RIM Targets Consumer Market With BlackBerry Pearl
The Pearl uses a version of the SureType keyboard software, and the Times identifies it as one of the device’s “weak spots.” Its meager 3.5-hour battery life for talk time was also cited by the Times as one of its weaknesses.
Among the phone’s strengths the Times mentions are its appearance and size—it’s shiny black and chrome and “incredibly tiny” at 4.2 by 2 by 0.6 inches—its Bluetooth connectivity and the fact that it operates on a GSM phone network, meaning it can function overseas. The BlackBerry Pearl has a 240-by-260-pixel color screen that also functions as a flashlight, a speakerphone, voice-dialing capabilities, movie playback, and built-in AOL, Yahoo, MSN and ICQ instant messaging, according to the Times. Users can even read PDF and PowerPoint files, as well as make changes to spreadsheets and documents, using the Pearl, the Times reports.
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