BlackBerry Tour 9630
BLACKBERRY TOUR 9630 REVIEW
The
Bold took BlackBerry devices to a new design level, and CDMA users have been
wanton for their own version since it was first announced. RIM did one better and gave them the
BlackBerry Tour 9630. The BlackBerry Tour 9630 is a digital dual band CDMA
phone that's available in Sprint and Verizon versions in the U.S., and it's
also a quad band GSM phone that will work anywhere GSM networks are available
outside of the U.S. Both Sprint and Verizon lock the GSM radio in the U.S., as
they want you to use their CDMA networks. The BlackBerry Tour 9630 also has 3G
for fast data and works on EV-DO Rev. A networks. Outside of the U.S., the
phone works on 2100MHz UMTS/HSPA 3G networks. The BlackBerry Tour 9630 is a
great looking BlackBerry. It has the Curve's curvy lines but the Bold's build
quality and classier looks. Measuring 4.4 x 2.4 x 0.6 inches, the BlackBerry
Tour is a hair bigger than the Curve 8900 and just a bit shorter and narrower
than the Bold. The 2.4" display has 480 x 360 pixel resolution and 65K
colors, and it looks bright and color saturated. The QWERTY keyboard is very
easy to use and the trackball provides an excellent navigation experience as
with other trackball-equipped BlackBerries. The menu keys, call send and call
end keys flank the trackball and are quite flat though not hard to use as they
are large. Music fans should be happy to know that the BlackBerry Tour has a
3.5mm stereo audio jack and it comes witha wired stereo headset. Along with the
audio jack, the BlackBerry Tour has volume controls, and two convenience keys,
one on each side of the phone. You can assign these keys to launch any
applications including voice command, camera, music and more. The 3.2 megapixel
camera lives on the back with flash and the battery door has a latch that
allows you to take the door off very easily. The battery doors vary a little
bit between the Sprint and Verizon versions: the Sprint Tour has a smooth
plastic back while the Verizon Tour has a soft touch battery door with a
textured plastic strip in the middle. The SIM card lives under the battery door
and you will need to take the battery out to access it when you travel
overseas, and the microSD card slot also lives under the battery door but it doesn't
require removal of the battery. The BlackBerry Tour 9630 gets mediocre signal
strength in areas that have average to good coverage. Near a cell tower though
the phone does get full bars or nearly full bars. The smartphone has never
dropped a call on either Sprint or Verizon networks, but the voice quality
can't compete with the BlackBerry Bold on AT&T. The voice isn't super clear
like the Bold, but the Tour has a good DSP for wind and noise filtering. The
BlackBerry Tour comes with Nuance voice command software that works very well
for voice dialing and checking the coverage level and battery level. The
smartphone also has smart dialing and speed dial. Call management features
include call waiting, conference call and call forwarding. The BlackBerry Tour
9630 has the BlackBerry Browser 4.7.1 which can display full HTML pages with
images and most layouts intact. Web pages load at a reasonable speed over EV-DO
Rev. A. The browser offers bookmarks, history, cookies, cache and settings for
fonts and images. One thing that still slows down web page rendering
considerably is JavaScript. The browser offers an option to turn JavaScript on
or off, and with the feature turned on pages load slowly even over EVDO; but
without JavaScript support you might see broken tables, text mis-alignment and
other layout nightmares. We certainly hope that RIM's next generation web
browser fixes this problem. In the meantime, webkit-based browsers beat the
BlackBerry offering by a mile for rendering accuracy and speed. For BlackBerry
traditionalists who want excellent push email and IM, the BlackBerry Tour
doesn't disappoint. The push email is super fast and allows signatures,
attachments and a multitude of message management features and settings. The
BlackBerry PIN-based messaging and IM are expedient and easy to use. The Tour
also supports SMS, MMS and popular messenger applications. The BlackBerry Tour
9630 has built-in GPS. It comes with BlackBerry Maps and also works with Sprint
Navigation and Verizon VZ Navigator. The GPS gets fast fixes and accurate
positions. BlackBerry Maps is a free download over the air and offers maps,
turn-by-turn on-screen directions and POI searches. The maps load a bit slower
than the carrier hosted navigation services, and it doesn't have voice guidance.
While not free, both carriers' navigation services offer route calculations,
turn-by-turn directions and voice guidance for driving. We tested the GPS with
both services and found the GPS worked smoothly for real time routing and
re-routing, traffic reports and POI searches. The voice guidance was on target
and the turn-by-turn direction and maps followed driving perfectly. The voice
was loud through the phone's built-in speaker and we had no trouble hearing it
over highway noise. While the BlackBerry Tour doesn't have the hardware music
controls found on the BlackBerry Curve 8520, it's a very decent music player.
The media player on the Tour doesn't look fancy but it can play MP3, AAC, AAC+
eAAC+, WMA and WMA ProPlus audio files. The built-in mono speakerphone is very
loud and has clear sound for music playback but it can sound blown out when the
volume is turned too high. Using the included wired stereo headset, the music
sounds very clear and loud with much stronger bass. The Tour also works with
Bluetooth stereo headsets via A2DP. The Sprint BlackBerry works with Sprint's
Music Store and Verzion's version works with V CAST Music with Rhapsody for
buying and downloading music over the air. The BlackBerry Tour also has a
microSD card slot that works with high capacity cards and plays music stored on
the card. The Sprint version includes a 1GB microSD card with the Tour, and
Verizon gives you a 2GB card with the phone. You can of course sync music using
the included USB cable. The BlackBerry Tour can also play video, and on the
entertainment front, the BlackBerry Tour for Sprint offers more unique content.
Sprint TV works reasonably well on the Tour. The on-demand videos play smoothly
most of the time but there are some noticeable frame drops and refresh delays.
Other sports and entertainment content on the Sprint version include NFL Mobile
Live and NASCAR Sprint Cup Mobile which offer team info, player info, news and
much more. The news and interview videos from the two sports channels are sharp
and play mostly smoothly, but the resolution is so small that you can barely
make out who is on the screen. Both NASCAR mobile and NFL mobile content is set
up for devices with lower resolutions, and as result, the text looks really
small on the Tour. Sadly the Verizon version of the Tour doesn't offer V CAST
Video services. What if you want to listen to streaming audio, update your
Facebook or upload photos to your favorite sites? How about games or checking
the weather? BlackBerry App World has you covered. Be it Pandora radio, or apps
for Facebook, MySpace and Flickr, or WeatherEye and free games, all you need to
do is just download it over the air and install them on your BlackBerry, and
many of them are free. RIM has just added a catalogue feature to the App World
and now when you look at an application you can see more info about it. App
World has top paid app lists, a newly released app list, a top free app list
and it also allows you to archive downloaded apps to microSD cards. The
BlackBerry Tour 9630 has a 3.2 megapixel autofocus camera with a flash. The
camera takes OK pictures but not impressive compared with other camera phones
in this class. The still images have inconsistent exposure, but colors look
saturated and balanced. The pictures could be sharper in both indoor and
outdoor shots. The autofocus lens is quite fast and the flash lamp is bright
and works well for shots in dark environments. The camera can also take video
with audio. The camera software offers white balance settings, effects,
shooting modes and geo-tagging as well as image quality and resolution
settings. The BlackBerry Tour has a rechargeable Lithium Ion battery that's
1400mAh in capacity. That's the same battery capacity as the BlackBerry Bold
and the Curve 8900 but the Tour doesn't last as long on a charge. The claimed
talk time is 5 hours and claimed standby time is 14 days. Both the Sprint
version and Verizon version of the Tour lasted no more than 4-5 days on standby
with only push email turned on. When we accessed EVDO data for more intensive
tasks such as shopping for music, watching on-demand video and navigation and
driving with voice guidance, the phone lasted about 1.5 days. If you talk a lot
on the phone and access data frequently as well as getting messages pushed to
you, expect to charge the Tour every day to 2 days. Playing music drains very
little battery.
SPECIFICATION & FEATURES
BLACKBERRY TOUR 9630 PRICE
Price in USA $129
Price in UK £78
Price in EURO €98
Price in PAK Rs.12,000
Price in INDIA Rs.6,999
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