HP iPaq Pocket PC h6315
Reviewed by: Bonnie Cha
Edited by John Morris
CNET Reviews
July 25, 2004
The handheld market has been getting squeezed lately, so it is no surprise that HP has finally decided to jump on the smart phone bandwagon with the iPaq h6315 Pocket PC. Available through T-Mobile wireless service ($499 with activation; $599 without), the h6315 blurs the line between phone and PDA and offers four-way wireless capabilities (GSM/GPRS, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and IrDA). In addition, it sports a VGA camera and add-on keyboard. Purely from a design standpoint, the h6315 can't match the popular Treo 600 [ http://reviews.cnet.com/Treo_600_CDMA/4505-6452_7-30520851.html ]; the iPaq is larger and heavier, and it looks much more like an overgrown PDA than a phone. Still, if you're after a Pocket PC with everything but the kitchen sink, the iPaq h6315 is the PDA for you.Design of HP iPaq Pocket PC h6315
The challenge with any convergence device is cramming all those multifaceted features into a design that is compact, functional, and aesthetically pleasing. The HP iPaq h6315 is only partially successful. Like the Audiovox PPC4100 [ http://reviews.cnet.com/Audiovox_PPC4100/4505-6452_7-30901529.html ], the Hitachi G1000 [ http://reviews.cnet.com/Hitachi_G1000/4505-6452_7-21008460.html ], and the Samsung SPH i700 [ http://reviews.cnet.com/Samsung_SPH_i700/4505-6452_7-30538747.html ], the h6315 looks more like a PDA than a phone. (Microsoft refers to these as Pocket PCs Phone Edition to distinguish them from true smart phones such as the Motorola MPx200 [ http://reviews.cnet.com/Motorola_MPx200/4505-6452_7-30586620.html ].) At 4.7 by 2.9 by 0.7 inches and 6.7 ounces, many users will find it too bulky to use as their primary cell phone. And even without the snap-on keyboard, it is larger and heavier than the Treo 600.
Make room: The h6315 carries some weight, especially with the snap-on keyboard.
The detachable keyboard has its advantages, however. Foremost among them, it
frees up valuable real estate for the 3.5-inch TFT (thin-film transistor), 64,000-color
screen, making it easier to read than a typical phone display. Beneath it, you'll
find four shortcut keys--Contacts, Talk, End, and Inbox--and a navigational keypad.
The rubberized sides make it easy to grip the handheld with one-touch access to
various functions. On the left are a 3.5mm headphone jack (which accepts Walkman-style
headphones), a voice-record button, and a Reset button, while the right side has
up- and down-volume controls, the SDIO/MMC slot, and a camera-capture button. The
top of the h6315 houses the antenna, the IR port, and the stylus holder. And rounding
out the chassis are the camera lens and the battery lock and release buttons on
the back of the device. HP also throws in a desktop cradle, an AC adapter, and an
earbud headset.
Features of HP iPaq Pocket PC h6315
From a PDA standpoint, the HP iPaq h6315 has a respectable set of features. Powered by a Texas Instrument OMAP 1510 167MHz processor, the device has 64MB of ROM and RAM (55MB of which are user accessible). The handheld runs Windows Mobile 2003 Phone Edition, and the usual suspects--Pocket Outlook, Word, Excel, Internet Explorer, and Windows Media Player--are onboard. You also get a few extras, including Microsoft Reader, ClearVue Presentations, and a handful of HP utilities, such as iPaq Backup and HP Profiles for defining profiles for wireless connectivity.
Make room: The h6315 carries some weight, especially with the snap-on keyboard.
Take photos with the h6315's VGA camera, then e-mail them to your friends.
There is also a built-in VGA camera that can take pictures with a maximum resolution of 640x480 pixels. Picture quality wasn't the greatest, and you'll want to be sure there's plenty of light if you're taking indoor shots, as they come out looking dark. A nice touch: You can use the included HP Image Zone software to view and edit images and to create slide shows.
Performance of HP iPaq Pocket PC h6315
We tested the quad-band (GSM/GPRS 850/900/1800/1900) HP iPaq h6315 in the San Francisco area with T-Mobile service. Call quality was generally good, and callers said they could hear us clearly, even through the speakerphone and headset. Also, volume was quite loud, so you should be able to hold a conversation outdoors with no problem.Performance analysis written by CNET Labs project leader Dong Van Ngo.
Copyright 2004