Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Review: Blackberry Classic Designed With Old Bold, Curve Users In Mind

The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2014 11:18 AM
    TORONTO — Attention BlackBerry Curve and Bold users: BlackBerry wants you to ditch your ancient phone and upgrade to something familiar yet new.
     
    With the new BlackBerry Classic, the Waterloo, Ont.-based company is targeting the "millions and millions" of loyal customers still clinging onto their antiquated, not-quite-smart phones.
     
    The beleaguered company has already said it no longer intends to compete with Apple and Android phone-makers in the increasingly cutthroat consumer smartphone market.
     
    It has now turned its attention to corporate customers, and with the Classic, is being even more specific in honing in on BlackBerry users who have had their old, outdated phones for way too long.
     
    The Classic was designed to be the spitting image of the Bold 9900, which was released in 2011, already a couple of years into BlackBerry's staggering decline.
     
    The Bold was competing against the likes of the iPhone 4S and the Samsung Galaxy S II. While it couldn't turn the company around, the phone did have its fans. Kim Kardashian recently made headlines for proclaiming it was still her phone of choice. She said she's been buying backups on eBay because she can't imagine living without it.
     
    BlackBerry bills the Classic as being like a Bold but modernized, with better hardware and software. The 3.5-inch screen is 60 per cent larger than the Bold 9900's display and BlackBerry claims the battery lasts 50 per cent longer than the old Bold's.
     
    The Classic runs the BlackBerry 10 operating system, which befuddled many longtime BlackBerry users when the new software was launched last year.
     
    BlackBerry has conceded that some of its hardcore users simply aren't up for trying to learn the swiping gestures used to navigate BlackBerry 10.
     
    So the company has brought back the trackpad and top row of keyboard keys that were familiar to Bold users but nixed in the design of the Q10 keyboard-based phone.
     
    "(BlackBerry 10) was too different," admits Michael Clewley, director of handheld software product management.
     
    One of the keys allows users to go back to the home screen without having to use a swipe gesture.
     
    "If the user is starting to feel a little bit lost ... they have the escape parachute to get back to the home screen," Clewley says.
     
    BlackBerry is hoping the confusing-to-some gesture system was the reason the Q10 wasn't largely adopted by old Bold users.
     
    Outside of the trackpad, new keyboard keys, and a slightly larger screen, there's not much of an upgrade between the Q10 and the Classic.
     
    But the Classic is certainly a huge leap forward compared to an old Curve or Bold.
     
    It has a web browser that actually works with virtually any website, access to far more apps — although still just a tiny number compared to what's available on other platforms — and most importantly, a keyboard that makes typing emails a breeze.
     
    There's still a bit of a learning curve to adjust to BlackBerry 10 but there's a tutorial that users are guided through when they first turn on the phone.
     
    If the Classic can't convince BlackBerry stalwarts to finally upgrade their old phone, perhaps nothing will.
     
    The Classic will be available starting Wednesday for $50 with a two-year contract or $499 unlocked directly from BlackBerry.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Turkey bans Twitter

    Turkey bans Twitter
    Turkey has banned social networking site Twitter, media reported. The ban came to light when Twitter users, trying to log on to their accounts, were redirected to a statement by Turkey's telecommunications regulator instead, BBC reported

    Turkey bans Twitter

    Australia eases visa laws for Indian, Chinese students

    Australia eases visa laws for Indian, Chinese students
    In a significant reform of the immigration laws affecting international students, Australia has eased the financial requirements for the visa applicants from "high risk" countries like India, China and Pakistan.

    Australia eases visa laws for Indian, Chinese students

    How do people stay slim despite eating 'fat' food?

    How do people stay slim despite eating 'fat' food?
    Your closest pal or colleague may eat the same high-calorie food that you gulp down but know how he/she stays slim and trim while you keep on adding extra kilos around your waist?

    How do people stay slim despite eating 'fat' food?

    Believe it! Humans can smell 1 trillion odours

    Believe it! Humans can smell 1 trillion odours
    From freshly baked pizza or popped popcorns in a cinema theatre to fresh sea breeze or wet paint at home, our nose can actually distinguish at least one trillion different odours.

    Believe it! Humans can smell 1 trillion odours

    Obese? Blame it on fat cells' expansion

    Obese? Blame it on fat cells' expansion
    You have heard about obesity or accumulation of fat but do you know that nutrition is not the only factor driving obesity in our kids? According to researchers, the mechanics of 'cellular expansion' plays a pivotal role in fat production.

    Obese? Blame it on fat cells' expansion

    This 'smart lens' will give you night vision

    This 'smart lens' will give you night vision
    What about wearing a contact lens that can let you see things in the dark? A smart contact lens is in the offing that could give its wearer infra-red 'night vision'.

    This 'smart lens' will give you night vision