The BlackBerry is the de facto e-mail device for nomadic
employees. Now Research In Motion is upping the ante with the
BlackBerry 8800, which aims to prove that RIM can do voice well
enough to serve as an all-in-one mobile platform.
Voice-activated dialing, enhanced multimedia capabilities, a GPS
sensor and other advanced features put this BlackBerry on par with
Windows Mobile phones and the Palm Treo. Even better, these add-ons
don’t come at the expense of its messaging capabilities: it
still boasts a full QWERTY keyboard and improves Web browsing with
a new trackball.
But this pretty little number still has its flaws, including a
limited battery life and disappointing data throughput.
CALL ME
‘Sleek’ and ‘stylish’ are words rarely
associated with previous devices from RIM, but both aptly describe
the 8800. The device itself is runway-model slim. A glossy black
finish and chromed sides replace the decidedly corporate look of
older BlackBerry models.
Beyond cosmetics, the new form factor means making and receiving
calls feels a lot less awkward than it did with previous models.
Dedicated volume controls are within easy reach during a
conversation.
The new device also offers Voice-Activated Dialing (VAD), which
saves you the trouble of scrolling through the address book. (It
also makes it easier to dial while driving, but we trust you know
better than to make calls while behind the wheel, right?) The VAD
feature is voice-independent, meaning the device doesn’t have
to train itself to a specific user’s voice. After activating
the VAD, you say, for example, “Call John Doe mobile.”
The device then scans the address book for the appropriate number.
If no exact match is found, the VAD will suggest names closest to
the one you said. We found the VAD to be accurate during testing
and simple enough for everyday use.
On the downside, the dial pad is still placed to one side of the
8800’s QWERTY keyboard, which does make it nearly impossible
to enter numbers without actually looking at the device.
The 8800 also includes a redesigned thumb-board and a new
trackball. To adjust for a slightly thinner device, the keys on the
thumb-board have been slimmed and raised a bit. Users of older
model BlackBerrys may stumble over these changes; we fat-fingered a
number of keystrokes until we adapted.
The 8800 replaces the click wheel with a small trackball on the
front of the device. The trackball is one reason Blackberry’s
Web experience is better, in our opinion, than that of a Windows
Mobile device. Although RIM attempts to format Web pages for the
small screen at the server (the carrier’s Blackberry Internet
Services server or at the enterprise’s Blackberry Enterprise
Server), there are some sites that just don’t optimize very
well. But by using RIM’s default Web client in Desktop Mode,
you get a cursor on the screen that has a full range of motion
thanks to the trackball, making it easy to scroll vertically and
horizontally. The trackball also helps make up for the fact that
BlackBerry doesn’t have the touchscreen found on many Windows
Mobile devices.
Enterprises will also appreciate the control they can exercise over
Web use. If the device is connected to a BlackBerry Enterprise
Server (BES), all Internet access on that device feeds through the
company’s firewall and Web filters. This means two things:
first, the BlackBerry can access internal or intranet sites
securely without exposing the sites to the outside world. All Web
and e-mail traffic is encrypted between the device and the BES.
Second, all of the company’s Web filtering policies will be
applied, which means no naughty pictures on corporate-issued
devices.
PLAYING CATCH-UP
With the 8800, RIM has finally brought multimedia and GPS to its
corporate devices. However, these are features that its competitors
have had for some time.
Music, videos and pictures can be copied to either the 64 MB of
internal memory or onto memory cards loaded into the 8800’s
microSD slot. The media player plays multiple music and video
formats, including MP3, Windows Media and MPEG4. Although it lacks
common options found on other smartphones, such as playlists and
song shuffle, the media player is a viable alternative for road
warriors who like to travel with tunes but don’t want to
carry a dedicated media player. One sticking point is that the
8800’s link to the desktop is only USB 1.1, which makes
transferring even small music files extremely slow.
Of course, given that the 8800 is designed primarily for the
enterprise, your users may not have an opportunity to play with the
multimedia features. If corporate policies dictate it,
administrators can disable the media player centrally from the
BES.
The 8800 is also the first BlackBerry with a built-in GPS module.
Not only does this open opportunities for location-based services
down the road, it also gives road warriors access to navigation
tools today. For example, Telenav, a subscription-based navigator
available from AT&T, captures location information from the
8800, then downloads maps, directions and even points of interest
from Telenav’s servers, and presents them on the
BlackBerry’s screen. We found the maps and turn-by-turn
directions to be surprisingly accurate, though because the service
downloads the maps as you go, it can sometimes be a bit slow.
Users can choose a destination from the 8800’s address book,
enter it on the keyboard, or call into Telenav and use its voice
response system. Travelers now have the convenience of mapping and
routing with turn-by-turn voice prompts, again without having to
carry a dedicated device. In fact, the 8800 is the only device in
AT&T’s current lineup that doesn’t require an
external GPS receiver.
NOBODY’S PERFECT
Although the 8800 brings both form and function to the BlackBerry
line, there are flaws beneath the chrome. One concern is battery
life. While RIM claims a staggering 22 days of standby time between
charges, we were only able to send and receive e-mail and make
occasional phone calls for five days before recharging. We’ve
found that RIM devices get very close to standby time when used
just for data. (The last one we reviewed, the 8700, listed 10 days
of standby, and we got seven days out of it just using e-mail.)
E-mail and data usage doesn’t fall under ‘talk
time,’ but since RIM doesn't publish a ‘data
time’ either we thought the battery issue worth
mentioning.
Also, despite AT&T’s ongoing deployment of its 3G
wireless network and the near-broadband speeds it offers, RIM has
chosen to limit the 8800 to the older, slower EDGE network. With
other wireless carriers offering smartphones, including other
BlackBerrys, with much faster data speeds, it puts both the 8800
and AT&T at a definite disadvantage. (At present, AT&T is
the only carrier for the 8800 in the United States, though
that’s likely to change in the next six months.)
Despite these concerns, the BlackBerry 8800 is the premier device
in RIM’s lineup. Though still weighted toward mobile e-mail,
its new form factor and enhanced voice features mean the 8800 can
hold its own with other smartphones on the market. Corporate users
looking for an all-in-one device need look no further. Pricing
starts at $349.