Not exact matches
One of the big allure of the Blackberry line of
phones has
always been the
keyboard.
«Real» cameras are still much better than in -
phone cameras; the right device to carry in your pocket, as a
phone or PDA, will
always be worse to read on than a device with a bigger screen, which in turn is too big to fit in your pocket;
keyboards are simply better than little thumbpads for entering more than a few words, and any device with a real
keyboard has to be a certain size.
Blackberry and physical
keyboards have
always gone hand - in - hand, to the point that it's not a stretch to say no other
phone maker has come even close to achieving the same level of mastery in that area as the company formerly known as RIM.
Always prefer
phones with
keyboards but I don't think the G2 would give me any more excitement than my TouchPro2 except for wifi calling.
When as a
phone manufacturer, or as customer, you choose to sacrifice the amount of real estate dedicated to the display to instead have a
keyboard there that's
always present, you're making a distinct choice to build a
phone that's more communication - centric vs. media - centric.
BlackBerry's
keyboard phones have
always been on to rule the smartphone scene and still remain a favorite among many.
Windows
Phone has
always had a good
keyboard, but Word Flow adds the ability to swipe through your words similar to Swype or SwiftKey.