RIM BlackBerry 8830 Cell Phone
- Installed Memory: 64 MB
- Operating System: BlackBerry OS
- Connectivity: Bluetooth
- Performance: Dual Band
- Design: Mobile
- Style: Candy Bar
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I'm Carryin' An Entire Office on My Belt These Days...
Pros
incredibly versatile, gentle learning curve, easy to use
Cons
no camera, keyboard backlighting fairly useless
Recommended it?
Yes
The Bottom Line:
If business takes you out of the country, a BlackBerry 8830 World Edition is an essential part of your wardrobe.
I'm carrying a BlackBerry® now: I guess that means I've finally joined the real techie generation. And it's not an everyday BlackBerry like I see the college kids using on the plane (in full defiance of the FAA, I might add); it's a - gasp! - BlackBerry 8830 World Edition. Now that I work for a company that just might send me out of the country once in a while, I need a phone that can function in more places than just the good ol' USA, and the World Edition - with the addition of an optional SIMS card - is just that phone.
Before this job, I was a BlackBerry virgin: never used one, rarely saw one; didn't recognize one when I did see it. Now there's one clipped to my waist most of my waking hours (I'm still not certain that's a good thing). I have my own smartphone, and it does it all:
•
It's a cell phone with the expected capabilities: voicemail, ringtones, SMS and MMS text messaging, picture and video messages, call-forwarding and -waiting, conference calling, speakerphone, voice dialing; the whole nine yards.
•
It's wireless email with "always-on" capability. Depending on your data plan, connect with either a corporate BlackBerry server or a POP server, including connection to webmail accounts such as gmail.
•
It has a full QWERTY keyboard, backlit, with upper and lower case, punctuation, and symbols plus dedicated keys for speakerphone, backspace/delete, and return. And the spacebar is trained to insert the @ sign and . (dot) in email addresses.
•
It provides a trackball for navigation and entry, menu button, dedicated send and end keys.
•
It opens email attachments, including pictures, spreadsheets, and word-processing documents, Word and Excel docs, at least.
•
It's wireless data and broadband internet access and can be coaxed into serving as a broadband modem for a lap- or desktop PC, after software installation.
•
It syncs to office programs for calendaring, contact database, to-do lists, and such.
•
It includes a media player for pictures, music, and video.
•
It's GPS enabled and has BlackBerry Maps. It'd have full navigation if I paid for Verizon's mapping software.
•
It's an instant messenger console, with BlackBerry Messaging.
•
It can sync to a corporate database (so they tell me - it's immaterial in my case).
•
It's fully Bluetooth enabled.
•
It comes with a high-resolution, light-sensing, full-color screen and RIM's user interface.
In other words, the BlackBerry 8830 World Edition is a mobile office, with an entertainment center thrown in. Not bad for a chunk of plastic and metal that's about the size of a euchre deck, approximately 2½ by 4½ inches and half an inch thick. But, what's it all about?
Description: The phone is a "candy bar" style, though shaped much more like a Nestles Crunch than a Milky Way, if you ask me. It's available in black, red, and silver finishes (mine's black); though available colors may ultimately depend on your cellular provider. The top half of the face is taken up by the screen, the bottom half is that QWERTY keyboard. Dedicated buttons are arranged across the face immediately under the screen - SEND, MENU, BACK, END - with a lighted trackball in the precise center of the face. There's a single "dot" omnidirectional mic in the lower right, an "earhole" speaker at the top. A red flashing indicator light is placed in the upper right-hand corner for new message alerts.
A rocker-style POWER and MUTE key combination covers much of the top of the body, as is a slot for the speakerphone. It's exposed when in the OEM holster, as are a pair of VOLUME UP/DOWN keys on the upper right edge. Along the left-hand edge, from top to bottom, are a 2.5mm headphone jack (compliments of Verizon, the mini-USB jack for charging and linkup to a computer, a "convenience key" that defaults to Voice Dialing, and a weird-looking little port that the documentation doesn't explain (I'm open to suggestions...)
The battery, SIM card, and micro-SD card slots are accessed from the rear of the phone: the bottom half slides off (with some effort, I might add) for access. The top half acts as sounding board for the speaker phone.
Living with a BlackBerry:
Setup is very simple: a setup Wizard appears on the screen as soon as the phone's turned on. You get to walk through connecting to your email¹; set language, date, and time; customize the interface with fonts and display themes; and set a few hotkeys. The setup wizard also includes some simple help such as keyboard shortcuts, e.g., instead of using the key for capitalization, merely hold the key until the letter changes on the screen. The wizard remains in the menus, but can be moved "out of the way" once initial setup is finished.
Software install: RIM sends along a boatload of Roxio software to manage media (why does everyone think that's so darned important?). Installation was fairly painful, since the CD proved faulty. Apparently that's not uncommon, since their software support page included the symptom and a workaround in their knowledge base. It seems you must install the software (either the RIM CD or your provider's CD) to install drivers to charge the phone from a USB cable, as well as use it as a modem. That's not readily apparent from the documentation, by the way.
The interface is considerably more intuitive than cellular phones and PDAs I've used in the past. The inclusion of a clearly-marked
Before this job, I was a BlackBerry virgin: never used one, rarely saw one; didn't recognize one when I did see it. Now there's one clipped to my waist most of my waking hours (I'm still not certain that's a good thing). I have my own smartphone, and it does it all:
•
It's a cell phone with the expected capabilities: voicemail, ringtones, SMS and MMS text messaging, picture and video messages, call-forwarding and -waiting, conference calling, speakerphone, voice dialing; the whole nine yards.
•
It's wireless email with "always-on" capability. Depending on your data plan, connect with either a corporate BlackBerry server or a POP server, including connection to webmail accounts such as gmail.
•
It has a full QWERTY keyboard, backlit, with upper and lower case, punctuation, and symbols plus dedicated keys for speakerphone, backspace/delete, and return. And the spacebar is trained to insert the @ sign and . (dot) in email addresses.
•
It provides a trackball for navigation and entry, menu button, dedicated send and end keys.
•
It opens email attachments, including pictures, spreadsheets, and word-processing documents, Word and Excel docs, at least.
•
It's wireless data and broadband internet access and can be coaxed into serving as a broadband modem for a lap- or desktop PC, after software installation.
•
It syncs to office programs for calendaring, contact database, to-do lists, and such.
•
It includes a media player for pictures, music, and video.
•
It's GPS enabled and has BlackBerry Maps. It'd have full navigation if I paid for Verizon's mapping software.
•
It's an instant messenger console, with BlackBerry Messaging.
•
It can sync to a corporate database (so they tell me - it's immaterial in my case).
•
It's fully Bluetooth enabled.
•
It comes with a high-resolution, light-sensing, full-color screen and RIM's user interface.
In other words, the BlackBerry 8830 World Edition is a mobile office, with an entertainment center thrown in. Not bad for a chunk of plastic and metal that's about the size of a euchre deck, approximately 2½ by 4½ inches and half an inch thick. But, what's it all about?
Description: The phone is a "candy bar" style, though shaped much more like a Nestles Crunch than a Milky Way, if you ask me. It's available in black, red, and silver finishes (mine's black); though available colors may ultimately depend on your cellular provider. The top half of the face is taken up by the screen, the bottom half is that QWERTY keyboard. Dedicated buttons are arranged across the face immediately under the screen - SEND, MENU, BACK, END - with a lighted trackball in the precise center of the face. There's a single "dot" omnidirectional mic in the lower right, an "earhole" speaker at the top. A red flashing indicator light is placed in the upper right-hand corner for new message alerts.
A rocker-style POWER and MUTE key combination covers much of the top of the body, as is a slot for the speakerphone. It's exposed when in the OEM holster, as are a pair of VOLUME UP/DOWN keys on the upper right edge. Along the left-hand edge, from top to bottom, are a 2.5mm headphone jack (compliments of Verizon, the mini-USB jack for charging and linkup to a computer, a "convenience key" that defaults to Voice Dialing, and a weird-looking little port that the documentation doesn't explain (I'm open to suggestions...)
The battery, SIM card, and micro-SD card slots are accessed from the rear of the phone: the bottom half slides off (with some effort, I might add) for access. The top half acts as sounding board for the speaker phone.
Living with a BlackBerry:
Setup is very simple: a setup Wizard appears on the screen as soon as the phone's turned on. You get to walk through connecting to your email¹; set language, date, and time; customize the interface with fonts and display themes; and set a few hotkeys. The setup wizard also includes some simple help such as keyboard shortcuts, e.g., instead of using the
Software install: RIM sends along a boatload of Roxio software to manage media (why does everyone think that's so darned important?). Installation was fairly painful, since the CD proved faulty. Apparently that's not uncommon, since their software support page included the symptom and a workaround in their knowledge base. It seems you must install the software (either the RIM CD or your provider's CD) to install drivers to charge the phone from a USB cable, as well as use it as a modem. That's not readily apparent from the documentation, by the way.
The interface is considerably more intuitive than cellular phones and PDAs I've used in the past. The inclusion of a clearly-marked
