From the Novus Vault

BlackBerry Curve 9370

A compact messaging-first phone from the era when keyboards, trackpads, and BBM defined business mobility.

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From the Novus Vault: BlackBerry Curve 9370

For nearly two decades, Novus Labs has been constructing an extensive interoperability library and collecting remarkable devices. This week we pull the BlackBerry Curve 9370 — a compact messaging-focused phone from the era when physical keyboards, optical trackpads, and BBM defined business mobility.

Released in 2011, the Curve 9370 packaged BlackBerry's signature experience into a pocketable form factor: traditional QWERTY keyboard, trackpad-driven navigation, and a small 2.44-inch display optimized for email and messaging rather than web browsing. It's a perfect artifact of the moment just before touchscreen smartphones swept the enterprise.

Highlights

  • Signature optical trackpad for precise, keyboard-free navigation
  • Traditional QWERTY keyboard with tactile, dedicated keys
  • Tight integration with BBM and BlackBerry push email
  • Compact, pocket-friendly form factor built for one-handed use
  • Messaging-first design tailored to business and enterprise users

Key Specifications

  • 2.44-inch TFT display (480 × 360)
  • BlackBerry 7.0 operating system
  • Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n and Bluetooth 2.1
  • 109 × 60 × 11 mm, 99 g
  • Released 2011

Significance

The Curve 9370 represents the final generation of BlackBerry's classic formula before the company pivoted to full-touchscreen devices. Its optical trackpad and tactile keyboard were purpose-built for rapid email and messaging — a workflow that modern touchscreen phones have never fully replicated.

For many enterprise users, this was the phone they carried before reluctantly migrating to iOS or Android. It's a reminder that input paradigms matter, and that there was a time when the most productive smartphone in a room didn't have a touchscreen at all.

About the Device Vault

Novus Labs has been building one of the industry's most extensive interoperability libraries since 2008. Our collection spans thousands of devices across wireless access points, phones, tablets, AV equipment, and smart home products — including vintage devices that help us test real-world backward compatibility scenarios.

Learn more about our interoperability services and Interop Device Library.

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