Conclusion: Short, not Sweet

You'll notice this review is shorter than our usual smartphone reviews. The reason, as I’ve already mentioned a couple of times in the article, is quite simple: the Bold 9780 brings absolutely nothing new to the table in terms of hardware, and even the core software is more than half a year old. When you think about the fact that the 9780 is physically identical to the almost 18-month-old 9700 with just a RAM/camera upgrade (plus the fact that the 9700 can also be updated to BlackBerry OS 6 itself), that's pretty slow moving for a competitive market. It's even more of an oddity compared with other vendors like Samsung, LG, and HTC updating their lineup on an almost monthly basis.

That raises the question as to whether RIM has decided to shift focus from the general smartphone market to a more narrow approach targeting enterprise-class customers. Even in the enterprise segment, it faces tough competition in the short term from devices such as the Nokia E5, which offers everything but BES for a much cheaper price and better build quality. There are other companies experimenting with iPhones as corporate mobile devices, and with HP having made it clear that it will be leveraging its clout in the enterprise sector in bringing webOS to market it becomes that much more difficult for RIM in the long term should they choose to continue in their current path. The turn of events at Nokia should be a clear enough signal to RIM that it needs to pull its socks up and keep up with the lightning pace of the mobile industry or get left behind.

As a device in itself, the Bold is pretty good if completely indistinct. There is nothing that stands out in particular, but it gets the job done well enough. While nothing revolutionary has happened on the hardware front just yet, it is good to see that RIM is in fact working in the background trying to tighten up the BlackBerry OS internals. To that effect the BlackBerry Bold 9780 is probably the best BlackBerry you can buy today, by far. The question here is, unless you have no other choice, should you actually buy a BlackBerry over other smartphones currently available…Bold or otherwise? If you're a BlackBerry diehard or have one from your work, that answer will come from their IT department. We've seen some improvements with OS 6 and the Torch, with minor improvements from the Bold, but we'd like to see RIM do more with their next outing.

Battery Life and Call Quality
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  • Galcobar - Friday, March 25, 2011 - link

    "BlackBerry's" standing in for a plural form is also present in the Display and Camera page, first paragraph; and Design and Ergonomics, third paragraph
  • JarredWalton - Friday, March 25, 2011 - link

    Thanks... I tried searching for "Blackberry's" and couldn't find any hits; turns out that the text was "BlackBerry’s" (notice that's a right-single-quote instead of a regular apostrophe). Any more comments from the grammar fiends, or have we finally reached the point where you can merely grumble about our style rather than full-blown errors? :-)
  • Holler - Saturday, March 26, 2011 - link


    technically, Curve 9330 3G for sprint I beleive was the first "non touch: blackberry with OS6. has same processor and memory, but lesser screen and camera. I think it came out a month sooner.
  • tammlam - Sunday, March 27, 2011 - link

    I'm on my second BB and the reason I went with them again is that these phones can take a licking and keep on ticking. I was tempted to go Android or WP7 but decided against it because I have seen some of my friends' Android phones have hardware failures from just regular use. My original BB was abused by my then 1-year-old son on a daily basis and it still works. It's been dropped, used as a chew toy, and thrown. I don't even hesitate to hand over the new BB to my now 2-year-old for him to play with. Furthermore, I do not use a protective case.
  • johnnydfred - Wednesday, March 30, 2011 - link

    I just "graded" to the new Bold. This company's offering is becoming a joke. Had to take a meeting with conference calling, and finally switched over to my iPhone to get 'er done. Just can't believe my corp. is still working with RIM.

    I could close my eyes, spin and launch this cruddy piece of silicon and plastic into the night, and have a pretty good chance of striking a better smartphone.
  • CellPig - Thursday, June 30, 2011 - link

    As long as Blackberry continues to keep their focus on things other than the internet browsing and apps they will continue to lose market share. Younger generations are snatching up smart phones left and right and they're not going to Blackberry. Does RIM not do any research on their target market??

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