At the launch of the BlackBerry Passport on Monday, we got to spend a little time with the device and formed some early impressions about the device. The BlackBerry Passport will go on sale at retail from October 10 at Rs. 49,990, but at the launch event, the company announced that the handset will be available for pre-order on Amazon.in and at BlackBerry Exclusive Stores from Monday.
Buyers who pre-order the phone will also get a Rs. 5,000 gift voucher on Amazon.in which can be used towards any purchases, and also 5,000 frequent flyer miles from Jet Airways.
The price tag seems pretty steep, but it competes directly with the top flagships of other well established brands, a point BlackBerry India Managing Director Sunil Lalvani was quick to make at the launch event. But does this unusual phone from BlackBerry measure up to the competition?
The first thing that you'll notice when you see the BlackBerry Passport is its massive size. The phone has a 4.5-inch display, which sounds small, but due to the square display the display seems larger. At over 3.5 inches wide, the phone is also wider than much larger phones. For comparison, the Samsung Galaxy Note 3, which has a 5.7-inch display, is 3.1-inches wide.
The square screen takes up most of the phone, but there's a short three-row keyboard below the display. The space bar has gone into the third row, and a few other keys like shift and symbol are missing altogether. If you're a long-time BlackBerry user, the new layout can feel jarring and counter-intuitive at first, but the company is positioning the keyboard as one of the biggest selling points of the Passport.
For one thing, it feels tough. The BlackBerry keyboards have always been comfortable to type on, and if you're holding the phone with both hands and thumb typing, then you can really type accurately at a very high speed without even looking at the screen. But the keyboard also doubles as a touchpad, which is where it gets really interesting. You can still flick up while writing a word to autocomplete, flick down to reveal numbers and special characters, or swipe to the left to delete one word at a time.
BlackBerry also claims that its shape allows the phone to display 60 characters in a single row, which is the same standard e-book readers also use. This sounds great, but in our very short hands-on, it didn't really seem to be a game-changer. Responsive design means that websites are quite easily read on other phones as well, including the BlackBerry Z10 which is this correspondent's primary phone. Our opinion may of course change when we have a chance to spend more time with the device.
The company also showed off some tweaks that the new BlackBerry OS 10.3 brings, including a dedicated home screen, and the Amazon Appstore pre-installed. There's also the BlackBerry Assistant, which can make appointments, read out your emails, search for contact details and more quite effectively.
The build quality of the phone is extremely good. It felt solid but not heavy and the keyboard felt great. The specifications of the phone are also in line with other top end devices as well. The screen is running at a resolution of 1440X1440 pixels, and there's a 13-megapixel camera that seemed to be pretty good though a little slow to focus. A 2.2GHz processor and 3GB of RAM, along with 32GB of storage round out a pretty good device, on paper.
The actual experience of using the phone was a little awkward thanks to its size, and even for a regular BlackBerry user, the new keyboard comes with a learning curve. The BlackBerry World app store also remains pretty limited, although the Amazon Appstore does widen the net. Not all Android apps (notably Google's like Maps) are available on Amazon though, which could still end up being a deal-breaker for many.
Add to that the reputation BlackBerry has gained for dropping prices in short order - something the company vehemently denied on Monday - and buying the Passport at its launch price may sound like a bad idea to many.



Huawei has launched its latest metal-clad MediaPad T1 8.0 tablet at Rs. 9,999. The Chinese handset giant has announced that the Huawei MediaPad T1 8.0 will be exclusively available via e-commerce website Flipkart starting October 10.
The voice-calling Huawei MediaPad T1 8.0 tablet runs Android 4.3 Jelly Bean with Emotion UI 1.6 skinned on top. It features an 8-inch IPS display with a resolution of 1280x800 pixels and 188 pixels per inch (ppi) density. The MediaPad T1 8.0 features a quad-core 1.2GHz Qualcomm MSM8212 A7 processor coupled with 1GB of RAM. The primary camera on the tablet is a 5-megapixel shooter (no flash) and there is a 0.3-megapixel (VGA) front facing camera for video calls.
The device packs an internal storage of 8GB which is further expandable via microSD card (up to 32GB). Connectivity options on Huawei MediaPad T1 8.0 include Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, GPS/ A-GPS and 3G, apart from voice calling.
Huawei MediaPad T1 8.0 measures 210.6x127.7x7.9mm and weighs 360 grams. The 4800mAh battery on the tablet is rated at up to 300 hours of standby time.
Notably, Huawei also launched the Honor 6 smartphone at Rs. 19,999 alongside the MediaPad T1 8.0. Some of the smartphone specifications include dual-SIM (GSM-GSM) support, 5-inch JDI full-HD (1080x1920 pixels), octa-core Hi Silicon Kirin 920 processor, 3GB of RAM, 13-megapixel rear camera, 5-megapixel front-facing camera, and 16GB of inbuilt storage (expandable via microSD card).
Huawei MediaPad T1 8.0

Huawei MediaPad T1 8.0

Display

8.00-inch

Processor

1.2GHz

Front Camera

 0.3-megapixel

Resolution

 800x1280 pixels

RAM

 1GB

OS

 Android 4.3

Storage

8GB

Rear Camera

5-megapixel

Battery capacity

4800mAh


Microsoft did something very...er... interesting in October 2012. It launched Windows 8, the operating system that would "unify" Microsoft's platforms across PCs, phones and tablets. Except, there was a fairly large flaw in the plan.
Microsoft's vision of unification wasn't just from an engineering perspective. The company also wanted a unified user interface across all its devices.
Now let's think about that for a second. Traditional PC users (both desktop and laptop) were used to mice and keyboards. They had been using these two devices pretty much since the advent of the PC. Various companies had also managed to add support for other input devices over the years, but no one was really using a touchscreen on the desktop.
Microsoft's presence in the tablet market was non-existent, for all intents and purposes. Very few "tablet PCs" existed, running full versions of Windows 7 with the lowest power Intel Core processors available at the time. They were heavy, didn't have great battery life, and only seemed to be useful for designers and artistic folk, who'd use a stylus to draw.
Most people were either using iOS or Android tablets, and few people were clamouring for a Windows equivalent of these two.
Finally, let's consider the phone market, where Microsoft had slight success with Windows Phone 7 and has since had a little more with Windows Phone 8 and 8.1. Its market share was fairly insignificant, and the company would have really needed something special to make things work out.
There were, at the time, around 1 billion Windows PCs in the world, 99 percent not using a touchscreen monitor. Less than 5 percent of smartphones ran any version of Windows Phone, and there were barely any tablet PCs. In that backdrop, Microsoft's decision to release an OS that was optimised for touch-screen devices, rather than traditional input methods, seems premature to say the least.
What's worse is that the UI was aesthetically, and in many cases functionally, seen as a regression from Windows 7, which is still the most popular PC operating system. Bringing back the Start Menu is an example that Microsoft is backing down from its aggressive way of teaching users new behaviour.
microsoft_windows_9_screenshot_computer_base_de.jpg
After two years of bug fixes, patches, question marks over the future of Windows RT, and an awkward operating system that was arguably a bigger flop than Vista in terms of adoption and user satisfaction (despite being technically more sound), Microsoft has slowly come around to accepting the reality.
September 30 is the speculated date for the "preview" version of Windows "Threshold", also informally called Windows 9 by most of the tech press. Sites have generously leaked videos and screenshots of a legit-looking preview build of Threshold.
Looking at the videos, you'll be able to see that the interface is still mostly flat and boring like Windows 8. I'm curious as to why they made an OS as pretty as Windows 7 and then went back to the flatness of the Windows 3.1 days, though that's down to personal taste.
Moving on, we see the return of the start menu , just with tiles thrown in. If you compare this start menu to the present one of Windows 7, it strikes me as less useful, as it simply links to fewer things. The entire right column is filled with tiles. What used to be in the right column (Control Panel, Documents, etc.) end up as pinned items, quite obviously taking up space used for pinned programs in Windows 7.
Of course, when compared to Windows 8, this is much better than making obscure "charm" gestures, or receiving a face full of that jarring start screen.
Metro (or Modern) UI apps can now be (mercifully) run in windowed mode, and can be minimised. While some may question the utility of these in the PC version of the OS, the main complaint with Windows 8.x was not having a choice, so I guess this is step in the right direction. The same goes for the existence of "PC Settings" when the Control Panel exists, and two different calculators, one for touch screens and the other being the old one we're used to on Windows 7. Of course these are still early days, and all this may yet be fixed before Windows 9 reaches the consumers.
microsoft_windows_9_start_screen_screenshot_computer_base_de_02.jpg
We'll also most likely see virtual desktops, like on Linux systems and OS X. You can switch between different desktops, and have different windows on each. This would, in theory, allow you to switch between multiple workflows. The actual implementation looks a bit sketchy, however. I'm specifically talking about window management; the creation, removal and navigation of virtual desktops looks good enough.
Long story short, from whatever we've seen so far, Threshold seems like a mixed bag. It's sort of Microsoft saying, "Hey, we made really bad decision with that Modern UI stuff but here's a compromise." But it's clear that the company still hasn't quite let go of those tiles, which suggests the company is continuing to walk the tightrope between listening to user feedback and going ahead with what it believes is the future of Windows.
Microsoft must keep in mind that the function of a good operating system is to provide a stable and secure environment for applications and users to interact in, not sell itself as one giant overblown "app".
Unifying the interfaces of PCs, tablets and phones wasn't a good plan either, as Windows 8 proved. Three different type of devices and two different input models can't be fitted into one box. Even Apple and Google keep PC and mobile separate, so one wonders if Microsoft is on the right track with its one size fits all policy. Kernel code sharing doesn't mean having a common UI. And blindly sharing features is known as taking a shortcut.
Tablets, convertibles and 2-in-1s are devices that can benefit from both: ecosystem support and a touchscreen interface. Microsoft should focus on smoothening out the experience for these users while at the same time leaving the traditional PC market alone, as far as the interface is concerned.
After all, Sun Tzu did say, "Victorious warriors win first and then go to war, while defeated warriors go to war first and then seek to win".
Windows 8 was an example of Microsoft going to war and then seeking to win. It was also an attempt at besieging a walled city, while bafflingly leaving the gates to its own fort wide open. Windows 9 must change that.
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed within this article are the personal opinions of the author. NDTV Gadgets is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity of any information on this article. All information is provided on an as-is basis. The information, facts or opinions appearing in the article do not reflect the views of NDTV Gadgets and NDTV Gadgets does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.

LG L Bello, a smartphone that was announced alongside the L Fino last month, has now been launched at Rs. 18,500. The price is listed on the company's India website.
Announced for a global rollout earlier this month, the Dual-SIM supporting LG L Bellofeatures a 5-inch FWVGA (480x854 pixels) IPS LCD display offering a pixel density of 196ppi.
Running on Android 4.4.2 KitKat, the smartphone is powered by a 1.3GHz quad-core processor paired with 1GB of RAM. The L Bello also features 8GB of inbuilt storage with expandable storage up to 32GB via microSD cards.
The company's website listing also suggests an 8-megapixel autofocus rear camera with LED flash for the handset along with a 1-megapixel front-facing camera. The rear camera of the smartphone can also record and playback full-HD videos. A 2540mAh battery backs the 3G-enabled LG L Bello.
The connectivity options of the LG L Bello includes Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, Wi-Fi Direct, Bluetooth 4.0, GPS, 3G, and USB 2.0. The handset measures 138.2x70.6x10.7mm. The Android 4.4.2 KitKat-based LG L Bello comes with UX derived from the flagship LG G3.
Some of the highlights of the G3-derived UX skin include Touch and Shoot feature that clicks images by tapping anywhere on the display to focus and shoot in one single step; Gesture Shot in the camera, which allows users to open and close a hand in front of the lens to start a three-second countdown for the shutter.
LG L Bello

LG L Bello

Display

5.00-inch

Processor

1.3GHz

Front Camera

 1-megapixel

Resolution

 480x854 pixels

RAM

 1GB

OS

 Android 4.2

Storage

8GB

Rear Camera

8-megapixel

Battery capacity

2540mAh