Archive

BlackBerry Storm 2 hands on video

The boys over at CrackBerry just posted what seems to be the very first hands on video of Rim’s upcoming Storm 2. The device does looks sweet and responsive…

EDITOR'S NOTE: This article is part of MobileTechWorld's historical archive. Mobile technology has evolved dramatically since this was published. For our latest coverage, explore our Latest News, Reviews, and AI in Mobile coverage.

The boys over at CrackBerry just posted what seems to be the very first hands on video of Rim’s upcoming Storm 2. The device does looks sweet and responsive unlike the original Storm (it does take a while to switch from protrait to landscape though). Kevin summed up his hands on by this :

•the hardware is much nicer – this is what Storm “1″ should have been. It feels nicer in the hand and the concept is executed more cleanly. Improved engineering all around. Examples: better battery door integration (no need for “feet” for an ill-placed speaker port or hooks to hold the door in place; tighter tolerances (no gaps/light shining through); buttons are part of display
•the click screen is more user-friendly – assuming when the 9550 hits the market the operating system is running as fast and smooth as it does on a non-touch BlackBerry, I *think* maybe I could give up my physical keyboard and make this my daily driver. Watch the video to see it in action. RIM’s premise of separating navigation from confirmation is the same, but the actual SurePress / TruePress / Whatever It Gets Called technology is better. Definitely a better feeling while typing. The display still moves downward a bit (you can feel a physical movement as you push down) and the glass is solid.
•the operating system is basically the same – the hardware in the video is running a version of OS 5.1, so with the Storm 9530/9500 to be upgraded to 5.0 soon, the basic device software difference between Storm 1 and Storm 2 will likely be negligible. The new Storm has more device memory so will be smoother running, but from a basic usage / visual / apps standpoint nothing major is changing.

Source : CrackBerry

Modern MTW coverage

This archive story is part of MTW’s long-running mobile technology coverage. For current reporting, buying advice and analysis, start here:

MMTW Editorial

Buyer action

Where to buy or check next

Use this as the final check before ordering a phone, changing network or trusting a headline monthly price.

Stay in the loop

Get MTW reporting, reviews, guides, and buying advice in your inbox.

Subscribe

Keep reading

Today on MTW

The latest stories moving through the newsroom.