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This Storm has a cool feature, called Motion’s SurePress functionally which can makes the screen clickable. It measures is 2.4 in x 0.6 in x 4.4 in (WxDxH) and 5.5 oz weight. It’s a little bit big and heavy. The 3.25 inch VGA glass display with an accelerometer produces a sharp and bright pictures. It offers 65,000 colors at a crisp 480×360 pixel resolution. Some settings for the display are the backlighting, font size, and type.
The BlackBerry Storm uses SurePress and SureType keyboard. SurePress makes the screen like being push down when we choose one of the application or enter any text. The SurePress technology also able to track a number of finger taps or swipes for some actions and the taps can be adjusted for its interval, hover point, and swipe sensitivity. The SureType keyboard shows a full QWERTY keyboard in landscape mode.
A Set of tactile navigation controls below the display are Talk and End/Power buttons, a Menu key, and a clear button. A user programmable shortcut key and a micro USB port are placed on the left side. A 3.5mm headphone jack, a volume rocker, and another customizable button (the camera activation/capture key by default) are placed on the right side. The camera lens and flash are placed on the backside. The microSD/SDHC card holder and SIM card slot are placed behind the battery cover. A device lock and mute button are placed on the top of the Storm.
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The Storm runs with the latest BlackBerry OS 4.7 and a DataViz Documents To Go Standard Edition to edit Word, Excel, and PowerPoint files. The Storm is support for Microsoft Exchange, IBM Lotus Domino, or Novell GroupWise, to deliver corporate e-mail in real time. It is also available for some instant messaging clients and websites such as Facebook, Flickr, Yahoo, Google, and etc. We can access up to 10 personal/business POP3 or IMAP4 e-mail accounts via the BlackBerry Internet Service. Storm also provides a spell check feature and an attachment viewer for opening Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Corel WordPerfect, PDF, JPEG, GIF, and more.




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Some personal management features are a Calendar, a task list, a memo pad, a voice recorder, a calculator, a password keeper, and etc. The BlackBerry Storm offers dual mode functionality, CDMA and GSM networks. Some voice features are a speakerphone, voice-activated dialing, smart dialing, conference calling, speed dial, and text and multimedia messaging. The Bluetooth 2.0 is onboard with support for a mono and stereo Bluetooth headsets, serial port profile, phone book access, and dial-up networking.
Using a Verizon’s EV-DO Rev. A network, makes the Storm faster for Web browsing, e-mail, and downloads. The Storm is support for the 2,100MHz UMTS/HSDPA, so 3G is available while overseas. The BlackBerry Storm has a full HTML Web browser with many improvement for a smartphone.
Using the 3.2 megapixel camera, we can make video recording, a flash, auto focus, 2x zoom, and image stabilization. Some settings for camera mode are three picture size, three picture qualities, white balance settings and various effects to photos. Options for camcorder mode are only a choice of two video formats (normal and MMS) and three color effects. The Storm’s picture quality is not too good, on the other hand it’s video quality is great compared with other smartphones.
The Storm’s built-in media player can play various music and video formats, such as MP3, WMA, AAC, AAC+, eAAC+, AMR-NB, and MIDI music files, and MPEG4, WMV, DivX4, XviD (partial support), and H.263 video clips. It also provides a search function, playlist creation, shuffle and repeat, and a full-screen mode for video playback. The software CD inside contains a copy of Roxio Easy Media Creator, so it can be used to create MP3s from CDs and add audio tags.
The call quality is good enough. Music playback through the phone’s speakers sounded blown out, though there was plenty of volume. The built-in 3.5mm headphone jack makes a better sound quality. The Storm’s GPS capabilities were great.
Plus :
The touch screen display has tactile feedback. The Storm offers dual-mode functionality for world-roaming capabilities as well as EV-DO Rev. A and UMTS/HSDPA support.
Minus :
The Storm’s SurePress touch-screen takes some acclimation. The keyboard buttons are too small and cramped. It has no trackball and no integrated Wi-Fi
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Detail Specifications :
- Email protocols supported POP3 , IMAP4
- Data services MMS , SMS , WWW , E-Mail , Yahoo! Messenger , AOL Instant Messenger , Windows Live Messenger
- Modem Integrated Wireless cellular modem
- Cellular enhancement protocol GSM , EDGE , GPRS , HSPA , UMTS , CDMA 2000 1X EV-DO Rev. A
- Dimensions (W x D x H) 2.4 in x 0.6 in x 4.4 in
- Weight 5.5 oz
- Built-in devices Camera , Music player
- OS provided BlackBerry Handheld Software
- Software included Microsoft Outlook , Web Access , Microsoft Exchange , IBM Lotus Domino , Novell GroupWise
- Installed RAM 128 MB
- Flash memory installed 1 GB
- Input device type Keyboard, Touch-screen
- Band / mode GSM 850/900/1800/1900 (Quadband) / UMTS 2100 / CDMA 800/1900 (Dual Band)
- Digital audio standards supported MP3 , MIDI
- Display type TFT active matrix
- Color support 16-bit (64K colors)
- Max resolution 480 x 360
- Battery installed (max) 1 Lithium ion
- Max supported batteries 1
- Talk time 330 min
- Standby time 360 h
- Power supply device Power adapter
- Wireless connectivity Bluetooth 2.0
- Port / Connector Type:Interface 1Headset
- Expansion slot(s) total (free) 1 microSD
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