By Sascha Segan - PC Magazine
AT&T, Sprint, and US Cellular will be getting new BlackBerries soon, as RIM announced touch-screen and keyboard-packing smartphones running its BlackBerry 7 OS for the three U.S. carriers.
The BlackBerry Torch 9810 looks very similar to the existing AT&T Torch, but has many upgrades under the hood, including the new BlackBerry 7 OS. The Torch 9850/9860 for AT&T, Sprint, and US Cellular, meanwhile, is RIM's latest attempt at a touchscreen-only model after ditching the BlackBerry Storm moniker.
Of the two new devices, the 9850/9860 is fresher and more daring. RIM has tried to do full-touchscreen phones before, in Verizon Wireless's BlackBerry Storm and Storm2. But the original Storm was buggy, and the Storm2 was criticized for having a difficult user interface.
The new touch Torch (say that five times fast) has a 3.7-inch, 800-by-480 touch screen and a 5-megapixel camera on the back with 720p HD video recording. The processor is a 1.2-Ghz, single-core Qualcomm Snapdragon QSD8655, and the phone has 768MB of RAM and 4GB of storage.
The touch Torch has a curved front which RIM calls the "waterfall." The company says it makes the screen appear bigger; it certainly prevents the device from looking boxy.
The big question around the touch Torch is whether the new BlackBerry 7 OS will provide a much better touch experience than consumers found on the Storm. Superficially, BlackBerry 7 looks a lot like BlackBerry 6—similar icons, the same app tray, and the traditional BlackBerry pop-up menus. But RIM has said that it includes many core features, such as hardware graphics acceleration, which will make the experience smoother and simpler.
The Torch 9810 looks so much like the existing Torch 9800 that AT&T needed to put out a PDF specifically pointing out the differences. Like the existing Torch, the Torch 9810 is a sliding smartphone with a touch screen and full keyboard.
The new Torch has a 1.2-Ghz processor, 8GB of memory, 768 MB RAM, 720p video recording, and support for AT&T's HSPA 14.4 network, all upgrades from the original model, AT&T says. The device's 5-megapixel still camera and 3.2-inch, 640-by-480 touch screen remain the same. The Torch 9810 will also run the BlackBerry 7 OS.
All the new devices will run on AT&T's HSPA 14.4 network, offering faster Internet speeds than previous 3G BlackBerries, AT&T said. The Sprint and US Cellular models will run on those carriers' 3G EVDO networks.
AT&T said the 9810 will come out in August and the 9860 will appear sometime before the end of the year. Also this year, AT&T will launch the BlackBerry Bold 9900, with which we had some hands-on time back in May. (See the slideshow below for more details.) That's a sped-up BlackBerry Bold, without a touch screen.
Sprint has not yet announced a release schedule for the Torch 9850.
Both models will also come to the Canadian carriers Rogers, Bell and Telus, RIM's blog says.