Monday, July 5, 2010

Pocket PC Mobile



The Pocket PC is a hand-held device that enables users to store and recover e-mail, contacts, appointments, tasks, play multimedia, files, games, switch over text messages with Google, Google Earth, Windows Live Messenger , browse the web and more.

The Pocket PC is a development from exceeding calculator-sized computers. Keystroke-programmable calculators which could do trouble-free business and scientific applications were existing by the 1970s. In 1982, Hewlett Packard's HP-75 integrated a 1-line text display, an alphanumeric keyboard, BASIC language and some fundamental PDA capabilities. The HP 95LX and HP 200Lx series crammed a PC-compatible DOS computer with graphics display and QWERTY keyboard into a palmtop format. The Omigo 100 used a pen and graphics interface on dDOS, but was not extensively sold in the United States. The HP 300XL built a palmtop computer on the Windows CE operating system, but not until the appearance factor and features of the Palm platform were modified that it was named the Pocket PC, after the Pocket-Rocket.

From a technical standpoint, "Pocket PC" is a Microsoft condition that sets various hardware and software necessities for mobile devices bearing the "Pocket PC" label.
Such as, any device which is to be confidential as a Pocket PC must : 

·Run Microsoft's Windows Mobile, Pocket PC version.
·Come bundled with a definite suite of applications in ROM.
Note: the name Windows Mobile includes both the Windows CE operating system and a suite of fundamental applications along with a precise user interface


· Consist of a touch screen.
· Consist of a directional pad or touchpad.
· Consist of a set of hardware application buttons.
· Be founded on an ARM version 4 companionable CPU, Intel XScale CPU,  MIPS CPU or SH3 CPU. As of the Pocket PC 2002 version, ARM-based CPUs are requisite.

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