TamsPPC - the PocketPC Blog

The PocketPC news and opinion source

December 19th, 2007

The HP ipaq 110 Classic handheld review - Part 2: physical characteristics

When a person who knows HP’s ipaq lineup for a long time looks at the 110; he immediately feels reminded of the original 3600/3700 series. These machines offered insane performance - but the flip side of the coin was a very bulky case. Is the 110 as bricky?

Compared to its predecessors, the 110 beats our trusty old 3700 in all aspects. It is smaller, thinner and lighter - but the screen still stays obscenely big. HP’s design masterpiece, the rx4240, is much smaller - but lacks the 5way navigator and the huge amount of screen real estate:

Palms business classic aka Palm TX is a bit bigger, but significantly thinner. The Treo 680 is less wide, but thicker:

The front of the 110 contains the four hardware buttons, 5way navigator, brightness sensor(top right) and dual LED’s for wireless and power supply state(top left):

HP moved the power button to the right side of the unit, and dropped the ‘long press-turns off backkight function’. The button has pretty good tactile feedback nevertheless. Reset and voice recorder buttons are right below:

Memory card slots are usually at the top of a device - HP decided to move the slot to the left side. The device ships with a dummy in the slot - this is no longer a mayor problem, as most users will stick in a fullsize SD card quickly(1gb costs like 7€ nowadays…):

The top of the device contains the headphone port; the bottom contains the miniUSB port and the microphone:

Pushing the button at the back of the unit allows you to slide the battery cover off the back - you can then swap out the battery(which is, incidentially, the same 1200mAH model found on the rx4240):

Last but not least, here”s a picture of the 110’s stylus next to a few other units:

Overall, HP has done a good job at modernizing the form factor of the 110. It keeps all the good features found on the 3xxx series(big screen,…) and is quite a bit smaller. Of course, consumer-oriented handhelds like the rx4240 are smaller and lighter - but the smallness is a significantly smaller screen…

December 19th, 2007

Windows Mobile Smartphone 6.1 screenshot gallery

A web site called “The Boy Genius report” has somehow managed to get their hands on a Motorola device running Windows Mobile Smartphone 6.1 - and posted a gallery containing over 100 screenshots here.

Compared to our own walkthrough of Windows Mobile 6.0 on the ipaq 514(complete with duffergile!), parts of the user interface look significantly flashier - but the long lists still remain unchanged(they now look a bit better, though).

While an operating system is not easy to judge by just looking at screenshots, I do not feel that Microsoft has overhauled any part of the user interface from a functional point of view. WM 6.0 made you scroll plain lists like hell - WM 6.1 will make you scroll colored lists instead…

December 19th, 2007

iPAQ HX2495b Review Part 1: A quick look at specs.

Here are some pictures of the device I took awhile ago back in March. I will be taking more soon.

Let me start off this review by saying that it is an updated review of my old one. I did a review of this handheld back in March when I got the unit. This one will be a longer one with more detail. I will start this review a little different this time. I will start with the specifications of the device.

Wireless: Wi-Fi (802.11b), Bluetooth, serial IR

Operating system: Windows Mobile 5.0 for Pocket PC

Processor: Intel PXA270 processor 520 MHz

Memory: 192 MB total memory (128 MB ROM and 64 MB SDRAM)

Display: 3.5-inch transflective TFT QVGA color, 64K colors, LED backlight with power save mode.

Battery: User removable 3.7v 1440mAH battery

Expansion: Compact Flash (Type II) and Secure Digital card slots.

Audio: Internal microphone, speaker, and 3.5-millimeter stereo headphone jack

Dimensions: 4.71 x 3.01 x 0.65 inches / 119.4 x 76.6 x 16.3 millimeters (WxHxD)

Weight: 5.8 ounces / 164.4 grams

Warranty: 1-year parts and labor

In the Box: HP iPAQ hx2495 Pocket PC, USB desktop synchronization cradle, removable/rechargeable lithium-lon battery, AC adapter, charger adapter, stylus, protective plastic flip cover, product information guide, getting started disc

(Parts taken from Amazon)

|