Monday 27 July 2015

BlackBerry Leap review

Many thought the days of BlackBerry were numbered yet the company is still here, pushing new phones. The Canadians might not be the leading smartphone manufacturer that it once was, but it's still got a loyal fanbase that the BlackBerry Leap comes to cater to.


You get a 5" HD display, dual-core processor, 2GB RAM, an 8MP shooter and a rich connectivity package - not the kind of specs to make a geek's pulse race, but adequate for the mid-range that the Leap is targeting. The design is instantly recognizable - square edges, plastic unibody and dotted rear panel with a huge BlackBerry logo. It's more of the classic kind, rather than modern or fresh, but that's a good thing to say for a business-oriented phone.



Key features

5" 720p LCD capacitive touchscreen, 294ppi
Dual-core 1.5GHz Krait CPU, 2GB of RAM, Adreno 225 GPU; Snapdragon S4 Plus chipset
8MP autofocus camera, single-LED flash; HDR, Panorama
1080@30fps video recording
2MP front camera, 720p video recording
16GB of built-in storage, expandable via a microSD slot
Cat. 3 LTE (100/50Mbps); Wi-Fi b/g/n; Bluetooth 4.0; GPS with A-GPS; FM; microUSB
2,800mAh battery
BlackBerry OS 10.3.1 with native Android app support (4.3 Jelly Bean API)

Main disadvantages

BlackBerry OS 10 not quite as functional as major rivals
Processor is decidedly underpowered
Non-IPS screen
No NFC
Non-removable battery


The BlackBerry Leap is hardly a hero device set to lift the profile of the company - instead it's a workhorse that should bring in some extra sales and help keep the maker afloat until it figures out its next strategic move. And on paper it looks capable of handling the task.
Blackberry Leap Blackberry Leap Blackberry Leap Blackberry Leap Blackberry Leap
Of course we shouldn't forget that competition in the mid-range has never been this fierce. What was once a land of underperforming handsets trying to replicate flagships designs with cheaper materials and often failing spectacularly now hosts a bunch of very solid smartphones that can cater to the needs of many a power user. The Leap needs to convince us it's got what it takes to compete there, offering enough standout features to attract attention and a well-balanced experience to make customers reach for their wallets.

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