BlackBerry Passport
Specifications
Price comparison
Average of 29 scores (from 40 reviews)
Reviews for the BlackBerry Passport
方正,易用,优质? 黑莓还没有放弃,发布了一款名为Passport的独特智能手机。它的实体键盘和对安卓应用的支持有望成为逆转乾坤的关键功能。请阅读我们的评测以了解这个逆转是否可能实现。
Source: Know Your Mobile EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The Passport is a weird looking piece of tech, yes, and the keyboard does take a bit of getting used to, but, like all new ideas, once you’ve accustomed yourself to its ways you feel right at home banging out emails, editing documents and tweeting. Good work, BlackBerry!
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 05/22/2017
Rating: Total score: 90%
Source: It Pro EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
BB10 gets updated and the Passport offers the unique square display. The last month has been a more enjoyable experience than I imagined. BB10 has improved tremendously since its launch in January 2013. It feels like a completely different operating system and the ability to install apps from the Amazon App Store gives users more options.
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 03/10/2016
Rating: Total score: 80%
Source: Recombu EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
Given that the original Passport was a decent phone in everything but design, it’s a real shame that Blackberry didn’t decide to crush that bizarre square construction into a more manageable rectangular shape. While the Silver Edition will no doubt entice Blackberry lovers who were saving up for a Passport, it’s definitely not worth an upgrade for existing Passport owners and does nothing to sway anyone put off by the original phone’s awkward design.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 08/11/2015
Rating: Total score: 70%
Source: Cool Smartphone EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
Overall the BlackBerry Passport is a really great smartphone. For the modern day tech-savy business user this would be a perfect device, for the average smartphone owner with a little adjustment of their expectations it could again be the perfect device. The combination of decent hardware, a great camera and intuitive software really make for a great overall package. The only slight issues are the size of the Passport and the slightly hit and miss nature of the app situation. Currently you can buy the Passport for about £375 over at Clove or about £499 at BlackBerry.
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 05/28/2015
Rating: Total score: 75% features: 75% display: 85% mobility: 75% workmanship: 70%
Source: Techradar EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
BlackBerry has succeeded in doing something different and producing a new device that sums up everything it is as a brand. That is a brilliant thing, and to those that feel this is aimed at them (medical professionals, entrepreneurs, the email-obsessed) then it should be up there as one of the first phones you consider. But for everyone else, this is unashamedly a productivity-centric machine that'll let you take your work around with you. What it's not is the market's best new smartphone.
Single Review, online available, Very Long, Date: 05/13/2015
Rating: Total score: 60%
Source: PC Authority EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
It is most let down by the lack of supported apps; BlackBerry must find a way to get key apps on to its platform. Still, this creative take on mobile working must be applauded, even if we don’t expect the Passport to sell in the millions. At the $849 price, it’s competing with flagship phones, making this truly a case of try-before-you-buy. Use it for a week: some will send it back frustrated, but others might just fall in love.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 04/13/2015
Rating: Total score: 80%
Source: Know Your Mobile EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The Passport is a weird looking piece of tech, yes, and the keyboard does take a bit of getting used to, but, like all new ideas, once you’ve accustomed yourself to its ways you feel right at home banging out emails, editing documents and tweeting. Good work, BlackBerry!
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 02/20/2015
Rating: Total score: 90%
Source: Under KG EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
video review
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 12/24/2014
Source: Tweaktown EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
Sure, the Passport isn't perfect, but it's BlackBerry trying something different. Instead of being lost in the sea of countless smartphones that all look and act so similar, BlackBerry has provided the world with something different: the Passport. Our full review will be online soon - stay tuned!
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 12/02/2014
Source: Techtree.com EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The BlackBerry Passport is a odd-looking device. It's uncomfortable for single-handed usage. The phone also feels uneasy in pocket. However, if you are a chat-addict, this is the ultimate messenger phone in the market right now. Since the Passport has no direct competition, you either buy it or go for the conventional handsets.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 11/20/2014
Rating: Total score: 60% price: 40% display: 75% mobility: 90% workmanship: 80%
Source: Tech Advisor EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
If you are looking to save money on a decent smartphone you could do a lot worse than the BlackBerry Z30. It is a decent 5in handset at a very good price. But if you want a BlackBerry that is truly fit for business, and you are able to spend on a full flagship smartphone, the BlackBerry Passport is a truly fascinating and powerful device. Just have a go with one first to make sure it is for you.
Comparison, online available, Very Short, Date: 11/03/2014
Source: Digital Trends EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The Blackberry Passport has great specs, a display of fantastic quality and solid build quality but it feels like a novelty device and not one for mainstream consumption. The Passport is uncomfortable to use and not meant for anyone apart from hardcore Blackberry fans.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 10/22/2014
Rating: Total score: 69%
Source: Zdnet.com EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
BlackBerry hopes to revive its fortunes with the Passport, and has come up with an innovative business-focused handset. We've seen the Passport ridiculed on size grounds, but this is unfair in our view. Yes it's large and difficult to use one-handed, and it lacks 'blingy' consumer features, but there are plenty of plus points: its 4.5-inch, 1:1 aspect ratio screen provides space to do real work; the touch-enabled QWERTY keyboard is usable and functional; services like Blend, Balance and Hub have obvious appeal to business users; Assistant lets you accomplish some tasks very quickly; the BES back end is a very capable enterprise mobile management system; and battery life is superb.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 10/21/2014
Rating: Total score: 80%
Source: GSM Arena EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
Finding a way out of the doldrums has become a do-or-die for BlackBerry, time perhaps to do something different than just do better. Not that the Z-series did anything wrong. But if the mindset back then was all about catching up to Android and iOS, the BlackBerry Passport marks a return to an identity that's authentically Blackberry's. And the Passport is nothing if not different.
Single Review, online available, Very Long, Date: 10/15/2014
Source: Phone Arena EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
As the dust settles, the Passport can’t quite get out of customs, even though it has a passport that shows it’s capable of proceeding onward. For roughly the same amount of money, we can recommend several other flagship smartphones that have a more rounded appeal than this. Sorry Passport, you tried desperately to beat out these all-touch smartphones, but at the end of the day, your poorly laid out keyboard and antiquated software experience validates you’re just not ready for the big leagues.
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 10/13/2014
Rating: Total score: 75%
Source: NDTV Gadgets EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
Large, awkward phablets are already popular so there's little worry about the shape and size being a turn-off. There's only the question of whether people will be willing to give BlackBerry a try. Devices such as the Z10 and Z3 simply don't have what it takes to stand out in a crowd of Android phones, but the Passport is new and different, and has very easily understandable benefits to offer. After many, many long years, BlackBerry might finally have done something completely right.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 10/13/2014
Rating: Total score: 80% price: 70% performance: 80% display: 70% mobility: 90% workmanship: 90%
Source: Zdnet.com EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
Some readers commented that my Passport sample photos impressed them in my smartphone camera shootout and so far I have been pleased with the results. I like the way the camera software checks conditions and prompts me to change the shooting mode, for example to include HDR, for optimal shots.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 10/13/2014
Source: Recombu EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The BlackBerry Passport is a very good phone. All the staples the company is known for are rock solid: tools for productivity, call quality, message management and battery longevity. The 10.3 update has also helped alleviate (although certainly not eradicate) the issue of flexibility with regards to app selection. The camera is significantly better too. In fact everything that long-time BlackBerry users knew the company needed to work on, have been worked on.
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 10/12/2014
Rating: Total score: 70%
Source: Tech2.in.com EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
This is BlackBerry’s comeback smartphone, and whether it is wildly successful or a moderate success, or even a failure, the company has got everyone’s attention. And I think that’s the strategy at work here — not about setting sales registers afire, but about making a statement–that BlackBerry is not dead, but alive and kicking, that it has the courage to innovate and that the company has a razor sharp focus back on the enterprise and productivity. And if it sells well, that’s just icing on the cake. The Passport is not BlackBerry’s saviour but just one of the milestones in BlackBerry’s attempt to reinvent itself.
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 10/11/2014
Rating: Total score: 80%
Source: Gizmag EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
That said, if you can get past the out-there form factor and less expansive app selection, then the handset has a lot going for it. Its physical keyboard shows the company continuing to defy the industry trend, and offers an accurate and satisfying experience. While the square display might be poorly suited to viewing video content, it’s great for web browsing and messaging. Overall, we can’t say that the Passport is the right device for you, but we can say that it has enough interesting ideas to make it well worth a look.
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 10/10/2014
Source: Reg Hardware EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
BlackBerry returns with an highly unusual design that's uncompromisingly aimed at two groups: enterprise users and those looking for powerful complementary "second phone". The Passport showcases one great innovation – a capacitive multitouch physical keyboard. While this holds great promise – and BB10 is maturing into a strong platform for business and power users – in reality, the Passport doesn't integrate the UI and the keyboard well. Indeed, its assertive shape and bulk will repel all but the determined.
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 10/08/2014
Source: Tech Advisor EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The BlackBerry Passport is not for everyone. The Passport is designed to be used as a productivity tool, in the workplace. As such it is powerful and versatile, and for those who want a portable productivity device with a hardware keyboard it will be a perfect companion. For many others it may be a hopelessly hobbled entertainment device.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 10/03/2014
Rating: Total score: 70% price: 70% performance: 90% features: 70% workmanship: 50%
Source: Techradar EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
BlackBerry has succeeded in doing something different and producing a new device that sums up everything it is as a brand. That is a brilliant thing, and to those that feel this is aimed at them (medical professionals, entrepreneurs, the email-obsessed) then it should be up there as one of the first phones you consider. But for everyone else, this is unashamedly a productivity-centric machine that'll let you take your work around with you. What it's not is the market's best new smartphone.
Single Review, online available, Very Long, Date: 10/02/2014
Rating: Total score: 60% price: 50% performance: 80% features: 80% workmanship: 40%
Source: IT Pro Portal EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
BlackBerry has given itself an uphill struggle in producing a handset which so squarely (pardon the pun) bucks the handset trend, and in deciding to support Android but not the full Play store. Great battery life, an undeniably good screen and BlackBerry Blend may be enough to sway some business users, but the pull for non-professionals is more difficult to understand.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 10/02/2014
Rating: Total score: 60%
Source: V3.co.uk EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
For corporate customers operating a BES, the Passport is probably the best smartphone option currently available. Offering a wealth of security and management features as well as a productivity-focused touch-enabled physical keyboard, coupled with BlackBerry's Hub feature, the Passport does have definite business appeal. But despite BlackBerry's efforts to make the Passport more consumer friendly as well, its slightly chunky design and focus on productivity features hamper its BYOD appeal. As a result we can't see many buyers outside enterprise firms already using BlackBerry choosing the Passport over a competing Android, iOS or Windows Phone handset.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 09/30/2014
Rating: Total score: 60%
Source: NDTV Gadgets EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The build quality of the phone is extremely good. It felt solid but not heavy and the keyboard felt great. The specifications of the phone are also in line with other top end devices as well. The screen is running at a resolution of 1440X1440 pixels, and there's a 13-megapixel camera that seemed to be pretty good though a little slow to focus. A 2.2GHz processor and 3GB of RAM, along with 32GB of storage round out a pretty good device, on paper.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 09/29/2014
Source: Computerworld.com EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
While BlackBerry has a number of great improvements in the Passport, I'm not sure how much they matter. Yes, it is nice to have a fast processor, a clear display and long battery life, but the added width of the square display means very little to me. Various rectangular phones I've tried show me all I need to see while on websites or typing emails. I'm not one to regularly compose or edit Excel spreadsheets, so the added width to do that is also meaningless to me. Admittedly, I'm not the target user of this device.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 09/26/2014
Source: Recode EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
For current BlackBerry users, and businesses using the company’s devices, the Passport brings some nice additions and the choice of a wide-screen phone. But if you’re already invested in other platforms, there’s no reason to switch.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 09/24/2014
Source: PC Mag EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
So, okay. Here's a weird thing. My BlackBerry Passport review period overlapped with my iPhone 6 review period. And while I was doing the iPhone 6 review, I kept checking the Passport even though it had a cracked screen for my e-mail. I'll just put that out there. The BlackBerry Passport is the apotheosis of the work phone. It is spectacular at the things you need to do for work: fitting in your jacket pocket, lasting all day, calling, emailing, Web browsing, editing PowerPoints, and showing them on a big screen.
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 09/24/2014
Rating: Total score: 70%
Source: T Break EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
Simply put, the BlackBerry Passport is a fantastic device that ranks right up there with the best phones I’ve used this year. But will it help BlackBerry regain market share? I certainly hope so. I don’t think BlackBerry made the Passport with the intention of converting someone from an iPhone. It’s made for someone who has owned a BlackBerry before and wants to fall in love with it all over again. There really is nothing else in the market quite like the BlackBerry Passport.
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 09/24/2014
Rating: Total score: 86% price: 85% performance: 80% features: 90% workmanship: 80%
Source: Stuff TV EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The BlackBerry Passport, with its quad-core Snapdragon innards and 3GB of RAM, is the most powerful smartphone the company has ever produced. But that's completely overshadowed by its build.
Single Review, online available, Very Short, Date: 09/24/2014
Source: Laptop Mag EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
The BlackBerry Passport is the first smartphone I've reviewed in years that I really didn't want to carry. Part of me liked having a physical keyboard again, but I couldn't type quickly enough on the wide layout. Worse, the heavy and awkward design made taking this device out and using it feel like work -- which is tragically ironic, given the productivity benefits the Passport's wide display, long battery life and smarter new BlackBerry 10.3 OS provide.
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 09/23/2014
Rating: Total score: 50%
Source: Pocket Lint EN→zh-CN Archive.org version
Overall the BlackBerry Passport is perplexing. We can't for the life of us work out who it has been designed for, how it was approved, and why BlackBerry thought that a square screen with massive keyboard and bulky chassis would be a success - even for diehard BlackBerry users.
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 09/23/2014
Rating: Total score: 40%
Source: Stiftung Warentest - Heft 3/2015
Single Review, , Length Unknown, Date: 02/01/2015
Rating: Total score: 88% mobility: 90% ergonomy: 90%
Source: Cyberbloc DE→zh-CN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Medium, Date: 01/13/2015
Rating: Total score: 60%
Source: Futurezone.at DE→zh-CN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 11/10/2014
Source: Mobicroco DE→zh-CN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Short, Date: 11/04/2014
Rating: Total score: 93% features: 90% workmanship: 90% ergonomy: 90%
Source: Connect - Heft 12/2014
Single Review, , Length Unknown, Date: 11/01/2014
Rating: Total score: 86%
Source: Connect - Heft 11/2014
Single Review, , Length Unknown, Date: 10/01/2014
Rating: Total score: 100%
Source: Netzwelt DE→zh-CN Archive.org version
Single Review, online available, Long, Date: 09/24/2014
Rating: Total score: 82% features: 100% mobility: 90% workmanship: 90%
Comment
Qualcomm Adreno 330:
支持OpenGL ES 3.0标准的集成显卡。
» Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Graphics Cards and the corresponding Benchmark List.
801 MSM8974AB: » Further information can be found in our Comparison of Mobile Processsors.
4.50": 这是常见的智能手机对角线尺寸。» To find out how fine a display is, see our DPI List.
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