Monday, March 21, 2011

Gadgets: Battle of the Smartphones!

I'm one of the few to own both an iPhone and a BlackBerry smartphone. I have the iPhone 4 16GB, and the Blackberry Curve 3G, but to make things fair for the purposes of this test, I've abducted my wife's BlackBerry Torch 9800. Both are on different networks, but that's not part of this comparison.

Let's get started, shall we?

First thing's first, a by-the-numbers side by side comparison.



iPhone 4

BlackBerry Torch 9800

Professional Target Market

Tech Sector

Business Sector

Display Size

3.5” Retina Display
(960x640 pixels)

3.2” High Resolution
(480x360 pixels)

Interface

Multi-Touch Screen Only

Multi-Touch Screen and slide-out Qwerty keyboard, trackpad

OS

iOS 4.x

Blackberry OS 6

Processor

Apple A4 1GHz

624 MHz

Memory/Storage

512 MB RAM/16 or 32 GB flash drive

512MB RAM/4GB flash + 4GB microSD (expandable to 32GB)

Size/Weight

4.5”x2.31”x0.37”
4.8 ounces

4.37”(5.83” open)x2.44”x0.57”
5.68 ounces

Battery

Built-in 1420 mAh
lithium-ion. 7 hours talk/300 hours standby (3G network)

1300 mAHr
lithium-ion. 5.5 hours talk/18 days standby (3G network)

Camera

5-megapixel, w/autofocus, LED flash, 5x zoom.
HD quality video (720p)

5-megapixel, w/autofocus, flash, 2.5x zoom.
VGA quality video (640x480)

Audio Formats

AAC (8 to 320 Kbps), Protected AAC (from iTunes Store), HE-AAC, MP3 (8 to 320 Kbps), MP3 VBR, Audible (formats
2, 3, 4, Audible Enhanced Audio, AAX, and AAX+), Apple Lossless, AIFF, and WAV

MP3, AAC-LC, AAC+, eAAC+, WMA, AMR-NB, MIDI, FLAC, Ogg Vorbis

App Selection

+350,000 available from iTunes App Store

+10,000 available from BlackBerry App World


Both phones have their ups and downs, and I do enjoy both, to a degree. The Torch's  big downside, for me, is that it is a little bulky, and the slide-out qwerty keyboard feels a little cramped, compared to other BlackBerrys. The iPhone's touchscreen keypad is a dream, once you get used to working with a touchscreen. But that's not a of the iPhone directly - that's just how touchscreens are. Win: iPhone 4

On the other hand, the Torch is better suited for selecting and copying text and other items and using the data in other applications than the iPhone, with the use of the trackball that's found on all BlackBerry phones. Win: BlackBerry Torch 9800

Personally, I enjoy navigating through the iPhone better. You can configure your apps to reside in folders, thus keeping like-apps together, instead of all over the place, like you have with the Torch. Win: iPhone 4

Both phones have a snappy, multitasking OS, and make it fairly easy to get around and be productive. The multitasking however, is a little better on the Torch, and although the processor is technically slower, it chugs along smoothly. Win: BlackBerry Torch 9800

The sheer amount and variety of apps available to iPhone users is just mind boggling. Apps, both paid and free, are available for virtually any task, for both professional and entertainment use. Apple's tagline of "There's an App for That" is beyond accurate. RIM's BlackBerry App World is lacking in this department, but since BlackBerrys are typically used by the business types, there are plenty to get the job done. Like with all cross-platform applications, some work better on the iPhone, and some work better on the BlackBerry. Win: iPhone 4

Syncing apps and music on the iPhone is done through Apple's iTunes software, and done very easily and intuitively. The BlackBerry Desktop Manager is fairly less so. Not that you can't syncronize everything you need to fairly seamlessly from your handheld to your computer, you can and you can do it well. Just not as well as with the iPhone 4. Both can easily syncronize with your Outlook account to manage your time, contacts and appointments. Handy, huh? Win: Draw

Ultimately, it all boils down to personal preference, but for me, the iPhone 4 is a much better phone/personal assistant, as I find myself reaching for my iPhone more often than my BlackBerry to execute most tasks.

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