| Take  heart BlackBerry diehards, your day is finally here. The BlackBerry Z10  was just a warm up and a promise to the QWERTY faithful that their  device would come. The BlackBerry Q10 runs the all new BlackBerry OS  10.1, based on bulletproof QNX, and it's wildly modern compared to the  OS on the BlackBerry Curve and Bold. And yes, it has a hardware QWERTY  keyboard that won't let you down. Throw in a 3.1" AMOLED touch screen  and you've got the Q10. The internals are identical to the touch screen  slate BlackBerry Z10, and though the hardware can't compete with the most powerful Android phones,  it doesn't need to because the OS is optimized for the hardware inside  (much like Windows Phone and the iPhone are highly optimized for  specific hardware). The phone has a 1.5GHz dual core Qualcomm Snapdragon  CPU, 2 gigs of RAM and 16 gigs of internal storage. The BlackBerry Q10  will be available on all major US carriers and on many carriers  overseas. Here in the US at launch, it's $199 with contract ($99 down  plus $20 monthly payments on the newly contract-less T-Mobile). The OS and basic navigation work just  the same as on the BlackBerry Z10, so we won't go into great detail in  this review. The OS supports multi-tasking via active panes (small  windows that tile across the multi-tasking screen), and it has several  screens for the app launcher (app icons). BlackBerry Hub is your unified  inbox for all notifications from emails to texts, to missed calls and  alarms. It's easy and intuitive and you needn't leave the Hub when  replying to emails, social networking messages and texts. In fact, there  are neither icons nor a separate app for your various email accounts,  though there is an SMS/MMS icon. Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and  Foursquare are preloaded. Box and Dropbox are pre-loaded as is  BlackBerry Maps (not the strongest mapping and navigation solution we've  seen), a shortcut to the YouTube mobile site and Documents to Go for  mobile MS Office compatible work. The OS comes with a file manager, PIM  apps that can sync with MS Exchange and other services like Google,  POP3/IMAP/Exchange, weather, a clock, calculator, Adobe Reader, a games  portal and a compass. The BlackBerry Q10 has dual band WiFi  802.11b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC and a GPS with digital compass. It has a  rear 8MP camera with an LED flash (the same as the Z10) and HDR mode  that comes courtesy of OS 10.1. BlackBerry World is your one stop shop  for apps, music and video. As we noted with the BlackBerry Z10, the app  selection doesn't yet come close to competing with iTunes, Google Play  for Android and even the Windows Phone app store. The OS and ecosystem  are very young, and we hope to see more apps as time progresses, though  this in part depends on how many folks buy OS 10 devices (developers  need a reason to make apps, after all). Still, some popular apps are  here like Skype, MLB at Bat, Angry Birds, Google Talk (a RIM app),  TuneIn Radio and Wisepilot (navigation). | 
| BlackBerry Q10 Video Review | 
Design and Ergonomics
The Q10 looks like a modern  interpretation of older QWERTY smartphones. I wouldn't call it a  stunning phone (it may be nearly impossible to make a phone with a  hardware keyboard look uber-sexy), but the black model's carbon fiber  back appeals to the car geek in me and it's strong too. The phone's face  has a clean and modern look with attractive metal strips between the  key rows that make it easier to find your place on the keyboard in the  dark. The phone isn't very thin, but the hardware keyboard and removable  battery don't allow for impossible thinness. The back cover slides off  to reveal the removable 2100 mAh battery, micro SIM card slot and micro  SDXC card slot.
The metal volume rocker with center  action button is the same as the Z10's, and it's easy to locate by touch  but stiff enough that we didn't activate it by accident. The  power/sleep button is up top as is the 3.5mm combo audio jack. Both the  micro USB and micro HDMI ports are on the left side. The 2MP front  camera and notification LED that blinks urgent red when messages and  alerts are waiting sit above the display and the speaker is on the  bottom edge. Our black model's back is grippy but not sticky and feels  good in hand. The phone is relatively small compared to today's  gargantuan smartphones and the Q10 is a bit shorter than the Z10. The  Q10 feels sturdy and the sides are reinforced with metal underneath the  plastic.
Calling and Data
BlackBerry phones are typically  excellent voice phones, and the Q10 on AT&T didn't disappoint. Our  call recipients thought we were calling from a landline phone and  likewise incoming voice was clear with average volume by cell phone  standards. This is an excellent phone for calls. Data speeds according  to speedtest.net were in line with today's LTE 4G phones and our  BlackBerry Q10 averaged 25Mbps down and 16Mbps up on AT&T's LTE  network in the Dallas metroplex. The phone played nicely with our  Jawbone and Motorola Bluetooth headsets and our BMW's built-in Bluetooth  for calls.
Keyboard
Gone are the trackballs and optical nav  pads found on older BlackBerry smartphones. The touch screen replaces  them, though purists will likely lament the further travel to the screen  vs. the nav pad. I have no qualms with the thoroughly modern touch  screen and I suspect the days of auxiliary navigation elements have  passed. The keyboard is pure joy for hardware keyboard lovers and it  maintains the sculpted waterfall keys we loved years ago on the  BlackBerry Bold 9900. The tactile keys make it easy to tell when you're  on target and it's clear if you've wandered from your desired key. The  usual BlackBerry keyboard shortcuts live on: double press the space bar  for a period, for example. BlackBerry OS 10.1 brings a host of hardware  keyboard tricks including typing "tweet" followed by a message to send a  new tweet, and "BBM Joe Blow" to start a BBM to Joe. The keys are  tactile and clicky, and for those who love their hardware keyboards  (some 70 million strong use BlackBerry phones worldwide), it won't  disappoint.
Display
At 328 PPI, the Q10's display has  sufficiently high pixel density that text and graphics always look very  sharp, even though the 720 x 720 resolution won't win any competitions  with current smartphones. The challenge is the 3.1" size: OS icons and  text are reasonably easy to see but text in web pages and documents is  tiny. That's the price you pay for the hardware keyboard that consumes  much of the front face real estate. Even with mobile sites, I often had  to pinch zoom to make text easy to read and desktop sites have  absolutely tiny text. As with BlackBerry smartphones of old, be prepared  to zoom when viewing web pages. Email and text messages are easy to  read since the OS handles font scaling, though you'll have to scroll  often to read through a medium length email. The Super AMOLED display  has very good color saturation and contrast and it's viewable outdoors.
Horsepower and Performance
In an Android phone review, this is  where we include many different benchmarks and analyze speed in detail.  As with Windows Phone, that's not necessary here, not just because  myriad benchmark programs don't yet exist for BlackBerry OS 10, but also  because the phone's software is completely optimized to perform well on  the hardware. This is a quick and responsive phone and the UI maintains  speed after several days of uptime. The active panes are here, just as  with the BlackBerry Z10 running OS 10, and these are miniaturized  windows where your running apps sit when minimized. Tap one and it runs  full screen with no significant delay, just where you left off. The OS  handles memory, so some apps may not update when running minimized as  active panes, but if you have 9 or fewer running, they generally do  update. The thoroughly modern webkit web browser with Adobe Flash is  very fast and is competitive with other platforms in terms of speed and  website compatibility.
Battery Life
Unlike the BlackBerry Z10 that launched  with just OK runtimes that improved with OS updates, BlackBerry clearly  focused on battery life with the Q10 knowing it had to compete with the  OS 7 BlackBerry phones it supplants. Thanks to the small display,  relatively undemanding CPU and a large 2100 mAh battery, the phone  delivers impressive runtimes. We routinely managed two days on a charge  with moderate use that included Facebook, Twitter and 3 email accounts  updates, 45 minutes of voice calls, 30 minutes of streaming HTML5 video  via YouTube and an hour of web browsing each day.
Camera
Like the BlackBerry Z10, the Q10 has a  2MP camera on the front and an 8MP camera with LED flash, backside  illuminated sensor and a fast f/2.2, five element lens on the rear.  Though BlackBerry OS 10.1 introduces HDR shooting for better high  contrast exposure, the camera is hobbled by a simplistic UI with few  controls. Yes, the iPhone has few camera settings and controls, but  Apple has a way of making users forgive them because photos and videos  come out looking great without having to fiddle endlessly with settings.  With the BlackBerry Q10 camera, I often feel that its good hardware  fails to meet the iPhone 5, Samsung Galaxy S3 and Nokia Lumia 920  challenge because the software isn't as good as it could be and I'm not  allowed to tweak settings to help it.
With good, even lighting, photos are  sharp and colorful. With stark outdoor sunlight or poor indoor lighting,  HDR really helps bring out detail in dark areas. Video stabilization is  decent but not nearly as good the optical image stabilization on the  Nokia Lumia 920. That said, with proper lighting, the BlackBerry Q10  captures sharp and colorful shots and fairly smooth 1080p video. And  it's certainly leaps and bounds ahead of Curve and Bold cameras. If  you're upgrading from an older BlackBerry model, you'll be in heaven.
Conclusion
The BlackBerry Q10 brings the  traditional BlackBerry smartphone into the modern age. I suspect it's  enough to make BlackBerry loyalists happy, though I doubt iPhone and  Android users will flock to it (that was the BlackBerry Z10's job). It's  fast, stable, and secure and it maintains enough of the UI conventions  of older BlackBerry smartphones to make existing BlackBerry owners feel a  bit less lost. It's an enjoyable hardware QWERTY smartphone in a world  where that form factor has all but died. Will it start a BlackBerry  revolution? I don't think so, but it may just be what the doctor ordered  to stem the exodus to other platforms.  Is it a fantastic smartphone  given today's excellent competition? Not such much unless you're a  QWERTY lover or a BlackBerry fan. The tiny display and lack of apps hold  it back from broad appeal.
Website: www.blackberry.com
Price: $199 with 2 year contract on most US carriers

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