Gadget Report 
                September 23rd, 2004 
                    proudly presented by 
                         PC World 
             Technology Advice You Can Trust 
             http://pcwnl.pcworld.com/t/229007/21421684/1/0/ 
 
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Electronics made fun again. Reports on the hottest new gadgets, 
including the latest high-tech products making their way from Japan. 
 
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September 23rd, 2004 
 
PDA Pundit: HP Trades Taps for Touches 

Sr. Editor Yardena Arar 

In the notebook PC realm, there have long been two camps on the issue 
of input devices: Those who prefer the joysticks made famous by IBM's 
ThinkPads, and those who like touchpads. People tend to have strong 
opinions on the matter. Buying decisions can hinge on whether a 
product has the customer's favorite input technology. This is one 
reason why Dell and IBM put both devices on some of their notebooks; 
they don't want to lose any customers because of their input choice. 

For people like myself, the debate is moot: I don't much like either, 
so I pack an optical mouse whenever I travel with my notebook. Even on 
a plane I usually find someplace to use the mouse--often my lap. 

But I digress. Somebody at Hewlett-Packard must believe that users of 
handhelds would also like input options beyond a stylus or, in some 
products, a jog wheel. Hence we have the IPaq Hx4700 series of Windows 
Mobile 2003-based Pocket PCs, which sport a touchpad in place of the 
navigation button on most IPaqs. 

The Tiniest Touchpad 

I have to admit, the notion of a touchpad on a PDA struck me as 
strange--and my first experiments with a shipping IPaq Hx4705 did 
little to change that perception. 

I should first describe the touchpad. Trapezoidal in shape, it 
occupies the central inch or so at the bottom of the 
charcoal-gray-and-black PDA. The touchpad's matte surface is 
punctuated by four slightly raised points--called Tap Zones--laid out 
in a diamond measuring about 0.75 inch wide by 0.25 inch high. 

Surrounding the touchpad is a larger and wider shiny black trapezoid 
with tiny white icons at each corner. If you press these icons, you 
feel a button click underneath the surface: These are the Hx4705's 
version of the application launch buttons on more traditional PDAs. 
While you can program these buttons for a variety of tasks, by default 
they launch (going clockwise from the lower left) the calendar, the 
contact list, the e-mail application, and ITask, a custom menu that 
affords quick access to frequently used applications. 

The Hx4705's installation CD includes a Macromedia Flash tutorial by 
Synaptics, and it's a good idea to take advantage of it. (HP partnered 
with Synaptics, a major touchpad technology company, to create the 
Hx4705.) Trying to use the touchpad otherwise left me puzzled; I 
couldn't figure out what effect my clumsy attempts to navigate would 
produce. 

>From the tutorial, I learned that the touchpad operates in two modes. 
Its default is a navigation mode in which you are supposed to scroll 
around by tapping or swiping the touchpad. For me, this was an 
exercise in frustration. Sometimes I got where I was trying to go, 
other times not. 

A Cursor for a Handheld 

I had more luck with the touchpad's cursor mode, which produces a 
small cursor on screen. For starters, the cursor always let me know 
where I was on the screen, and it generally behaved like a cursor on a 
notebook with a touchpad. When I swiped, the cursor moved; when I 
tapped, it highlighted and selected a menu item or icon. 

But the cursor mode ultimately proved frustrating. It reminded me of 
why I don't like touchpads on notebooks: They don't always produce the 
desired results, and I don't like the constant friction of fingertip 
on touchpad. 

Another annoyance: Switching between navigation and cursor mode is by 
no means intuitive. You can go into the Programs menu to toggle a 
NavPointMode icon, program one of the application buttons to do the 
same, or go into the Settings menu to choose the mode from a screen 
that also lets you customize such attributes as lightness of touch and 
how much scrolling happens in a finger swipe. 

Of course, the whole touchpad concept loses a lot of appeal once you 
need to do anything that requires using the stylus. Since you 
instinctively want to use the touchpad with your writing hand, you 
wind up juggling the stylus (and possibly dropping it) when you could 
just as easily be using it to navigate faster and more efficiently. 

A Fatal Flaw? 

In many respects, the Hx4705 is a fine PDA. Its built-in Wi-Fi adapter 
was easy to set up; and the Bluetooth adapter looked to be equally 
user-friendly, although I didn't try it. Other hardware specs are also 
impressive, including both Secure Digital and Compact Flash slots; 
Intel's 624-MHz Bulverde processor for handhelds (the fastest 
available); and a roomy 4-inch LCD that you can easily toggle between 
landscape and portrait modes. The unit I tested had 128MB of ROM and 
92MB of SD-RAM (135MB of the combined memory is available to users). 

The business-oriented software bundle, which includes several trial 
versions, should delight corporate customers. (Since PC World is 
standardized on Lotus Notes, I was happy to see CommonTime's Cadenza 
MNotes synchronization software--more on that in another column.) 

But at $649, the Hx4705 commands top dollar for a handheld. And even 
diehard touchpad fans might balk at paying such a premium to get their 
favorite technology on this type of device. For the latest prices, 
check the PC World Product Finder: 
http://pcwnl.pcworld.com/t/229007/21421684/755341/0/ 

I'd save my PDA big bucks for something more useful, such as HP's IPaq 
H6315, which delivers a phone, a camera, and a snap-on keyboard as 
well as Wi-Fi and Bluetooth connectivity--and works just fine with a 
simple stylus. For my review of the H6315, read "HP's Thrice-Wireless 
PDA": 
http://pcwnl.pcworld.com/t/229007/21421684/755342/0/ 

Have a question or comment? Write to Yardena Arar: 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Read Yardena Arar's regularly published "PDA Pundit" columns: 
http://pcwnl.pcworld.com/t/229007/21421684/364622/0/ 

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