The smartphone wars have been going on for quite a number of
years now. Mobile phones have gone from being able to be used as a self-defence
device to now sleek and multi-purposes. They have also gone from getting
smaller back to getting bigger again. However one thing seems to be quite
consistent is that most phones have done away with physical keyboards and
replaced them with the touchscreen ones.
I have always been a fan of Apple. I gradually replaced my
computer with a Mac and had joined the camp of iPods after Sony ended their
production of my favourite MDs. So when iPhone was first announced, I thought I
would be getting an iPhone. Like a lot of people I couldn’t wait to get my
hands on an iPhone and continue with an Apple a day. However, with the iPhone
having completely done away with the physical keyboard, I did not like it at
all when I tried it at the shops. At first I thought it was just because of the
pressure people posed on me trying in the shops. So I gave it more tries when
my friends got “iPhone-ised” one by one. Still did not like it. The virtual
keyboards just didn’t do it for me at all. Later when other brands of
smartphones came out, I tried most of them and found out that I am really not
built for virtual keyboards. At that point I thought I would just stick with my
trusty traditional Sony phone. I was quite happy with it until something called
Facebook comes along and hopped on to the mobile world.
As an actor, I need to meet people all the time and so one
day when Facebook became a norm for everyone you meet to “friend” everyone on
the spot with their smartphones, I had no choice but to join the movement. This
is when I discovered the BlackBerry Bold 9700. I have always been sceptical
about a QWERTY keyboard on a phone because seriously how comfortable could that
be? I had tried the Nokia QWERTY phone and I did not like it at all. The
buttons are so small that every time I pressed them I felt like I was having
acupuncture treatments on my fingers but without the benefits. That is until I
tried the one on the Bold. This was the first time I felt that “Oh such a small
keyboard could be so comfy and easy to use!” I fell in love with BlackBerry –
quite a number of years later than the likes of Paris Hilton and Hilary Duff.
The Bold 9700 was so easy to use that I started using it for my emails and not
to mention Facebook. I felt I am so in touch with the world now because I could
just “Friend” people on Facebook on the fly. Life was good.
However with the Forbidden Fruit taking over with iPhone,
BlackBerry has been declining in terms of market shares. This doesn’t help with
Google entering the foray with the Android OS and sent their droids to
companies making cheap phones to saturate the market with seemingly good-looking
phones for the price of a pack of Tim Tam. BlackBerry followed up with a few
products and still didn’t quite make the mark. I eventually updated my 9700
with 9900 when my trusty 9700 of 3 years died the day before Christmas last
year. The 9900 running the OS7 was great with some new great additions – and
man that Social Feeds app was the reason that I revived my interest in Twitter.
Also the BlackBerry Maps kept me from getting lost many many times. However,
with the OS7 aging and the 9900 seems to start lagging behind because of its
hardware limitations, I have my eyes set on the Q10 since its announcement. I
waited and waited and finally the fruit is ripe for harvest.
I plunge myself into the pool in the first week of Q10’s
release in Australia. This is the first time I bought a phone at release – and
bought it outright without a contract. I couldn’t wait to have a play with it.
The OS10 was very different from OS7. However, with my
experience with the now ill-fated PlayBook (that I still use quite a bit), I
have no problem understanding the logic of OS10. Still I do think that OS10 is
not without issues from my point of view. Firstly I was disappointed that my
favourite Social Feeds app was gone. Now in order to perform multiple social
network updates, I need to copy and paste them in the Hub and personally I do
not think it is very efficient way for business people to do that (or maybe they
do not have time to tweet). The Hub was great to get all things in one place
but Social Feeds is about streamlining social network updates, and personally I
think it should have been kept. The other thing I was disappointed was the
half-ass Live Messenger app that has so many bugs that you couldn’t even sync
your Messenger contacts with the app. I deleted it two seconds later. Also the
touch screen on Q10 seems to be a lot more sensitive than 9900. Sometimes
screen just change and disappear even when you fingers are not actually
touching the screen.
Having said that I still enjoy my Q10 a lot, especially once
you start to understand the logic behind the OS built better as you use it.
Some of them just make sense. BlackBerry World might not have a lot of apps on
it, but I do think I have the ones I needed most already, but then I am not a
big apps fan. For me I only need Facebook, Twitter and LinkedIN as additional
apps. Skype is also available but my love of Skype dropped after Microsoft
acquired it and forced a marriage between Skype and Live Messenger. The
marriage just didn’t work. However, as time went by (two weeks now), I started
to enjoy the benefits brought by a great Unit Converter app and not to mention
the TripView app that gives me a piece of comfort against the ridiculously
unreliable Sydney bus services. I like the OS10 screen being not particularly
cluttered and have some big icons arranged properly. The Docs to Go app has
encouraged to write more on the bus – which I started earlier this week and
finished two other blogs. And I did downloaded Angry Birds Star Wars and Polar
Slide for free. Also the integration with Drop Box makes transferring file so
much easier for me now as I don’t need to email them to and fro all the time.
I think the Q10’s OS10 does have business people in mind, as
it is very business technology oriented. It might not be the entertainment
phone people might want it to be but I think for a person like me who doesn’t
care a darn about playing games on the phone, cluttering apps on the phone, and
just being part of the crowd, I think the BlackBerry Q10 really suits me a lot.
I do wish that more people appreciate the effort of BlackBerry but with the
smartphone market becoming more about being trendy instead of being practical,
BlackBerry’s future might not be as bright as one would hope. But for me, as
long as they are still making great phones like my trusty Bold 9700, Bold 9900
and Q10, I still believe a BlackBerry a day keeps my tech problems away.
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