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Thursday, April 18, 2024

Meet the BlackBerry Priv

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Temmy
Temmyhttps://www.jozigist.co.za/
Temmy, a fun loving creative writer, is a graduate of Lead City University. She simply loves life, others and God. Aside writing, she enjoys counselling and encouraging others.‎

BlackBerry Priv is the fourth new BlackBerry device released under the leadership of CEO John Chen, and I think it’s the most polished and modernized smartphone of the lot. BlackBerry’s other recent devices, the Passport, Classic and the lower-end Leap, had unusual screen sizes or middling build quality. In contrast, Priv looks like it could have been made by any of the half dozen really successful smartphone manufacturers.

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My concern with this phone is its cost; $899 without a contract is a trivial matter for the CEOs who have been waiting for a really good BlackBerry phone, but not trivial to the millions of people BlackBerry needs to buy this thing if it’s going to survive as a hardware manufacturer. But more on that later; there really is a lot to like here if price is no object.

The slide-out physical keyboard had me worried. A mechanical part on a modern slab-style touchscreen phone? But even though I’ve fallen out of the habit of using BlackBerry’s QWERTY keyboard, I found it intuitive to use and a little easier than the sometimes cluttered BlackBerry digital keyboard, which has a lot of auto-suggest text.

The physical keyboard retains the capacitive frets that let you do some of the swipe and scroll on-screen actions the Passport allowed, and it has a lot of those familiar keyboard shortcuts. It even balances well in the hand so there’s really no letdown here for keyboard lovers, and the product designers I spoke with assured me they popped and retracted the keyboard about a million times in testing to make sure the mechanism doesn’t fail.

It has a big, gorgeous 5.4-inch screen that curves at the edges, and the whole thing is surprisingly light in the hand and has a really nice long-lasting battery. My version of a torture test is to never plug it in until the screen goes dark while I am testing a phone, and the Priv typically lasts two days of intermittent use and one day of heavy use. The camera, with its 18-megapixel sensor, held up very well in one-to-one comparisons with the iPhone 6S Plus; the colour saturation may have actually been a little better.

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-theglobeandmail

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