The Good The BlackBerry Passport offers powerful hardware and a clever keyboard that makes for a great reading and editing experience.
The Bad That squat, square shape makes it awkward to use. Amazon's app store lacks some key apps found on Google Play.
The Bottom Line The
BlackBerry Passport's bullish focus on productivity spawns a fantastic
keyboard, but its blocky shape makes one-handed use difficult.
The phone will be available unlocked later this week for $599 in the US, and later in 2014 for €649 in France and Germany, $699 in Canada, and £529 in the UK. (No Australian price was released, but the US price converts to around AU$675.) BlackBerry has announced that AT&T will carry the device in the US, but more information on carrier availability, the phone's price on contract, and specific release dates haven't been announced at time of publication.
I approached this phone with reservations, and came away as something of a fan -- it's really nice! But the Passport has a critical flaw, and you're looking at it. The squat, square chassis that makes the device great for reading and editing documents is the reason for its distinct shape. But it makes for a cumbersome user experience, and one that'll give pause to even those of us cursed with giant hands.
Design and specs
Keep in mind that these are completely different phones targeting fundamentally different audiences: the average consumer versus that nebulous "professional" BlackBerry has courted for so long. And if you fall into the latter camp of hard-core BlackBerry devotees or can't do without a physical keyboard, this is the phone for you.
No comments:
Post a Comment