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 Curve 8520 Review

 

Summary
Over the past few months we’ve received a number of entry-level smartphones for testing. The BlackBerry Curve 8520 was the most surprising of the lot, since we didn’t expect a BlackBerry that would be available on a R150 weekender package, which by the way includes unlimited Internet browsing and email.
Features and Design

While the Curve 8520 lacks the design flourishes of the most recent BlackBerrys, But Beneath its rather pedantic surface are a surfeit of features for both work and pleasure, including full PIM sync, music and video players, full text, IM and, naturally, BlackBerry’s nonpareil e-mail capabilities. That includes complete Microsoft Office attachment viewing, reading and editing, and several other embedded apps, including direct links to Facebook, MySpace and other social networking sites. The BlackBerry App Store also offers hundreds of other apps. Inexplicably, the App Store app isn’t preloaded on the Curve – you have to download it yourself.

Form Factor

The Curve’s screen-over-QWERTY-keyboard form factor has become pretty standard for slab smartphones. Unlike previous BlackBerrys, the 8520’s edges are ringed with rubber to ensure a better grip.

Keys on the left side of the keyboard slope slightly up to the right, and keys on the right slope slightly up to the left, to make it easier to avoid tapping adjacent keys. On the frost-blue unit we reviewed, the alphanumeric icons were difficult to make out in direct light. And, as usual, the small number keys – all the keys are kind of tiny, actually – make it hard to direct dial.

The right side has three bump buttons under the rubber rim: two at the top for volume, and one in the middle to activate the camera. The left perimeter has a dimpled bump to activate the voice dialing below the microUSB jack, above which is the 3.5mm headphone jack. Up top are music play control buttons, a mute button, and a dedicated music speaker. The rear houses the 2-megapixel camera.

The microSD slot, good for up to a 32GB card, hides behind the battery cover, but you can leave the battery in to swap cards. A 1GB card comes preinstalled. Above the keyboard is the navigation array, which doesn’t use BlackBerry’s typical track nipple, but a more responsive and easier to use track pad.
Can a phone serve as a workable PMP?

Using the included BlackBerry desktop software (which you also use to sync PIM and other files from a PC), you can load tracks. It offer the option to pull in either entire playlists, or random tracks from specific playlists, depending on how much space you have on your microSD card, from either iTunes or Windows Media Player. A Mac version to transfer tracks from iTunes is due in September.

While the Curve has no problem playing back MPEG-4 or HD H.264 videos – those usually captured by cheap camcorders, digital cameras and cellphones – on its bright and colorful 2.46-inch screen, it can’t handle QuickTime movies.
With a 3.5 mm jack to plug in your own headphones, with decent enough onboard speakers, and you have yourself quite the media phone. Music plays continuously and seamlessly under all applications.
 
 
 
Sound Quality

Conversation quality at both ends of calls was as close to landline quality as we’ve ever experienced, with no network echo or warble. The phone produced in some of the crispest and cleanest cell conversations we’ve had.

 

Phone Functionality

The trackpad is a huge leap beyond BlackBerry’s (and everyone else’s) other navigation options. The tiny pad – it’s a quarter-inch square – is more functional and intuitively reactive than typical concentric circle nav arrays. You simply slide your thumb across it to move the cursor in any direction, and press it in to activate whatever lights up – simple and easy.

Web

Even though the Curve runs only on GPRS and EDGE network, the HTML browser is relatively responsive. Mobile-optimized pages such as Google and F1 load in around seven seconds, non-optimized pages load in 12 seconds or more, depending on graphic content. Thanks to BlackBerry’s submenu options, it’s easy to go to a specific URL, view history, bookmark pages, etc.

Camera

The Curve’s 2-megapixel camera takes surprisingly excellent pictures indoors and out, with plenty of preset exposure options. Snapshots are colorful, with as much detail as you’d expect from a 2-megapixel imager. Each step-up with the 5x zoom, however, reduces resolution, as if you were simply cropping a larger image.

The Curve can capture both half VGA and MMS-compatible QCIF videos. The former lack the usual digital artifacts you find when you blow up the footage, but suffer from jagged edges instead. But these are minor quibbles, since the videos are otherwise smooth.

Battery Life

RIM says you’ll get 4.5 hours of talk time, which is below average, even for sub-R3,000 phones. We managed to squeeze a whopping six-hours-plus of talk time out of the Curve in our unscientific tests, which is above average. Real-life runtimes from mixed usage, obviously, will be shorter.

Conclusion

Other than perhaps some missing style flourishes and the lack of 3G connectivity, the Curve 8520 is a real BlackBerry, with all the BlackBerry bells and whistles we’ve come to expect. Excellent for both verbal and non-verbal communication and with plenty of entertainment and expansion options, the myriad-use Curve 8520 is an insane value.

Pros:

BlackBerry e-mail, IM and text capabilities
Excellent sound quality for both voice and media
Able to read and edit Microsoft Office attachments
Trackpad simplifies navigation
Compatible with T-Mobile myFaves
Surprisingly high quality 2-megapixel photos and HVGA video

Cons:

Small keypad difficult for direct dialing
EDGE instead of 3G connectivity
No onboard GPS


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