Pros & Cons
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- Excellent hardware design.
- Global 3G roaming.
- Lots of media options.
- Awesome messaging capabilities.
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- Buggy.
- Web browser needs a refresh.
RIM BlackBerry Tour 9630 (Verizon Wireless) Specs
| 802.11x/Band(s): | No |
| Bands: | 1800 |
| Bands: | 1900 |
| Bands: | 2100 |
| Bands: | 850 |
| Bands: | 900 |
| Battery Life (As Tested): | 6 hours 32 minutes |
| Bluetooth: | Yes |
| Camera Flash: | Yes |
| Camera: | Yes |
| Form Factor: | Candy Bar |
| High-Speed Data: | 1xRTT |
| High-Speed Data: | EDGE |
| High-Speed Data: | EVDO Rev 0 |
| High-Speed Data: | EVDO Rev A |
| High-Speed Data: | HSDPA |
| High-Speed Data: | UMTS |
| Megapixels: | 3.2 MP |
| Operating System as Tested: | Other |
| Phone Capability / Network: | CDMA |
| Phone Capability / Network: | GSM |
| Phone Capability / Network: | UMTS |
| Physical Keyboard: | Yes |
| Screen Details: | 480-by-360 |
| Screen Details: | 65k-color TFT LCD screen |
| Screen Size: | 2.4 inches |
| Service Provider: | Verizon Wireless |
The new BlackBerry Tour 9630 is a remix of many of the best BlackBerry features on the market today packed into beautiful hardware. It's the benchmark for business smartphones, as well as being an excellent music player and a terrific tool for social networking. My unit was a little buggy, but the Tour is still the best smartphone on Verizon Wireless.
The Tour is beautiful. At 4.4 by 2.4 by 0.6 inches (HWD) and 4.6 ounces, it looks like a cross between the
Although its RF reception is merely average, the Tour has the best receiving voice quality of any Verizon Wireless phone on the market today. Calls sound beautiful through the earpiece, and crystal clear through mono or stereo Bluetooth headphones. The speakerphone's decent, too. Transmissions weren't quite as perfect, as some background noise came through.
The Tour is a true world phone, able to connect on Verizon's 3G network here in the U.S. and on 2G GSM/EDGE and 3G HSPA networks abroad. (There's no Wi-Fi.) It comes with a SIM card that charges high roaming rates but promises seamless calling with your U.S. number. If if you want to use a foreign SIM card and number at lower rates, you can call Verizon to unlock your phone's SIM slot after 60 days.
Voice dialing worked fine over a Bluetooth headset. The Tour comes with visual voicemail, and both ringtones and the vibrating alert were of average power. Talk time, at 6 hours and 32 minutes, was very good for a Verizon Wireless phone.
If you send messages, the Tour has you covered, whether they're e-mail, IM, SMS, MMS, or social networking updates. The Tour offers the usual excellent BlackBerry push e-mail, with a new setup screen that's easier to use than ever. Included DataViz software lets you view or edit Microsoft Office document attachments. The
The BlackBerry Web browser is still weak, stalling on many JavaScript-heavy pages. Your best bet is to install an alternative browser, either
The Tour offers an unusually flexible set of music options. You can download songs directly onto the phone for $1.99 each through an on-device client, sync music over from a PC with
The 3.2-megapixel camera has autofocus, which is a mixed blessing; it made for sharp photos with terrific exposure and white balance, but stuck the Tour with an annoying 1.3-second shutter delay. Alas, there's no way to turn off the autofocus. The video camera mode takes smooth 480-by-352 videos at 24 frames per second. You can automatically geotag your photos, or upload them to Facebook, MySpace, AIM, or
The Tour also comes with two mapping options (the free BlackBerry Maps, which offers GPS positioning but not spoken directions, and the $9.99
If you want more apps, you can download them from the 1,600-strong catalog in BlackBerry App World on the phone. Java performance tested with the JBenchmark benchmark suite was a bit slower than the BlackBerry Bold, except that the Tour successfully ran a gaming benchmark at which the Bold couldn't complete.
Sounds great, huh? Here's the warning: I tried two Tour units, and they both had a noticeable bug. They could suddenly stop being able to read their MicroSD memory cards, requiring a battery pull to fix the problem. Also, on one of my two units, the screen emitted a subtle, very high pitched noise when it was on.
It says something about the Tour's great bones and Verizon's weak smartphone lineup that I'm still recommending it. That said, you should buy this with your eyes open to its potential flaws.
I'm confident that Verizon and RIM will fix these flaws, and the Tour is such a positive jump forward from the
The Tour will be released July 12 on both Verizon and Sprint for $199.99 with a two-year contract, after rebates.
Benchmark Test Results
Continuous talk time: 6 hours 32 minutes
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Final Thoughts
RIM BlackBerry Tour 9630 (Verizon Wireless)
The BlackBerry Tour is the best choice for a smartphone on Verizon Wireless—even though the unit we got was a little buggy.