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Sunday, 24 November 2013

BlackBerry Z30

Introduction

The BlackBerry Z30 launches in time of crisis and will be looked upon as the savior, or end up as the one that witnessed the company's undoing. Market share has hit the fan, as RIM of old which stood for innovation and vision, has turned into the money-losing, job-cutting, CEO-swapping, rescue-deal-awaiting BlackBerry that we have now.

Yet, in the middle of all this, another flagship gets unleashed to hopefully help and turn around the shrinking market share and ease the pressure from all sorts of competition. The BB 10 OS was indeed a great comeback, especially from such a conservative company, but the Z10 failed to become the kick-starter many thought - hoped - it would be. It's now the BlackBerry Z30's turn but the company may have already lost the smartphone battle and now running in survival mode.

The Z30 isn't BlackBerry's first smartphone to entirely break up with the old ways and go after the multimedia powerhouses of the competition. In fact, a five-incher must've been on the cards ever since the 4.2" Z10 appeared early this year. This sure looks like a steep increase in screen size but Blackberry must've been aware of the fact that they needed to catch up and do it fast. It's a 720p Super AMOLED display too, a second for the company after the Q10, but the first full-scale touchscreen.

The Z30 is powered by an upgraded Qualcomm chipset with a more recent GPU and has better battery backup than the preceding Z10. The latest version, 10.2, of the BB OS brings lockscreen notifications, a new instant preview and reply feature, new Priority Hub, updated system apps, USB host and more.

Here is the BlackBerry Z30 complete feature list.

Key features

  • Quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE, penta-band UMTS/HSPA, penta-band LTE
  • 5.0" 16M-color 720p Super AMOLED capacitive touchscreen
  • Dual-core 1.7 GHz Krait, 2GB RAM, Adreno 320
  • 8 megapixel auto-focus camera with face detection and Time Shift; LED flash, 2MP front facing camera
  • Full HD (1080p) video recording at 30fps; 720p recording with front-facing camera
  • 16GB storage, microSD card slot; built-in Dropbox and Box integration
  • Ability to side-load and run Jelly-Bean-compatible apps
  • Dual-band Wi-Fi a/b/g/n, Wi-Fi hotspot; Wi-Fi sync
  • Bluetooth 4.0
  • NFC
  • Standard microUSB port, USB host, microHDMI
  • 3.5mm audio jack
  • GPS receiver with A-GPS and GLONASS
  • BlackBerry 10.2 OS
  • Office document editor
  • BlackBerry Hub with extensive social networking connectivity
  • BBM with video chat and screen sharing

Main disadvantages

  • Below-par screen resolution, the competition has 1080p displays
  • The UI poses a steep learning curve
  • Thick and heavy, not quite up to the usual high standard of design and finish
  • BlackBerry Maps fall short of the competition
  • Camera offers little control over image quality
  • Audio quality degrades with headphones plugged in (as opposed to an external amp)

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