Wednesday, April 18, 2007

 

Test driving the RIM 8800

8800I received a little package from Rogers last week - an opportunity to test drive the new Blackberry 8800.

I have been using a 7200 series Blackberry for the past few years and my family will attest that I am a certified addict. I need the full keyboard, so I have been waiting for the 8800's full keyboard combined with the Pearl trackball. It takes some getting used to - but there is so much more.

The system boots up almost immediately - a welcome change from what I have been used to. Starting from removing the battery is a longer initialization process. Quad-band, GSM/GPRS and EDGE networks with resultant zippy download speeds.

The built-in GPS came in handy for a road trip yesterday. While Pierre Karl Peladeau, chief executive of Quebecor, was in Ottawa calling for an acceleration of the AWS spectrum auction, I spent the day testing the Telenav turn-by-turn voice navigation to help us get through the streets of Montreal. At $10 per month, it is a nice package that is priced competitively to services like GM's OnStar.

One-touch voice activated dialing and a speaker phone are other useful tools - especially when driving. The system responds to other voice commands as well. Has anyone built an application to get the system to read my incoming emails to me while I drive?

Of course, it is also Bluetooth equipped and I was able to easily pair one of my Motorola earpieces. The demo unit I have also came with wired stereo ear buds - the system can play audio and video files (MP3, WMA, MPEG4 and WMV among others).

Will RIM design one that can float when I drop it into Lake Muskoka?

Jim Balsillie, Co-CEO of Research In Motion, will be a keynote speaker at The 2007 Canadian Telecom Summit on June 12.

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Comments:
Don't you have any qualms about regularly writing on issues affecting Rogers and accepting free gifts from them at the same time?
 
The most recent post on deregulation would seem to go against Rogers' views, no?
 
Thanks for expressing a concern. There are two important points regarding this. First of all, the 8800 was provided to me on a short term basis for review and evaluation. I had it for only a week. Second, I was upfront in disclosing that this device was provided by a carrier.

As the second poster correctly points out, while I have a cordial and friendly relationship with senior executives at Rogers (and most of the carriers and service providers in Canada), I have always posted opinions that are my own - and these frequently diverge from one or another.

It is one of the elements that makes our discussions interesting!
 
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