
RIM has rebooted its touchscreen range with the Storm 2 9520, featuring re-tooled clickable touchscreen technology and new, intuitive text input options.
It's still going to be seen as RIM's attempt to rival the likes of the iPhone 3GS, Palm Pre and HTC Hero, but are the updates on the Storm 2 enough to fix the issues that were so widely condemned on the original Storm?
The Storm 2 is the same size as the original, but 5g heavier. We'd have imagined this would have given it a weightier and premium feel, but in practice this isn't the case with the phone feeling a little too heavy in the hand.

The Storm 2 is pretty button-packed around the edges, with a number of rubberised buttons (which are apparently manufactured this way to stop them falling off, a problem with the original Storm).

The top of the phone hold two buttons embedded into the phone itself – the power/lock button and the mute key. The 3.5mm headphone jack is now recessed into the phone and lives on the right-hand side of the phone, just above the rubber-cased volume/up and down keys.
Finally the camera shutter button is also located on the right-hand side, although far enough away from the other keys that you can easily avoid striking it.

The button layout is well thought through – the only slightly difficult key to hit is the mute key on the top right. However, given we probably used this least (and only when we got a call) that wasn't the end of the world.
The screen is built on four piezoelectric sensors, and clicks when you press down on it. This system is similar to the first Storm, which also used a clickable screen (known as SurePress) but where that only had one mechanical sensor, the Storm 2 has four.

But when the phone is put into sleep mode, RIM has come up with a cool trick – the screen will lock and cannot be clicked down. This obviously annoyed enough people on the first Storm for the company to change it, and it's very cool.
The call/terminate keys can be pressed though, meaning the screen will light up if you accidentally strike down there. Speaking of lights, there's an LED indicator at the top which blinks different colours for things likes charging and new messages - handy when the Storm 2 is in sleep mode.
The idea of the locked screen is to add to the premium feel of the device – constant pressing of the old Storm's screen made the whole process feel a little bit cheap and poorly made.

This means that when you hold the phone in your hand there's a lot of movement in the supposedly static chassis, which once again ruins the premium feel.
Removing the metallic battery cover is difficult too – it can't be done with a finger so you'll need to find some extra implement to help you. It's an odd choice, and we thought there might be something in the box to help, but there isn't.
The microSD slot lives under the battery cover, next to the not-insubstantial 1400mAh battery, which falls out with a simple pat. It's a simple system, although the fact it feels like it's guarded by Cerberus himself thanks to the locked down battery cover is very annoying.
In the box
The BlackBerry Storm 2 box is as luxurious as you'd expect a flagship device to be. RIM has thoroughly eschewed the minimal packaging favoured by HTC and Apple, and gone with a nice black box.
Full Spesification's For Blackberry Storm 2
GENERAL | Network | GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 HSDPA 2100 |
LAYAR | Tipe | TFT capacitive touchscreen, 65K colors |
Ukuran | 360 x 480 pixels, 3.25 inches | |
DIMENSI | Ukuran/Berat | 112.5 x 62.2 x 14 mm/160 g |
AUDIO | Fitur | Accelerometer sensor for auto-rotate |
Jack | 3.5 mm audio jack | |
Speakerphone | Ya | |
MEMORY | Internal | 2 GB |
Eksternal | microSD, up to 16GB | |
DATA | 3G | HSDPA, 7.2 Mbps; HSUPA |
EDGE | Class 10, 236.8 kbps | |
GPRS | Class 10 (4+1/3+2 slots), 32 - 48 kbps | |
WLAN | Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g | |
Bluetooth | Ya, v2.1 with A2DP | |
Infrared | Tidak | |
USB/Port | Ya, microUSB v2.0 | |
KAMERA | Primer | 3.15 MP, 2048x1536 pixels, autofocus, LED flash |
Sekunder | Tidak | |
Video Record | Ya | |
BATERAI | Tipe | Standard battery, Li-Ion 1400 mAh |
Standby | Up to 305 h (2G) / Up to 280 h (3G) | |
Talk Time | Up to 5 h (2G) / Up to 6 h (3G) | |
FITUR | OS | BlackBerry OS |
CPU | - | |
Browser | HTML | |
GPS | Ya, with A-GPS support | |
Messaging | SMS, MMS, Email, IM | |
Java | Ya | |
FITUR LAIN | Multiple SIM | |
Video Player | MP4/H.264/H.263/WMV player | |
MP3 Player | MP3/WMA/AAC+ player | |
Audio Record | ||
TV |
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