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Anyone got the Z30?

Little Foot

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GameBoy27

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Nov 23, 2004
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Where is gameboy he can talk your ear off till he is blue in the face about all great propaganda blackberry has to offer He been posting about the z30 for months now convincing himself to get the z30

http://m.cnet.com/reviews/blackberry-z30/35827877?ds=1
I'm getting my Z30 this week. I've been reading reviews from people who have the new phone and so far they've been really positive. I take every review from CNET etc. with a grain of salt.

One positive from that review is
"I know many true BlackBerry adherents out there will bemoan the Z30's lack of a physical keyboard. Even so, from someone who gave up tangible keys years ago for tapping out messages on glass panels, the Z30's software keyboard is one of the best I've used. The bigger screen makes for more comfortable typing than the smaller Z10 and I also appreciate BB10's impressive predictive text abilities."
Considering I send a lot of emails and texts, having a good keyboard is very important to me. I'm not going to lose sleep over the camera not being quite as good as other phones. If I want to take good pictures, I use my Canon T4i.

User reviews: http://forums.crackberry.com/blackberry-z30-f401/hey-canada-who-got-z30-860621/
 

onthebottom

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I'm getting my Z30 this week. I've been reading reviews from people who have the new phone and so far they've been really positive. I take every review from CNET etc. with a grain of salt.

One positive from that review is "I know many true BlackBerry adherents out there will bemoan the Z30's lack of a physical keyboard. Even so, from someone who gave up tangible keys years ago for tapping out messages on glass panels, the Z30's software keyboard is one of the best I've used. The bigger screen makes for more comfortable typing than the smaller Z10 and I also appreciate BB10's impressive predictive text abilities."

Considering I send a lot of emails and texts, having a good keyboard is very important to me. I'm not going to lose sleep over the camera not being quite as good as other phones. If I want to take good pictures, I use my Canon T4i.
I would say, and I think the market agrees with me on this, that the core of their review, that it's a good phone but too little too late, is spot on.


Market news:

BLACKBERRY'S PLAN TO GO PRIVATE FAILS, STOCK CRASHES
JAY YAROW NOV. 4, 2013,


BlackBerry shares are down 12% today.

Early in the day, news broke that the company's deal to go private had fallen through, and CEO Thorsten Heins was out of the company.

BlackBerry later issued a press release confirming the news.

In the release, BlackBerry announced that it would take on $1 billion in convertible debt, which converts if the stock hits $10 a share. Fairfax Financial, which was supposed to lead the BlackBerry deal to go private, will kick in $250 million of the convertible debt.

Fairfax had originally planned to take BlackBerry private in a $4.7 billion deal. It couldn't get the money together, so the deal fell apart.

.......
 

Little Foot

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And it's looks like Blackerry is going stop making handset


http://finance.yahoo.com/news/blackberry-focus-software-not-devices-212355509.html
BlackBerry to focus on software _ not devices TORONTO (AP) -- BlackBerry lovers left could be in for some bad news. The device that was so addictive that it was dubbed the "CrackBerry" might not have much of a future: Its new chairman and interim chief executive says he wants to emphasize software and services -- not devices. That could mean the company might ultimately get out of the business of selling smartphones. The possible change in strategy comes as Fairfax Financial, BlackBerry's largest shareholder with a 10 percent stake, said Monday it won't buy the struggling smartphone company and take it private. It said that instead Fairfax and other investors will inject $1 billion as part of a revised investment proposal. CEO Thorsten Heins is stepping down and John Chen was appointed chairman of BlackBerry's board of directors and interim CEO. Chen, the former CEO of software data company Sybase, told The Associated Press on Monday that BlackBerry employees need to start thinking differently about the company and accept that "we're really not in phones but we're in phones for software, for services." Chen said he wants to find a CEO with a strong software and services background. He noted that BlackBerry Messenger, BlackBerry's popular messaging application, has been downloaded by more than 20 million users since it became available on Google's Android and Apple's iOS platforms in the last 10 days. BlackBerry Messenger, or BBM, works like text messaging but doesn't incur extra fees. BBM had long been one of the most popular features on BlackBerry devices and only became available on rival smartphones last month. While there are fewer users of the actual BlackBerry smartphone, BBM remains popular. Chen said there are now about 80 million active users of BBM. "I'd like to find somebody to help me monetize that," Chen said. Colin Gillis, an industry analyst at BGC Financial, questioned whether that's possible. "It's like Apple saying we're going to stop making phones and we're going to become an iMessage company," Gillis said. BlackBerry no longer provides the number of actually device subscribers, and a company spokeswoman said that number would not be "an accurate reflection of our business today." In June, it said the total BlackBerry subscriber base was about 72 million. Mike Walkley, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity, estimates that there were about around 65 million BlackBerry device subscribers globally at the end of August, down from a peak of around 80 million at end of August 2012. He said he expects the rate of decline to accelerate. By comparison, smartphone market leader Samsung Electronics Co. shipped 81 million units in the July-September quarter alone, according to research group IDC. Gillis said BlackBerry might indeed stop selling phones but noted BlackBerry is already obsolete. He doesn't think current BlackBerry users have to worry though. "They are not just going to shut the lights off," Gillis said. The decline of the BlackBerry has come shockingly fast. In 1999, BlackBerry became a game-changing breakthrough in personal connectedness. It changed the culture by allowing on-the-go business people to access wireless email. President Barack Obama couldn't bear to part with his BlackBerry. Oprah Winfrey declared it one of her "favorite things." Then came a new generation of competing smartphones, and suddenly the BlackBerry looked ancient. Apple debuted the iPhone in 2007 and showed that phones can handle much more than email and phone calls. In the years since, BlackBerry Ltd. been hammered by competition from the iPhone as well as Android-based rivals. This year's much-delayed launch of the BlackBerry 10 system and the fancier devices that use it was supposed to rejuvenate the brand and lure customers. It did not work. Waterloo, Ontario-based BlackBerry recently announced 4,500 layoffs, or 40 percent of its global workforce, and reported a quarterly loss of nearly $1 billion. "Sadly I think they are already out of the business after the BlackBerry 10 flop," said Mike Walkley, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity. Walkley said he believes BlackBerry will focus on its mobile device management business, which allows IT departments to manage different devices connected to their corporate networks.
 

GameBoy27

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Finally got my Z30 and all I have to say is wow. It's actually much better than I expected. Here's what I like so far.

- The screen is beautiful, crisp and extremely responsive.
- Build quality and finish is excellent.
- Browser is lightning quick. Had a few friends with iPhone 4 & 5's try it and they were very impressed.
- Crazy battery life. Charged it at noon Monday and still have 35% left more than 2 days later with lots of use. (Update, down to 24% at 9:30 PM so I plugged it in).
- Typing on the virtual keyboard is nice and easy and the predictive text works well, flicking entire words to complete sentences. (Update, voice to text is near perfect).
- Camera takes great pictures as does the 1080p video.
- Speakers have really nice sound.

No downside so far, other than there isn't as many apps available like on other platforms but that's a non-issue for me. I can live without a farting app. :D
 
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djk

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They based it off the Z10, not the Z30. LMAO... Blackberry never learns.
Another thing.. talk about not knowing your demo.

Where's the concierge app and service? The design isn't gaudy enough. Its obvious they're going after Vertu with this phone.
 

onthebottom

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djk

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the hobby needs more capitalism

GameBoy27

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If only that reporter could have talked to GameBoy27.... if only.....
Ha, good one! lol

For the record, I'm loving my Z30 and so has just about everyone who's seen it. The greatest number of compliments are from friends who have iPhones.
 
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