Ultimate Mobile OS Showdown: iPhone vs Android vs webOs vs Blackberry vs Windows Mobile vs Symbian
In the movie Braveheart, there's a pivotal scene involving Mel Gibson and a Scottish battalion where, as William Wallace, he tries to muster some courage from his ragtag company. Face painted blue and half-hysterical, he rallies them with a memorable speech about freedom and love of country. Then, the army proceeds to completely destroy the foreign oppressor in a fight to the bitter end.
In some ways, the current war on smartphone devices could be just as pivotal...and bloody. Companies such as Palm and Nokia have everything to lose if their platforms do not thoroughly crush the competition. Meanwhile, Apple has taken a strong lead with the iPhone, and BlackBerry devices do not appear to be losing any momentum, at least in the business sector. Google has entered the fight with their Android OS, attracting legions of developers to the platform in record time.
All of these operating systems support touch control, rudimentary multi-tasking, rich media, desktop-like Web browsing, and advanced messaging. Yet, only one OS is superior and will ultimately emerge as the victor. It might seem like Apple has already had their Braveheart moment, and maybe there is room for several companies at the top of the pile, but if Windows has taught us anything, it's that a single operating system can become so dominant that every other desktop OS becomes inconsequential. Developers lock into a platform, users get accustomed to it, and that OS wins the war.
We set out to put the major contenders to the test and find out which could become the most dominant. Really, it's too early to call Apple the victor, even though it would be easy to do so with 50,000 apps available and over a million iPhone users. As any technology analyst can tell you, there are actually significantly more Nokia and BlackBerry phones in use today than the iPhone, especially in Europe. The surprise is that the OS that seems to be winning the battle (the iPhone) may not eventually win the OS war in the long run.
We evaluated each OS on the popular handsets using the same set of criteria. We tested apps for speed using any of the built-in tools available, such as messaging, browsing, scheduler, application store, contacts, clock, weather, maps, 3D games, and social networking tools. We would have tested using the same app across all platforms, but there are none. (Worldmate and Facebook come close, but there are no clients yet for the Palm Pre.) To compare apples to apples, we tested the standard/bundled apps for each OS. We tested multi-tasking (such as playing music and checking e-mail, or running two apps at once), media file format (for photos, music and video), and organization tools such as calendar and contacts.
We also tested PC syncing back to the desktop – although each OS provides slightly different sync features and some forgo the concept altogether. We tested database support -- where possible – for apps that use a remote server, such as Daylite Touch on the iPhone. For messaging, we set up Gmail, Yahoo, ISP, and Exchange accounts where possible to test for reliable messaging delivery, search, and other features for the e-mail gurus out there. We then tested Flash support using several Flash-heavy sites, and tested network speed for both Wi-Fi and carrier access.
BlackBerry OS
Research in Motion is completely dominant in the smartphone industry, with some 28.5 million devices in use worldwide. For testing BlackBerry OS, we used the Curve 8900. There's a new model coming out called the BlackBerry Tour that was not quite available, and the Blackberry Bold is an older model with a lower-res camera, even though it does have a faster processor.

The Curve has a 512MHz processor, a 3.2 megapixel camera and built-in Wi-Fi, a GPS chip, and a full and useful 35-key QWERTY keyboard. The Blackberry OS version on the phone we tested is version 4.6 – in the near future, RIM will release an incremental 5.0 release.

BlackBerry OS includes many apps for staying organized and grabbing e-mail.
App Speed Test
Even though the BlackBerry Curve has a much slower processor than the iPhone 3GS, the Curve has a more textual interface. Almost every app we tested – from the Mail client, to the browser, to the alarm clock – opened in about one second. Similar to the iPhone, the Camera app loaded in four seconds from first click until the camera image appeared. The only delays we noticed were with some third party apps. For example, MobiPocket, an e-reader for books, loaded in four seconds, and there was a longer delay running WorldMate Live -- at five seconds. Most apps were fast loading and ran smoothly.

Even the mapping app loaded faster on BlackBerry OS than on the other smartphone OSes we tested.
App Availability
Compared to the Palm Pre, T-Mobile G1 running Android, and the iPhone, the BlackBerry Curve 8900 seems like a letdown in terms of bundled apps. The interface, which looks like a Tron-knockoff with its white outlined icons, is barebones and the apps are mostly textual, a hold-over from the days of the first BglackBerry devices. Still, the advantage is that apps load and operate quickly.
BlackBerry OS is more limited in terms of amazing apps, but does provide some a Pandora client.
On the main screen, there's the usual mix of contact manager, calendar, mail apps (for SMS and e-mail), a media player, IM client, a handful of basic games (Sudoku, Klondike), and the BlackBerry App World. RIM also offers a maps program, memopad, a task manager, calculator, DataViz apps for docs, spreadsheets, and slideshows, a video camera app, a notes recorder, and voice dialer. Both Apple and Palm have BlackBerry beat in terms of bundled apps, offering YouTube clients, weather apps, and unique tools that you might be compelled to buy for the BlackBerry OS, if they were even available.

This Facebook client loaded quickly, but it lacks the pizazz of the matching app on iPhone.
When you want to add apps, the selection is minimal – there are 2,000 apps, but many are not that exciting – we found only a few unique apps. There's a program called Poynt that helps you find movie theaters using the built-in GPS, WorldMate Live for travel details, a Facebook and Pandora client, the MobiPocket e-reader for books, Viigo (a news aggregator), an Audible.com player for listening to audiobooks, and only a few games. There's just nowhere near as many innovative apps for BlackBerry OS, such as tools for bird-watching or leveling a picture with the iPhone's built-in tilt sensor.

Worldmate is one of the better BlackBerry OS third-part apps for tracking travel plans.

There is a YouTube client for BlackBerry OS, running in a postage-stamp sized window.
Multi-tasking Support
BlackBerry OS is actually not a bad multi-tasking smartphone. (For a fun diversion, ask a BlackBerry user you know to see their phone and count how many apps they have running at the same time without knowing it). To switch apps, you need to select a menu option or just press Alt and the Escape key (the one that looks like a backwards arrow). What this means in practice is that you can not only run the music player in the background (as you can on the iPhone) but keep the Facebook client, task manager and contact list, and the Web running simultaneously. Each apps stays in its current state, so you can jump back to a Facebook chat or your current task list. The Palm Pre is the overall winner in multi-tasking, because open apps will prompt you with messages – such as new e-mails or missed appointments – but the BlackBerry OS is a close second because of how many apps you can fit into memory, whereas the Palm Pre gets easily bogged down with more than two or three.

You can switch between apps using a menu option of pressing Alt and then the Back arrow.
Media support
For a smartphone intended more for business than entertainment, the BlackBerry OS is actually a fairly capable media device. The OS supports unique video formats such as DivX 4, partial support for XviD (the format popular with BitTorrent users), MPEG-4 H.263, and WMV3. Audio support includes all of th emost common formats, minus uncompressed WAV. The OS supports BMP, GIF, JPEG, PNG, and TIFF photo formats – which is three more formats more than the iPhone OS supports. RIM offers the BlackBerry Media Sync tool, which helps you sync iTunes or Windows Media Player libraries.