BlackBerry Classic

BlackBerry Classic
Manufacturer BlackBerry
Slogan "Your Power. Upgraded."
Compatible networks LTE, PCS, CDMA, HSPA+, GSM & EDGE
Availability by Region February 4, 2014 (2014-02-04)
Related BlackBerry Bold
Type Smartphone
Form factor Bar/Slate
Dimensions 131 mm (5.2 in) H
72.4 mm (2.85 in) W
10.2 mm (0.40 in) D
Weight 178 g (6.28 oz)
Operating system BlackBerry 10.3.3
CPU Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Plus 1.5 GHz dual-core Krait
GPU Adreno 225
Memory 2 GB RAM
Storage 16 GB flash memory
Removable storage Up to the exFAT file system limit[1]
Battery 2515 mAH non-removable battery
Data inputs Multi-touch touchscreen, physical QWERTY keyboard, trackpad
Display 3.5-inch at 294 ppi, 720 x 720px
Rear camera 8 megapixels, 1080p@30fps and 720p@60fpsvideo capture
Front camera 2 MP, 720p video capture
Connectivity IEEE 802.11n-2009, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC, Micro HDMI, Micro-USB
SAR Head: 0.70 W/kg 1 g
Body: 0.62 W/kg 1 g
Hotspot: 1.23 W/kg 1 g
Website http://www.blackberry.com/classic
Made in People's Republic of China

The BlackBerry Classic, originally known as the BlackBerry Q20, is a touchscreen-based smartphone with a physical QWERTY keyboard developed by BlackBerry, previously known as RIM (Research In Motion). The BlackBerry Classic was unveiled in December 17, 2014 and it runs BlackBerry 10 operating system.[2] Its design is similar to the BlackBerry Q10 in form and feel and especially to the BlackBerry Bold 9900 and related lines in that they feature an optical trackpad which can compliment or be used as primary means of navigation instead of or with the device's touch-screen.[3]

Specifications

Hardware

The BlackBerry Classic has a 3.5-inch IPS LCD display, Dual-core 1.5 GHz Krait Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Plus processor, 2 GB of RAM and 16 GB of internal storage that can be expanded using microSD cards up to 256 GB. The phone has a 2515 mAh Li-Ion battery, 8 MP rear camera with LED flash and 2 MP front-facing camera with auto-focus. It is available in Black, White, Blue, Bronze, Cobalt blue colors.[4]

Software

BlackBerry Classic ships with BlackBerry OS 10.3.1 and is upgradable to 10.3.2.

Reception

The BlackBerry Classic received generally positive reviews from critics, with average ratings of 7/10.[5] Techradar gave a 3.5/5 score, praising the speed of the web browser and messaging services, but expressing disappointment toward a lack of apps and the phone's physical weight.[6]

Sales

In March 2015, financial firm Morgan Stanley issued a report claiming both the BlackBerry Passport and Classic were "not selling" and that only 8,000 units combined were sold in that financial quarter.[7] According to The Guardian, general sales had reached $793 million, which was below BlackBerry's $927 million expectations.[8]

On July 5, 2016, BlackBerry announced that it would cease production of the Classic globally.[9] This ignited speculation that the Classic had been the last BlackBerry with a physical keyboard and with BlackBerry 10. However, on 26 July 2016 the company hinted that another model with a traditional keyboard was "coming shortly".[10][11] Previously, COO Marty Beard had debunked the rumours about the end of BlackBerry 10.[12]

See also

References

  1. BlackBerry 10.3.x smartphones support external storage up to exFAT file system limit
  2. Brad Reed. "Everything old is new again: BlackBerry unveils the Classic". BGR.
  3. Matt Hamblen (17 December 2014). "BlackBerry's new Classic smartphone has a physical keyboard, sells for $449". Computerworld.
  4. "BlackBerry Classic Specifications". GSMArena. Retrieved August 14, 2018.
  5. Matt Egan (15 May 2015). "BlackBerry Classic". The Informr.
  6. David Nield. "BlackBerry Classic review". TechRadar.
  7. "BlackBerry Passport and BlackBerry Classic not selling says Morgan Stanley". Phone Arena.
  8. Chris Johnston. "BlackBerry hit by worse-than-expected sales". the Guardian.
  9. "BlackBerry Ends Production of Classic Smartphone - Government on CIO Today". www.cio-today.com.
  10. The Canadian Press (July 26, 2016). "BlackBerry launching new smartphone with emphasis on beefed up security". CBC News. CBC. Retrieved July 26, 2016.
  11. Cheng, Roger (July 26, 2016). "BlackBerry's cheaper DTEK 50 skips the keyboard, but keeps Android". CNET. CBS Interactive, Inc. Retrieved July 26, 2016.
  12. "BlackBerry: BB10 And Keyboard Phones Are Not Dead". 14 July 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.