| Mobile phone based communications with the HP Palmtop |
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How to connect your HP 200LX (or similar models) to a mobile
phone for Internet access, sending fax, sending SMS or exchanging other data
Please note: This article is about 10 years old. It does not reflect the state of the art in mobile communication technologies anymore. Especially the section about the different mobile phones is outdated.
Contents of this page:
Introduction:If you want to go online with your palmtop (HP 100LX, 200LX, 1000CX; the 700LX has this capability built-in, so this page is not relevant to the 700LX) using a mobile telephone network, you need a cellular phone. There are also PCMCIA cards that have a GSM modem built-in, e.g. the Nokia Card Phone), but as far as I know, all these cards don´t work in the palmtop, because they draw too much power from the PCMCIA slot (maximum is 150mA). Note that these cards are ´phones´ by themselves - I don´t speak about the cards that build a connection to a mobile phone. These cards may work - see below!Now you have to decide, which cellular phone you´ll buy - nowadays
there are lots of possibilities.
All these possibilities have advantages and disadvantages: 1. Older phones often are only capable to connect to a computer via
PCMCIA
cards. These cards are expensive, and you have to sacrifice the only
PCMCIA
port of the palmtop. So you can´t use a memory or another PCMCIA
card simultanously. Also you have to be SURE, that the PCMCIA card for
the phone doesn´t draw too much power from the palmtop: 150 mA is
the maximum. So don´t try to use a card that´s more power hungry,
it could destroy your palmtop! Also make sure that it´s possible
to talk to the data card as to a standard modem (that is, with the Hayes
AT commands), otherwise all the standard communication software will have
trouble!
2. A serial cable connection is a very reliable connection, but
the phone has to have a serial data port. Also you have to buy a data cable
(most of them are pretty expensive) and use the HP connectivity cable,
a null modem adapter and this data cable; all three in series. This combo
would be quite bulky.
3. If you want to connect the phone and the palmtop via Infrared, be aware that that there exist two very bad problems:
For the second problem, there is unfortunately no soultion by now. You have to live with it and try to find work-arounds. See the list of phones below to see how bad a phone causes this problem and how it may be avoided. If you want to learn more about this problem, and maybe even can help to solve it, please see my EMI problem page! In general, every phone causes this problem when it is used with the LX via IR. Some phones produce less interference, some more. Make sure your cellular network provider allows data calls! Maybe you have to ask them to provide this service to you, maybe you even have to pay for it. I recommend that you make this clear before you decide which phone to buy, because maybe you want to change your network provider when you see that you have to pay too much money for data calls. :-) Note that as far as I know all WAP capable phones have a built-in modem, so if you have a phone that´s WAP capable, it´s quite sure that you can use it as a modem. It only depends on if the modem is usable from out of the phone - either via serial cable or via IR. By the way: For those who have had troubles with Windows 98 and IrDA because of these strange "virtual" devices Windows 98 sets up, please read my IrDA page! Short phone overviewTo give you a first idea which phone brand may be suitable for your needs, I give you a short overview here with the most important features and drawbacks of the three biggest phone brands: Nokia, Siemens and Ericsson. This overview is only relevant to newer phones, not for phones which are older than approximately two years. This is due to the technical improvements which come with time. For more detailled information please read the big phone list below.
List of phones and their features:Please note that I don´t have any interest in advertising for one of the companies whose phones I describe. The following list is intended to be as unbiased as possible, describing advantages and disadvantages of each phone. Since I rely on reports of users whose experiences I publish here, there may be errors in the following list. But these errors don´t have anything to do with my private opinion or interests. The same is true for the software I describe. I myself use only the Siemens S35i and D&A Software´s ´WWW/LX´.
Siemens phones:General notes:Siemens phones are generally (in my opinion) very well designed phones, the menu structure is easy to understand and they are customizeable, so that often used functions are easily accessable and only the less often ones are hidden inside the complex menu structures. However, one drawback applies to all Siemens phones: They have a low-power IrDA interface. That saves battery life of course, but it makes IrDA connections for Internet access with the 200LX almost impossible. It may work for some specific combinations and situations, but usually you have more problems than you want to have. Thus, if you want to use WWW/LX with your phone and use IrDA rather than a data cable, I cannot recommend you to buy a Siemens phone.
IrDA port, wired port, no WAP, data connection speed limited to 9600 bps. My self-made data cable works without any problem. The baud rate of
the S25's wired port is fixed to 19200.
wired port, WAP, no IrDA port, connection speed limited to 9600 bps More information here. Comments: Works without problems with my self-made data cable (tested)
and any communication software.
IrDA port, wired port, WAP, connection speed limited to 9600 bps More information here. Comments: My self-made data cable works without any
problem. The best IR-eye-to-eye-distance for IrDA communication is abt.
18-20 cm says Günther, who bought this phone in May 2000. He
also says, when he wraps the S35i with aluminium foil (and leaves a hole
for the IR, of course), he can even establish an internet connection without
any EMI errors. However, I still get errors with aluminium foil.
The baud rate of the S35i's wired port is fixed to 19200.
IrDA port, wired port, WAP, supports HSCSD up to 57600 bps More information here. Comments: Nothing known about compatibility to the 200LX, since no one has tested it by now.
IrDA port, wired port, WAP, MP3-Player, connection speed limited to 9600 bps (no HSCSD, no GPRS) More information here. Comments: Nothing known about compatibility to the 200LX, since no one has tested it by now.
IrDA port, wired port, WAP, GPRS More information here. Comments: Nothing known about compatibility to the 200LX, since no one has tested it by now.
Ericsson phones:For older Ericsson phones (e.g. the T28s) there exist IrDA dongles. One user reported that such a dongle worked in combination with the CF788 phone and the Palmtop. I don´t know if these older phones have the possibility to attach a data cable, but since the IrDA dongle has to be connected somewhere to the telephone, I think they have. And in this case the question remains, if such a dongle would be a real advantage compared to a data cable.... For use with the palmtop it wouldn´t, I think. But on the other side some of the Ericsson phones use the IrDA protocol also over the wired port. The only software that would be able to use these IrDA-speaking Ericsson phones at all (either over cable or over IR) would be the WWW/LX suite by D&A Software, since this is the only software which is able to use the IrDA protocol (even via the data cable, set the parameters port=-1 and IR=0 in this case in the www.cfg).
IrDA port, WAP, I don´t know about wired port and connection speed limit More information here Comments: works via IR with the LX. Not extensively tested yet, but
I´ll soon provide more information
The phones only differ in their look and the I888 uses 900 MHz and 1900 MHz, the SH888 uses 900 MHz and 1800 MHz. So they should work exactly identically in combination with the palmtop. These phones are known to use the IrDA protocol through the wired port. IrDA port, wired port (speaks IrDA!!, comment see above), no WAP, connection limited to 9600 baud. More information here. Comments: This phone is reported to work well with the palmtop via IrDA.
But be aware that this phone is a quite old one, so its features are probably
not up-to-date anymore. The best IR-eye-to-eye distance is reported to
be about 30 cm. Another user reported that 10-15 cm is a good distance.
IrDA port, WAP 1.2.1, Bluetooth, HSCSD, GPRS, triband, voice record, and it is very small! More information here The T39m and the T68 are basically the same, only the design is different. But technically and from the palmtop point of view, they are identical. This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it reports: The T39m has the size of a credit card+arial and weights 86 gram. I have used it for a couple of days and I must say that I am impressed. The supplied battery (which uses the new LiPolymer technology) has a standby time of max. 300 hours. The special big battery has a standby time of 700 hours! Regarding the EMI problem: I have tested with Ring.com. If I have the HPLX and the T39m about 5cm apart I get disturbances. Abive that I get no disturbance at all!
I have got HSCSD to work with the AT string ATZ+cbst=0,0,1;+chsn=4,2,0,12 with 38400 baud. Nokia phones:General note: The Nokia phones´ IrDA ports have in general a very much larger working range than the IrDA ports made by Siemens. So you can work around the EMI problem here by keeping a distance of abt. 30 cm between the IrDA port of the phone and the infrared port of the palmtop.
No serial port, only usable as a modem with optional PCMCIA card or with a GSM-Nota cable More information here (6110). More information here (6150). All phones of the Nokia 61xx-series don´t work on a direct way with the LX as a modem, because they don´t have a built-in modem. Some models (I think all non-US models) have an IR port, but this is only for data exchange between phones or for use with a Windows-Software. So none of these phones works as a modem for the LX! You can use (some of?) them as a modem for a Windows machine, if you use the Windows software modem called "Nokia cellular data suite". There´s no chance to make this work on the LX via infrared! But there are two ways to to use the Nokia 6110 or 6150 as a modem: One solution is to use an optional PCMCIA card. There is a manufacturer called OPTION who makes such PCMCIA cards. There are probably other manufacturers, too. One person reported success using an OPTION card with a Nokia 6110 as a modem for the HP LX. If you have questions about this OPTION PCMCIA card and how to make it work with the HP Palmtops please contact This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . The other solution is the "GSM-Nota" cable. A user reports: "I use my Nokia 6110 with my HP200LX with the aid of something called a GSM-Nota cable. It's basically a cable with a small battery powered matchbox sized adapter box stuck in the middle of it. One end plugs into the phone and the other plugs into the serial port of the HP. They're very popular in the Psion world and usually are sold with a Psion compatible serial connector on the end. I discovered that the company that makes them also makes them with a standard 9 pin serial connection which I then connect it to the HP using the Connectivity cable and the null-modem adaptor. The cable then makes the Nokia respond to standard Hayes-AT commands. It works for SMS messaging (Stefan Peichl has incorporated compatibility for the GSM-Nota into PDU.COM at my request), address book and for data. It is a superb solution for those of us stuck with the Nokia 61xx series. You can find out more about the GSM-Nota at http://www.idware.fr and http://www.exportech.co.uk (the guys I bought mine from)." If you have further question about the GSM-Nota cable please contact This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . IrDA port, wired port, WAP, connection speed up to 14.400 bps, with HSCSD up to 43.200 bps More information here. Comments from a user:
regarding HSCSD, please have a look at the HSCSD section.
IrDA port, wired port?, WAP 1.2.1, GPRS, HSCSD and Bluetooth More information here. Comments: Works at least via IrDA with the 200LX and WWW/LX for GSM and HSCSD
Internet connections.
IrDA port, wired port?, WAP 1.2.1, GPRS, HSCSD and FM Radio More information here. Comments: Works at least via IrDA with the 200LX and WWW/LX for GSM and HSCSD
Internet connections.
GPRS not tested yet.
IrDA port, wired port, WAP, provides data connection speed of up to 14400 bps (depends on network provider if it´s usable or not) More information here. Comments: Tested via IrDA with WWW/LX. The optional data cable is called
´DLR-3´ but was not tested yet.
IrDA port, wired port is also present (under the battery), no WAP, data connection speed is limited to 14400 bps (depends on network provider) More information here. Comments: Read the comments of Nokia 8810!
For further questions please contact
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.
IrDA port, no wired port, no WAP, data connection speed limited to 38400 bps (says the prospect - but which network does support that?? ) More information here. You have to switch the 8810 off and on again after an IrDA online run,
because the software (V. 4.05) has a bug. I don´t know if this bug
is removed in newer software versions. If you don´t do this ´reboot´,
the next IrDA online run won´t work properly.
IrDA port, I don´t know about wired port, no WAP, data connection speed limited to 9600 bps More information here. Comments: Not tested yet, but should work just as the other newer Nokia
phones.
wired port or PCMCIA card necessary, no WAP of course, no other ports, connection speed limit 9600 baud. Sorry, I didn´t find any URL providing more info about this phone! Comments: Tested with WWW/LX. No problems known. For further questions
please contact
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.
Motorola phones:
wired port, no IrDA, no WAP, don´t know about connection speed limit Comments: works with HP connectivity cable, null modem adapter (either
HP or Motorola) and Motorola´s data cable which comes with a whole
kit which includes Windows software and a manual. But for the LX you only
need the data cable from this kit.
wired serial port, IrDA? There are more than one Motorola phone which are called "timeport". I don't know anything about them, but if you can provide informations, please don't hesitate to do so. For further questions you can contact
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
and/or
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.
works with AAPEX Data ClipperCom World V.34 data fax 33.6 PC card modem. This modem is a PCMCIA card modem that combines a normal landline 33.6 modem with a cellular modem. You have to make a special cable in order to get both to work together. If you have forther questions about this combo, please email This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . Sagem phones:General information (by This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it ):
Wired port, communication speed limit: 9600 (GSM), serial port spped with PC adjustable from 2400 to 19200 bps, using a tuning software up to 38400 bps. Supports V.110 (ISDN). WAP browser in MW series. Before you start communicate with the modem, you must press C on the phone, because the modem goes into sleep mode after a few seconds of inactivity. If you have further questions about Sagem phones, please contact Radek Svagr other phones
wired port, no IrDA No URL found. Try www.bosch.de Comments: Tested with WWW/LX and ACCIS4. No problems known. If
you have further questions, please contact
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Comments: The proprietary fax/data transfer kit (79.99 US$, according to a zdnet review) is needed,
it contains a cable with a box in the middle. This box contains the electronics and an
additional phone port, which you can probably connect the charger or a headset to, even
while using the data cable. For the connection to the palmtop you need the HP connectivity cable
and an additional null modem adapter (see my HPLX RS232 page) CDPD modems and phones:The following info has been provided by Bruce M. (an HPLX mailinglist member): CDPD devices which are known to work with the HP 200LX:
About the CDPD service:
CDPD exists since about 1996 in the US. The service uses the same frequency as the analog cell phone system
called AMPS that was the first and is the most widely deployed cellular system in the US.
Rather than using an analog telephone to dial in to an ISP, however, when a CDPD modem is activated,
it joins the network much as an 802.11 wireless modem would join a wireless LAN. But the speed
is much lower, with a theoretical bidirectional throughput of 19.2kb/s (typically more like 9.6kb/s in
practice), and the first-hop round-trip latency is typically between 0.5s and 1.5s.
The two biggest CDPD networks in the US belong to Verizon and AT&T. Verizon covers nearly the entire
northeastern part of the US. If you can provide more information that is relevant here, please drop me an email with as much of information as you can provide! I´ll then publish it here. It was great if you allowed me to publish even your email address as I did it above with some email addresses of phone users. Test with different phones connected to the HP 200LX:Here you can see a posting of Jaques Belin to the HPLX mailing list. He tested several phones with the HP 200LX using different pieces of software. This is a very good review, especially if you are planning to buy a new mobile phone and if you know what software you will use.Read the review (ASCII text file) How to send and receive SMS with the Palmtop:You can not only use the cellular phone as a modem, but you can also write your SMS on the palmtop and then send it with the phone and use the palmtop as a huge archive of received SMSs. Stefan Peichl and Tony Hutchins cooperated in developing PostPDU, which is a plugin for Post/LX for very convenient SMS handling. It is based on Stefan Peichl´s PDU.COM, which converts text messages to a format the phone can handle. PDU.COM can also be used as a stand-alone program if you use a data cable. If you use IrDA, you have to use WWW/LX with Post/LX (and preferably also Post/PDU).PostPDU even supports splitting large messages up into more smaller ones (max. 160 characters) and it supports mass SMS, i.e. you can give multiple telephone numbers in the To: field and the SMS is send to all these numbers. The clue: You don´t even need a registered version of WWW/LX to use Post/PDU. Since the demo version of WWW/LX is limited to 16kB data transmission per session, and since SMS does not need much of that, you can easily send and receive many SMSs per session (exact amount not known, but I estimate it to be abt. 40 SMSs per session)! For download of the needed components, click here. You need the packages WWW/LX, Post/LX, Robot/LX and PostPDU. Nokia´s built-in SMS editorThanks to Niels Keetlaer from Holland for this tip:
By my information all Nokia phones do have a build-in sms-editor. (I mean, not the editor one can use to enter messages from the phone, but an editor which can be reached when a serial link is established). I have only tested this with my 2110 which came with my 700lx for I do not have [access to] any other 'wired' Nokia phone. It is faily easy to access this editor. First you need to setup the physical link (doh) by dock the nokia into your 700lx or plug in a cable or use it's infrared capabilities if possible. Open this connection, you can use any terminal(program) as long it's euhm.. well normal [and can handle serial links]. Usually you will gain access to the modem (you might be accessing via a modem card, like I do with my 700lx) and can give the usual AT commands. There is an AT command to enter the SMS-editor, which is AT*C. Now the phone will go into an SMS-editor and will no longer accept any AT commands until you exit the editor. You can get help by entering HELP (how suprising). EXIT exits (suprised?). I don't know much more for I have never really used this. [the build in app in my 700lx is way easier to use...] Nice thing to know when using the 700lx: You can connect to the modem, even when the phone is turned off. You can try stuff, eg. ATDT(phone number) which results in a NO CARRIER. Unknown commands will result in 'ERROR', and so will AT*C when the phone is turned off. You really have to turn on the phone (and wait a little while) before the AT*C command works. How to send faxes with your palmtopIn general, it is not possble at all to send a fax via infrared. This is because WWW/LX and IR.EXE are the only programs which support the IrDA protocol, and no fax software can interoperate with WWW/LX or IR.EXE. This implies also that you cannot use these strange Ericsson phones which use the IrDA protocol even on the wired port.So you only can send faxes written on the palmtop with your mobile phone, if you have a data cable. (Exception: There are SMS to fax gateways available, so you can send an SMS to a special gateway number, the gateway converts your SMS into a fax and forwards it to the fax machine you have addressed in your SMS. Ask your cellphone service provider for the correct gateway number and be aware that your faxes will be limited to about 150 characters!) Once you have a working palmtop - data cable - mobile phone connection (test with a terminal emulation, send an AT and look if you get back an OK), you can begin to set up a fax program on your palmtop. I recommend bgfax in conjuction with 2bgfax, which enables you to add a hand-written signature to your fax. If you want a simpler setup, you can use qfax. Or you use my special setup: I have a combination of 2bgfax and qfax running on my palmtop, controlled by a single batch file "lxfax.bat". This combination lets me simply call "lxfax filename", then opens a text editor with a fax template (sender information, receiver information, fax header, signature). I can then write the fax text, close the text editor saving the file, lxfax calls 2bgfax to convert the text file to a fax file and then calls qfax, which sends the fax. Here is my lxfax.bat file: @echo off REM LXFAX.BAT written by Daniel Hertrich 08-31-00 set faxpath=c:\fax if not "%faxpath%"=="c:\fax" then goto error if "%1"=="" goto error c: cd %faxpath% copy templ1.fxt %1.txt :editfax pe %1.txt 2fax %1.txt 000new.fax view /cga /p26 /A4 /MO 000new.fax choice /c:se Send fax or Edit once more if errorlevel 2 goto editfax setcom1 6nw echo. echo Next choose 000new.fax as file to be faxed, enter fax number and echo choose "FAX" as file type! Then "SEND". echo. pause %faxpath%\qfax setcom1 o move %1.txt sent /-Y move 000new.fax sent\%1.fax /-Y goto end :error echo ERROR!!! :endAs you see, you need the additional utility "setcom1" by Stefan Peichl. This is needed to set the COM port parameters to the correct values in order to let qfax talk to your phone. Which setcom1 parameters you really need depends on your phone, the "setcom1 6nw" works for the Siemens phones (19200 baud, n81). The second call of setcom1 switches the COM port off again. Here PE.EXE is used as the text editor. You need the following files out of the bgfax, 2bgfax and qfax packages (bgfax and 2bgfax can be found on www.hp200lx.net (search "bgfax"), qfax is available for download here (be sure to download the palmtop version!. 2fax.cnf 2fax.exe 2fax.fnt qfax.cfg qfax.exe qfaxconf.exe qfrec.exe (if you want to receive faxes) reg.dat view.exeThrow these files into the directory c:\fax (if you want to use another path than I used, you only have to adjust lines 3, 4 and maybe 6 (drive) of the above mentioned lxfax.bat file), create a subdirectory c:\fax\sent, there all sent faxes will go, and edit qfax.cfg. CommPort and InitString have to be set there. CommPort must be 1 and InitString is set to AT&F&C1&D2 here, which works for the Siemens S35i. Also create a file templ1.fxt which holds your fax template. Mine looks like this:
FROM: Daniel Hertrich Address line 1
Address line 2
GERMANY
Phone number
Fax numer
Email
TO: [Receiver]
SUBJECT: [Subject]
_____________________________________________________________________________________
Dear Sir or Madam,
[here goes the text]
Kind regards
.INCLUDE:0,sign.pcx
Daniel Hertrich
The .INCLUDE command tells 2fax to insert the sign.pcx file here, which holds my hand-written signature
as a black-and-white pcx graphic.The template file and the pcx also have to be in the c:\fax directory.
Well, having all that prepared, I can now, whereever I am in DOS,
Security update: Added 08-sept-2001:In order to protect this fax setup against abuse (your signature PCX file could be the key for criminals to get access to all your money!), you can put the signature PCX files on an encrypted drive, which you can create for example with "Secure Device".Say, your signature file now is on the encrypted drive F:. You have to change the following things of your fax setup:
How to synchronize a mobile phone with the HPLX (phone book, organizer etc.)The phone book / contacts / vcardThere are several ways to send phone book entries or even the whole phone book from your phone to the LX or vice versa.In general, you can use every terminal emulation to do that, because the exchange of phone book entries can be controlled by AT commands. Lists of AT commands for the differen phones can be found below (section "AT commands").
In order to down- or upload a whole phone book
automatically, you have to use a scripting language which can be used within such a terminal emulation.
The simplest way is to use Robot/LX together with WWW/LX. There is a robot script available (phone.scr)
which can do exactly this: Download or upload a whole phone book, either from / to SIM
card memory or from / to
internal phone memory.
If you use WWW/LX and Robot/LX, this works either via cable or via IrDA. A standard
terminal emulation can of course only be used via cable due to its lack of IrDA support.
If you only want to exchange single contacts between the phone and the palmtop,
the simplest way is to
use the OBEX protocol, which is implemented into the free(!) software IR.EXE by D&A Software. Every
IrDA capable phone should support OBEX.
This works only via IrDA, and you don't need a license of WWW/LX for that.
In general wou will want to do the following: You will probably ask now, how a vcard looks like, and how the phone book of the palmtop can ceonvert entries from / to vcard. There ist the great capability of the palmtop´s built-in applications to define so-called "smart clips" (see palmtop manual). This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it wrote the following report:
"Some backgroundinfo. I had a Nokia 7110 and I wanted to transfer what I had in
my phonebook on the Hplx to the phone. The 7110 supports more info under each
nameentry, but most new phones on the market supports Vcard in some way.
I found some info on how Vcards are supposed to look like and I went to "work".
I used ir.exe made by Andreas Garzotto.
I first added a Smartclip I called "Vcard" in the phonebook on the Hplx:
The Vcard smartclip looks like this:
If you have a cellphone that does not support more numbers/info per name then
your Smartclip should only have this info:
When the Smartclip was ready I made a macro that chooses the Vcard Smartclip in
the phonebook and then copies the info to the clipboard and opens Memo and
paste it there. Then the macro saves the file.
My macro looks like this:
You have to write your own macro so that it chooses the correct Smartclip in
you phonebook.
The icon looks like this.
That is it. The phone beeps that it has received the Vcard and I can add it to
my 7110´s phonebook. 7110 supports several numbers per name. When I get an
entry transferred it shows the work/jobb numbers with a little factory beside
it in the display on the 7110. Also Home/hjem cellphone/mob is showed with its
own icon. Very nice.
I have now sold the Nokia 7110 to my father. I bought a Nokia 6210 and all the
above worked without any changes to the setup. I now use an Ericsson T39m
cellphone. It does not have the memory to hold the notefield so that could be
removed from the Vcard. But it does support the rest."
For sending a vcard from the phone to the palmtop, the steps are pretty identical: The calendar / appointments / vcalThere is not yet any easy way to exchange whole appointment books between a phone and the palmtop.
But it should be possible to send single appointments as a vcal OBEX object to the phone,
similar to the way described above for the vcard. Collection of related software:Internet software for the palmtop with links to the makers´ home pages:WWW/LX version 3 is an internet software package for the palmtop by D&A Software. Provides all you need for internet on the palmtop. The only software which is IrDA compatible! IR.EXE by D&A Software is free software which can be used for various IrDA applications (vcard, vcal exchange, IrDA printer emulation...) LXTCP is a free software that provides an IP stack and several client programs to the palmtop. About the same functionality as WWW/LX, except that it doesn´t have IrDA capabilities and there´s no web browser for it. But there´s an (also free) addition called ´cc:lxpop´ that lets you use the built-in cc:Mail program for email. LXTCP is made by Rod Whitby, cc:lxpop is made by Brian McIlvaine. NetTamer: A shareware product that integrates an IP stack, a web browser, an email client and some more features. Also no IrDA! Goin´ Postal: A very nice software package for email made by Steven Lawson. Includes a dialer and an email client. SSHDOS, which is a DOS SSH client, usable with dosppp for example, see next item. dosppp, which is a PPP packet driver for DOS, providing a TCP/IP stack to clients like sshdos, for example. PDU and PostPDU: Send SMSs written on the palmtop with your mobile phone. Made by Stefan Peichl and Tony Hutchins Quickstar Fax (qfax), a HP palmtop fax program. See section "How to send faxes" for usage! www.hp200lx.net, category "Communication" of the SUPER data base for every other piece of communications software you are looking for! New technologies:BluetoothWith time there come new technologies which enable mobile, i.e. wireless communications. A very interesting technology is Bluetooth, which is a standard to connect several computer peripherials wirelessly to each other. Mobile phones equipped with Bluetooth are just put on the market, first models are available from Nokia.So it would be great if we could let data cables at home, don´t worry about electromagnetic interference in the IR receiver electronics and just establish a Bluetooth radio connection from the palmtop on the table to the mobile phone in the pocket to let the latter establish an Internet connection through the GSM or GPRS network to the ISP. Wouldn´t that be great? Well, theoretically it is possible: There are already RS232-Bluetooth dongles which you can plug into any serial RS232 port. For the operating system of the computer this connection looks just as a serial cable connection. Unfortunately these dongles aren´t available yet. And the first ones which will be available end of 2001 made by Brainboxes will require an external power supply. So you had to carry around the dongle, an HP to DB9 adaptor, a null modem adaptor, an external power supply and your bluetooth phone. Not really convenient, IMO. ;-) Leaving away the bunch of adaptors would not be difficult - just open the dongle and attach a self-made HP plug to it. But I don´t know if the external power supply could be replaced by a direct wiring to the 200LX´s main batteries for example. We will have to wait until the first ones become available to test this. There are lots of Bluetooth PCMCIA cards available. But probably no one of these work in the Palmtop, because you need special drivers for them. Windows drivers, of course. The only chance would be if someone ported a driver from Windows to DOS. In addition these cards may draw too much power from the PCMCIA port. I don´t know about the power requirements of Bluetooth cards, but if they exceed the 150mA limit of the Palmtop´s PCMCIA slot, they are totally useless. HSCSD: (some companies market this service as HSCD or HSMD)HSCSD (High Speed Circuit Switched Data) can easily be used if you already own a mobile phone which works together with the palmtop and is HSCSD-capable. HSCSD simply opens more than one GSM channel by using more timeslots and thus offers n times the capacity of one GSM channel (n is the number of used channels, up to 4 channels can be used, so a bit rate of max 14.400bps *4 = 57.600bps can be used). Ask your mobile phone network provider if you can use HSCSD and make sure your phone supports it. You probably have to use a special INIT string to enable HSCSD. Look at the section AT-commands of this document in order to find out about the commands needed for special founctions of your phone.
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provided following
HSCSD INIT strings for the Nokia 6210 (the "analog" strings establish a
conventional HSCSD connection, the V.110 (=ISDN) strings use the ISDN protocol to
establish a link and thus you will get the "CONNECT" 15-20 seconds earlier.
There is no difference in connection speed, and not all network providers and
telephones can use V.110, but if they can, it saves you time (15-20 seconds once per connection)
and money): GPRSGeneral Packet Radio Service is a new standard in mobile telecommunications. It is a packet-based radio service which is optimized to transmit data and speech as data packets (just as the Internet), currently with a throughput of about 25 - 50 kbps. So you don´t establish a real link, but you can send or receive data packets whenever you want to. You are not charged by time anymore but by amount of data / speech transmitted over the network. This is of course ideal for sending an email on the road with the palmtop. :-) You don´t have to establish an expensive link just to send a 2kB-email. Imagine: If I want to send an email from my palmtop witht the mobile phone, I have to dial into my network provider, send the email with Post/LX and then disconnect. This all takes about 2 minutes. For 2 online minutes I currently have to pay about 0.15 US$. The GPRS prices are currently at a level of about 0.025US$ per 1kB (Mar 2002, Germany), i.e. if you send a 2kB email, with all overhead for SMTP protocol etc. maybe 3kB, you only pay 0.075 US$ for sending your email. See the advantage? ;-) On the other hd, for larger data amounts, GPRS is still much, much more expensive than a GSM connection. Ask your GSM / GPRS service provider for the current rates.GPRS has become available and mobile phones which support GPRS are also availble (Siemens S45, Nokia 6310, Ericsson T39m, T68...). If you intend to use the Ericsson phones with GPRS, you have to use a modified version of WWW/LX v3 for that due to a bug in the Ericsson firmware. Andreas Garzotto was so kind to develop a work-around for this bug. Please contact the people at D&A Software and ask for this modified version, if you need it.
UMTSUniversal Mobile Telecommunication System (also known as the 3rd generation mobile network or simply "3G") is not yet available. It will also be packet-based, as GPRS, but it will offer much higher bandwidth (up to 2 MB/s in the first stage). If someone besides me will still own a 200LX when UMTS becomes available, please report if you got any UMTS device working in conjunction with the 200LX!AT commands:Here you will find data sheets provided by the phone manufactureres and other collections of AT commands:
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