1411063
story
Da1ek writes
"Bill Thompson has a article on BBCi, commenting on the flurry of picture messaging phones. 'With cameras everywhere, technology consultant Bill Thompson wonders if we should be worried about where the images of ourselves are ending up', check out the full article here."
Is this necessary? (Score:2, Funny)
~S
You just say that... (Score:2)
Just great.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Just great.... (Score:4, Funny)
Have you seen the resolution of these phones? People'd probably think you were playing Caverns of Mars or something.
Re:Just great.... (Score:2, Interesting)
I got so tired of al the pet-and-other-cuteness pcitures we testers were MMS'ing and Bluetoothing to each-other that I enabled the POP3 mailboxes (yes, it can check POP3 mailboxes over GPRS, and decode MIME mail attachments like pix) and told my friends to send me some skinpics.
I can safely report that a porno MMS service, or a dating/hook-up service over XHTML & MMS is completly feasible and probably will be a massive hit. Use the browser to check out the profiles of the people logged on looking as well, send your instant pic to the ones you like, exchange locations, get laid. The operator will love it, the service-maker will love it, and sex will be driving technology forward again, as it should.
Re:Just great.... (Score:1)
More afraid of the phones' security holes (Score:5, Interesting)
Now that these phones give any software the ability to use the phone fuctions, when are we to expect the first virus that spreads via multimedia messaging and automatically calls a number in a far away country outside of any jurisdiction?
Or even better, let the CIA & co. make your phone call back so that you pay for being eavesdropped and watched by the nice little camera.
The last thing I need is one of these phones...
Re:More afraid of the phones' security holes (Score:2)
My vote: don't buy one until it is really necessary (well, I can't see any reason for a picture phone anyway).
Re:More afraid of the phones' security holes (Score:1)
Got any proof or documentation about this, or are you just perpetuating an urban myth?
Re:More afraid of the phones' security holes (Score:1)
Re:More afraid of the phones' security holes (Score:2)
Of course not! It's a feature!
Re:More afraid of the phones' security holes (Score:1)
Remember the Nokia bug where a specially-crafted SMS could shutdown a Nokia phone and render the phone dead (ie. the user couldn't switch it back on w/o the phone being serviced first).
Most phones today (esp. MMS/EMS capable phones) do some interpretation of the content and trigs on special char-sequences and stuff...
So it's possible todo all kinds of mayhem if you know the phonenumber and phone-model...
Re:More afraid of the phones' security holes (Score:1)
(BTW the bug was fixed in a firmware update.)
If you have any information on this special interpretation of which you speak, let's hear it.
Re:More afraid of the phones' security holes (Score:2)
Toilet in a phone (Score:2, Funny)
~S
Dogbert's videophone (Score:4, Funny)
Bah, who cares. (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh no! Accidently sent grandma my ass again. (Score:2)
This is not the same issue at all as government camera networks. Government cameras give the government a power to enforce their power that they wouldn't have otherwise. Leagues of schoolgirls running around snapping pics at Burger King don't pose the same threat to society.
As it is I often walk the streets taking photos and movies of anything and anyone I find interesting. For me this can range from snapshots of public toilets (with no persons included.. just the bathroom conditions) to artwork and buildings to sweethearts kissing to wildlife. It certainly isn't harming anyone for me to take such pictures so I'm sure cellphone cameras won't destroy society either.
As far as the option of people to require photo evidence when placing phone calls.. this comes as a shock.. you could just refuse. It's your right not to take a picture if you don't want to. Tell mom or the boss or whomever to go blow themselves.
I also agree that ever time a new technology presents itself certain people (often journalists and politicians) decide said technologies are the end of civilization. As always I must point out that any technology is a tool, like a hammer. Technology cannot harm or help on it's own. It all depends on how people use it.
Re:Oh no! Accidently sent grandma my ass again. (Score:1)
However, most of us would not expect people worldwide to be watching us as we're in a pub or club, nor would we expect future employers to be able to do a google search of every photo containing our face on the historical web.
Select * from images.archive.org where face_match(image) like face_match(employee_photo[192]);
Re:Oh no! Accidently sent grandma my ass again. (Score:2)
This is assuming that you send your pictures taken with your cellphone, through your cellphone, to some sort of web archive first. Which you won't because the service isn't designed that way. And even if you did, I fail to see how that changes anything about every other picture already posted somewhere on the web today. (and if you did that of course, you should expect stuff like this to happen to you in the natural order of things)
Re:Oh no! Accidently sent grandma my ass again. (Score:2)
Laws on employee privacy and such are where you should be concerned. You can't, and probably don't want to stop technology but you can make it illegal for employers to snoop on you. They will anyway but then again they already do.
It's not quite that simple though :-( (Score:3, Insightful)
I agree with you up to a point: I'm naturally quite a private person, but I keep private things private.
However, I am slightly concerned by ever increasing surveillance of public life. It's just too easy to misconstrue something you see in a single photo. What about the girlfriend who sees an incidental photo of her boyfriend cuddling another girl in the park? She doesn't know it's an old friend who's just suffered a personal tragedy and needs comforting. She just sees her (ex-)boyfriend with another girl.
Your point about government surveillance is really just a special case of this problem. The "I don't care, I've got nothing to hide" crowd make the naive assumption that no-one will ever make a mistake in interpreting the data that's being collected. History strongly disagrees.
This I do have a problem with, and the problem is that "voluntary" things that become the norm are no longer voluntary. It's like a "voluntary" ID card: you don't need it. Unless, of course, you want to buy a drink, open a bank account, rent a car, take out a mortgage or travel abroad.
If you start telling your boss to go screw themselves then, unless everyone else is doing the same, you're just putting yourself first in the firing line. Fortunately, since many ailments serious enough to keep someone off work legitimately don't actually exhibit dramatic physical signs, this one's unlikely to catch on.
I can see the point in family cases and such, though. How am I supposed to go buy an engagement ring for my girlfriend discreetly if I can't tell her I'm going away with the lads at the weekend and I'll be back on Sunday? And would I want to marry a girl who felt that much need to check up on me anyway?
Harder to misconstrue communication (Score:2)
Consider the following realworld scenario:
My girlfriend checks the security camera system, and sees that I entered the house arm in arm with some girl she doesn't know.
When she gets home, she asks me casually "So did you have a visitor today?"
Unless I turn red and start stuttering, she knows that she has nothing to worry about. I'll mention that my old friend so-and-so was in town, and I comforted her because of this or that.
Now, say I blankly deny having a visitor. Now it could be because I got distracted and forgot, or it could be because I'm covering up. So she can ask me about it, and if I've merely forgotten, this will remind me, and we're back at the previous situation.
Fundamentally, however, because we do communicate, she doesn't automatically jump to the conclusion that I'm trying to deceive her, and vice versa. And, in my humble opinion, the more you establish patterns of trust, the more likely both parties are to live up to trust.
Re:Harder to misconstrue communication (Score:2)
Also people get bored of snooping after a while. The information is there but people usually don't make a habit of looking it up. If you've ever been a sysadmin you probably know that you don't spend all day reading peoples email and tracking what websites they look at.
On first thought you might think it'd lead most people to be less open but I've found that not to be the case. People might be freaked out by being recorded for a while but after that they just get used to it and don't care anymore. It just becomes part of life.
Re:Bah, who cares. (Score:2)
This technology, like the Internet-connected PC, has the potential to change our lives in yet to be determined ways, some of which are good, some of which are bad, many of which, in my opinion, go beyond the realm of "who cares?" When Berners-Lee was inventing the Web, did he forsee the intrusion of pop-up ads, the need for firewalls, and the ubiquity of porn?
Today the thousand dollar home encyclopedia is extinct because of computers. I don't know if anybody saw that happening besides Microsoft. Certainly it took Britannica years to figure out they couldn't charge a huge premium for their services any more.
So what I propose to you is that having web connected cameras everywhere carried around by everyone is going to lead to societal changes that we cannot completely predict. Even today I know people who simply hate to have their photos taken. What will happen to those people when everyone has a camera pointing in their faces? Will they become shut-ins? What about employers? Will they do an image search of prospective hires to see if there are any pictures out there of the prospect in a drug den or a whorehouse? Will all sorts of currently face-to-face meetings take place over videophone?Will the government require a picture record submitted into a central registry of all cash transactions over a certain amount? Who knows? "The Jetsons" seemed to come up with all sorts of funny/amusing uses of picturephoes which won't seem so funny or amusing when happening in real life.
Re:Bah, who cares. (Score:2)
No it's not. I still consult paper when I can, and you can't beat the layout. Plus it doesn't require me to be sitting at the computer (think couch and fireplace here)...
You're right for that, we won't and can't predict what's going to happen to us after that.
Now for the people who don't want camera pointing in their faces, I fail to see how in the first place carrying a picture phone will differ from the current (and *HUGELY better*) generation of digital cameras. I don't trust that they became shut-ins, and yes, employers still need employees to come to work in the morning !
I just don't care what other people do with their own lives, and if they want to send a low-quality photo of me taken from far away over their expensive phone service for whichever reason they might have, I still don't care !
Re:Bah, who cares. (Score:2)
Come on, Forged. Stop beating around the bush. Tell us how you really feel!
How I really feel (Score:2)
yes but phone != webcam (Score:2)
(I know that some people have nothing better to do, but this isn't the answer I was expecting
Re:Bah, who cares. (Score:2)
Paranoia (Score:2)
Fact is... (Score:4, Insightful)
And who needs drive-by snoop photos, as long as Photoshop is handy. This thing about being worried over one's photo being snapped in public is overblown...I don't see anyone being up in arms over the video being captured by using ATMs or speed cameras.
Re:Fact is... (Score:2)
That's just because you're not looking hard enough. There are plenty of people concerned, particularly about speed cameras being used to track people's movements (as is being proposed here in the UK).
Re:Fact is... (Score:2)
As it is, cameras at every intersection and along stretches of highways are being used more and more every day. I'm saying the concern we hear about is nothing more than rhetoric.
Re:Fact is... (Score:1)
Give me a break... (Score:2)
Concern: disquiet, worry, anxiety.
If I were simply concerned over identity theft/malignment, etc., I'd be a bit slow on the uptake, me thinks. Concern and protest are two different things. No one will take to the streets over this, as they are only concerned, and that's my point. There is and there will be no protest, thus is it not an issue.
Re:Give me a break... (Score:2)
You might also want to check your definition of the noun "issue" [reference.com] - yours (if no protest than not an issue) seems to be way off. I can't find any requirement for public protest in the A.H. definitions. You are of course welcome to have your own definitions of words and own ways to classify urgent problems. I don't think I agree with them, though.
[1] Whatever exactly that may be - it's obviously highly subjective which taints this whole discussion.
I have an issue w/your issue, sir (Score:2)
The discussion as begun seemed to hint that public unrest (serious problem?) is just around the corner, so if there is taint casting a shadow on the carpet, it was here when I walked in...sorry if I stepped in it
Re:Fact is... (Score:1)
Does risking imprisonment to destroy unpopular speed cameras count?
Example Story [bbc.co.uk]
(that was using a lorry no less. And don't forget that hundreds of people would have driven past this person while they were attacking the camera, and not one of them reported it. What does that say about public opinion?)
Re:Fact is... (Score:1)
I think the point is that the banks and police are constrained by certain guidelines when taking your picture. Such rules would not apply or would be difficult to enforce with your average guy on the street.
I personally don't mind being photographed whilst in a public place as I am seen by anyone in that public place anyway. The differences arise when that picture is propogated and I start to appear in places I would not normally (eg. dodgy websites!).
So when will slashdot get picture profiles?
one you probably wouldn't want passed around (Score:1)
http://www.collegehumor.com/?image_id=5374&retu
Great for stalkers... (Score:1)
Technology is great.
Re:Great for stalkers... (Score:4, Interesting)
The next big thing, happening now, actually, is GPS data as one of the EXIF digital photo variables. You can match a photo to where it was taken, not just when, or of whom, and in what light, with what lens, etc.
Re:Great for stalkers... (Score:1)
Good phrase. I'll have to remember it. If we were talking about sane people, you would be correct.
The rest of your statement begs the question, because we are able to, should we?
Going by my girl-friends experiences, the answer is no.
Go ahead... (Score:2)
The real news here is that S. Jobs has positioned QuickTime as a leader in the field of compressed video for use in said picture phones, and...oh wait, I can't talk about that before next week's expo. Sorry
I'm not allowed one of these. (Score:5, Interesting)
The same goes for many other people.
I guess this means that they will still have to make many cellphones without picture taking capabilities.
Re:I'm not allowed one of these. (Score:1)
Interesting point -- I'd completely forgotten that most of the sites we visit require you to leave cameras with the marine at the door.
So will that lead to a special "phones for people working on classified material" category in phone dealers' customer lists? If I were selling phones (with access to their phone calls and text messages), it wouldn't go unnoticed that this might be an interesting group to listen to.
Second throughts: maybe interesting wasn't the right word. Nerdishly useful to spies, perhaps?
Re:I'm not allowed one of these. (Score:1)
Re:I'm not allowed one of these. (Score:5, Interesting)
Non issue (Score:2)
Chances are, involvement in any of these activities would be exposed sooner or later, new phones could make this just a bit quicker.
Otherwise, it's clearly a non-issue.
Re:Non issue (Score:4, Interesting)
One word: Freedom! (Score:1)
cu,
Lispy
It's very much an issue, I'm afraid (Score:2)
It doesn't matter if you are involved in something fishy. It only matters if you appear to be.
Unfortunately, history suggests that an awful lot of innocent people will take the heat for something completely benign if mass surveillance gets implemented. Governments already screw up like this when some techie analyst misunderstands what's happening in a picture, or looking at several sources concludes that 2+2=17.
What makes you think it'll be any different when your significant other, or your boss, or your parents see something that looks (but isn't) out of line?
[Aside: Hell, most western governments can't even manage a routine social security or tax database without screwing up all over the place. For three months, I was doing two full-time jobs on opposite sides of the UK according to the tax office, after someone there mistyped a number one day. I was overtaxed by several hundred pounds as a direct result. I called to fix this, was asked for my address and date of birth to confirm my ID, and was told that they were very sorry, but they couldn't deal with me any more, because what I'd told them didn't match their records. And this was something where obviously what their records said was actually impossible.]
Re:It's very much an issue, I'm afraid (Score:2)
Is people having any kind of cameras, digital or not, a form of mass surveillance?
Re:It's very much an issue, I'm afraid (Score:2)
It isn't, in itself. It becomes so when, for example, the "boss requiring evidence of sickness" scenario arrives.
Re:It's very much an issue, I'm afraid (Score:2)
And if he can do that, he might as well tell them to take the picture with a normal camera.
I'm not sure about it being a matter of Privacy... (Score:2, Insightful)
In the age of American Parinoia, and the subsiquent squeeze that's been put on privacy and the right to freedom, we're all used to being video taped everywhere. Digital Cameras are all over the place, and most stores have some kind of video surveylance systems in place.
I believe the idea of employers asking for pictures of a sick person is a little out of place, since they could go so far as make you bring in a doctors note, but most don't.
Now I will believe that business will violate some sort of ethical boundry with devices like this, just like they have with their other surveylance devices. It's nothing new... as long as there has been a camera there has been someone abusing them. Things will get posted for people to see until someone does something about it, and then they will be posted for employees to see.
think outside the box, why don't you? (Score:5, Interesting)
Every time there is a story about a new advanced mobile phone, you hear people go "Why does my phone have to do X? it's a phone! Why can't it do one thing well?".
Well, first of all, at least with GSM, which is what most of the world except the USA and Japan use, the phone has worked "very well" for about 10 years now. Coverage is excellent. Sound quality is excellent. Text messages work great. No problems.
Second, "phone" is just a traditional term that is attached to these devices. Just because people call it "phone" doesn't mean that the only feature it should and could have is voice communication. PDA's are getting phone features now, and "phones" are getting PDA features. You might as well refer to all of these handheld computer & communication devices with some new term. But why? What's wrong with continuing to call them "phone" or "PDA"? It's just a name for crying out loud!
And as far as the features themselves go, some of them are quite convenient.
It's quite clear that North Americans have not yet grasped (based on statistics) the convenience and un-obtrusiveness of text messages. It's weird too, as they are basically the equivalent to instant messaging or email, which are both quite popular in North America. Text messages cut down on ringing phones and annoyance quite a lot.
Cameras, while clearly more of a novelty, can be quite cool too. "Hey, is the bar crowded?" "Here, I'll show you!", and then you send an MMS with a 10 second old photo. "You wouldn't believe how much fun we're having here on our vacation!", and a photo to go with it, like a post card, only instantaneous. Yes, it's not something that is necessary, but it's fun and can be quite convenient and nobody is forcing you to buy one of these devices.
Always on internet? You don't HAVE to surf or check your email, but if you're sitting in a restaurant, wondering if there are still tickets to that one movie you wanted to see, you can do it and you can reserve those tickets. Sport freak? You can check those soccer / name-the-sport scores. Or perhaps you're camping and want to check the weather forecast.
Java or native (compiled for the particular device and OS) games? With phones / PDA's that have CPU's as fast as the 486's of a few years ago and as much or more RAM, why not? It means your device doubles as a Game Boy Advance. If you spend a lot of time commuting, waiting on delayed planes on airports, then games can be great!
There are some "phones" now that also double as mp3 players. Why carry two devices if one is enough? Sure, they may not have a 20GB hard drive like the iPod, but the basic idea is good.
Bluetooth - it allows you to drive and talk on the phone at the same time, with a hands-free set but without cables to get tangled up in, without having to take the phone out from your pocket. It also allows you to - without cables - synchronize your address book from your PC to your phone. It allows you to use the Internet connectivity on your phone to get your laptop online from anywhere in the world (provided you use GSM, supported in countries on the planet).
And if you like your phone to be just a traditional phone for voice communication, then go right ahead and buy one of those models that are just that. The cellphone manufacturers still make those too.
Re:think outside the box, why don't you? (Score:1)
Personally, I don't care too much about my phone being able to take pictures or surf the Internet or play MP3's. I'm disappointed in Handspring trying to go the "integrated" Treo phone route-- I would have rather seen them make a larger, "steno" sized PDA and "think outside the pocket." But that's another rant-- back to the phones and SMS. If perhaps, cell companies made the "AIM" messaging (not SMS) completely transparent instead of sending it to special codes that you have to remember, it would change American's usage patterns of "SMS."
I bought the Motorola TimePort because it's supposedly GSM compatible. I think that T-Mobile even has "proprietized" that with some kind of "American" GSM.
T-Mobile (VoiceStream) even abandoned trying to provide multiple numbers per phone-- something that I would have found intensely useful for a small business. The reason? American's didn't understand the bills and contested them constantly. We suck.
I could get a $60 adapter to turn my TimePort into an FM radio walkman... but I don't think I'll be doing that anytime soon... [insert ClearChannel rant du-jour]. I'd still rather have a dedicated device for that task.
I have seen the integrated device fad come and go and come and go-- and no one ever seems to realize, that to suceed you need to build something that does a small domain of things VERY WELL to last. My Visor Platinum does a PDA's job very well, and I won't be upgrading it until something new comes around that isn't trying to do everything at once, poorly. Cell companies should be concentrating on doing one thing very well: replacing your land line with better pricing, services and coverage.
I'm still waiting for that magical docking box that allows me to dock my cell phone and provide a dial tone to the rest of my house. I'd gladly pay $100 for that box and dump Verizon's land lines.
Missing the point (Score:2)
You'd be surprised to see how fast some people can send you a note on their cellphone these days. Most devices also feature multilingual dictonnaries to speed-up text input, and you can use abbreviations. For 10c a message to any other cellphone in the world, that is great.
That, and europeans just don't like voicemail like americans do. It's two different cultures, and gsm phones give you both options. How cool is that !
Well, let's see ... (Score:1)
You won't have to make up excuses. Don't want to go to work? Instead of calling in sick, you would call and say "Hi, I really need to take a day off". Bosses will be used to these requests.
I think that when you're in public, you shouldn't expect any sort of privacy.
You know MS's Stinger phone? (Score:3, Funny)
(it's a variant of the old 'sending "LO BATT" to people with alphanumeric pagers' joke...)
Not as popular as you think (Score:3, Insightful)
Then the problem is actually getting people to use them, now while three of the four UK networks are offering a free trial period in the hope that people will continue using it
A lot of people from the research we've done said that they'll use the phones to take the pictures, but copy them over to a computer and send them through the email rather than paying 25-40 pence per message, we don't expect this attitude to change for at least another 12 months on most users.
This won't be another SMS/Text Messaging phenomenom.
Cameras in the hands of citizens are good (Score:3, Insightful)
AA Words Clog (to) (Score:3, Interesting)
The art of snapping someone in a compromising position in a pub or wherever with your camera phone and emailing it to a web site. VK
From The Guardians "Survival guide 2003" [guardian.co.uk]
Interesting guide, by the way
Rupert Hine:Picture Phone (Score:1)
"...I'll be stripped to the skin
You'll be stripped to the bone
And we'll all say no to the picture-phone
It was so easy to cheat on a blind line
With an alibi and your image intact
Whatever the number -
Whatever the crime -
Not only the famous will have to resign
And you have come to depend
On your right to pretend you're alone
Would the star of the screen
Ever wish to be seen
Red-eyed and dying through the morning call
And the president's friends
Would they live for long
If they saw down the wire what really goes on
When you're home to relax
Come the facial attacks
And the breathers in masks - oh no!..."
Is this like the web phones? (Score:2)
If anyone is interested in the web phones [abnormal.com], I've got 130+ of them I would love to unload... Make an offer... they will display most pages that netscape 4 would display.
I'm sceptical (Score:4, Insightful)
1) These are not good cameras. Compared to what's available these days as a stand-alone digital camera, the picture size and quality is pathetic.
2) Unlike text messaging, it is driven from the top down, not the bottom up. I can't speak for the USA, but for the rest of us, SMS (text messaging) has become a valuable social tool. The mobile phone networks did not predict this, it caught them by surprise when this added-on extra became one of the main events. Most mobile phones, with the 0-9 keypad, are appallingly badly designed for text entry. SMS is a killer app in spite of this.
Now they have come up with picture messaging - 1/10th the expressive power, 1000 times the bandwidth (and they can therefore charge more for it) backed by big ad campaigns here in the UK. Well, SMS never needed ad campaigns to make it popular, people made it popular because it worked for them, not because some company told them that they needed it. After you've had your picture-phone for a year, when the novelty has worn off, I wonder how often you'll use the photo-message function compared to the text message function?
Re:I'm sceptical (Score:1)
Its expected that people will use them to send pictures from holiday rather than postcards, pictures at parties when people can't make it, and to your current girlfriend when you've found a new one and you want to split up with her in the worst way possible.
Re:I'm sceptical (Score:3, Interesting)
I was hooked, it was so much fun. Took photos of everything that moved (and didn't). The photo quality was *great*. 640x480x4096 colours. Perfect for "web-ready" images.
Now, you and I can use a digital camera, connect to a computer and email it to somebody.
But guess what, most people don't have the skills or equipment to do it. I expect these things will sell like hotcakes once the price drops to the "mass consumer" level.
Re:I'm sceptical (Score:2)
SMS was just a novelty in the US for a long time, just like picture phones are now. Why type something in on that silly little keypad when I can just talk to them directly? I use it all the time now, but I had an SMS-capable phone for almost a year before I ever even tried the feature. I think photo capability is another means of communication that will also find its niche once it becomes commonplace and cheap.
Re:I'm sceptical (Score:1)
A picture phone isn't intended as a replacement for a digital camera. I already have a digital camera, and a good one too. But you know what I don't have in my pocket right now? That's right, a camera.
The SMS features of my phone aren't even a replacement for the two-way pager I already use for work (that pager has a QWERTY key layout, better configurability of message notification, etc.); and I'm sure the PDA functions are far more primitive that a real PDA. But such a phone combines all of these features into one device that it's reasonably for me to carry around all the time. So it may not be as good as any of those things, but it's much more useful since I will actually use it.
I don't think the argument that picture phones are "top-down" driven makes any difference. It may well be true, but I have a feeling that picture phones will catch on whether or not they are heavily hyped, and the more users there are the more options we'll have for cheaper bandwidth. Alternatively, if they wouldn't have caught on otherwise I don't think hype can "force" people to use a luxury item like this they don't have to.
You may be right that I'll use the SMS function more often than the picture function--but so what? On my phone the camera doesn't take up extra space (it's not an attachment--that is a stupid idea) and even if I use it three or four times a month, while I'm SMS-ing every day, it's still worth it. And I'll always have it sitting there to record something pretty I want to show my wife, to record a license plate in an accident I've just witnessed or to snap a picture of that new car I fancy.
Re:I'm sceptical (Score:2)
Whatever happened to the aphorism "A picture is worth a thousand words"?
Re:I'm sceptical (Score:2)
It doesn't true hold very often.
For instance, a friend said to me a few years ago, as we bought movie tickets "whatever did we do before cellphones?". Well, we were a lot more rigid in our planning, that's what we did. And we missed each other more often.
Now we have to option of sending a text message to co-ordinate our social lives, e.g. "I have 4 tickets for the 8:30 show lotR T2T @ Odeon Covent Garden cinema, meet us corner of Shaftsbury Ave" or "am running late, cu l8r". Now try expressing that in 400*600 full-colour pixels.
I'll admit that picture messaging will be a godsend to tree-surgeons, and in the event of car crashes. But these are niches - text will continue to predominate. Or perhaps you'd like to reply in JPG format.
Picture phones = gimmick (Score:1, Insightful)
uh-huh, sure. I can't think of one reason I would ever need a picture phone where I wouldn't have a much better digital camera, unless I'm at a bar one night and the girl's on the counter start taking it off...
They're about as practical as a segway.
Maybe in about 5 generations when the picture quality rivals that of today's digital cameras, but for now it's just another gee-whiz feature to get people to buy the latest-and-greatest.
Oh, and did someone forget about battery life? 1) Digital cameras have poor battery life
2) Cellphones have poor battery life
Re:Picture phones = gimmick (Score:1)
Perhaps you should get outside into the daylight and stop needing to use the flash on your camera.
Re:Picture phones = gimmick (Score:2)
But I was pleasantly suprised by the Sanyo SCP-5300. My wife has been taking as many as 20 pictures per day and uploading them to her webcam site [carlazone.com], and the phone has yet to run out of battery...this usually includes flash pictures as well.
I believe the imaging element is CMOS, not CCD, which means it can run at very low power, but really looks bad/banded in low-light.
Re:Picture phones = gimmick (Score:2)
Does he cover his face at Disney World... (Score:2)
I'm skeptical that these phones will catch on. It all fits into the general tech concept of lets make a combination microwave oven-refrigerator with a built-in web browser. Frankly, if I want to take pictures, I'll use a camera dedicated to that purpose. It will undoubtedly have better capabilities. Furthermore, in the real world how often does someone need a camera unexpectedly. And as for his examples of professionals, in most cases I think a dedicated camera, with better functionality, would be better for them.
Re:Does he cover his face at Disney World... (Score:1)
I suppose they could take it a step further and mail that picture to all their friends before any law-officer could stop them too
aah the power of technology! =)
Re:Does he cover his face at Disney World... (Score:2)
Cell camera sparks fistfight at women’s party (Score:1)
The Saudi government has banned mobile phones that have cameras, but they are smuggled in.
Useful in some cases (Score:1)
The guys with the guns were constantly waving people to stay back. They didn't realize, however, that one of the people had a Nokia 7650 and was snapping photos of them as fast as he could. Those photos then ended up to TV news and several newspapers as they were the only pictures of the perpetrators.
In cases like these it is quite useful that people have a digital camera readily in use.
Re:Useful in some cases (Score:1)
REAL uses for picture phones (Score:4, Insightful)
On the other hand, just imagine how useful one of these things could be for a field service engineer, customer service, etc. ("OK, you've got cover opened, right? See the board? Do you see a little switch pack down at the left?" "[Click] This one?" "Yes... could you get a little closer?" "OK [Click]" "Good, now see switch #6, set to 0... set it to 1."
Insurance adjusters (who now have to carry digital cameras and laptops with them)...
All sorts of situations where someone in an unfamiliar situation wants to CONSULT with someone at a remote location...
Re:REAL uses for picture phones (Score:2)
And you can't imagine this happening in the non-proefessional domain?
"Okay, I'm in the cookies aisle, but I don't see the cookies you were talking about. Where are they again?"
"Show me where you are...okay...no...they're further down...near the Oreas...that's it."
But, as the article implies, I think the "killer app" is people checking to see if the person they're talking to is lying about his or her whereabouts. Parents checking on children, jealous boyfriends checking on girlfriends, bosses checking on employees, and the biggie is...drum roll...wives checking up on their husbands.
Re:REAL uses for picture phones (Score:1)
How about: Girlfriend tries on dress in shop, wants boyfriend's advice before buying it. Or, guy sits on home on Saturday night, receives an MMS message from his friends with a photo of the party, decides to hit the party.... Etc.
It's no secret why MMS is currently being pushed so hard in Europe ($$$ - many mobile operators freely admit that the SMS boom caught them unawares and they were forced to maintain a low unit charge), but I think it has a real chance to be a lot more than a gimmick.
(Anyway, MMS could be viewed as just a stepstone for the KILLER 3G app - real-time videoconferencing.)
Re:REAL uses for picture phones (Score:2)
Wee'er at thisa batr here and im soo drunmk an man theres a hot chickl here wiht me
poor limeys (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:poor limeys (Score:1)
A bit rich coming (I strongly suspect) from the nation that funds the IRA
Personal security aspect? (Score:1)
One press of a button and your exact position (and the last 30 seconds of sound/video) is on an ICQ to your friends and email to the police.
When we get there, I predict a big drop in violent crime.
And the implications for people's politeness are interesting when anyone being an asshole can be sent to a hundred people as email in a minute (Subject: "What an asshole! Anyone know him?"). (Especially interesting with face recognition).
The problem is the possibility of 1984. We have a better and better world today beacuse everything depended on a good industry and to get a good industry you more or less needed an open democratic society.
What if some control state can keep the economy open and throw all political troublemakers in jail? Stalin Sovjet that works well... shudder! History as a foot trampling a face.
More pics than in my whole life before? When? (Score:1)
Geez, one more reason to not leaving the house.
cu,
Lispy
My picture phone (Score:2)
Having a camera built into my mobile (which I carry all the time anyway) is a cool thing, although the picture quality of the 7650 isn't that great. The 640 x 480 res is ok, but the colour quality, sharpness and light response are pretty bad. It's fine for sending a postage-sized image to another phone, but it's not good enough for use as a cheap digicam. When the quality improves a bit (perhaps enough to produce a decent standard-sized print), these devices will be really useful.
The whole messaging aspect depends on everyone else having the capacity to actually receive the pictures you send. Phone manufacturers are already pushing for this, and including the facility to view transmitted images on their new mobiles, even if they don't include a camera.
all these newfangled whooznits ... (Score:1)
But they don't grab me -- yet -- when what I want is unmetered wireless access per se. Sure, it may be *bandwidth* limited (hey, even 28.8 would make me grudgingly satisfied, 56K would be groovy, 128 or higher would be pleasant like punch), but what I *don't* want are a) roaming charges and b) per-minute costs for calls or data.
Yes, I'd pay $100/month flat. Even $150. *Maybe* even $200, once enough LEO sats / dirigbles / solar planes / (whatever) are circling to provide coverage that is at least all over North America.
A few places I'd like to be able to communicate (voice and data) from:
- friends' apts and houses in cities I don't live.
- Big Bend National Park (far West Texas)
- chair lifts in Utah
- my favorite chinese buffet
- a tube floating down the Guadalupe River
Now, it's true there are times that I would *not* like to communicate from these places -- this list is just a few examples of places which I'd like to be able to visit without being tied to a long cord. Batteries have gotten smaller and better, there's plenty of processor in the Zaurus and other handhelds to use the Web, send email, etc -- it's just the communication infrastructure that isn't yet as far as necessary to make this possible.
Long-range 802.11 stuff is getting impressive, but I so hold out hope for the balloon / satellite option, because I doubt the guadalupe mountains are going to be convered otherwise.
timothy
As usual, Futurama predicts all! (Score:2, Funny)
Bender: No it isn't. I just took some pictures of your face and stuck them on someone else's body.
Leela: [looks inside] Hey!"
(episode 2ACV09, A Bicyclops Built For Two)
In defense of a little privacy (Score:2)
I don't have a general problem with these phones specifically. Ultimately it's just another camera. If the people in question want to carry a camera, they could just as well carry one of the new, smaller-than-a-wallet digital cameras and upload them somewhere that evening.
I do have a problem with societies general move to increased monitoring. People argue "if you're not doing anything wrong, what's the problem?" The problem is that "wrong" is relative and your legal (and in your mind, ethical) activities may cause problems elsewhere. Say you love your spouse, but your spouse is a tad bit paranoididly jealous. Suddenly an innocent picture of you meeting a potential business client of the opposite gender might look suspicious. Perhaps you're just listening to a union organizer's pitch during a unionization effort. Suddenly your decision to just listen, even if you decide against, might cost you a job if a photo of the two of you talking is mis-interpreted. Perhaps you live in part of the world where there is still a strong level of racism/sexism/somethingism. You decide to try and work for social change, but because you have a family to protect you decide to only work behind the scenes. A photo of you meeting someone might cause your children to be threatened. A visit to an family planning clinic might result in your harassment elsewhere as your photo circulates amoung extreme anti-abortion activists. Perhaps the economic downturn has dramatically left you with no options for employment, so you take a job with someone who illegally screens employees based on religion. Sure, it's illegal, but you need the work to support your family. Suddenly photos of you attending religious services might cost you your job.
Sometimes the society around you might strongly disagree with your actions, actions that you feel are ethical and correct. Privacy allows you to follow your heart without needing to put yourself on the line. Sure, ideally you'd have no external commitments and would make a public stand, but for most people that isn't an option.
Corporate Espionage? (Score:1)
Re:What I want to know is... (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:What I want to know is... (Score:1)
Being able to check train times cinima times, news, email etc on the move is very handy.
Sending pictures is neat too, but it is going to take a while to get used to. It can be usefull too I did use it to prove that my train was late when I wan't in work on time.
I think the next Killer App for mobiles could be integration with Internet IM servaces. but could hit mobile providers if it cuts into SMS revinue.
Re:What I want to know is... (Score:1)