- Jul 18, 2004
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The reviews are in and they're very much a mixed bag. (Shamelessly lifted in part from Good Morning Silicon Valley):
:brokenheart:
Joshua Topolsky at Endgadget: "The selling points are easy: the phone is gorgeous to look at and hold, it's designed and backed by RIM (now almost a household name thanks to their prevalence in the business and entertainment markets), and it's packed with features that, at first glance, make it seem not only as good as the iPhone, but better. The only hitch in this plan is a major one: it's not as easy, enjoyable, or consistent to use as the iPhone, and the one place where everyone is sure they have an upper hand -- that wow-inducing clickable screen -- just isn't all that great. For casual users, the learning curve and complexity of this phone will feel like an instant turn off, and for power users, the lack of a decent typing option and considerable lagginess in software will give them pause. RIM tried to strike some middle ground between form and function, and unfortunately came up short on both."
Matt Buchanon at Gizmodo: "It's good -- RIM clearly put a lot of thought into the design. But I think it fall short of what they were aiming for, and ultimately what all the hype is driving people to expect. Some of this is fixable: The damn thing needs to crash less often. But SurePress is not the end-all, be-all of touchscreen technologies -- it's not really an evolutionary step forward, even. The experience may be fairly refined, but more polish is still needed. Had this Storm been left to brew a bit longer, it would've been much more powerful."
Anita Hamilton at Time: "After 24 hours of actually testing the new BlackBerry side by side with its main competition -- Apple's iPhone 3G and T-Mobile's G1 (the 'Google phone') -- the novelty quickly wore off. I hate the click screen, and none of the handful of people I let try it had anything nice to say about it either. That's a shame because the Storm has a slew of handy extras that neither the iPhone nor the G1 can match. But an annoying user interface is a deal breaker."
The Boy Genius Report: "Here's our honest to god non-biased conclusion this is the best phone to ever touch Verizon Wireless so far. If you're a Verizon Wireless subscriber and a dumb phone won't cut it, you'd be pretty air-headed to not pick this bad boy up above any other smartphone in Verizon's lineup. ... The tricky part gets into whether you should switch carriers for the phone like a lot of you are considering. That's obviously a personal judgment you have to make, but we wouldn't trade our Bolds in for Storms if you paid us. Like a lot of money. Like, six figures. It's not that the Storm is a piece of junk for the most part, it's that it goes against everything a BlackBerry stands for Quick. Easy. Effortless. The touch screen on the Storm complicates the simplest of tasks sometimes; you lose that lightning fast BlackBerry crack-addict mentality, at least to us."
Walter Mossberg at The Wall Street Journal:"The Storm's multimedia software isn't as fancy as the iPhone's, but it's better than the G1's, and worked very well in my tests. Overall, the Storm is a very capable handheld computer that will appeal to BlackBerry users who have been pining for a touch-controlled device with a larger screen. And it offers yet another good option for anyone who is looking to buy one of the new, more powerful, pocket computers."
:brokenheart: