BlackBerry Z30
BLACKBERRY Z30 REVIEW
The
last BlackBerry smartphone to be released in October 2013, the Z30, is also the
largest handset launched by the Canadian company in its entire history. The Z30
packs a nicely responsive 5-inch Super AMOLED display, which at 1,280-by-720
resolution and 295ppi is crisp enough, if not top of the range (Samsung's
Galaxy S4 delivers 441ppi, for example). The screen could do with being a
little brighter, too. Still, the 1.7GHz quad-core Qualcomm MSM8960T Pro CPU
with 2GB of RAM keeps everything zipping along nicely. There's 16GB of internal
storage, expandable via a MicroSD card slot located under the back cover. Connectivity
is good, with support for quad-band GSM/GPRS/EDGE, HSPA and LTE, along with
dual-band 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS and NFC. The Z30 features a
large 2,880mAh battery, which BlackBerry says will last for 25 hours of mixed
use (or 18 hours of 3G talk and 16 days on standby), which seems a reasonable
assessment in our experience. However, the positioning of the charging port on
the side is one of the handset's least elegant features, and that large battery
takes a lot of charging — or at least it did on the sample we tested. As well as
the Micro-USB 2.0 charging/data-sync port, there's a Micro-HDMI port for video
output on an external monitor or projector. The 8-megapixel rear camera is
adequate and businesslike but nothing particularly exciting (and refused to
open a couple of times on the unit I road-tested). Still, this is not a handset
aimed at the snap-happy crowd, even if the TimeShift feature, which allows you
to remove unwanted elements from a picture, and the image-editing software are
useful additions. The rear camera will record full-HD (1080p) video, while the
2-megapixel front-facing camera will do HD (720p) video. The Z30 is the first
BlackBerry handset to run the 10.2 version of the BlackBerry 10 operating
system, which improves on what was already a good user experience. BlackBerry
says the Z30 is aimed at a prosumer and business audience with an emphasis on
productivity; it certainly feels as though it's been built with busy
professionals in mind. One key updates is the BlackBerry Priority Hub, which
collects the most important messages across email, social networking and other
accounts to give users quicker access to high-priority conversations. You have
to do some work to teach it which are the priority messages, but it's a handy
addition. Although I found the Hub occasionally slow to update with messages as
well, it's still a useful tool, as is the Attachments view that makes it easy
to find files. There are several tweaks aimed at making it simpler to see and
respond to messages: the lockscreen displays a summary of emails and tweets,
which is a handy and mildly addictive way to keep up to date; you can also
respond to a BBM message without leaving the app that's open at the time.
Similarly, the BlackBerry 10 'peek', which allows you to check your messages
without closing an application, is a useful addition once you've mastered the
up-and-across swipe. Elsewhere you'll find some sweet keyboard shortcuts to
speed up typing as well (Docs to Go is handy enterprise-oriented addition
here), while the 'reader' option in the browser strips out all the extraneous
formatting and images from web pages, making them much easier to read. Perhaps
the worst thing you can say about the BlackBerry Z30 is that's it's a little
lacking in fun — I felt slightly guilty watching a YouTube video on it, for
example. And the BlackBerry World app store isn't going to help turn your
somewhat po-faced Z30 into a party machine either, as it still lacks depth
compared to the Android or iOS alternatives. Having said that, you can
side-load Android apps, which should help you fill in the gaps. The Z30 is a
polished business handset aimed at the multitasking executive, and contains
lots of neat tweaks aimed at making such people as productive as possible. It's
the short-back-and-sides of the phablet world — a briefcase when everyone wants
a cool courier bag, or a pair of brogues
when everyone is wearing trainers. For a rectangle, it's surprisingly square.
In short, it's a little too serious, and BlackBerry 10 lacks the broad app
ecosystem that would give the Z30 wider appeal for use in the office and at
home — which is what most buyers actually want in a smartphone. To be a real
success, smartphones have to appeal to consumers as well as business users. It's
also impossible to review such a device without noting BlackBerry's current
situation, with analysts Gartner even suggesting that enterprise customers
should start looking at alternatives fast. The Z30 isn't the handset to turn
the company's fortunes around, but it will certainly appeal to the (increasingly
niche) business-first audience.
SPECIFICATION & FEATURES
BLACKBERRY Z30 PRICE
Price in USA $838
Price in UK £474
Price in EURO €650
Price in PAK Rs.80,000
Price in INDIA Rs.45,000
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