Computer Active (UK)

Blackberry Key2

Blackberry’s phone remains a pressing issue

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A year ago, Blackberry announced the Keyone, an Android smartphone with a button keyboard, and everyone said, ‘Wow! Blackberry still exists?’ In fact, the phone was made by a company called TCL, which had bought the rights to the name after the once-giant Canadian firm announced it was giving up hardware to focus on software and services. It did contribute the Keyone’s tweaked version of Android, incorporat­ing features like Blackberry Hub, which handles texts and social-media messages in one place.

Surprising­ly, just enough people bought a Keyone to make the whole exercise not entirely futile, so here, in the inevitable cycle of consumer technology, is the differentl­y spelled Key2.

The screen, which measures just 4.5in because the space below is taken up by the keyboard, remains the same, but this is otherwise a noticeably slimmer and arguably more attractive device. Again, it comes in all-black (or black with silver details). The distinctiv­e chrome bars between the rows of buttons have gone, removing an aid to accurate typing, but there’s still a gap you can feel with your fingertips, and a new matt finish helps. The narrow space bar houses the fingerprin­t sensor.

This still isn’t, however, an exclusivel­y keyboard-operated device. To reach the Home screen you have to tap an icon, and you can’t just start typing to search for apps or messages – you have to open the app drawer first. A new ‘speed key’ lets you assign apps to keys, though, and the keyboard has a touch-sensitive surface, so you can swipe across it to scroll (albeit not very reliably). The screen feels awkwardly small, but it’s sharp and has good colour quality. The dual camera, with iphone X-style optical zoom, makes a decent job of ‘portrait’ shots with fake blurred background­s, and copes well in low light, but is otherwise fairly average.

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Inside is a mid-range eight- core Snapdragon 660 chip that runs Blackberry-flavoured Android 8.1 smoothly. Cellular data speeds are slower than current phones, though, and we found Bluetooth prone to drop-outs. The battery lasted just over 13 hours in our video- playback test, and in ordinary use came nowhere near the claimed two days.

If you like pressing buttons, it’s fine. But there are better phones for less money

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