Holding the HP iPaq with camera attachment

HP PhotoSmart Mobile Camera review – an SD card camera for Windows PDAs

By Charlotte

In the age of smartphones, the idea of not having a camera in your pocket at all times may seem foreign. But even as far as twenty years ago, there were developments to try and make it happen.

See the PDA, the darling of science fiction, and a common tool of the Gen X and Boomer generation’s salary-men, being the progenitor of the smart phone. HP was making investments into the PDA space with the iPaq, as well as into the imaging space with their PhotoSmart cameras. Crossing these two areas, HP made the PhotoSmart Mobile Camera, connecting via the SD card slot on supported iPaq PDAs. Those unlucky enough to not have a dual-slot PDA would have to contend with the anemic internal RAM storage of the iPaq.

So, how does this strange camera feel to use? Well, perhaps bad is harsh word to use, but it’s the first thing that comes to mind when I think of the user experience. The first thing you will have to contend with, is the glossy, dim, 2003 LCD tech. The camera works best outdoors, in bright sunlight, which is exactly the most difficult environment to use the thing.

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The live-view on the screen is letterboxed, and of a low frame rate. You can opt to make it fit the screen in the video settings, but this makes the frame rate so low, it becomes practically useless as a framing tool. So, stick with letterboxed, as much as it adds to the difficulty of use.

Short of some quality settings, and white balance presets, there is no concession to adjust your exposure. But unlike some cameras of the era, it actually does a good job of metering, relative to the competition.

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As you can see from this photo, it tries to underexpose if there is a bright sky, which is preferable, but sometimes, it doesn’t, leading to strange artifacts.

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Another huge problem, is the lack of autofocus. Yes, on the tiny sub-240p live-view, it expects you to manual focus. There are no focus aids, the best you will get is clicking the digital zoom button twice, trying your hardest to get things in focus, then zooming back out.

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This normally wouldn’t be a problem, but the furthest setting towards infinity actually focuses past infinity, so you can’t simply set and forget, frustratingly.

macro test

If you can manage, the close focus results are very pleasing, but its easier said than done with that screen. Focus in general is just annoying, it seems best at 3-10 metres, not that a 1.3-megapixel sensor on a wide-angle lens was ever suited for infinity shooting.

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It’s a frustrating, but unique experience, it’s probably something more fun for computer nerds, than camera nerds, but nonetheless, I hope you enjoyed the crunchy photos from my bushwalk.

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About The Author

By Charlotte
amateur photographer from Queensland, Australia.
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Comments

Mark Ellerby on HP PhotoSmart Mobile Camera review – an SD card camera for Windows PDAs

Comment posted: 07/10/2025

It doesn't seem to handle high contrast scenes very well, but otherwise the pictures have a pleasantly low-fi kind of appeal. The close ups of the yellow flowers are really nice. The now-'vintage' digital cameras were much more characterful than later ones and it's fun to see the kind of images they produce. It's amazing you have an iPaq that still works as well !
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Alastair Bell on HP PhotoSmart Mobile Camera review – an SD card camera for Windows PDAs

Comment posted: 07/10/2025

Sometimes we forget how bad things used to be!
It's great to read such a refreshing reminder of the poor performance of the early days of digital photography.
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Ed Gillam on HP PhotoSmart Mobile Camera review – an SD card camera for Windows PDAs

Comment posted: 07/10/2025

Hi Charlotte - what a trip down memory lane. I had a couple of these PDAs. I'd forgotten about them. They were designed to replace paper diaries and lists of phone numbers in the work context. The claim was that you could also do email and browse the web. I never found they were really up to this, but I probably had the cheapest ones I could get hold of. I vaguely remember the camera but I've never used one or see one. Thanks for posting some examples from your walk. To think that 20MP is now the standard! Onwards and upwards.

Ed
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