easy to find and use. Finally, as I said earlier, I got the pink one which alot of people didn’t know they had. Also since there was a difference in holding this phone compared to my old phone I would suggest you get a case to cover it. I found that a snap on case and the one from “Seidio” is the best and only costs about $8.00 to $10.00 on the net. It is hard plastic with a rubberized finish the keeps the phone from sliding from your hand. There are cheaper imitations but they are not well made and crack very easily. I would definately get this phone. I’m a Baby Boomer and I learned to use it quickly. Of course, I really like Verizon service. I have had other services and there is no comparison.

4 Stars Full of Features
I anxiously awaited the arrival of my new Blackberry… but had mixed feelings once getting it in my hands.

PROS:

I think it can do just about anything, perhaps even fly a plane.

Great size – I was expecting it to be as awkward as holding the iphone – but it was much more comfortable.

Camera shot nice quality photos.

Screen was large and easy to read.

Nicely made, lightweight, but a substantial feel in the hand.

Though a silly comment, the ringtones are great.

CONS:

The set up time was lengthy. Entering new contacts would also take a while. (transfer from your existing phone if you can.)

The key pad is a bit small – what would happen if the print rubbed off the keys? Plus the trackball was a little hard to get used to.

I live in a rural area, so the network was a bit slow, even though according to Verizon it was as fast as it would be in an urban area. Apps timed out or froze often.

Offering so many options made it clumsy to navigate quickly. Less intuitive than other smartphones.

Obviously, this device is for someone who might use it as a mobile office, needed document access or needs to maintain large contact information. It can do almost too much – not the best choice for someone mainly interested in a phone & texting. I found that many apps needlessly overlapped other devices that I have, so I decided to return it for something else. Great phone, just not for me.

5 Stars I have Blackberry Curve with Verizon Wireless and I honestly wonder how I lived without it!
I have Blackberry Curve with Verizon Wireless and I honestly wonder how I lived without it! It is such a useful tool for email, social networking, like twitter and facebook. The camera is good so you can send pictures and videos to anyone. I use it on fires to send pix and updates from the fireline via twitter and facebook. Before this phone I used a Motorola Q and the Curve blows its doors off. I purchased an 8 gigabyte Micro SD Card for less that $[...] to store photos and videos. Its packed full of features that I have yet to discover.

[...]

4 Stars Here’s Why I’m A Crackberry Addict!
The Good:

* Clear, reliable calls

* Extensive messaging capabilities

* Excellent usability – very intuitive

* Good bluetooth support

* Easy to add new apps with many available for free

* Good media support

The Bad:

* No option for repeat notification on unacknowledged text messages

* SD card slot not accessible without removing the battery

* GPS usage restricted to VZW apps

Bottom Line:

The Blackberry Curve for Verizon hits the mark as a very solid smartphone with only minor drawbacks. My detailed usage based review follows.

Messaging: This is the main reason that people look to a Blackberry as their phone, and the Curve does not disappoint. After contacting my Exchange Administrator, I was up and running with push e-mail from my work account to my Curve. If your company supports this, it is the way to go because it does require your desktop computer to be on and connected in order to receive your e-mail. However you do have the ability to run the desktop software to sync your e-mail if a direct connection to your corporate e-mail is not available.

Messaging does not stop there. The Curve also flawlessly supports SMS and MMS messaging as well. One of the nice features on the Curve that is not on most regular phones is the grouping of related messages into threads or conversations.

The one drawback on SMS is that the Curve cannot simulate a pager. Most people have ditched pagers at this point in favor of SMS. However if you are not in the room when you get an SMS message, the Curve will not nag you until you read the message the way a pager would. My Lg phones had a feature where you could have repeated notification every two minutes, and it would be nice to see a similar feature on future Blackberry devices.

Call Quality: The great messaging capabilities would fall flat unless the Curve was also a good phone. While the sound is a little bit thinner than what I’m used to on my Lg phones, it is still more than good enough. This is true whether in normal or speakerphone mode. The speakerphone quality is quite good on the Curve.

Bluetooth: It was easy to pair my Motorola T305 Bluetooth Portable Hands-Free Speaker (Black) with the Curve. Once connected, pushing the multifunction button on the T305 brought up the voice command prompt for hands free usage. Call quality with the Curve and the T305 combination had no drop off in performance.

Additional Applications: There are plenty of freely available add ons for the Curve, and most support over the air installation by point the Curve’s browser to the appropriate URL. I have added Google’s mobile app, Gmail, and Google Maps. The Gmail app is a nice upgrade over the WAP interface available through the Curve’s browser. The Google Maps app cannot be used as a GPS for navigation as Verizon has restricted access to the GPS. You are limited to VZNavigator or whatever other purchased app Verizon makes available. I have a Garmin Nuvi so this isn’t a big deal to me.

You can find other apps on the Blackberry site or by searching for what you need in Google.

Usability: This is a real strong point for the Curve. I have had various Palm and Windows Mobile devices – not all phones – and RIM beats both of these hands down. First, it is refreshing not to have to reset the Curve regularly or have it reset itself spontaneously. The crown jewel, though, is the trackball. It is such a better user experience to be able to scroll rather than have to hold down a sluggish five-way D-pad to navigate. It is very smooth and natural feeling by way of comparison. The Curve does not have a touch screen, and therefore has no stylus. Personally I prefer the non-touchscreen as this limits fingerprints and smudges on the screen. The keyboard is of adequate size. I occasionally hit the wrong key, but his is fairly rare. The menus and options are also fairly intuitive, and it is easy to set up folders and move things around to your liking.

Media Support: The Curve comes with a fairly standard media player capable of playing music and video, and it supports the use of microSD cards up to 8 Gb. The placement of the card slot is a bit annoying because you have to take the battery out to get to it. If you don’t have to access the card that often, it’s probably not that big of a deal. The speaker is not going to win any competitions, but the included headphones are pretty good. If you decide to upgrade the headphones, it is important to get the right kind. Even though the Curve has a 3.5mm jack, the plug needs to have three stripes rather than the two that come on most earbuds. If you use the ones from you iPod that only have two, you will eventually short out the jack.

You can also stream media from Slacker or view video clips on web sites. YouTube mobile worked without issue.

One thing that would have been nice is access to V-Cast music. For whatever reason, Verizon chose not to make this available although they did do so on the Storm which makes the decision on the Curve that much more puzzling.

Conclusion: There is a lot to like – if not love – about the Blackberry Curve from Verizon. It performs very well on its core functionality with a few minor annoyances, but these are not new to longtime Verizon customers. I highly recommend this for those seeking a good phone that integrates well with corporate e-mail. Using it can be addictive to the point that it could be called a Crackberry!

5 Stars Best Phone I ever owned
Unfortunately, I recently upgraded to the blackberry storm from my old, trusty, reliable curve. Though there are things I absolutely love about the new storm (world-wide calling namely), I very much miss my old Curve. This phone was extremely reliable, never missing calls and always keeping accurate call records. I am one of those people who receives thousands of email messaged per day, and my curve kept up with them all. The trackball was very easy to use and to play brickbreaker, probably the best game to ever come preloaded on a phone. I loved that all my messaged came into one inbox, emails and texts alike. Plus, the QWERTY keyboard was easy to type with and made sending long email messages a breeze.

There are, however, a few reasons not to buy this phone. First of all, if you need worldwide voice and data, you can’t get that with the curve. Secondly, if you like to send extremely long SMS (text) messages, the curve (and any blackberry I believe) has a strict 160-character single message field. To send more than one you must send the first and then send the second and so on and so forth (this is not applicable to email). Third, if you don’t like locking you phone, you may want to go with something that closes. There have been many times when I’ve accidentally forgotten to lock my phone and had my curve call people (generally the first “p” in my contact list). Lastly, if you don’t like putting full names into your contact list, this can make the way your address book reads very messy.

Overall, the Blackberry Curve was the best phone I ever had. I’d probably downgrade if it had international calling. I’d highly recommend you buy this phone.

Buy/More Info

BlackBerry Curve 8330 Phone Red Sprint

June 13th, 2009 Cellphone Review No comments

BlackBerry Curve 8330 Phone Red Sprint




Adding a fashionable touch to Research in Motion’s formidable arsenal of telephonic, PIM, and media tools, the BlackBerry 8330 Curve for Sprint is also the smallest, lightest BlackBerry phone that includes a full QWERTY keyboard. This amalgam of the svelte BlackBerry Pearl and the more business-oriented 8800 combines RIM’s long-valued corporate email and messaging platform with a host of advanced multimedia features, including a 2-megapixel camera and stereo Bluetooth (for listening to music via wireless headphones). It also offers GPS navigation capabilities for accessing the optional Sprint Navigation turn-by-turn direction service.

Click for larger view.

Sprint Service Options
Supporting the EV-DO high-speed data standard, this phone enables you to download and stream high-quality video, straight onto your phone. Where coverage is available, EV-DO connectivity provides average download speeds ranging from 400 to 700 Kbps, with peak rates up to 2 Mbps. With Sprint TV, you can make your cell phone your always-on source for news, weather, sports and more. This comprehensive video service combines high-quality streaming audio and video from channels including the NFL Network, ABC, The Weather Channel, Fox Sports, E!, CNN, The Discovery Channel, and more.

The Sprint Music Store enables you to buy, download, and then jam out wherever you are with new songs or old favorites. Offering a growing selection of more than 1.6 million songs, the store provides you two copies of each song–one for the phone and another for the PC, as well as the ability to burn songs to a CD using Windows Media Player. Save your songs to a memory card with a capacity that’s right for you.

This GPS-enabled phone provides optional access to Sprint Navigation for driving directions on your mobile phone–by voice and onscreen. Along the way, turn-by-turn directions will be announced in a clear voice and displayed on your phone. For example, Sprint Navigation will say, “Go 1.2 miles and turn right on Elm Street.” As you approach the turn, you will hear, “Turn right on Elm Street.” Sprint Navigation also provides proactive traffic alerts with one click re-routing. And it’s easy to find restaurants, banks, cafes, hotels and more from over 10 million points of interest across the U.S.

The Curve’s full QWERTY keyboard and the innovative trackball navigation system (placed above the keyboard) makes accessing your data and writing email a breeze.

Staying Connected
With BlackBerry’s push email technology, your email will find you without having to initiate a connection. BlackBerry devices are designed to remain on and continuously connected to the wireless network, notifying you as new email arrives. In addition to the text, you can also receive and view attachments in a wide range of popular file formats, including Microsoft Office, Corel WordPerfect, and Adobe PDF.

Browse the web with the integrated, full-featured browser, which quickly and efficiently displays HTML pages as well as enables you to set up RSS feeds to stay connected to up-to-the-minute news and blog posts. And keep up with your contacts using a variety of instant message (IM) networks, including the integrated Blackberry Messenger as well as downloadable clients for Google Talk, Yahoo! Messenger, and Lotus Sametime.

For corporate users, the Curve delivers all the enterprise email and messaging capabilities you’ve come to expect. It’s supported on BlackBerry Internet Service, giving you access to up to 10 work or personal email accounts (including most popular ISP email accounts), as well as BlackBerry Enterprise Server, enabling advanced security and IT administration within IBM Lotus Domino, Microsoft Exchange and Novell GroupWise environments.

Phone Features
The Curve 8330 is fashioned with subtly curving corners and chrome highlights. Measuring 4.2 x 2.4 inches, the Curve is just as slim as the Pearl (0.63 inches) and weighs in at 4 ounces. It features a bright 2.5-inch color TFT screen that provides 65,000 colors and a 320 x 240-pixel resolution, and it includes a light-sensing feature that automatically adjusts backlighting for indoor, outdoor and dark environments. Like the BlackBerry 8800, the Curve includes a trackball navigation system located on the top of the QWERTY keypad, and it also features an integrated spell checker with a customizable dictionary to help maintain accuracy while on the go. It has 96 MB of internal ROM memory, and is expandable using MicroSD/MicroSDHC memory cards (up to 8 GB in size).

The 2-megapixel camera makes it easy to capture pictures to send via email or upload to your online photo collection.

You can snap vivid photos (though no video) using the 2-megapixel camera on the back of the Curve, which also features a 5x digital zoom, built-in flash, self-portrait mirror and full screen viewfinder. It can capture images in up to three picture quality and size resolutions that can be shared instantly by email, MMS or BlackBerry Messenger, or even uploaded to your Flickr account with the Yahoo! Go service. Photos can also be immediately set as a unique caller ID or Home Screen image. You can edit photos and create albums within the Curve using the PhotoSuite application. Pictures can be cropped, rotated and straightened, and flaws can be fixed by removing redeye or changing the brightness, contrast, and saturation levels.

Listen to your favorite music and watch downloaded videos using the included stereo headset, or use an optional wireless headphone thanks to the Curve’s support for the Bluetooth stereo audio profile (A2DP/AVRCP). The Curve is compatible with MP3 and WMA audio files, and dedicated volume controls are conveniently located on the side of the handset.

With the Voice-Activated Dialing (VAD) feature, you can initiate a call just by telling the Curve who to call from your contact list–either via the integrated speakerphone or using an optional Bluetooth wireless headset. Other advanced phone features include advanced sound technology that cancels out background noise and echo, dedicated volume and mute keys, and the ability to customize the Curve with polyphonic and MP3 ringtones.

The BlackBerry Maps application enables you to view maps and driving directions as well as email maps to other BlackBerry users and launch maps from your address book. It also includes a local search capability that allows users to find local businesses, such as banks, hotels and restaurants, within a short driving distance.

Vital Statistics
The BlackBerry Curve 8330 weighs 4 ounces and measures 4.2 x 2.4 x 0.63 inches. Its 1150 mAh lithium-ion battery is rated at up to 5.9 hours of talk time, and up to 264 hours (11 days) of digital standby time. It runs on the 800/1900 CDMA/EV-DO frequencies.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars Simply Everything.
There are a few phones I will compare this phone with to prove to you that it is the best phone out there in the market. Since this is a Sprint phone, I won’t bother with phones other carriers carry because I am a Sprint user. Sprint has the HTC Touch Diamond, Touch Pro, Treo Pro, Palm Centro, Samsung Instinct and the Blackberry Pearl.

The Curve is an improvement over the Pearl because it has a better trackball in the center which doesn’t fall out after a few months of use. The keyboard is a full fledged QWERTY. Now, I haven’t used the other curves but there is something annoying about the way the icons are displayed. The Sprint curve however seems to have a better icon/font display. While the Curve does not have windows like the HTC twins and Treo, the blackberry comes with it’s own software which is much faster, has an efficient battery life and is very fast and easy to customize with every possible feature.

Remarkable Features – The call quality on this phone is superb. Sprint’s coverage is so good, I live in New York and I’ve traveled to Las Vegas with this phone and I must say the roaming was an awesome experience. When you compare this phone to Samsung Instinct, HTC and the Palms, you will find a much better coverage and I must admit sometimes I have to decrease the volume cause people can be so loud. My previous phone was a Sony Ericsson and I must admit the volume is approximately 225% as loud.

Another great feature is how you can set up your email, you can have a whole mailbox dedicated to a certain email address and the same can have over ten thousand emails. I didn’t try more you see. For texts and missed calls, blackberry’s log is almost untouchable and there is no phone in it’s league, SERIOUSLY. While the windows phones have internet explorer, I find that the blackberry browser is faster and i love the mobile layout for the phone. So internet and texting experience is a breeze and I can be so fast on the phone.

Sometimes my laptop is kept right around but I just can’t be bothered. I can write long emails and I am one of those people who hate abbreviations so the blackberry really is the phone for me because I can type so freely. And oh, it was never easier to dial numbers on the phone. I don’t use voice dialling. I simply punch in the name using the name of the person using the QWERTY keyboard and it gives me the best matches instantly. Other than that, the blackberry messenger is absolutely outstanding. It is so easy to send small pic files, it auto compresses them into 7kb files. I speak to friends overseas and we prefer this over using gtalk. If you use yahoo or gtalk or even the great AIM, this phone comes with all that.

Sprint has this phone available for a singe user (individual) for a minimum of 69.99 per month for 450 minutes. This includes unlimited data, unlimited text messages, unlimited internet browsing, GPS navigation, Sprint TV, Radio and some other features. This really is a fantastic option and far better than what the other carriers offer. You can also set up google maps on this which when I travelled to Baltimore I discovered was outstanding.

Accessories/Features – The phone comes with a little leather case that has a magnet to keypad lock your phone, otherwise you can use the standby button on the head and put the phone into a battery saving mode where it wont be disturbed unless you’re getting a call. It comes with 1gb worth of data on a microsd card, which is expandable up to 8gb I believe. A earphone set without noise cancellation. Also an important USB cable, software to back up your data and numbers.

Unlike a lot of non-techies would think this is not a business phone or a phone which is dedicated to people who have nothing but boredom on their mind. This phone can be used by anyone from the age of 18 to 60. It is easy to use. Far better than the Samsungs, LGs, Sanyos, HTCs…

The one thing I dislike about the blacberry is the camera. It comes with a flash but it really falls flat on it’s face if you compare it to the iphone or any mediocre sony ericsson camera.

An accessory that is not included but is a must have is the black rubber skin for the phone. It can cost up to $20 but it’s worth the whole shebang. It so happens that this might need changing every few months depending on how miserly you are, I am one of those people who choose quality over price. I don’t mind paying anything for a phone, anything reasonable and I would stick with the Blacberry over any other phone.

An irritating thing about the blackberry is how it sometimes takes forever to start up. Sometimes it seems the power is never fully turned off. I still haven’t figured that out. WHEN YOUR BATTERY IS LOW, the phone automatically switches the radio off because it is so annoying when your phone turns off on it’s own. The 8330 never does that. It may take upto twenty minutes of charging to use the radio to make outgoing calls again. It takes a long time to charge sometimes. I don’t drive but I know it uses a USB charger / V3.

It is lovely to hold and well built. Get this with insurance because people love stealing this phone. I’ve had my phone stolen once so I learned my lesson. Another impressive feature is the 3.5 mm jack. The speaker is average and the voice recording can sometimes be fun though I do it when I want to sing and think im singing well. MP3 songs can be set as ring tones.

Overall, this is the best phone I have ever used with an average camera. But the phone itself is so good, I stop caring about the camera which by the way comes with a flash. I love my blacberry and am transformed for good. A two day battery life you will love, a good mp3 player back up when your ipod is not around, 1000 applications for this phone, excellent Sprint service. A must have for anyone who wants to keep abreast with technology. So much better looking too.

I didn’t mention anything about bluetooth because every single phones comes with a bluetooth. If you’re getting this phone and don’t have a skin for it, I must say you’re not very bright.

4 Stars Very nice phone
Loving my Blackberry Curve 8330. I’ve had a BB 8700g before and liked it very much but this phone blows it and my Palm Centro that I upgraded from right out of the water. I’m quite pleased with the BB Curve 8330. Not for nothing, Sprint’s Curve is the best one to have because it has far more features than any other cell phone carriers’ Curves. Sprint didn’t hold back featurewise. My friends are a bit jealous because of the amount of features my phone has compared to their Curves. Here’s the breakdown of what I like and dislike.

Pros:

- Beautiful ruby red color

- Very clear and vivid video and pictures

- Great call quality

- Nice, loud speakerphone

- MP3 sound quality is superb

- Has standard 3.5mm headphone jack which is great. No need to buy those special 2.5mm headphones.

- A USB port

- Snappy bluetooth pairing with my bluetooth headset when with many other phones it seems like it takes forever for the two devices to find each other

- Expandable to 16GB with 4.5 OS

- Speedy email retrieval

- Camera and video camera is pretty good especially outdoors but the indoor photos are not too shabby

- Decent battery life

- Trackball makes for easy navigating

- 96MB of internal ROM memory which is a nice amount of storage and I’m able to fit a lot of third party software with room to spare

- A lot of awesome features and apps that came with the phone plus plenty you can download

- Nice rendering of doc, pdf and ppt files

Honorable mention: The Sprint GPS TelNav(which I thought I didn’t need)on this phone rocks. It really can go toe to toe as far as navigation with my Garmin GPS plus it finds signals a lot quicker than my Garmin. I’ve used it while driving and while walking and it has been on point with fantastic accuracy.

Cons:

- Internet videos, particularly YouTube, displays very small and doesn’t take up the whole screen and there’s no way to make it full screen like I was able to with my Palm Centro

- Video camera does not shoot videos using the whole 320×240 screen. It only takes the videos at 240×176. Therefore the videos you shoot never take up the whole screen.

- The browser could be a bit faster

- Hangs and freezes on some websites

- Rebooting is way too slow

- Wish the camera had more features

- Voice dialing is bad and doesn’t register spoken names very well. Luckily I use another app to handle that.

All and all…this is a very nice phone. I’ve had it for 2 months and so far so good.

4 Stars Excellent Smartphone!!!
I have had my Blackberry Curve (Red) from Sprint for three weeks now and I have been quite happy with the device so far with only one or two quibbles.

Pros:

Incredible battery life

Very stable operating system

Excellent messaging capabilities

3.5mm standard headphone jack

Easily customized via third party theme packs

Very light compared to the weight of other smartphones

Cons:

Keys could stand to be a bit larger

Finger print magnet

Trackball navigation takes a little getting used to

Long startup times. Very long!

Low screen resolution (320X240)

Very poor documentation

At this point I’ve gotten fairly comfortable navigating around the phone and it’s menu system but it wasn’t an easy start requiring more than a little trial and error along with a lot of online reading. However, now that I’ve gotten the basics down pat as well as some more advanced feature use under my belt I have to say I now see the allure of the Blackberry platform! It just “Works”!

Blackberry’s are designed to be left on 24/7 and as such their boot up times make booting up a low end desktop computer running Windows Vista seem fast by comparison. We’re talking almost two minutes from pressing the power button (or inserting the battery which turns the device on automatically) to usable phone. Now, with that being said I’d like to take this time to point out I’ve turned off my phone only twice in three weeks and had to do a reset once (by pulling the battery out for 30 seconds). One of the times I turned the phone off was to restart the device after the installation of some third party themes.

Speaking of themes, there are plenty out there to be found, both free and not free. If you don’t like the ones that come stock on the BB Curve 8330 then you won’t have a problem finding ones that you do like. One note of interest that I did not find addressed in any documentation that came with the phone is that once you get a theme customized (folders and items moved around) it’s only for that theme. You’ll have to move everything around again when you switch themes. The upside is that if you switch back to a previous theme you customizations are still there.

One thing I highly recommend to anyone buying this phone is to update the operating system to the new BB OS 4.5. You’ll get built in HTML email support and a slightly improved web browser along with MMS support. One problem I ran into was not the fault of RIM though. Do NOT try to update the OS from a PC running Windows 7 Beta! It won’t work and you may brick your phone (which can be fixed easily enough so don’t panic). The update only works on a Vista or XP machine.

The web browser that comes with the phone is a bit of a mixed bag. It works well enough for me and if you dig into the options you’ll see where you can easily switch “modes” to make the browser appear to servers as either the Blackberry Browser, Pocket IE, desktop IE, Open Wave WAP browswer, or desktop Mozilla Firefox browser. Very handy if you want to view the full desktop experience. Again, I did not find any of this in the documentation but through trial and error.

If you get the phone as an upgrade, as I did, then you will have to speak to someone at Sprint to activate the phone. It will not activate online through their ESN switching site. Also, don’t forget to head to the Sprint Blackberry Internet Services site to lot in and set up your email accounts, up to ten of them. After you set up the emails (Gmail in my case) you’ll also need to send out the service books via the site.

There are lots more things that makes this a very nice smartphone, especially compared to Windows Mobile devices. Just be prepared for a slight learning curve (no pun intended) if you’re new to the Blackberry platform. If you are patient and give the platform a chance I think you’ll be very happy with this device.

4 Stars Great phone and features
I got this phone in January and still love it. It is my first real smartphone, I upgraded from the Sanyo M1. This phone doesn’t take very long to boot up like other people have commented on, maybe because I don’t have it bogged down with a ton of add’l applications.

Since it’s on the 3g network it finds that and the slower network and I get more dropped calls than I used to. But still not that many. Also, playin games on this phone I noticed a lag compare to my old phone, I think because it is always refreshing internally for new emails, not sure.

It has a 3.5 jack, so I had to buy and adapter for a regular, old school, headset. I don’t like bluetooth headsets. The adapter was under $5 on ebay, though.

All in all a great phone with great features, I would recommend it and I would buy a BB again.

5 Stars Great phone, wide capability
I just switched from a Palm PDA phone (Centro 690) to Blackberry and I am thrilled. I have owned Palms for 10 years or so and was quite comfortable with them. Now I am wondering how I stayed with them for so long. The Blackberry is very sleek looking, (the red is wonderful) and it is responsive, has great call quality, and navigates the web nicely. I am happy!

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BlackBerry Curve 8320 Phone Titanium T Mobile

June 10th, 2009 Cellphone Review No comments

BlackBerry Curve 8320 Phone Titanium T Mobile




Adding a fashionable touch to Research in Motion’s formidable arsenal of telephonic, PIM, and media tools, the BlackBerry 8320 Curve for T-Mobile is also the smallest, lightest BlackBerry phone that includes a full QWERTY keyboard. This amalgam of the svelte BlackBerry Pearl and the more business-oriented 8800 combines RIM’s long-valued corporate email and messaging platform with a host of advanced multimedia features, including a 2-megapixel camera and stereo Bluetooth (for listening to music via wireless headphones). In addition to its quad-band GSM and EDGE connectivity, it also offers Wi-Fi connectivity for access to the Internet and email as well as access to T-Mobile’s Hotspot @Home service. This version comes in titanium, but it’s also available in pale gold.

The Curve’s full QWERTY keyboard and the innovative trackball navigation system (placed above the keyboard) makes accessing your data and writing email a breeze..

The 2-megapixel camera makes it easy to capture pictures to send via email or upload to your online photo collection.

T-Mobile Service Options
With T-Mobile HotSpot @Home service, you’ll effortlessly transition between Wi-Fi calling and T-Mobile’s wireless network while you talk. You can get unlimited nationwide calls over Wi-Fi–at home via your wireless router or at any U.S. T-Mobile HotSpot. You can also use the HotSpot @Home service via most open, or unsecured, wireless routers, as well as any secured wireless router for which you have access to the password from the owner. This phone is compatible with the 802.11b/g Wi-Fi standard as well as the following wireless security protocols: WEP, WPA (TKIP), WPA2 (AES-CCMP), LEAP, PEAP, EAP-TLS, EAP-TTLS, EAP-FAST, EAP-SIM, EAP-AKA. Whenever you’re not using a Wi-Fi network, the Curve works just like a regular mobile phone, using your Whenever Minutes under your T-Mobile voice plan.

This phone also includes compatibility with T-Mobile’s myFaves service, which allows you to call up to five of your most common contacts–on any network, even landlines–without using any of your minutes. Learn more about myFaves from T-Mobile.

Staying Connected
With BlackBerry’s push email technology, your email will find you without having to initiate a connection. BlackBerry devices are designed to remain on and continuously connected to the wireless network, notifying you as new email arrives. In addition to the text, you can also receive and view attachments in a wide range of popular file formats, including Microsoft Office, Corel WordPerfect, and Adobe PDF.

Browse the web with the integrated, full-featured browser, which quickly and efficiently displays HTML pages as well as enables you to set up RSS feeds to stay connected to up-to-the-minute news and blog posts. And keep up with your contacts using a variety of instant message (IM) networks, including the integrated Blackberry Messenger as well as downloadable clients for Google Talk, Yahoo! Messenger, and Lotus Sametime.

For corporate users, the Curve delivers all the enterprise email and messaging capabilities you’ve come to expect. It’s supported on BlackBerry Internet Service, giving you access to up to 10 work or personal email accounts (including most popular ISP email accounts), as well as BlackBerry Enterprise Server, enabling advanced security and IT administration within IBM Lotus Domino, Microsoft Exchange and Novell GroupWise environments.

Phone Features

Click for larger view.

The Curve is fashioned in a liquid silver finish with chrome highlights and subtly curving corners. Measuring 4.2 x 2.4 inches, the Curve is just as slim as the Pearl (0.6 inches) and weighs in at 3.9 ounces–just 0.7 ounces heavier than its predecessor. It features a bright 2.5-inch color TFT screen that provides 65,000 colors and a 320 x 240-pixel resolution, and it includes a light-sensing feature that automatically adjusts backlighting for indoor, outdoor and dark environments. Like the BlackBerry 8800, the Curve includes a trackball navigation system located on the top of the QWERTY keypad, and it also features an integrated spell checker with a customizable dictionary to help maintain accuracy while on the go. It has 64 MB of internal ROM memory, and is expandable using MicroSD memory cards. The battery provides up to 4 hours (240 minutes) of talk time and up to 17 days (408 hours) of standby time.

You can snap vivid photos (though no video) using the 2-megapixel camera on the back of the Curve, which also features a 5x digital zoom, built-in flash, self-portrait mirror and full screen viewfinder. It can capture images in up to three picture quality and size resolutions that can be shared instantly by email, MMS or BlackBerry Messenger, or even uploaded to your Flickr account with the Yahoo! Go service. Photos can also be immediately set as a unique caller ID or Home Screen image. You can edit photos and create albums within the Curve using the PhotoSuite application. Pictures can be cropped, rotated and straightened, and flaws can be fixed by removing redeye or changing the brightness, contrast, and saturation levels.

Listen to your favorite music and watch downloaded videos using the included stereo headset, or use an optional wireless headphone thanks to the Curve’s support for the Bluetooth stereo audio profile (A2DP/AVRCP). The Curve is compatible with a wide variety of file formats, including MP3, WMA and AAC/AAC+/eAAC+ audio and WMV, MPEG4 and H.263 video. Dedicated volume controls are conveniently located on the side of the handset.

With the Voice-Activated Dialing (VAD) feature, you can initiate a call just by telling the Curve who to call from your contact list–either via the integrated speakerphone or using an optional Bluetooth wireless headset. Other advanced phone features include advanced sound technology that cancels out background noise and echo, dedicated volume and mute keys, and the ability to customize the Curve with polyphonic and MP3 ringtones.

Vital Statistics
The Blackberry Curve 8320 weighs 3.92 ounces and measures 4.2 x 2.4 x 0.6 inches. Its lithium-ion battery is rated at up to 4 hours of talk time, and up to 408 hours (17 days) of digital standby time. It runs on the 850/900/1800/1900 GSM/GPRS/EDGE frequencies.

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars Best Value when purchasing through Amazon and choosing T-Mobile
Ordered the Blackberry Curve 8320 (actually 2 of them) with the favs family plan. The phone is good, however, the internet on T-Mobile (edge) is super slow in comparison to other providers with high speed alternatives; 3g for Sprint, Verizon, ATT, or evdo for Verizon & Sprint. Amazon provided the best deal out of any other retailer out there, hands down, and they provided excellent service when I needed it.

Despite the complaint of slow internet through t-mobile, when it comes down flexibility of its use as a phone, T-mobile is the only provider at the moment that allows hotspot (UMA) calling or the ability to use the wifi connection of the phone to make phone calls, WITHOUT deducting minutes from your phone plan, as long as you pay for the $10 a month hotspot calling service.

Pros:

1) Unlimited HotSpot calling through T-mobile: Make unlimited national phone calls with this phone on any wifi network as long as you pay for the 10 dollar hotspot calling feature.

2) hotspot calling feature is available on a family plan (covers EVERYONE on their family plan for one low price) and it costs the same as a single line hotspot feature.

3) Phone is Wifi capable, go online through any Wifi network (that you have access to: secured networks you don’t have a key to don’t work obviously!)

4) good messaging (SMS) and e-mail capabilities (outlook, gmail, hotmail, etc) as long as you pay for the required data plans (See cons below)

5) Good call quality, build quality, and great feature set(for the money) on the phone itself, the plans are something else.

Cons:

1) Phone is slow when navigating through menus and dialing in comparison to dedicated cell phones (non pda phones)

2) Screen is a bit small to actually do any real web browsing; its purpose is mostly to receive emails. i would call this an email phone. yes you can web browse, but it is tedious, even with aftermarket software browsers like mini opera, etc.

3) On the T-mobile side, the internet is absolutely slow slow slow. makes web browsing practically unusable, unless of course you are on a wifi connection. If you have the patience to deal with browsing on the edge network and wait X2 as long as dial-up, then be my guest, I’d recommend wifi.

4) required to pay for data plan: extra $$$ for something the phone is supposed to do out of the box. No data plan, no internet or email unless you have an available wifi connection.

5) if you are using outlook for work to receive email, it is then required to pay even more money for the BB enterprise server data plan in order to receive emails instantly or close to real time. Otherwise, you have to deal with web outlook (OWA) which only pushes email about every 15 minutes to your blackberry device.

There you have it, depending on what your needs are, this phone can be the either best phone you have ever owned, or it could be just a phone with too many features. For me, its the best overall value for a phone, period.

other thoughts: Now if only it was 3G…

4 Stars Great Phone
I lost my last Blackberry and upgraded to a curve and wish I had just upgraded sooner. Better keys, better browser, camera… just all around a great phone. The only thing I would like to see is a slimmer version.

4 Stars The Best Free Phone Out There
Well to start off my original concern was that I get the best phone out with internet capabilities at the lowest possible price. The 8320 is that phone, with the key word being “lowest” possible price. I would rather the iphone but over the course of a year your going to pay a lot more for it. I got the 8320 for -79.99 in my pocket after a rebate with a plan that only costs [...] a month and it has WiFi so you don’t have to continue paying [...] dollars a month for unlimited internet after 6 months. Internet is FREE. That by itself makes this phone the best bargain out there. My one concern was that this phone would be really big and look weird in my pocket but it is much smaller than it looks and fits comfortably in my pants pocket.

4 Stars Get an unlocked 8320! Terrific on AT&T!
I bought this item on eBay (refurbished, brand new but out of box)- and it is just amazing. WiFi, Camera, Video (you need to upgrade the firmware) and a full keyboard – what a great phone.

Very small issues – sometimes the network cuts out (AT&T’s problem), no mainstream IM client, no way to check email or use IM over WiFi and the browser needs work. I’m sure BB will fix these issues with later phones.

The buttons are a little small (I have fingers like sausages) but I’ve learned to type using my thumbs nonetheless.

Add an 8GB MicroSD card and you’re in business! I don’t need an MP3 player anymore!

To reiterate, find the phone unlocked if you can. Mine says T-Mobile when it starts up, but since it’s unlocked I just pop in my AT&T card and it works fine.

4 Stars One Small Point…
The literature consistently says “Does not take video”—it does take video. Go to the video area (icon looks like a camera) click on it and there you are. The capability came with my 8320 from Cincinnati Bell. Even the RIM website omits this feature, it’s there. Enjoy, it does a great job of video, too. Crisp, with voice, good color, you can zoom in and out as well. Only reason I am giving the device one less than full stars is it is such a difficult little thing to master compared to the iTouch, but it does so much more. Well worth the price and the time invested.

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