BlackBerry Curve 9360 review

With users rushing to denounce BlackBerry and announce they’ll leave the platform, RIM really needs to pull a belter out of the bag to put the horrors of 2011 behind it.

Which is where the BlackBerry Curve 9360 comes in. The range has long been one of BlackBerry’s most popular – affordable, but not cheap; sleek, but not too flash. And the bestselling Curve 9300 has now been updated to give even more bang for the buck. 3G, GPS, NFC, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth and, of course, BBM are all here and accounted for.

The first thing you notice is just how thin this smartphone is. The Curve 9360 feels almost like it’s not completely finished, as though you’re holding a dummy unit in a shop. It’s only 11mm thick, and light as a feather at 99g. It also has precise edges – not enough to cut you, but it certainly gives that impression.

Made of a combination of brushed metal and black plastic, this is one good-looking handset, and measuring just 109 x 60mm, it’s a great size.

Up top you have the standard 3.5mm headphone jack and a lock button that’s not touch sensitive, although we did wonder about this, since you don’t actually press it in far enough to be noticeable to lock and unlock the screen.

The back houses the 5MP camera lens on one side, while the LED light for taking snaps is at the other end. We missed having a flash on the Curve 9300, so it’s really good to see it back here.

This battery cover’s not easy to get off – and that’s being kind. In the absence of an instruction manual with our review unit, we sat there patiently trying to get it off for what felt like an eternity, and could find no obvious way to do it. We eventually had to force it open and closed just to get a SIM and MicroSD card inside.Around the front, you’ll find the compact QWERTY keyboard, optical track pad and four BlackBerry shortcut keys. They appear to be fused to the bottom of the screen but they’re not touch-sensitive and give a nice, satisfying click as you push them in.

The screen itself has a 480 x 360 resolution and really looks like a quality display. RIM hasn’t cut corners here.

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