The good: The BlackBerry Z30 is equipped with a big screen, long battery life, and excellent messaging capabilities. It also boasts great call quality plus a microSD card slot for extra storage.
The bad: The Z30’s BlackBerry 10.2 software is bogged down with unnecessary eye candy. The BlackBerry platform still lags behind iOS and Android in both app number and quality. The Z30’s camera takes unimpressive pictures. The phone is only sold by Verizon.
The bottom line: The BlackBerry Z30 lives up the promise of a flagship phone, but it's too little, too late for all but the most committed BlackBerry users.

Everyone knows BlackBerry is in dire straits, but that hasn't stopped the company from taking one more stab at a flagship smartphone. In many ways BlackBerry's latest creation, the BlackBerry Z30, is what the BlackBerry 10 launch device should have been. Unlike the actual BB10 debut product, the smaller Z10, the Z30 is without a doubt the company's biggest, boldest, most advanced gadget yet. Unfortunately, though, this fresh effort from the Canadian handset maker comes way too late. Arriving at just one US carrier, Verizon, this November for $199.99, I fear all those who would have considered the Z30 over iPhones and Android handsets have long since moved to greener pastures.
Sure, the Z30 is compelling. Despite boasting a large 5-inch touch screen, handsome styling, and a high-capacity battery, the device falls short compared with the competition. Specifically the $199.99 Motorola Droid Maxx and $199.99 Samsung Galaxy S4, which, thanks to the growing strength of the Android ecosystem and BlackBerry's uncertain future as a viable company, add up to much better deals on Verizon.
Design
Shaped like your typical rectangular smartphone slab, at first glance I had trouble telling the BlackBerry Z30 apart from the sea of similar-looking Android devices now flooding the market. With its jet-black color scheme, silver accents, and rounded corners, the Z30 could've been crafted by any of today's top handset makers. As a matter of fact, the phone's soft-touch back and subtle striping bears a striking resemblance to the Motorola Droid Maxx. That's a good thing, since I'm fond of the Maxx's nano-coated back and soft-touch textures on phones in general.
Prominent BlackBerry logos, both on the back and on the front below the screen, give the Z30 away as device designed in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada. Verizon couldn't resist slapping its own moniker on the phone, either, above the display and on the rear, but at least they're stenciled in a modest gray.
Z30
On the left side you'll find ports for Micro-HDMI and Micro-USB.
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)
Above the Z30's large 5-inch screen sits the earpiece, a 2-megapixel front-facing camera, and the iconic red BlackBerry notification light. The phone's left edge houses ports for Micro-HDMI and Micro-USB cables, while on the right you'll find controls for play/pause and volume-up and -down. Rounding out the Z30's bevy of physical buttons is a power key on the top edge next to a 3.5mm headphone jack.
Z30
The right side holds controls for volume-up and -down plus play/pause.
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)
BlackBerry makes sure to tout the Z30's noise cancellation abilities and the fact that its flagship handset boasts not just two but an array of four microphones. The mics ring the phone, one on each of the Z30's four edges, and they complement the device's set of powerful stereo speakers (top and bottom). Indeed, the first time I fired up the music app and piped a tune through the Z30's sound system I was shocked. The volume this phone's tiny drivers can produce is phenomenally loud, with loads more sound than what you get from the HTC One and Motorola Droid Maxx -- both of which have muscular stereo speakers.
Screen
The Z30 is BlackBerry's biggest-screened smartphone yet. It packs a large 5-inch 720p HD resolution display, which the company says has a pixel density of 295 pixels per inch. Of course, that's nowhere near as sharp as the displays on the HTC One and the Samsung Galaxy S4, whose full HD screens offer 468ppi and 441ppi, respectively. Still, it's practically gigantic compared with the displays gracing the previous BlackBerry Z10 (4.2-inch) and BlackBerry Q10 (3.1-inch).
Z30
The Z30's screen is big but not very bright.
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)
I have to say, though, that the Z30's display isn't very bright. For instance, the Motorola Droid Maxx, while it has the same 720 HD resolution and OLED screen technology, is much brighter when viewed side by side with the Z30. Still, one benefit of the Z30's OLED hardware is that it has high contrast and wide viewing angles.
Software and interface
A bigger screen isn't the only improvement you'll find on the BlackBerry Z30. The phone's software has been updated as well. The Z30 runs the new BlackBerry 10.2 operating system, which has a few fresh tricks up its sleeve. Along with the familiar Peek gesture that lets you quickly see your messages and the BlackBerry Hub unified inbox, both of which first debuted with BlackBerry 10, there's a new Priority Hub feature.
Priority Hub will pay attention to whom you interact with most, whether on Facebook, Twitter, e-mail, or texts, then will float those conversations up to the top of a Priority Hub view. By default, the criteria for tagging messages as a priority is pretty straightforward. Priority Hub will prioritize (hence the name) conversations from contacts who have the same last name as you or those labeled as highly important. The same goes for messages you select as vitally significant. Simply long-press a conversation in your inbox to slap it with a priority icon (represented by an up arrow) to accomplish this. You can toggle these Priority Hub settings on and off as you see fit.
Z30
Use the Peek gesture to check your inbox from any screen and Priority Calling to respond to incoming calls with canned messages.
(Credit: Brian Bennett/CNET)
It seems that every OS is catching notification fever, and BlackBerry 10.2 is no exception. Just like Apple's iOS 7, BB 10.2 now supplies previews of messages as they hit your phone. No matter which app you happen to be in or settings windows you have open, new notifications appear as thin headers across the top of the screen.
Tapping these notifications will launch a full view of the message to read its full contents and respond. Hitting an "x" icon within the notification preview will dismiss it entirely. To quickly handle incoming calls, a new feature called Priority Calling lets you receive caller ID notifications then either accept, dismiss, or respond with a canned reply. BlackBerry Messenger alerts provide the extra option of responding inside the notification itself so you don't have to switch out of the app or menu you're currently viewing.
For all BlackBerry's efforts to breathe life into its smartphone platform, it can't hide the lack of many popular apps gracing its virtual store shelves. Sure, many of the major players have found a home on BB10, such as Facebook, Twitter, and Flipboard. The photo-sharing service Instagram isn't available and neither is my current podcast app of choice, Pocketcast.
Keyboard
I know many true BlackBerry adherents out there will bemoan the Z30's lack of a physical keyboard. Even so, from someone who gave up tangible keys years ago for tapping out messages on glass panels, the Z30's software keyboard is one of the best I've used. The bigger screen makes for more comfortable typing than on the smaller Z10, and I also appreciate BB10's impressive predictive text abilities.
Z30
The Z30's keyboard is both comfortable and fast.
(Credit: Sarah Tew/CNET)
Able to learn over time what words you're likely working toward, the phone also offers handy suggestions placed over the letter your finger (and eyes) would have to travel to. Flicking upward pushes predicted text into the body of your message. The Z30 also did an admirable job of accurately detecting what keys I hit. The end result is that this gadget lets me type fast and furiously without many errors.
Core components
Powering the Z30's software is a respectably zippy 1.7GHz Snapdragon S4 Pro processor and quad-core Adreno graphics. It's the same thing Motorola packs into both the Droid Maxx and Moto X Android handsets.This CPU engine is backed up by 2GB of RAM and 16GB of internal storage. As I mentioned before, the Z30 also comes equipped with a microSD card slot for extra storage.

Nokia Lumia 1520, 2520 to launch Nov 22 in US, says report

The launch date has been pushed back from November 15, says Windows Phone Central.
Nokia's Lumia 1520.
Nokia's Lumia 1520.

Nokia's Lumia 1520 smartphone and 2520 tablet will reportedly reach US consumers on November 22.
This latest tidbit comes from blog site Windows Phone Central, which provided a peak at an inventory list reportedly revealing the launch date for the new devices. The entries for the large-screened 1520 phone, or phablet, show all four color variants due to be carried by AT&T. The listings for the 2520 tablet indicate that it will be offered by both AT&T and Verizon.
The Lumia 1520 was initially slated to launch on November 15, but that date was pushed back, according to WP Central. Microsoft actually jumped the gun this week when it unveiled a preorder page for the 1520 showing a release date of November 15 via AT&T. The folks in Redmond pulled down the page on Wednesday, saying that "we're so excited with the upcoming arrival of the Lumia 1520 that a product page went up prematurely last night on MicrosoftStore.com."
Microsoft's preorder page had shown the price of the 1520 as $199 with the usual two-year contract and $549 without a contract. The Windows RT-based 2520 tablet is expected to sell for $499, though Verizon may trim that to $399 for a special Black Friday deal, WP Central said.
Assuming the date in the leaked inventory list is accurate, November 22 will be a big day for Microsoft as it will also mark the launch of the Xbox One.

Android is the fastest growing product in tech history

We've all been watching as Android has made its meteoric rise in the mobile world, and we have watched as the platform has surpassed the competition. It turns out that we may have been watching something more than just a new dominant force, but a truly historic feat in the tech world. According to new data, Android may be the fastest growing product in tech history.

The data and chart come from Asymco and analyst Horace Dediu. The chart plots out various successful tech products and their total adoption numbers compared with how long after the initial release that the product hit that number. The mobile platforms of the past generation saw some impressive numbers with Symbian hitting 450 million users, but it took that platform 44 quarters (11 years) to reach that number. BlackBerry saw 225 million users in 43 quarters; and, Windows Mobile saw 72 million in 30 quarters. 

That's when the smartphone boom happened. Just 23 quarters after its initial release Apple's iOS has hit 700 million users, which would be incredibly impressive on its own if not for Android. Android has taken just 20 quarters (5 years) to make it to 1 billion users. That's pretty crazy. 

Android is the fastest growing product in tech history

Five Tips For IT Innovation

Innovation isn’t easy, but based on some of these recent stories about the topic, it can indeed be done. It requires shifting, tweaking, or flipping your perspective so that you see things you don’t normally see.
Tip No. 1: Look where you don’t normally look. In this interview this week with Computer Weekly, McKinsey CIO Mike Wright said that he looks for innovation in small companies: “Most innovation is happening within the smaller organizations with specialist capabilities.” It’s easier to get straight answers faster from small companies, he adds, though it’s important to take time to look for such companies, especially when so many CIOs have constructed administrative barriers to keep from being bombarded by sales calls.

8 HOT IT SKILLS FOR 2014

 When it comes to overall job prospects for IT professionals, 2014 will look a lot like this year, with 32% of companies expecting to increase head count in their IT shops, compared with 33% in 2013, according to Computerworld's annual Forecast survey.
But while demand will remain steady overall, there have been a few changes in the skill sets most desired by hiring managers. Unemployment "is probably close to zero for people with high-demand skill sets," says Michael Kirven, founder and CEO of Mondo, a technology resource provider. Employers in search of top skills, he says, need to be prepared to move fast. "If you want them, you can be 100% sure there are at least two other firms that want them, as well," he says.
New hiresWhat changes do you expect in your IT employee head count in the next 12 months?IncreaseDecreaseRemain the same20102011201220132014Year010203040506070Percent
Data from 2014 Forecast Survey (Base: 221; June 2013), 2013 Survey, 2012 Survey, 2011 Survey and 2010 Survey. Mouse over graph to get data details; click on items in chart key to turn them on and off.
Here's a look at the IT skills that will be in demand next year, according to companies with plans to hire IT professionals in 2014.

1. Programming/application development


49% of respondents said that they plan to hire for this skill in the next 12 months.
Last year's ranking: No. 1

As it did in the 2013 Forecast survey, programming/application development tops the list of hot skills, although just under half of the 221 respondents said they will hire in this area, compared with 60% last year. Scot Melland, CEO of Dice Holdings, parent of IT jobs website Dice.com, concurs that software developers are the most sought-after technology workers and notes that they enjoy one of the lowest unemployment rates around -- just 1.8%, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. It's no wonder, then, that respondents to the Computerworld 2014 Forecast survey named developer and programmer job openings as the most difficult to fill. The hottest specialties within that category, Melland says, are mobile development expertise and experience building secure applications.

BlackBerry gives up on selling itself as CEO resigns

Fairfax and partners will purchase $1 billion in BlackBerry debt; former Sybase chief Chen named interim CEO

BlackBerry announced Monday that it won't be sold to Fairfax Financial Holdings or any other suitors, and that its CEO Thorsten Heins will resign.
John Chen, former CEO of Sybase will step in as interim CEO, BlackBerry said in a statement.
Fairfax had tentatively agreed in September to buy BlackBerry for $4.7 billion in a deal that was set to close today. Fairfax reportedly couldn't raise financing to close the deal.
Meanwhile, other suitors had come forward to investigate taking the company private, including BlackBerry's founders.
Instead of buying BlackBerry, Fairfax will join with others to invest $1 billion in the company. BlackBerry will sell convertible debt to the investors. Fairfax will acquire $250 million of the $1 billion. The transaction is expected to be finished in two weeks.
Prem Watsa, CEO of Fairfax, will become lead director of compensation, nomination and governance at BlackBerry.
BlackBerry had first arranged the purchase in September after setting up a "review of strategic alternatives" in August in light of a $1 billion write-off in its recent quarter over poor smartphone sales. Layoffs of 4,500 workers were also announced at the time.

Today's statement merely says that review process is concluded.

Google releases Nexus 5 phone with Kit Kat

Google on Thursday released its latest candy-themed mobile operating system: Android 4.4, more deliciously known as Kit Kat.
The system will launch immediately on Google's new Nexus 5 phone and then roll out to other Nexus devices, the Samsung Galaxy S4 and HTC One, in the next few weeks.
Nexus devices are Google's flagship line of phones and tablets, running the newest and purest form of Android and available without contracts. The Nexus 5, manufactured by LG, is built to work internationally on a variety of bands and with whatever local SIM card you pick up, though Verizon's band is still not supported.
Physically, the 5-inch Nexus is a bit thinner and lighter than the previous generation, while packing a faster Snapdragon 800 processor. It has optical image stabilization and a new HDR camera feature for combining multiple exposures into a single photo, lightening up dark areas and bringing details back to images blown out by a flash.
The Nexus 5 is available online today in 10 countries and will be available in retail stores like Best Buy. It's a wider rollout than for previous generations of Nexus phones. The 16 GB version will cost $349 without a contract and the 32 GB version will go for $399, also without a contract.
The phone also will be the first to have the new Kit Kat features, many of which attempt to break down the walls between web, search, apps and communication tools.
The phone app -- widely neglected since Android smartphones first came out -- gets more search power in Kit Kat, pulling in search results for business as well as your usual roster of contacts. Incoming calls from business are recognized automatically in caller ID, while pulling data from the same database that powers Google Maps.
Kit Kat also adds support for third-party cloud services like Box so you can see files stored on the device and in the cloud. Google Hangouts absorbs SMS and MMS messages, so your chats, video calls and texts are all together in one place.
Google Now, the company's app for serving up answers to questions you haven't even asked yet, is adding new categories. It can deduce your interests based on your web searches -- say, "The Walking Dead," or corgis -- and add a card to Google Now with the latest information about those interests. If there's a specific site you check a lot that is only sporadically updated, Google Now might alert you to new posts when they happen.
It's also tapping the power of crowds. Google Now knows your location, and Google knows what people at that exact spot during that time are most likely to search. For example, someone standing in front of Old Faithful at Yellowstone might search for a schedule of when the geyser is going to erupt. Google Now will automatically show you the times without your searching.
Google Search on Kit Kat is not limited to content from the web. Google is starting to index content deep inside of individual apps, so if you search for a recipe it might show a web page and a link to a cooking app you already have installed. For now, it will only work with installed apps, but Google says its working on adding support for apps in the Google Play store, which could be a clever way to sell more apps.
Kit Kat is also Google's attempt to address one the bigger problems plaguing Android: OS fragmentation. Low-end Android devices are big sellers in emerging markets like China and India, but because of their limited memories and pokey processors, they typically run older versions of the Android operating system, like Gingerbread.
The decision of what version of Android to ship on these devices is up the manufacturers. But Google is trying hard to make its newest OS more appealing for these markets by upgrading it to use less processor power and memory.

It's Going To Be An Interesting Week For BlackBerry

Anyone with a passing interest in BlackBerry’s ongoing corporate fortunes will be paying close attention to the Canadian company. Any competing bids against the offer from Fairfax Financial Holdings will have to be due on Monday, there are murmurs of two co-founders putting together a bid, and the Fairfax bid itself is reportedly struggling to raise the required funds.
Fairfax  is looking to raise enough funding for its $4.7 billion bid for the smartphone manufacturer, but funding from several large banks “declining to participate on concerns that the smartphone maker will not be able to reverse its fortunes” (reports Reuters). That’s not to say that the $9 per share deal is dead, but it’s certainly not progressing smoothly.
There’s also the opportunity for another partnership to come in and pick up the company with an improved offer, notably co-founders Mike Lazaridis and Douglas Fregin. Lazaridis has been talked about as a potential bidder since September, and he has disagreed with BlackBerry’s board on the strategy that CEO Thorsten Heins put in place for the launch of the BB10 powered devices during 2013. The Wall Street Journal are reporting that Qualcomm could be joining in that bid, which is also backed by Cereberus Capital management.
BlackBerry has also been exploring options with a number of other companies, including Samsung, Google, and Facebook, with lots of support for BlackBerry, but no concrete indications that they would be interested in backing the manufacturer.
All of which ties in with BlackBerry’s fortunes during 2013. They have an interesting product in BB10 and the associated handsets, but they have not set the smartphone world alight in terms of sales. It would be a long and slow process to build up BB10 into the ‘third’ ecosystem, especially as Microsoft now comfortably occupies that space, but there are opportunities to build a strong hardware niche, alongside some well-respected platform independent services.
Whether there is enough promise and immediate revenue for a successful takeover is likely to be answered this week. If Fairfax can get the funding in place, or there are strong counter bids from other partnerships, expect the share price to rise strongly.

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