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Pocket
packet packs punch
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Hp
h2210 iPAQ Pocket PC
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Hp
h2210 iPAQ Pocket PC
$599
www.hp.com.au
Reviewer: Pte John Wellfare
Pocket
PCs have gradually increased in popularity during the past few years,
owing largely to improvements in technology that mean a pretty powerful
little palmtop is within the realms of affordability for an average
income earner.
Hp has a finger in just about every technology pie and this ones
no different. The Hp iPAQ range is highly regarded in the Pocket PC
business and its not hard to see why. For its size, the h2210
is quite fast even programs like Media Player (in case you
didnt know, you can watch video on your palmtop these days)
load quickly.
What impressed me most about the h2210 was the ability to use both
SD memory cards and Compact Flash. The PCs in-built 64Mb of
available memory may not be enough to fulfil all your needs, but add
the ability to plug in the memory cards that have become so commonplace
in other digital equipment, and there really isnt a limit to
what you can do.
One of the simpler features of the h2210 and standard among
most pocket PCs these days is the touch screen, which eliminates
the problems of dealing with tiny buttons like you do with your mobile
and using awkward mouse buttons or touch pads like you do with your
laptop. Accessing your files requires just simple a tap of the h2210s
attached pen (or a fingernail if youre in a rush).
Almost all the software you can imagine youll need is already
provided, mostly from Microsoft (although startlingly bug-free). You
have Pocket Word, Pocket Excel, the previously mentioned Media Player,
Outlook (which handles all your personal contact and calendar information
as well as e-mail) and a suite of other handy goodies. Theres
even an application for programming all your remote controls into
the device.
There is also a massive range of software available to download over
the Internet (which you can do either directly with the h2210, or
by connecting it to your home PC), including voice recognition applications
and street maps, if you want to hook your Pocket PC up to a GPS for
convenient city navigation.
Writing on the h2210 can be done using a few different methods. Theres
a handy digital keyboard with the option for small or large (perhaps
it should read tiny or little) buttons, which
isnt as difficult as it seems when you first begin. Theres
also a cool auto-transcriber that allows you to write on the screen
as you would a normal notepad, and transforms your jumbled cat-scratch
into pristine print. The transcriber also takes a little programming
before it learns exactly how you write and thus how to interpret your
letters the first time you use it is likely to be a very frustrating
experience.
Hps h2210 is a top item to have on the grounds of pure gadgetability
alone, but it is also extremely useful. For a disorganised person
like myself, the iPAQ has had a transforming effect I shouldnt
ever be late for an appointment again. |