Blackberry Storm 2, Motorola Cliq: The Critics Weigh In

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The reviews are in for the much-anticipated Blackberry Storm 2 and Motorola’s Android debut the Cliq. Finally, questions hanging over these devices have been answered. I know you’re all eagerly waiting to find out whether the new Storm can wipe out the stain of its predecessor’s virtually unanimous thumbs down, or will Blackberry Storm fanboys be called to defend the honor of their beloved PDA once more? What about the beleaguered Motorola, which was once the cell phone trailblazer? Will Android be its savior?

(See the full reviews: BlackBerry Storm 2 & Motorola Cliq )

Blackberry Storm 2 Thunders onto Verizon’s Network

I don’t think it would be an understatement to say the Blackberry Storm 2 is to Windows 7 what the original Storm was to Vista. As PC World’s Ginny Mies stated right up front in her Storm 2 review, “This is the Storm that I wish RIM had released last year.” The handset’s aesthetics, the on-screen keyboard and the software are just better, according to Mies. The downside is that Research In Motion chose to stay with its SurePress technology. SurePress is supposed to give you that tactile feel you get from pressing real keys and buttons, while still using a touchscreen. This time around the Storm 2 has a few more sensors to help make typing and clicking more accurate, but Mies says it still falls short.

Motorola Cliqs with your Clique on T-Mobile

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Motorola’s Android-based entry, the Cliq, is all about social networks with integration for Facebook, MySpace and Twitter. Mies liked its sleek design and innovative MotoBlur overlay. On the downside, the Cliq isn’t running the latest Android build (yet), and the camera was subpar compared to similar devices. Mies also said the MotoBlur interface was a little overwhelming at first noting that, “Text, talk bubbles, and images fly out at you in every direction.”

The biggest draw for the Cliq is its ability to keep you up to date with notifications from all your social networks. You can also let the phone build your address book for you using information from your social networks. Thanks to the MotoBlur interface, the Cliq creates listings for all your social networking friends, and is able to condense multiple social networking profiles into one listing–a handy solution if you’re connected to the same person over multiple networks. The MotoBlur’s contacts app displays items like a person’s birthdate, current status update, profile picture, e-mail address, phone number and so on. When Mies described this, I thought it sounded similar to desktop-based products like the Outlook plug-in Xobni, and the possibly soon-to-be defunct Xoopit add-on for Gmail.

LG Promises Windows Phones for U.S. Customers.

Hot on the heels of Microsoft setting an Oct. 6 launch date for Windows Mobile 6.5, LG said Thursday that the company will soon launch two unnamed new Windows phones for “early adopter customers” in both the U.S. and other markets.

The two new phones join the GW550, which LG recently launched abroad. The three new phones – one with a full touch screen, one with a sliding QWERTY keyboard and the GW550, a BlackBerry-style QWERTY phone – will feature Windows Mobile 6.5 and LG’s 3D “S-Class” user interfaceLG, which the company launched in February. Like HTC’s Touch Flo3D and Samsung’s TouchWiz, S-Class replaces much of Windows Mobile’s native UI with LG’s own designs.

LG will also produce 10 more Windows phones by the end of 2010, the company said in a press release.

The phones will be compatible with LG’s own app store, which LG said may have 2,000 applications by the end of the year. As Windows Mobile phones, they’ll also work with Microsoft’s Windows Marketplace for Mobile. The U.S. versions will probably also have a third app store on board designed by the wireless carriers.

LG currently only has one Windows Mobile phone in the U.S. market – the Incite for AT&T, which hasn’t received very strong reviews. But the company has a long-standing and strong relationship with Verizon Wireless, and LG smartphones for Verizon could shake up the market a bit.

LG promises more news in the upcoming weeks, but, following the usual practice, information about U.S. releases will probably be issued by the carriers.