Price:
RS: 51,500
Camera:
5MP, 2592×1944 pixels, LED flash, Geo-tagging, face detection, image stabilization, Video (720p)
Battery:
Talk time Up to 6 h 30 min, Stand-by Up to 307 h
Memory:
8GB built-in, 768MB RAM + microSD card (supports up to 32GB)
Connectivity:
Bluetooth v2.1 with A2DP, EDR, USB, WLAN (Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, dual-band), GPRS, EDGE, 3G (HSDPA 14.4Mbps, HSUPA 5.76Mbps)
Browser:
HTML
Colors:
Black
Entertainment :
MP4/WMV/H.263/H.264 player, MP3/eAAC+/WMA player, 3.5mm audio jack, Games (built-in + downloadable)
About BlackBerry Bold 9900
The Blackberry Bold achieved iconic position as the must-have executive smart phone, with a QWERTY keyboard that made emails very easy. And still four years later, the Bold is trying to remain significant, as its creator tries to reinvent itself with a new OS to replace the Blackberry platform that once defined mobile computing. The Blackberry Bold 9000 series is the end of the line for the Blackberry as we know it.
The Bold 9900 switched to a touch screen in an attempt to appeal to a market that was head over heal in love with the iPhone and Android family. But the Bold Touch retained its QWERTY keyboard; RIM addressed those who wanted an onscreen-only keyboard with a face-lift of Blackberry Torch model. When you get right down to it, the Blackberry Bold is pretty much a Blackberry Bold — it’s not a most important departure from the device’s olden times, which might explain why it has struggled in the market.
At first blush, the Bold 9900 looks like its predecessors, apart from for the larger screen: a 2.8-inch, horizontally oriented 640-by-480-pixel touch screen, giving the conventional keyboard-oriented Bold its first touch capabilities. Even though the screen has twice the resolution of the previous Bold 9700 model, it’s still too small to use for most Web pages and the kinds of apps you’d run on an iPhone or Android device.
The Blackberry Bold’s hardware has been upgraded in several other ways. First, the Bold 9900 sports a faster processor than its 9700 predecessor — 1.2GHz single-core ARM versus 624MHz — but still is less powerful than most competing smart phones. The bezel feels higher-quality, with its carbon fiber and metal. The physical keyboard feels more responsive, and its labels are easier to read as they are both larger and dispense with the muddy red-on-black theme for symbols.
The rear camera is a typical 5 mega pixels with an LED flash, but without auto focus as you’ll find on most competing smart phones. The Wi-Fi radio now supports 802.11n networks in addition to 802.11b and 802.11g networks. There’s also a near-field communications (NFC) short-range wireless chip, but it’s not enabled in the OS as yet.
In a nutshell, the Bold 9900′s hardware is behind most rival devices, excepting its very nice keyboard and high-quality bezel.
RS: 51,500
Camera:
5MP, 2592×1944 pixels, LED flash, Geo-tagging, face detection, image stabilization, Video (720p)
Battery:
Talk time Up to 6 h 30 min, Stand-by Up to 307 h
Memory:
8GB built-in, 768MB RAM + microSD card (supports up to 32GB)
Connectivity:
Bluetooth v2.1 with A2DP, EDR, USB, WLAN (Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, dual-band), GPRS, EDGE, 3G (HSDPA 14.4Mbps, HSUPA 5.76Mbps)
Browser:
HTML
Colors:
Black
Entertainment :
MP4/WMV/H.263/H.264 player, MP3/eAAC+/WMA player, 3.5mm audio jack, Games (built-in + downloadable)
About BlackBerry Bold 9900
The Blackberry Bold achieved iconic position as the must-have executive smart phone, with a QWERTY keyboard that made emails very easy. And still four years later, the Bold is trying to remain significant, as its creator tries to reinvent itself with a new OS to replace the Blackberry platform that once defined mobile computing. The Blackberry Bold 9000 series is the end of the line for the Blackberry as we know it.
The Bold 9900 switched to a touch screen in an attempt to appeal to a market that was head over heal in love with the iPhone and Android family. But the Bold Touch retained its QWERTY keyboard; RIM addressed those who wanted an onscreen-only keyboard with a face-lift of Blackberry Torch model. When you get right down to it, the Blackberry Bold is pretty much a Blackberry Bold — it’s not a most important departure from the device’s olden times, which might explain why it has struggled in the market.
At first blush, the Bold 9900 looks like its predecessors, apart from for the larger screen: a 2.8-inch, horizontally oriented 640-by-480-pixel touch screen, giving the conventional keyboard-oriented Bold its first touch capabilities. Even though the screen has twice the resolution of the previous Bold 9700 model, it’s still too small to use for most Web pages and the kinds of apps you’d run on an iPhone or Android device.
The Blackberry Bold’s hardware has been upgraded in several other ways. First, the Bold 9900 sports a faster processor than its 9700 predecessor — 1.2GHz single-core ARM versus 624MHz — but still is less powerful than most competing smart phones. The bezel feels higher-quality, with its carbon fiber and metal. The physical keyboard feels more responsive, and its labels are easier to read as they are both larger and dispense with the muddy red-on-black theme for symbols.
The rear camera is a typical 5 mega pixels with an LED flash, but without auto focus as you’ll find on most competing smart phones. The Wi-Fi radio now supports 802.11n networks in addition to 802.11b and 802.11g networks. There’s also a near-field communications (NFC) short-range wireless chip, but it’s not enabled in the OS as yet.
In a nutshell, the Bold 9900′s hardware is behind most rival devices, excepting its very nice keyboard and high-quality bezel.
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