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The 2MP camera worked well enough to snap photos and upload/mail/mms them around. Trying to do any serious browsing of “full sites” is an exercise in both patience (due to Edge speeds, on top of the pedestrian phone speed) and dexterity (attempting to hit a tiny link with my gigantic finger) which provided some fun and then the realization that this thing isn’t for people like me. Here you see the problem of a tiny 2.8″ QVGA screen. Ok, that’s looking very Breezy! However, that keyboard makes all the difference when trying to enter in a URL, or punch in a facebook status, or even take some (brief) notes. The lock screen looks promising, and sliding it reveals a very nice grid of icons: It looks pretty clean and nice at first blush, but just poking at it for a few minutes, you’re greeted with endless lags, spinning wait cursors, and menus that look like they’d be at home on the Breeze. The Pursuit’s Brew-based OS seemed to be trying to be a mix of Symbian and iOS, with some throwbacks to even older interface behaviors. Pushing up the top, it slides nearly halfway up revealing a reasonably usable keyboard. Under the covers, you can see the the SIM slot above the battery, and on the right side is a micro-SD card slot for up to 32GB of external memory. The speaker grille is somewhat hidden in the upper grove where the rubber grip lives, on the right side. The back is smooth, but has a nice recessed center area and the 2MP camera. The right side has the USB port, a hold button, and a camera button. The front has the QVGA touch screen with dial, back, and hangup hard-buttons on the bottom. You can see above that it’s smaller but thicker than an iPhone 4, but overall it’s quite pocket-able. The back’s “dumbbell” shape gives you something to hang onto when holding it, and it has two rubbery strips that help hold it in place when you set it down to type on it. Like its flip-sibling, it’s all plastic but feels reasonably solid in the hand.
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With the battery, the Pursuit II is fairly light at 4.9 ounces.
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In the box you’ll find a thin Quick Start guide, the phone, a USB charging & PC connection cable, and AC adapter. The keyboard does work well for text entry, at least.
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It looks at first blush like it could be a fair “simple” touch screen phone, but the phone software is cumbersome to use, the device is infuriatingly slow to use, and the touch screen’s responsiveness is poor. The Pursuit II is a QVGA touch screen Brew-based phone with a slide-up keyboard.
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The voice quality (and speakerphone) are quite good, but choosing this device certainly is not a selection you’d make based on cost – there are full touch smartphones in the $50-$100 range that are more capable (and easier to use) than the Breeze III. I’d personally never be able to stand the Breeze III as my daily device, but if all you need is basic voice capability, or you want a nice light flip phone, it could work. The included PC-Suite software works with either phone, I’ll cover it at the end of the review. The phone includes voice control, which worked fairly well for starting applications, and fair for voice dialing. The 1.3MP camera takes decent fixed-focus photos, which can be emailed, or sent via MMS with ease. Here’s the web browser (which is pretty slow, even given Edge speeds:) No worse than any other flip phone, but I’d really not want to do anything more than basic calling on this thing. In either case these are pretty basic applications and navigating them (let alone entering anything at all with the dialpad) is fairly cumbersome. Which has essentially the same applications – the difference being that when you select one of these you get additional sub-menu options. Advance mode gives you the grid of icons look: Selecting an option leads to a sub-menu, which has a subset of all the options you’d find in advanced mode. It has two modes – the “Breeze” mode is a simplified menu system: Using the Breeze III reminds me of the flip phone I had in 2003, with a much better screen and slightly more feature rich software. On the back is the speaker (for speakerphone, tones, rings, etc.) and the 1.3MP camera.