True, RIM has loaded the Pearl with the bare minimum spec these days - the camera's a mere 1.3 megapixels. It's good enough for taking the odd snap on a night out and emailing it the morning after. It's not going to replace a proper camera, but it's there as a spontaneous, for-the-moment backup should the occasion present itself.

The results are good - like most camera phone pics, the colours are a little saturated as the sensor battles with low-light surrounds, but they're good enough to see who was degrading themselves after one too many pints of Stella.
Find yourself in near-dark surroundings and there's a flash to blind your fellow partygoers. It'll whiteout anyone too close to the frame, but at least you'll be able to find out what they were up to when the hangover haze has passed.
To BlackBerry converts, the keyboard will be second nature, but if you're more accustomed to your T9 or a full QWERTY job then it's going to take a bit of breaking in. Imagine a QWERTY keyboard, but with only half the number of buttons necessary.
With two letters per key, some predictive text-alike software kicks in to make sense of what you're trying to type. With fewer permutations than a standard numeric keypad, it's far more accurate and after a little practice you'll never want to go back.
Don't get lost on the good looks and fun extras, though - this is still a BlackBerry through and through.
Email setup is a cinch. For consumers, there's the BlackBerry Internet Service - just enter the details for your existing email account into the appropriate boxes on a webpage and before you know it, email will start popping up on your handset like text messages.
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COMMENTS
Very Nice little device
I've just been evaluating one of these for work and due to get one soon.
Its a great little device - looks stylish and has a good build quality .. perhaps with the exception of the 'pearl' trackball which feels cheap.
Whilts the keyboard is small and it takes a while to get used to the predictive text, its usable for short emails.
It will be popular for gadget freaks and people who want a stylish phone/email device from which you can send short replies.
However in my opionion this is obvioulsy the big push into the consumer market. Its so obvioulsy designed and marketed as a consumer device which will rival all the main players. Why do i think this ? Its got a camera, can play music & video's and is the first BB device to have a name rather than a number !
No doubt it will be a success though - it looks so good and is definatley usable as long as you dont want to write too long a replies to your emails !
So Close And Yet So Far
I thought this could replace my T39 but the cons killed this phone for me:
- I need reading glasses to read the keyboard (same problem my T39 has developed over time)
- miniSD, I have SD cards from my cameras, I'd love to use them in my phone
- Special software and cable required for Mac sync support -- Bluetooth sync is crippled (for "security" reasons)
- Special headphone jack
Otherwise, nice kit but I'll wait for something w/o a keyboard (stylus-n-screen).
Keyboard is good
For those of you who think the keyboard is a night mare, your wrong, you just haven't given it a chance, it takes getting use to. Its got "sure type" which requires faith to use. Type a word (of course you have to spell it correctly) and if you trust the sure type it will spell it by the end of the last letter imputed, look away if you don't trust it! 1 day owning the pearl and taking it back is not enough time, the keyboard and sure type is great!

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