The Blackberry Venice offers both a trademark physical Qwerty keypad and a more convenient On-Screen keypad. The power button has been thankfully displaced from the top to the left side, just like most of the other smartphones. The most interesting aspect is the slider type formfactor which requires users to push the screen outwards in order to reveal the physical keyboard. Blackberry Venice doesn’t look compact and if we go by the photos, it seems to be bulky and tall. The SIM and the Micro SD slots have been relocated to the top of the device. On the imaging front, Blackberry Venice incorporates a 18-Megapixel primary camera unit tagged alongside a dual-LED flash which boasts of features like Optical Image Stabilization and fast focus. The images show off the Blackberry Venice running on Android Lollipop and unlike before, this time Blackberry has opted for a full fledged Android operating system. Blackberry had attempted to bridge the gap between Blackberry OS and Android by allowing users to side load the Android applications but the absence of Google services turned it into more of an half baked attempt, limiting users of many core Android applications. It would be interesting to see if this device will pull Blackberry out of the sinking ship or it will just fail to make a considerable impact, like the Blackberry Passport. One thing is for sure. Blackberry has got to offer more than just a QWERTY slider to find any success. How about timely security updates for Android to start with?