• Wednesday, April 24, 2024
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BusinessDay

A closer look @ the Z10

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The BlackBerry Z10 has finally arrived after what has been a very tough year for the company and with the rumoured iPhone 6 and Samsung Galaxy S4 handsets due to land in 2013, the battle has only just begun. Blackberry launched the device in Nigeria yesterday. It is priced at N100, 000.

Launched alongside the physical keyboard-toting BlackBerry Q10, the Z10’s current competitors take the shape of the iPhone 5, Samsung Galaxy S3, HTC One X and Nokia Lumia 920. But has it got what it takes to make it into our list of the best smartphones around? Read on to find out.

Size and build

Hold it in your hand and you’ll be forgiven for being less than overwhelmed with BlackBerry’s new smartphone. The understated design is available in either all-black or a slightly more eye-catching white on black.

A large glass front is then sandwiched by two plastic ends with a slightly rubberised back covering the rear. With the functional ‘substance over style. stealth-like aesthetics, the Z10 is something that we would imagine to be as comfortable in the hand of a bat-obsessed crusader as a businessman.

Measuring in at 130mm x 65.6mm x 9mm it might be considered ‘chunky’, however thanks to the build quality it instantly moves into the realms of ‘durable’ rather than ‘heavyweight’. It feels like a phone that was made for a marathon of suit trousers, coffee spills and desk-level drops.

Screen

With a 4.2-inch 1280×768 display, the Z10 boasts a pixel density that exceeds the iPhone 5. While it may not be able to combat the sun as well as Apple’s handset, it makes up for it in sharpness.

Operating System

The Z10 boasts a fairly sizable bezel, something other smartphone makers are hastily trying to remove. The reasoning for this is actually the software itself – BlackBerry 10. Many of the main gestures in BlackBerry’s new OS are done by swiping from off the screen onto the display. With a swipe up from the bottom acting as both the ‘Home’ action and also as a way to unlock the phone.

A swipe upwards from the bottom of the screen acts as both the ‘Home’ action and also as a way to unlock the phone. Once unlocked you’re greeted with what looks to be BlackBerry business as usual – a series of app icons split up over windows with an unlimited number allowed.

Apps can be minimised by swiping up, turning each one into an ‘Active Frame’ which then remains in a window next to the apps. Essentially minimised apps, the Active Frames can also function as live widgets showing realtime updates on news stories, giving you essential calendar information or even showing you the weather at your location. You can have up to 8 running at any one time.

You can see that BlackBerry has created these as an alternative to Android’s widgets however it’s more a halfway house at the moment with some apps like the Guardian showing a brilliant slideshow of news images while some others show an infuriatingly tiny version of the app screen.

BlackBerry Hub

Central to BlackBerry 10 is the Hub – a stream of notifications encompassing all your accounts including Gmail, Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn, showing you everything from messages to birthdays. It’s certainly an impressive feature and something we can really see business users and heavy social network addicts appreciating.

BlackBerry Balance

To help appease the business users, BlackBerry Balance has been created, essentially splitting your Z10 into two halves. It lets you switch between work and personal with the two being completely cut off from the other, avoiding any potentially disastrous situations involving your holiday snaps and a business presentation.

BlackBerry World

To get your mitts on apps you’ll need to use the BlackBerry World app store where you’ll find the usual mass of overpriced stock exchange apps but also some more pleasant surprises including recent HD films, pretty much the entire singles music chart and some apps you’ll actually recognise. In fact there’s over 70, 000 apps available at launch and confirmation of yet more big names including Skype and WhatsApp with Instagram likely to appear as well.

BBM Video

One of the big new features to land on BlackBerry 10, BBM has been given an upgrade letting you perform crystal clear voice calls as well as video calls on the 2MP front-facing camera with other BBM users, rivalling both Skype and Apple’s FaceTime service.

BlackBerry 10 also includes Story Maker, which is BlackBerry’s version of iMovie. This is a simple movie editing app that aims to take the hassle out of creating a short home movie.

You can add videos or images and then apply any soundtrack of your choice. Six filters are available and then once complete it’ll be rendered in HD where you can then upload to YouTube.

Screen Share

A feature exclusive to BBM, Screen Share lets you do exactly that. At the press of a button you can share your screen with the person you’re having a video call with whether it’s a YouTube video, internet page or contact information. Clearly implemented as a business focused feature, Screen Share also has social potential.

You can add videos or images and then apply any soundtrack of your choice. Six filters are available and then once complete it’ll be rendered in HD where you can then upload to YouTube.

BB10 also gives you BlackBerry Remember – the brand’s answer to the popular app Evernote. Whether it’s a shopping list or a project, you can create a workbook and then fill it with images, videos, documents or music.

You can also add voice memos and emails to help remind you.

Performance

All of these apps require large amounts of memory and that’s where the specs list comes in. Under the hood you’ll find a 1.5GHz dual-core processor, which may not sound like much but it’s actually on par with Sony’s flagship Xperia Z and most of the Nokia Lumia range, making the handset pretty zippy.

Culled from T3