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    BlackBerry 8300 Curve

By Mary Branscombe, 10 Jul 2007

Rating: $rating

Price as reviewed:£127 exc VAT (depending on contract)
Best price: £6.48

Editor's choice

The BlackBerry Pearl is utterly appealing, but without a QWERTY keyboard, rather compromised as a business device. The BlackBerry 8800 has everything you need but it's just too big. Like Goldilock's porridge, the BlackBerry 8300 is just right for business with a little entertainment on the side, although it's not so much an object of desire.

Although BlackBerrys do a lot more than email, it is email that is still key, and that means QWERTY. The 8300, or Curve as it is also known is the first BlackBerry to combine QWERTY, a camera and memory card storage, which makes it the best BlackBerry model for combining email with entertainment, without compromise. The keys are slightly smaller than on a traditional BlackBerry but they are well spaced, well laid out and easy to thumb type on at speed. If you do make a mistake there is now a built-in spell checker for email, texts and memos. Messages are not checked automatically, so you won't be slowed down if you're trying to dash off an urgent reply and you can add words to the custom dictionary and ignore acronyms, words with numbers and short words.

As many BlackBerry users pride themselves on producing messages that are correctly spelled and punctuated, the spell checker will be a welcome addition to automatic full stops when you type two spaces and pressing and holding keys to get capital letters. Typing two spaces also fills in the @ symbol and full stops in email addresses and URLs if you're in a field where that's what the BlackBerry expects you to type. All that adds up to faster and less fiddly typing than other QWERTY smartphones on the market.

RIM manages to fit the keyboard, the same smooth trackball as the Pearl and a large (2.5"), bright screen into a case as thin as the Pearl and much smaller than previous BlackBerry models. At just 111g it doesn't weigh your pocket down much and while it's not quite as thin as the T-Mobile Dash it's smaller, lighter and more like a phone.

The Curve's soft-touch edges are easy to grip, although there are a lot of buttons on the sides to avoid: two 'convenience' keys (customisable but initially set to voice dialling and the camera), volume controls that double as scroll buttons, the mini-USB port and a 3.5mm jack that takes standard headphones as well as the headset that comes with the Curve.

Like the 2-megapixel camera (with flash), the microSD slot (annoyingly under the battery), the media player (which adds full-screen video, playlists and shuffle) and Roxio's Easy Media Creator built into the Desktop Media Manager software so you can convert video, this makes the Curve better at multimedia than the Pearl. It has the same A2DP stereo Blueooth, so you can mix music and phone calls seamlessly. The camera quality is better than most 2 megapixel models, producing sharp, colourful images (although zoomed images are disappointing and you can't capture video). Macro shots are good enough to capture business cards and documents. Photos are taken quickly, so you won't miss the shot you want to get but saving is a little slow. You can also control the white balance and automatic flash.

The media player handles AAC, MP3, WMA, MPEG-4, H.263 and WMV video. It also now plays attachments to messages, which is handy if you get voice mail by email. IT administrators can turn off the camera and memory card by policy, so it's still business friendly.

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