- Color Pocket PC with 64 MB of RAM with Microsoft’s Pocket PC 2002 operating
- Built-in CompactFlash slot lets you add memory, accessories
- Vibrant 16-bit color display provides clear view indoors and out
- Store and edit data, browse the Internet, check e-mail with powerful Pocket PC applications
- What’s in the box: Jornada 568, Stylus, rechargeable lithium-polymer battery, CR-2032 backup battery, AC adapter, USB cradle, Jornada Quick Start Guide, Documentation pack, Pocket PC Companion CD
Product Description
Meetings, appointments, projects, and deadlines – sometimes it is hard to keep it all together. Organizing is not the issue – it is about doing more on the go. The HP Jornada 560 series color personal digital assistant has everything you need to gracefully juggle the details, and have fun doing it.The vibrant, reflective, 16-bit color display gives you a clear view indoors and out. Now you can work longer with up to 14 hours of battery life from the standard removab… More >>
Hewlett Packard Jornada 568 Pocket PC

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The original HP Jornada Pocket PC’s were easily outclassed by Compaq and Casio’s models, but HP’s engineers have redeemed themselves- and surpassed the competition- with the new Pocket PC 2002 versions: the Jornada 565 and 568. (The only difference between the two is RAM, with the 568 having 64Mb to the 565′s 32Mb.)
These new models have the superior display and speed of the competitors products, but easily top the Compaq with built-in CF card expansion and replaceable, rechargable batteries that have longer life spans than the iPAQ. The included flip-up cover is also a plus and makes the Jornada the lightest weight and slimmest Pocket PC available with both screen protection and CF expansion built-in.
HP also thoughtfully provided a way for users to store up to 8Mb of data or programs in the secure FlashROM, assuring the security of vital material.
Besides the Microsoft Pocket PC software suite, HP’s bundled software includes Code Wallet Pro and the versitile OmniSolve calculator as well as HP’s own image viewer. This viewer is the best I’ve tried on any Pocket PC. My favorite bundled program though has to be Mobile Conversay. This easy-to-use program allows you to talk to your Jornada and receive spoken responses. Mobile Conversay will read your calendar to you, tell you the date and time, check your battery life, start and stop programs and more.
The Jornada 565/568 are easily the top of the new crop of Pocket PC’s.
Rating: 5 / 5
Although the new iPaqs are sure to generate a lot of hype, HP is hoping they can gather a much larger share of the Pocket PC market with the new Jornada 560 family.
Size:
The Jornada 560 is about the same size as the 540 and 520, slightly less wide but the same height. The BIG change is in the weight – my old Jornada 548 weighed 9.1 ounces, and the 565/567 weighs 3 ounces less at 6.1 ounces. It doesn’t sound like much, but this device doesn’t try to pull my Dockers down like the old one did! The difference in size is obviously due to the new 3.5″ display, which seems to make the screen a bit sharper than its larger competitor, the iPaq.
I love the screen cover on the Jornada 560 series – you don’t need to have a separate carrying case for the device! With my iPaq, I needed a carrying case to protect the screen. With the Jornada, I can close the cover and jam it into my pocket without worrying about scratching the display. HP devices always feel like they’re well built, and the Jornada 560 is no exception.
The Jornada feels very good in the hand. I like the rubberized sides of the device, as I feel like I always have a good grip on it. When I was taking my iPaq with me to work every day on the light rail, I was always feeling like I was going to have it slip out of my hand onto the floor. It was also wider and wasn’t as easy to hold. With the CF sleeve on it (hey, I always have to have my eBooks and music!) the iPaq was also much thicker and heavier.
Functionality:
The 560 series uses a new display that’s smaller than that used in the previous generation of Pocket PCs, measuring up at 3.5 inches diagonally instead of 3.8 inches. This reflective TFT display is also much clearer and well defined due to a .216 dot pitch – the older displays had a .24 dot pitch. With Microsoft ClearType and the Jornada display, everything’s easy to read. Outside, this display is even sharper than the iPaq’s.
I’ve gone for many days using the device with backlight a lot, and still have had battery power to spare. The 560 has a replaceable lithium polymer battery pack, so you can have several charged packs on hand. There’s a backup battery stored in a tiny slot on the side of the device, so if your battery DOES happen to croak, you won’t lose all your data.
HP will soon be shipping an extended life battery pack that will be a bit thicker, but doubles the estimated battery life to 28 hours! In January of 2002, HP should ship a battery pack with a built-in MMC memory slot. This means that you could pop an MMC card into the battery pack to store data and still have a wide-open CF slot.
There’s one nice feature in the 560 called “HP Safe Store”. It’s an 8 MB ROM area that allows users to install applications, store documents and make emergency backups of their data. If the battery dies and the Jornada RAM is erased, this data remains intact! I’ve installed critical apps into this area, saving my system memory and CF card space for more important data.
Expandability:
IPaq users love to point out that HP Jornada Pocket PCs don’t support Compact Flash Type II cards – only Type I. This limits the Jornada, since you can’t use the IBM Microdrive for mass storage, or use some of the 802.11b wireless cards that have hit the market. However, Socket Communications’ 802.11b card DOES work in the Type I slot of the Jornada 560 series.
If you’re considering an iPaq so you can have extra expandability, don’t – HP will provide more expansion options soon! In December 2001, you can buy a PC Card Adapter, an extended battery pack with SD/MMC slot and a mini-thumb pocket keyboard. These expansion options will clip into the battery compartment or will use a sleeve (like the iPaq).
Value:
HP provides a lot for the price. The Jornada 568 is very compact, there is a wonderfully clear color display, you have the HP Safe Store ROM, and removable lithium polymer battery packs so I feel that the Jornada 560 series is well worth the cost. I’ve had people gasp at the price of most Pocket PCs, but when I show them that this device is really a contender to replace a laptop PC they seem to think that it is a bargain.
Conclusion:
My overall feelings about the HP Jornada 560 Series Pocket PC can be summed up as follows:
· It’s extremely easy to carry in all situations and very well built
· It has very few flaws, other than the speaker pop that will most likely be fixed with a ROM patch
· The added applications are very useful and even a bit fun!
· The 206 MHz StrongARM CPU, the new Pocket PC 2002 OS, and the sharp reflective TFT display make for a fast and very usable Pocket PC
Ever since my first HP calculator back in the late 1970s, I’ve had a love affair with HP devices. They are always a little bit pricey, but are very well built. The Jornada 560 series is no exception to this long history, and I think that it’ll be able to make some serious inroads to the current domination of the Pocket PC market by the Compaq iPaq. I do wish that HP would lower the price about $100 – that would seal the fate of the iPaq. If you don’t have any Type II Compact Flash cards and want a fast, expandable, and very pocketable PDA, the Jornada 560 is the way to go.
Rating: 5 / 5
I bought my HP Jornada 568 on February 1, and waited more than two months in order to write a review not guided by the emotion of having such an wonderful invention the firsts days, but by the funcionality of the device. And I must tell that it is extremely useful.
The display is excellent, as with everything on this pocket PC. It works very fast even when almost every application is open; the design is so slim and light that is a pleasure to carry your Jornada everywhere; I think that is one of the most elegant designs in the market also.
The sound, with headphones, is excellent for music, even when it is obvious that listening through the tiny built-in speaker is not the best way to get the best sound quality.
The navigation through the internet is very good, but you must be aware that the effect in some pages is like if you were passing a magnifying glass over a book’s page, because most of the internet pages do not exactly “fit to screen” (this also happens with large Excel files or complex Word documents), but even with that detail that is not inherent to the Jornada but to all Pocket PC’s, is very useful and clear, because you can increase the size of the text in the page in order to a comfortable reading.
If you also plan to receive e-mail in your Pocket PC, the new operative system allows to receive HTML direct from the Internet, because it converts it to text format automatically, and that was a mayor flaw of the preceding OS.
The Word and Excel documents can be edited or created with easiness, given the multiple input choices the OS has to offer.
I highly recommend a Compact Flash Card of at least 128MB. This is not only for file storage, but to install the programs of your Jornada within the Storage Card and leting almost all the RAM for the applications preinstalled so you can get your device to run extra fast. The only flaw with this is that if you are using a CompactModem or CompactLAN in order to connect to the Internet, the programs that are installed in the CF card will not be available at the moment of navigation because the expansion slot will be already in use.
If you never had owned a Pocket PC, another recomendation is the Pocket PC Handbook, by Dan Hanttula. It is more than worth the price.
Overall, if you are planning to buy a Pocket PC and are not sure about which one to chose, do not hesitate anymore and pick the HP Jornada 568. You will be more than pleased and surely will write a review from your Pocket PC.
Accesories I own and recomend: Targus Stowaway Keyboard, Targus PDA/Keyboard Combo Case (Leather) (only if you use the keyboard very often), Viking CF card 128MB, Pretec’s CompactModem and CompactLan (the Support Service from Pretec is superb) and the Pocket PC Handbook, by Hanttula.
Rating: 5 / 5
I love my Jornada 568! HP did just about everything right when designing the 560 series. I especially appreciate the flip-top, which protects your screen from scratches from car keys, pens, and other sharp objects in your pocket or purse. And HP’s customer service was, for me, wonderful. (I don’t hear many compliments for Compac’s customer support crew. Read some the comments for the iPaq.)
Unfortunately, with the HP-Compac merger, the powers running the show decided to discontinue the HP line of PDAs after this year. What a loss.
My two minor gripes with the 568: compact flash slot doesn’t support Type II (but you can easily remedy that by buying the CF Pocket 560 expansion sleeve), and I had the screen dust problem with my original 568 (production problem where dust gets behind the screen; annoying with dark backgrounds when the dust “lights up” like tiny stars on the screen). HP sent me a replacement 568, no questions asked. No problems with the newer unit.
Bottom line: If you’re looking to buy a Pocket PC 2002 PDA, buy the Jornada 568 — while you still can!
Rating: 5 / 5
This device will end the iPaq’s top spot for Pocket PC’s. This is smaller, and feels great in your hand..Nice rubberized grips around the edges. Protective cover makes it a breeze to pop into your shirt pocket or trousers. Removable/swappable battery allows for extended life away from your cradle. I can go on and on. Having owned the ipaq and Palm devices, I can say this is surely the best device on the market HP did it right.
Rating: 5 / 5
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