Four months after Research In Motion (RIM) gave the world its first peek at BlackBerry 10 OS Beta 3, CNET got a little more hands-on time with its features.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Taking a 'Peek'
With BlackBerry OS 10, RIM is redesigning seemingly every aspect of its former operating system, from the browser to the lock screen. "Peeking" is one design theme. Here, sliding up a thumb or finger from the bottom of the phone slowly dissolves the lock screen, giving you a full or partial view of what's underneath. You can commit and unlock it all the way, or lower the veil once more.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Active frames
I know you've heard it all before: a home-screen experience characterised by thumbnail views of programs that update with recent activity. RIM seems to have followed in Microsoft's "live tile" footsteps with "active frames", but there is at least one difference: the large frames correspond to open apps that you can invoke or minimise with a tap.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Home screens
Swipe beyond the active frames, and you'll see a few pages of the traditional icons laid out in a grid. These are large, square and finger friendly.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
HTML5
The web browser is based on HTML5 standards, which RIM said will let web surfers do cool things, like open the camera app within a site without leaving the browser. For pages heavy with ads and other distractions, enabling reader mode with a few gestures will give you a clearer view of your story (pictured).
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Universal inbox, returned
RIM kept the idea of its universal message box for notifications and events, and turned it into an omnipresent element that's just under the surface. Peel back the page you're on, or, more accurately, slide it back, and you'll be able to quickly check for new notifications. Calendar events, social-networking updates, calls, texts and emails all count.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
BlackBerry Hub: the layer beneath the layer
RIM has really embraced the idea of layers in the design philosophy often referred to as "flow". You can use gestures to further reveal the newly dubbed BlackBerry Hub, a sort of catch-all navigation for accounts and settings. Currently in the beta product, there are two methods for peeling back the layers. You can simply peek back by moving a finger on the screen, or view a deeper layer by swiping a different "root back" arrow on a different part of the screen.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
If there weren't enough menus
Further challenging you to stay focused on the new OS is what RIM calls a "cross-cut menu", which you call up by pressing and holding something, say a contact entry, in your address book. Here, you can forward or reply to the email, organise it and so on.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
BlackBerry Messenger
For a long time, BlackBerry Messenger, an app that lets you communicate nearly instantly and for free with other BlackBerry users, was unique to RIM (Apple followed suit with iMessage). In OS 10, the communications staple is decorated with the new smart keyboard and an emoticons keyboard that pops up and disappears when you're done.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Group chat
The group chat interface in BlackBerry 10 OS also gets an updated look and feel; setting up a new group seems straightforward.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Clever camera
RIM's first reveal of the camera wowed us with its cool time-shift trick, which virtually rewinds photos to let you pick an expression you prefer most. "Rewinding" in this case lets you pick from several snapshots taken in burst mode. It's smart, but once you make your pick, there's no going back.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Face detection
The icon-heavy camera will detect faces and let you manipulate photos.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Keep tabs on your contact's companies
RIM added this feature just for its corporate users: enter the company name of a contact into your address book, and you'll be able to keep tabs on the latest news about him or her. According to RIM, business professionals asked for this feature in order to be able to stay up to date on clients and partners before meetings. It's powered by a database that RIM acquired with a third-party company.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Facebook native app
RIM and Facebook showed off the new native app for BlackBerry 10 OS.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Facebook profile
A quick look at the Facebook profile page.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
BlackBerry App World
The new App World experience opens for submissions on 10 October. It'll include new content, like music and a never-ending list of top apps.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
Games!
We'll get clearer images soon, but here's an idea of the layout for games.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
NFC capabilities
This is what near-field communication (NFC) sharing capabilities, similar to Samsung's S-Beam, will look like on BlackBerry 10.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
BlackBerry Balance switches profiles
A new feature changes your BlackBerry App World profile from work to personal at the press of a button.
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(Credit: Jessica Dolcourt/CNET)
App-swapping demo
You can separate apps for work and play.
Via CNET.com

















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