RIM Blackberry 6710 Phone (T-Mobile)


Compras Nikon
Bluetooth
Compatible with T-Mobile cell phone service, the RIM BlackBerry 6710 is a full-featured connected organizer that brings you a built-in QWERTY keyboard, e-mail, SMS text messaging and web browsing on the go, along with everything you'd expect from an organizer in a single wireless phone that supports international GSM/GPRS roaming. It's all displayed on a spacious, 20-line, 160 x 160 screen.

Calling Features
For calling, the 6710 can be held up to the ear like a regular phone so you can answer it quickly, plus the included headset also lets talk while you type on the backlit keyboard and read the screen. There's also a dedicated voice mail button, and redial, missed call indicator, call log, speed dial, mute control, no-answer transfer, vibrating ring, a phone book capacity of 250 entries, and more.

Messaging and Internet
The 6710 can get you online fast and features GPRS high speed data transfer. The BlackBerry browser supports WML, HTML and XML, so you can access almost any kind of online data, and since it's Java-compatible, you can also easily download new wallpaper, graphics, ring tones, and games, in addition to the ones already included with the phone.

Organizer
For organizing yourself, you'll get an address book, memo pad, task list, and a calendar that can synchronize wirelessly-- meaning that you can set, accept or decline meeting requests using the BlackBerry and your online calendar will be updated for others to see. You can also wirelessly synchronize your inbox and folders with your desktop PC, or search your organization's e-mail address list. And you can view e-mail attachments in variety of file formats such as Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, WordPerfect, and Adobe PDF.

Vital Statistics
The RIM BlackBerry 6710 weighs 5.64 ounces and measures 4.53 x 2.95 x 0.95 inches. Its Lithium Ion batteries are rated at 165 minutes minimum digital talk time, and 75 hours minimum digital standby time. It runs on GSM 900/1900 MHz, using the Symbian Operating System 7.0s, Series 60 platform, version 2. The phone comes with a one year limited warranty.

In the Box
BlackBerry 6710, hands-free ear piece, holster, cradle, travel charger, battery, user documentation


1 Awesome Portable Office
I get a bazillion corporate emails a day and I've gotten pretty sick of hauling the laptop home every evening and on weekends just to keep up. I knew a BlackBerry was a good solution but I had no idea how productive/addictive they were. (I guess they call them CrackBerries for a reason.)

I had an opportunity to try three different BlackBerries. The Cingular 6280 (screen too small), the Cingular 7280 (color screen was hard to read and it was too small) and the T-Mobile 6710. I stuck with the 6710 for the obvious reason. The screen size! It's perfect and very easy to read. The larger screen makes reading emails or the whole calender, especially in agenda view and browsing WAP websites a breeze.

Phone conversations are also crystal clear with no volume issues.

It also comes with a Desktop Cradle (neither Cingular BB came with a cradle). Only complaint is the cradle is RS232 instead of USB.

The battery life is also supurb.

All in all, it's an awesome device and it doesn't leave my side.



Sunday, 07-Sep-2008 23:51:27 CDT
Quote of the Day:


A Severe Strain on the Credulity

As a method of sending a missile to the higher, and even to the
highest parts of the earth's atmospheric envelope, Professor Goddard's rocket
is a practicable and therefore promising device. It is when one considers the
multiple-charge rocket as a traveler to the moon that one begins to doubt...
for after the rocket quits our air and really starts on its journey, its
flight would be neither accelerated nor maintained by the explosion of the
charges it then might have left. Professor Goddard, with his "chair" in
Clark College and countenancing of the Smithsonian Institution, does not
know the relation of action to re-action, and of the need to have something
better than a vacuum against which to react... Of course he only seems to
lack the knowledge ladled out daily in high schools.
-- New York Times Editorial, 1920

Death is only a state of mind.

Only it doesn't leave you much time to think about anything else.