Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Wearables
  3. Smart Home
  4. Reviews

BlackBerry Presenter Review

Add as a preferred source on Google
BlackBerry Presenter
“Suit-and-tie road warriors will fall hard for the sleek Presenter, but the narrowly focused device won’t likely find much use outside conference room walls.”
Pros
  • Small, pocketable form factor
  • Sleek boardroom-friendly design
  • Quick, simple setup
  • Automatic scaling for different displays
Cons
  • Lags as PowerPoint files load to device
  • No HDMI, DVI or audio output
  • Max 1024 x 768 resolution
  • Price nearly on par with netbook
  • Can’t display any files but PowerPoints

“Why you can trust Digital Trends – We have a 20-year history of testing, reviewing, and rating products, services and apps to help you make a sound buying decision. Find out more about how we test and score products.“

blackberry-presenter-e1
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Introduction

For an army of workers who wear wingtips like combat boots, Hickey Freeman suits like flak vests and clutch Samsonite briefcases like duffle bags, the BlackBerry is as much a phone as a sidearm: reliable, always on the hip, but ultimately, too weak for the real action. Delivering presentations – the sales equivalent of trench warfare – requires the big guns. A chunky laptop is usually par for the course.

Recommended Videos

Research in Motion set out to change that with its $200 BlackBerry Presenter. The tiny, palm-sized brick takes the place of a much larger laptop by allowing the everyday BlackBerry to serve up PowerPoint files to a projector or TV screen, wirelessly. We took the new device through live fire training to see whether it could really pull it off.

blackberry-presenter-e5Features

RIM’s BlackBerry Presenter looks a bit like an Altoids tin as designed by RIM: striped in solid metal edging, gloss black on top, and MasterLock solid. At just under an inch tall, 3.4 inches long and 2.4 inches wide, it will easily drop into whatever jacket pocket isn’t occupied by your BlackBerry.

Flip it around to the business end and you’ll find a notch carved out with three simple ports: VGA, S-Video, and micro USB. A small toggle also switches the Presenter’s output from NTSC to PAL, depending on the region (a useful feature for those who might find themselves in Oklahoma City giving a presentation one day, and Denmark the next).

The Presenter includes a wall adapter for powering it via micro USB, a data cable for connecting to a PC (for firmware upgrades), and a slim pleather case.

Setup and Use

The first time you use the Presenter, you’ll need to download the appropriately named BlackBerry Presenter application from BlackBerry App World. After connecting the microUSB power cable to the Presenter and tapping it into the TV – via VGA or S-video – it will go into pairing mode, flashing red on top and displaying a simple BlackBerry splash screen on the TV or projector until you pair it with your phone from Presenter. For us, it worked as seamlessly as any Bluetooth device: Just select it on the phone and enter the four-digit passkey, which will be obvious from the Presenter’s splash screen. The Presenter will automatically adjust its resolution to the attached display, which eliminates 90 percent of the headaches we’ve had from connecting notebooks to different displays all the time.

After setup, displaying a slideshow is as simple as opening it in Presenter and selecting Present from the Menu. But be prepared to make some small talk for your audience. We encountered a significant delay from the time we queued up a 2MB presentation to the time the first slide appeared – a little less than a minute. The root cause: the BlackBerry app actually caches the PowerPoint data into memory within the Presenter itself, rather than feeding it slides on the fly. Besides the initial delay, our slides took up to seven seconds to flip as this loading process continued, until the entire slideshow made it over to the Presenter. Eventually, slide-flipping becomes nearly instantaneous.

blackberry-presenter-e3At this Golden Hour, the Presenter truly comes into its own. Besides the initial ease of connecting it, and the wow factor of performing a slideshow from an Altoids tin, the mobility of a phone as a presentation device quickly become apparent. Unlike a notebook, using a BlackBerry to present allows you to strut around the room with slide controls in hand. Unlike simple PowerPoint remotes, the Presenter app can also display a cheat sheet of slide notes for quick reference to items that might not actually appear on screen – a sort of digital replacement for index cards. You can even dial in a specific slide number and jump directly to it to eliminate the headache of scrolling between 20 in-between slides, and blank the screen to regain audience attention.

Since the Presenter has its own dedicated memory, showing a slideshow the second time around eliminates all of the aforementioned lag problems. It just works, perfectly, right off the bat. Considering how many sales presentations seem to require the same slideshow, that might significantly ease the lag problem for many users. However, we would have to recommend precaching fresh slideshows on the device prior to showtime for high-pressure gigs – the load time really could be excessive when you’re staring down a walnut conference table flanked by 20 pairs of eyes.

Conclusion

For a very specific segment of business users who call PowerPoint presentations in conference rooms an everyday part of their lives, BlackBerry’s Presenter could be a silver bullet. Besides eliminating the need for a bulky notebook, it adds an extra whiz-bang factor to any presentation, and turns your existing BlackBerry into the ultimate presentation controller. The Presenter aims to do one thing very well, and it hits that mark. Our sales team took the Presenter into the field and loved it.

But geeks won’t be able to help spotting the greater potential this box might have had. It lacks HDMI, DVI and audio outputs, any of which could have been useful for higher-end projectors, or presentations with sound. It won’t play any files but PowerPoint files, which rules out even basic photo slideshows, which seemed to us like a no brainer. It doesn’t even support resolutions above 1024 x 768.

If you – or your company – can afford a price tag that’s nearly on par with a netbook for a one trick pony, the Presenter should earn its keep with just one successful meeting and the resulting ink on a dotted line. Just don’t expect to get much use of it outside the boardroom.

Highs:

  • Small, pocketable form factor
  • Sleek boardroom-friendly design
  • Quick, simple setup
  • Automatic scaling for different displays

Lows:

  • Lags as PowerPoint files load to device
  • No HDMI, DVI or audio output
  • Max 1024 x 768 resolution
  • Price nearly on par with netbook
  • Can’t display any files but PowerPoints
Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
Your Galaxy Watch is losing a health feature, and the replacement needs another gadget
Samsung is killing Vascular Load on Galaxy Watches
Blood pressure on Samsung Galaxy Watch 8.

Samsung’s Galaxy Watches have been leaning harder into health features with every generation. Sleep scores, heart metrics, blood pressure, and much more are all big selling points. Samsung is removing the standalone Vascular Load feature for Galaxy Watch users in the United States.

According to a Samsung Health notice spotted by users on Reddit (via SammyGuru), the feature will no longer be available starting in late July with Samsung Health 7.0 and the One UI Watch 9 update. Samsung’s notice reportedly says existing Vascular Load records will also disappear from Samsung Health once the feature is removed. Users who want to keep that history need to export their personal data in advance through Samsung Health settings.

Read more
The OPPO Watch X3 has a ridiculous feature I cannot stop using
My smartwatch let me doomscroll from my wrist
Oppo Watch X3 Media Controls

While smartwatches were built to make us more health-conscious and have us reach for our phones less often. I always believed that a second (smaller) screen on your wrist basically can be just as distracting as your smartphone, and the Oppo Watch X3 decided to stop pretending by doubling down on this.

The Oppo Watch X3 comes with a dedicated remote control feature that lets me control my phone from my wrist, and I am having way too much fun messing around with it. This sounds ridiculous, but it has also been surprisingly handy.

Read more
Samsung’s smart glasses leak shows why your next Galaxy wearable may live on your face
Galaxy Glasses may turn Samsung’s Watch, Ring, and phone into one face-worn ecosystem
Samsung Galaxy Glasses leak

While Samsung already has a bunch of wearables, its upcoming smart glasses might tighten the experience even further. A new leak from SammyGuru offers an early look at the Galaxy Glasses Manager app, the companion app Samsung is expected to use for its new smart glasses.

The leak does not reveal final pricing, battery life, launch date, or every hardware spec. Unlike your typical leak that just hints at a device, the companion app actually makes it sound more real.

Read more