Black Berry mobile phone a new technology mobile phone. It has lots of features. It has larger 2.4-inch screen, a bigger battery for longer talk time, and a real QWERTY keyboard. GPS capability makes Black Berry 8800 a unique. We were very impressed with the bundled TeleNav GPS Navigator.
It has very natural-sounding female voice and will tell you the distance before the next turn and alerted us at just the right time before the turn itself. TeleNav also pulls up addresses from your contact list. The local search function worked well, too, allowing us to map a business address, navigate to it, or dial the number.
BlackBerry 8800 other standard-issue features include an organizer (address book, calendar, memo pad, task list) that syncs with Outlook and a Web browser. This is not a 3G device, we enjoyed very good performance on Cingular’s EDGE network and the browser loads text before images, sites begin load within ten seconds, and articles on those pages took only about six seconds to pop up.
Its audio quality when making regular voice calls was generally good. Anybody didn’t complain, but it seems slight fuzziness on end of the line during some conversations. When one left a voicemail on a landline phone, the message sounded clear when played back, if a little faint. Black Berry 8800 can be used to make conference calls, and the voice-activated dialing worked quite well even over Bluetooth.
Pushing new e-mail to our Inbox automatically. The Black Berry 8800 allows users to set up ten personal and corporate e-mail accounts and features the easiest setup of any smart phone. It has also attachment support and continues to be excellent, as you can view Word, Excel, PDF, and JPEG files. But in it there was no option to edit or create Office documents, at least not without third-party software.
Lastly, the Black Berry 8800 is an excellent smart phone and a surprisingly good navigator, which offers both HSDPA and Wi-Fi connectivity. Black Berry 8800 has up to five hours of talk time, and GPS capability. It is its unique capability.
Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/authors/brett-gian/32040.htm
It has very natural-sounding female voice and will tell you the distance before the next turn and alerted us at just the right time before the turn itself. TeleNav also pulls up addresses from your contact list. The local search function worked well, too, allowing us to map a business address, navigate to it, or dial the number.
BlackBerry 8800 other standard-issue features include an organizer (address book, calendar, memo pad, task list) that syncs with Outlook and a Web browser. This is not a 3G device, we enjoyed very good performance on Cingular’s EDGE network and the browser loads text before images, sites begin load within ten seconds, and articles on those pages took only about six seconds to pop up.
Its audio quality when making regular voice calls was generally good. Anybody didn’t complain, but it seems slight fuzziness on end of the line during some conversations. When one left a voicemail on a landline phone, the message sounded clear when played back, if a little faint. Black Berry 8800 can be used to make conference calls, and the voice-activated dialing worked quite well even over Bluetooth.
Pushing new e-mail to our Inbox automatically. The Black Berry 8800 allows users to set up ten personal and corporate e-mail accounts and features the easiest setup of any smart phone. It has also attachment support and continues to be excellent, as you can view Word, Excel, PDF, and JPEG files. But in it there was no option to edit or create Office documents, at least not without third-party software.
Lastly, the Black Berry 8800 is an excellent smart phone and a surprisingly good navigator, which offers both HSDPA and Wi-Fi connectivity. Black Berry 8800 has up to five hours of talk time, and GPS capability. It is its unique capability.
Source:
http://www.articlesbase.com/authors/brett-gian/32040.htm