Friday, October 25, 2013

BlackBerry Z30 Review

With BBM now on Android and iOS, it’s time for another major announcement from BlackBerry. After launching two premium (albeit overpriced) handsets, it’s time to make it a trio with the new BlackBerry Z30. The company’s latest flagship was just announced today and lucky for you, we have an in depth review on the new slab and of course, BB 10.2. We’ll be taking a look at both simultaneously and see just how BB 10 has evolved. Coming back to the phone, the Z30’s primary focus is communications, messaging and productivity, just like their earlier offerings. But does it have a lighter side as well or is it still all work and no play? 

Design and Build 
The Z30 moves away from the busy design of the Z10 for a simpler look. The protective glass now overflows around the edges much like the HTC One X. The phone is only slightly thicker than the Z10 at 9.4mm but it’s considerably heavier at 170g. This is mainly due to the larger display and battery.
Blackberry Z30
Solidly built but not very striking


The microHDMI and microUSB ports are on the left while the volume rocker, voice command and two microphones sit on the right. The Z30 has two more microphones totalling up to four, for better noise cancellation and better audio during BBM video calls. The placement of the power button on the top is not the most ideal as it’s difficult to reach it at times. This can easily be circumvented by simply swiping from below to unlock the screen.
Blackberry Z30
The rear cover offers very good grip


The back of the Z30 is very grippy which feels great to hold. This also helps keep the phone in place when placed on any surface so it won’t slide about your food tray on a plane. New to the Z30 are stereo speakers which are placed at the top and bottom. The handset also gets a new Paratek antenna for better signal reception. The back cover is removable and is where you’ll find the slots for the SIM and mciroSD card slot.
Blackberry Z30
The ports under the hood


Overall, the Z30 is a well-crafted handset. It doesn’t have much going for it in terms of aesthetics, some would call a bit bland even, but I guess that works for the enterprise sector. Ergonomics are good as well however, the Z30 is heavy and single handed operations are not always a cake walk. 

Features 
The biggest feature of the Z30 is the OS itself. This is the first phone to launch with BB 10.2 and this update will be seeded to the Z10, Q10 and Q5 as well. The two new features that you will use the most are the new lock screen preview and priority hub. The first one gives you a peek into your unread alert and this works for any app that’s present in the hub, including Whatsapp. Right now, these aren’t actionable so you can’t reply to an email without unlocking the phone but we hear that’s in the works. The next is priority hub. This secondary hub gathers all alerts that are marked as important. The system automatically picks up contacts or conversations that are most often used and assigns them priority. You can also manually mark a contact or conversation as priority and vice versa with a simple gesture. The rest of the new features include attachments, new sharing options, priority calling and BBM previews. This is all best demonstrated so do watch the following video (coming up shortly) for a better look.


The Z30 feels really quick and fluid and this is partly due to improvements in the new OS as well as the slightly faster Qualcomm chipset onboard. The dual-core Snapdragon MSM8960T (or S4 Pro) runs at 1.7GHz on the clock and features faster Adreno 320 graphics. There’s also 2GB of RAM to complement this.
Blackberry Z30
Priority hub is a nifty addition


We did notice some lag intermittently when trying to compose a new mail or switching between apps but overall, you’re in for a smooth ride.

Media 
Media functionality remains pretty much unchanged from the previous models and there isn’t anything really new software wise as well. The stereo speakers are really good however and are almost as good as HTC’s BoomSound. It is a bit treble heavy but alerts are really loud even at half volume and music and videos sound really good. Audio quality is pretty good through the headphones as well so no complaints here. The media player could use some audio enhancements and better format support however. There’s 16GB of onboard storage which is expandable to 64GB.

Blackberry Z30
Media playback hasn't improved much


You’ll still need Blackberry Link before you can start dragging and dropping files in your phone. We hope they get rid of this somewhere down the line. Full HD video playback is smooth and the stock player even reads MKV files. 
Page 1:

Design - Features - Media

Page 3:

Specifications

No comments:

Post a Comment