Tuesday, May 1, 2012

BlackBerry 10 Dev Alpha hands-on

Behold the BlackBerry 10 Dev Alpha. Research in Motion is now following within the footsteps of tech giants like Nokia, Intel and Qualcomm by pushing out a tool solely devoted to serve the desires of its developers. Considering the extent of importance RIM is placing at the launch of its latest OS, the QNX-based BlackBerry 10, this can be a critical move for the Canadian company because it works to recruit interested parties from other platforms while strengthening its existing relationships. Emulators and development kits are nice, in fact, but they cannot take where of a precise working device -- and the Dev Alpha stands out as the primary vehicle to drive BB 10 developers until the overall production smartphones begin shipping sometime q4.

Our time with the Dev Alpha was brief, and we weren't ready to glean much out of the experience. Why? Once we got the chance to play with it, the device was more of a miniature PlayBook than a BB10 phone. Actually, it even had PlayBook OS 2.0 loaded instead of the following-gen BlackBerry platform. So what did we discover out about this mysterious device?

One of several areas wherein we were most intrigued was the display. The Dev Alpha boasts a 4.2-inch screen (it's still unclear what type it's miles, and if it's PenTile) with a gorgeous resolution of 1280 x 768. This packs in additional horizontal pixels than the quality 720p panels, meaning this can okay be the most efficient valuable displays we have seen in a phone up to now. And in our limited time with the handset, shall we easily tell that the screen is first class. We couldn't choose any pixelation, the colours gave the impression to be well saturated and the viewing angles were above average (the panel started to fade as we attempted to peer it on-edge). Still, when given that that's simply a limited-edition device designed with the wishes of developers in mind, we're hoping this will likely be indicative of what we will be able to expect from this fall's lineup of BlackBerry phones -- as much as par, if not better, than nearly all of competing smartphones available in the market.

We weren't ready to glean a number of specs from our time with the Dev Alpha, but we learned that it houses 16GB internal storage and 1GB RAM. It also encompasses a slot for microSD cards and a mini-HDMI port at the left side. At the top you will see the three.5mm headphone jack, power key and mic, while the correct side offers a 3-stage volume rocker -- the mute button is in between the up and down keys. Gazing front, we discovered a front-facing camera next to the speaker, in addition to an enormous bezel for gesture support. The back is product of the identical matte and rubber found at the PlayBook, that is really easy to grip, although the phone's square body made it a chunk uncomfortable to hang on an extended-term basis.

While we were hoping to get some quality time with the OS that RIM is putting a lot stock into, it was as a minimum satisfying to determine the corporate putting numerous heart and soul right into a dedicated developer device. The BlackBerry maker seems to intend business, and it has a great recruiting tool to flaunt. We'll keep you updated at the latest BB10 information because it comes out this week.

Joseph Volpe contributed to this post.



From WhatNewsToday.net

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