BlackBerry Storm recensie
De eerste Nederlandse BlackBerry Storm video recensie? Niet echt. Het Financieele Dagblad heeft het zich wel erg makkelijk gemaakt. Even wat bestaande foto’s en filmpjes aan elkaar plakken en van wat standaard commentaar voorzien en klaar waren ze bij het dagblad. Je zou er bijna een overeenkomst met Geert Wilders’ Fitna in zien…
Blackberry Storm vs. iPhone 3G
Opgeslagen onder: BlackBerry filmpjes, BlackBerry reviews
850 keer bekeken
In afwachting van de eerste Nederlandse video reviews hebben we hier nog een aardige vergelijking tussen de twee kemphanen gevonden. Na het zien van meerdere ‘battles’ tussen de iPhone 3G en de BlackBerry Storm kunnen we concluderen dat beide toestellen zo hun vóór- en nadelen hebben. Daarnaast is veilig om te kunnen stellen dat op dit moment de Storm nog niet een ware iPhone killer is. Let wel: de Storm is pas net uitgekomen en na een of twee software updates en wat gewenning zou het best wel eens die ‘killer’ kunnen worden. Laten we niet vergeten dat de iPhone al een tijdje beschikbaar is en een flinke reeks van updates achter de rug heeft.
BlackBerry Storm uitpakken en indrukken
Opgeslagen onder: BlackBerry filmpjes, BlackBerry reviews
432 keer bekeken
Hierbij een aardige uitpakvideo van Phonedog, grappig ventje met een mooi toestel. Zijn eerste indruk is goed te noemen, al gaat het typen en corrigeren op het laatst wel even mis. Ik ben benieuwd naar zijn volledige review.
BlackBerry Storm in de ogen van iPhone fan

Bij Gizmodo werkt iemand die de iPhone aanbidt. Zijn naam is Matt Buchanan en hij heeft zich voorgenomen de BlacKBerry Storm eens goed aan de tand te voelen en er een pittig stukje over te schrijven. Toegegeven: het is wel eens verfrissend om wat kritische geluiden over de Storm te horen. Daarnaast is hij niet overal negatief over. Ik heb me hieronder echter beperkt tot zijn kritiek op de Storm en de conclusie. Het hele artikel kan je hier lezen.
Interface
The major issue with the interface, at least in the main menu area, is that it lags. Like, enough to be annoying. Scrolling through the main menu, for instance, it seems like part of the scroll slowdown is deliberate (I don’t know why) but the sluggishness turned to choppiness more often than occasionally. The transition fades from screen to screen, besides being inconsistent (sometimes you get ‘em, sometimes you don’t), make the OS actually feel slower. And when it does lag, it’s somehow more frustrating because it makes you distrust and pissed off at the SurePress feedback—not good for your major selling point.
Stability
The Storm needed a little bit longer in the oven—I had lotsa lock-ups and crashes over the last two days with it. Lag was all over the place, which is a cardinal sin with a touch-based UI. It really needs to be more stable. I wonder how long before there’s a software update, ’cause it needs one badly.
The Keyboard
The keyboard layouts themselves are roomy and perfect, with the QWERTY subtly divided into two halves. Which actually makes for a good guideline—keep your thumbs on their respective sides of the divide and you’ll be a much happier camper when it comes to typing, since you have to consciously let the screen pop back up between every letter press. Having a true alternating rhythm between your thumbs makes it much easier to use, so you’re not trying to press a key with your other thumb while the screen’s already pushed in.
RIM makes a big deal out of the fact they’ve separated navigation from confirmation with their SurePress thing. That, hypothetically, is a means to an end, the end being more accurate typing than a standard, feedbackless touch keyboard. In that respect, it fails. Even after two days, with the keyboard’s great layout and perfect size, I was leaning just as hard on the autocorrect on the Storm as I ever did on the iPhone. Here’s why: Confirming I’ve pushed a key doesn’t actually tell me whether I’ve pushed the right one. Which makes the feedback, as far as typing on a keyboard goes, basically useless. It’s made worse by the fact that RIM’s glowing blue highlights also are far less effective than pop up letters at indicating what key you’re pushing.
I hate to say this, but I kind of came to hate typing on it. Pushing the screen in over and over requires so much more effort than simply gliding my fingers around a good touch keyboard. It was tiring. SurePress is a bit less annoying with the onscreen SureType keyboard in portrait mode though. One other gripe is that you can’t get a QWERTY keyboard in portrait, even though its screen is as wide as the iPhone’s.
Verdict
The Storm is a strong effort from RIM, but it’s not quite the killer phone that they or Verizon need it to be. It’s good—RIM clearly put a lot of thought into the design. But I think it fall short of what they were aiming for, and ultimately what all the hype is driving people to expect. Some of this is fixable: The damn thing needs to crash less often. But SurePress is not the end-all, be-all of touchscreen technologies—it’s not really an evolutionary step forward, even. The experience may be fairly refined, but more polish is still needed. Had this Storm been left to brew a bit longer, it would’ve been much more powerful.
BlackBerry Storm handson
Opgeslagen onder: BlackBerry filmpjes, BlackBerry reviews
533 keer bekeken
Hieronder een aardige videoreview van de BlackBerry Storm. De echte Storm chaser zal niet echt iets nieuws zien, maar de echte Storm chaser bekijkt het zes minuten durende filmpje toch wel
Ik verwacht dat aan het einde van deze week de eerste Nederlandse reviews op YouTube zullen verschijnen.
BlackBerry Storm review zonder storm
Opgeslagen onder: BlackBerry filmpjes, BlackBerry reviews
556 keer bekeken
Als je twee vrouwen vier minuten wilt horen praten over de BlackBerry Storm, klik dan op play hieronder. Wil je de BlackBerry Storm in actie zien en dingen over het toestel te weten komen die je nog niet wist? Gewoon doorlopen, niets aan de hand hier.
Goede kop voor de radio
Opgeslagen onder: BlackBerry filmpjes, BlackBerry reviews
590 keer bekeken
En toch ook voor dit soort video reviews, want iemand met zo’n uitsraling vergeet je niet snel. Leuke review van de BlackBerry Storm. Hopelijk zijn wij van blackberrystorm.nl ook snel verslaafd!
BlackBerry Storm minpunten?
Opgeslagen onder: BlackBerry filmpjes, BlackBerry reviews
947 keer bekeken
In onderstaand filmpje nóg meer hosanna over de BlackBerry Storm. Het gaat bijna vervelen: geweldig scherm, innovatief touchscreen, fijn toetsenbord etc. Laten we echter niet vergeten dat de eerste reviews van de BlackBerry Bold ook zeer positief waren. Inmiddels beginnen echter de eerste klachten binnen te druppelen, waarvan sommige toch best ernstig zijn. Er zijn klachten over de afwerking (o.a. krakend joystickje), de batterij schijnt soms al na een halve dag leeg te zijn (een software update helpt), bij een aantal gebruikers loopt de Bold vast tijdens het smsen en tot slot loopt de UMTS verbinding niet lekker (schijnt vooral aan KPN te liggen). Al met al zijn de meeste klachten toch best serieus en je mag eigenlijk van een duur toestel en zeker van BlackBerry verwachten dat deze pijnpuntjes snel worden opgelost. Let wel: we hebben het nu dus over de Bold. Ik hoop wel dat er binnenkort uitgebreidere tests komen van de Storm waarin bovenstaande punten voor de zekerheid worden gecheckt bij de Storm.
BlackBerry Storm reviews
Opgeslagen onder: BlackBerry filmpjes, BlackBerry reviews
474 keer bekeken
De BlackBerry Storm is sinds enkele dagen te koop in Amerika. Het is dan ook niet verrassend dat de eerste ‘echte’ video reviews binnen komen druppelen. Onderstaand filmpje laat de Storm mooi van dichtbij zien in al zijn/haar glorie. Het is jammer dat de maker niet wat meer commentaar geeft, dat zou wat beter bij het filmpje passen dan de vreselijke achtergrondmuziek. Er doen verschillende verhalen de ronde over de snelheid van het surfen op internet, zeker omdat WiFi ontbreekt. In dit filmpje lijkt het wel goed te zitten met de snelheid, maar het wachten is natuurlijk op een filmpje waarin de surfsnelheden van de iPhone en de BlackBerry Storm in een rechtstreeks duel met elkaar worden vergeleken.
BlackBerry Storm review
Voor degenen die álles willen weten van de BlackBerry Storm hebben we natuurlijk de uitgebreide handleiding klaar staan. Voor degenen die álles willen weten van wat anderen van de BlackBerry Storm vinden zijn er de reviews. Hieronder een aardig verhaal van een tot nu toe redelijk kritische BlackBerry watcher.
First an admission. I have never been a fan of BlackBerry devices. Maybe that’s partly because management have never found me worthy of one, but it’s mostly because they have always felt ‘plasticky’ to me. The Pearl was, of course, slimmer than the traditional BlackBerry brick but still lacked a certain physical gravitas, while the Bold just seemed unnecessarily bulky. So the Storm really is a revolution.
Basically the same size as the iPhone – though admittedly about the same weight as the heavier G1 – the Storm just feels more sturdy than many of its predecessors. That said, I never got to chuck it on the floor to see whether my perception of its resilience is warranted and it needs to be, because customers will be stuck with it for two years if they want to get it free from exclusive network partner Vodafone.
But it is the Storm’s touchscreen that sets it apart from the rest of the recent button-less pack. It actually makes the iPhone look flat.
Both the G1 and the Nokia 5800 XpressMusic – which by the way will be sold in the UK by Orange – have made use of tactile feedback. The G1 uses it cleverly, for instance, when you move icons around the desktop. Press and hold on an icon and it shudders to tell you it can be moved about. The 5800, meanwhile, uses it well to make its touchscreen qwerty keypad seem much more active by having the virtual keys gently vibrate when pressed. RIM, however, has taken a different approach to the difference between navigating a page and activating a page.
RIM maintains that for years it has steered clear of touchscreens not because it could not make them, but because its core business customers feared that they would accidentally send an email or text or make a call just by moving around the screen.
The 5800 gets around this problem by demanding double tapping to activate commands. The Storm, however, has a touchscreen that effectively floats a fraction of a millimeter above a whole bank of sensors so when you scroll down to an icon you want you just press down on the screen in the right place. It gives the sort of physical click that any BlackBerry user will recognise from the trackball on previous devices. Its simple but remarkably effective.
The Storm has many of the features people have come to expect in the post-iPhone world. Turn it through 90 degrees and the screen flips from portrait to landscape. Web pages are crisp and clean and easily navigated by dragging them around. Double tap on an area and it zooms in. If you want to click on a link you can move a cursor around a screen with your finger – cleverly the cursor is set slightly away from your finger so you can see what you are doing, the same goes for the cursor when typing emails if you need to go back and make corrections – or if you have zoomed in, you can just ‘click’ on the link.
One Storm-specific variant is to place two fingers on the screen – one at the start of some text and one at the end – which highlights the text so it can be copied and pasted into an email, text message or instant message.
One potential surfing drawback is that the Storm does not have Wi-Fi – a technology of which Vodafone is no fan – but with HSDPA it should operate fine… provided the company can keep its network up to scratch.
The 3.2 megapixel camera is better than the camera in the iPhone – and it has a flash like the Nokia 5800 – while its video capture rate is even better than the Finnish effort. It comes with all the usual widgets such as purpose-built versions of YouTube, Flickr and Facebook and BlackBerry plans to make its software developer’s kit available from today in the hope that application hounds will get working on creating some must-have apps.
BlackBerry is working on its own application store but Vodafone also plans to make them available through the device and give downloaders the chance to pay for them through their phone bill. Showing its business roots, the Storm already has software for reading and editing Word and Powerpoint documents.
The device’s music player will play pretty much everything – except tracks purchased via iTunes, of course – as will its video player. And you get to plug your own headphones into it. Hopefully Vodafone will ship it with a fairly chunky SD card, at least bigger than the 2GB card which T-Mobile plans for the G1.
GPS enables a host of map applications – including of course BlackBerry maps and Google Maps – while it will work with instant messenger clients from AOL and Windows Live Messenger to GoogleTalk and ICQ.
Being a BlackBerry, of course, email is very important and it can integrate 10 different accounts into one inbox and take push email from all the major web accounts such as GMail, Hotmail etc. Obviously it will sync with Outlook, Exchange or Lotus Notes et al because it is, after all, a BlackBerry, which gives it a major advantage over the G1.
When it comes to integrating all the different ways that a user can communicate, however, it does lack a certain panache. Other devices – especially the iPhone, with visual voicemail, and the 5800, with its clever use of its contact books to store all your communications with individual people – do so-called integrated communications better than the Storm.
Oh and if you get completely lost it has those two friendly green and red buttons on the bottom. It is, after all, a phone…
On the surface the Storm runs the iPhone a close second of the four Christmas touchscreens, beating the Nokia 5800 – who can be bothered to double tap everything? – and the G1. But the devil is going to be in the detail.
