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SmartPhoneToday > News > HP Launches Wi-Fi Enabled Smartphone, PDAs

HP Launches Wi-Fi Enabled Smartphone, PDAs

By Eric Griffith
July 26, 2004

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News on these products has leaked out for weeks thanks to gadget blogs and other sites that watch for FCC approvals and retailer site foul-ups that spill the beans. However, today they are official: Hewlett-Packard (HP) is launching a new line of iPAQ-branded personal digital assistants (PDAs) that will use several forms of wireless for communications and entertainment.

This line-up includes one of the first products to launch in the United States that will include both 802.11b-based Wi-Fi and cellular support in one. The HP iPAQ h6315 (see top image) -- launched in partnership with T-Mobile (a division of Deutsche Telekom ) -- will use GSM for global voice support, GPRS for long-range wireless data, Wi-Fi for data on local area networks (LANs), plus Bluetooth for supporting personal area communications such as a wireless voice headset.

"This is a unique offering, and a first for HP," says John Dayan, HP's senior director of handheld and wireless business. "We've partnered with T-Mobile to bring this to market, and even before, to come up with the design and branding."

T-Mobile is a long time cellular phone carrier and its Wi-Fi public hotspot business currently boasts the largest network in the United States. According to Todd Achilles, director for handset product management for T-Mobile, its European sister companies are "on a tear deploying hotspots" and he expects they'll have 10,000 hotspot locations on both continents by the end of the year. T-Mobile runs hotspots at Starbucks, Borders Books and Music, FedEx Kinkos, and other locations.

The h6315 will run the smartphone edition of the Windows Mobile 2003 operating system, which means users can't go into landscape format like other new Pocket PC products. Dayan says it will ship in the box with a case and a thumb keyboard that can be attached for easier dialing and text messaging. It will also have an integrated digital camera capable of VGA quality shots.

The operating system only allows one wireless data connection at a time, but Achilles says the switch over is seamless. For example, if a Web page is open over the GPRS link, and the user walks into a hotspot, the unit will associate with the access point (if allowed) and store an IP address in standby. Next time it needs to access the Internet, such as when a link is clicked, the h6315 will use whatever connection is faster (usually the Wi-Fi).

Using the GSM for voice while also surfing/sending data is supported, however. T-Mobile is expecting this product boost the number of customers who sign up for both, saying one-third of its hotspot users already have a T-Mobile voice account now.

The h6315 doesn't have any voice over IP component. Achilles says T-Mobile sees "that as an opportunity down the line." Third party VoIP software like Skype should run on it.

The iPAQ h6315 won't ship until August, when it will be available direct from HP, T-Mobile, and various retailers. It will sell for $599 without activation, or $499 (minus a rebate) with activation of T-Mobile's plan for cellular and hotspot service. For more details on the iPAQ h6315, visit its Hardware Information Page.

The h6315 is exclusive for T-Mobile users on the voice and GPRS side, though the Wi-Fi connectivity will work with any hotspot, home network, or corporate network where the user is allowed access.

Achilles says, "Devices like this, and the next generation to come in 2005, are really abstracting the network level away from the user. It's not just the calls, but also the billing, signing for services -- everything else associated with that. There's great things coming."

Other products have been announced overseas that combine cellular and Wi-Fi, though most won't allow simultaneous use. Companies like Motorola are expected to make some significant announcements in this area later this year.

Dayan calls the h6315 the "marquee product" but it's not alone in launching this week. HP is also launching the $650 iPAQ hx4705 as its "power performance series" -- it includes a four-inch TFT display with VGA (640x480) resolution, and can support landscape mode. It will also include Wi-Fi and Bluetooth. For more details on the iPAQ hx4705, visit its Hardware Information Page.


hx4705

HP is calling the rx3000 series "Mobile Media Companions" as they're designed to capture and share digital media such as music, videos and still photos. Using integrated Wi-Fi, the units can stream media from a source like a home PC. The rx3715 comes with extra memory and goes for $499. The less expensive (with less memory) rx3415 will be out in the fall for around $399. For more on these two handhelds, vist their Hardware Information Page.


rx3415

rx3715

The value product line includes the rz1710 for productivity and the rz1715 is a less expensive Mobile Media Companion with a different start-up screen interface for faster access. Both are priced starting at $279. Neither support any native wireless features but have expansion slots to add it via third parties. For more on these handhelds, visit their Hardware Information Page.


rz1715



Related Links:

  • iPAQ h6315 Hardware Information Page
  • iPAQ hx4705 Hardware Information Page
  • rx3715 & rx3415 Hardware Information Page
  • rz1710 & rz1715 Hardware Information Page
  • Discuss New iPAQs

     
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