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7 Megapixel Camera Phone

Alex writes "It looks like LG Electronics are planning a 7 Megapixel Camera Phone which to me seems like overkill - but it must be making a few of those digital photography manufacturers pushing out point and shoot digicams a little nervous. Camera phones will never take over DSLRs or serious digital cameras but are we seeing what will be the death of the entry level point and shoot digicam?"

333 comments

  1. camcorder phone by osho_gg · · Score: 3, Interesting

    So, when do we start seeing phone with camcorder?

    1. Re:camcorder phone by ebsf1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hmm...they are already out there. What we need are ones with storage space for more than 30 seconds or so.

    2. Re:camcorder phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With some phones you can take 15 second (or so) clips already.

      To the 7 megapixel camera phone I say, why?!

    3. Re:camcorder phone by TheUnknownOne · · Score: 1, Troll

      There already are cellphones that record video, I believe there are some that also record sound. Personally I dont like camera phones. I think my phone should be used for communicating, not taking worthless pictures that are (usually) low quality and looking at them on a small screen. On another note, If this is a 7MP Camera are they actually going to have a decent lens? Using a cheap piece of plastic probably wont cut it...

    4. Re:camcorder phone by zallus · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It [video, sound in phones] is actually just a cultural foundation-laying for later projects. Cell phone companies know that portable videophones will sell, if purely for the Sci-Fi factor. "Normal" videophones, the ones pictured in SF, haven't (and won't) be adopted first for a simple reason: lack of an "hip, trendy" market. People won't buy a new desk-mounted phone because nobody requires they buy one to talk to them, and that's the only thing that pushes them to upgrade things. Cellphone users, however, are being gradually phased into the idea of a videophone with cameraphones, SMS messaging, and other such "alternate communication paradigms". Once they adopt it, and they will, as the cellphone companies will just drop it into their new phones that you're forced to upgrade to to use their service, desktop users will have a much more proven, and probably required (read: in use by one's boss) technology. Then we'll start to see the real effects of this technology; the "cell-posted video blog", the "900 number that won't date you", etc.

      --
      I mod down pathetic posts.
    5. Re:camcorder phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      It's not going to cut it anyhow. Pushing more megapixels into a camera dosen't mean shit if it's sensors can't get a decent amount of light. Lenses be damned, because the sensor on this thing will fit inside a cheerio, therefore it's not going to collect enough light, therefore they've got to amplify the signals, therefore it's going to be noisy as shit.... You're going to get one remarkably large, and obnoxiously noisy picture, of overall lesser quality than a 1 megapixel phone with a sensor of comparable size... Regardless if the lens is a piece of plastic, or if it's some priceless artifact that was carved from a diamond found in a piece of angel shit.

      Great.

      Heck, much over 5MP in a snapshot camera is worthless, for that matter. You will see NO gains.

      But, I have absolutely no doubt that people are going to jump all over this, regardless of the cost, just so they can say to their dipshit friends "hey dude, I've got a 7mp phone, and look at my 180x200 OLED display it in all of it's glory", while they prostrate themselves at his knees begging him to shovel more shit into their brains.

      Seriously, folks. We've hit the barrier in what increased megapixels--at the cost of the size of sensors--can do for us, that is. If they're made any smaller, all they're going to be good for is receiving UV light, and I know how well I can see UV, if you get what I'm saying.

    6. Re:camcorder phone by puhuri · · Score: 2, Informative

      For example, Nokia 6630 records QCIF (174 x 144) video "up to 1 hour". I assume you need large enough RS-MMC. While camera phones, because of their small size, cannot compte with quality of compact cameras or DSLRs, they have the (dis)advantage being always with you.

      If we speak about "real" camcoders, I like to have one with 100 GB 2.5 inch laptop drive. I think it will cost about the same as MiniDV casette unit and would be much more convinient than cassettes. I know there exists some camcorders with fixed storage, but their optical quality is not good.

    7. Re:camcorder phone by SlashdotMeNow · · Score: 1

      My videophone can do decent recordings with sound. It can record to SD so if you have a big card you can record a home movie if you want.

    8. Re:camcorder phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      This got me thinking...

      A high resolution device providing a low resolution video means great quality digital zoom. This is my guess being as optical zoom would require more space and mechanical complexity - not good in a phone.

      Plus wouldn't the higher resolution also give better chance of providing digital steady-cam capabilities with a little bit of image processing? Or is the image processing required just too much for current silicon?

      I see handy-cams, digital cameras etc just stop-gaps until we are in a situation where as much as possible is provided in one device that is both waterproof, portable and able to be always with you, like a watch or some other form like a broach (like in Star Trek), or ear-bud, or contact lens, or pearcing. But I am dreaming here arn't I... been reading too much Sci-Fi, not going to live long enough.

      Course I'm not really going to be impressed by the resolution of cameras until we have one like in the Movie Blade Runner.

    9. Re:camcorder phone by the+angry+liberal · · Score: 1

      If we speak about "real" camcoders

      This would be nice, but I don't think a laptop hard drive can keep pace with a raw 720p audio/video stream.

      There is also the issue of 100GB not being very much record time unless you do compression, which would knock it out of the "real" category and more into the "expensive toy" realm. Unlike a tape, you can't just eject the drive and pop another in like with DV tapes.

      I could be wrong on both of these, as I base the logic on what I have run into with my gear. I use Vegas for video editing and have noticed it runs badly when I read from my IDE drives, so I do most of my work on my two 10k rpm scsi drives in raid0. Collectively, they have ~80GB of space and that gets used up very quickly.

    10. Re:camcorder phone by puhuri · · Score: 1
      This would be nice, but I don't think a laptop hard drive can keep pace with a raw 720p audio/video stream.

      I would consider DV compression still as "real" camcorder category. If you grab DV video from MiniDV camcorder, you get something 13 GB/hour, that is less than 4 MB/s; something a laptop drive should easily handle. That is more than 7 hours of video to one disk that is more than enough for one week family vacation - as you can easily remove unwanted parts, something you cannot do with tapes. And then you can have one 400 GB external drive to save all video and still images of your four-week vacation. Or have two of those and then you do not lose all your video (or any) even if one breaks or gets lost...

    11. Re:camcorder phone by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "So, when do we start seeing phone with camcorder?"

      Nokia 3650s have short video recording capabilities. I have an amusing 10 second clip of my dog teasing my cat. Now that 4 gig CF cards are a reality, we may start seeing something more camcorder'ish in the next 2-3 years. Frankly, I think that's pretty darn cool. It sucks how interesting things happen when your video camera is stowed away in the closet.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    12. Re:camcorder phone by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "A high resolution device providing a low resolution video means great quality digital zoom."

      Sadly, the lens has to be of great quality in order to get such a fine resolution. Phones are last in line to get lens quality that is good enough for this. The company I used to work for built a video camera that had a pretty darn high res CCD, but it was hampered by the lenses we used. We thought it was so great that we found lenses as cheap as $10 until we doubled the resolution of the CCD and found little improvement.

      But... it'll happen some day. Lots of people always working on better smaller lenses.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    13. Re:camcorder phone by the_true_cirrus · · Score: 1
      I live in the UK and we've had video phones here for quite a while now. "Three" - the first 3G network here - has been around for about 2 years or so and had phones that let you make 2-way video calls right from the beginning - AFAIK these can also record and play short video clips.

      Even my 2.5G Nokia 6600 which is nearly a year old now and is available for free on most tarifs can do video clips. Unfortunately it will only record up to 10 seconds out of the box (but newer models can do up to an hour and include software on the phone to edit your video clips and combine them to longer ones) - but it can play clips seemingly of any length. I have a 22 minute southpark episode on my phone and it plays perfectly! (next project - get lord of the rings on my phone! lol!)

      Admittedly, the resolution and picture quality is a bit grainy on these 3GPP videos, but I recon newer phones will soon fix that. Megapixel cameras, MPEG-4 support in the hardware (which I believe NVidia is offering) and bigger memory cards (hell, you can get a 1gig SD card for just over 50quid these days!) ought to soon combine to provide decent video recording capabilities. Of course phones will nevere rival professional cameras and video-cameras, but compared to an average camcorder that an average user uses today they'll easily hold their own I think.

    14. Re:camcorder phone by nmg196 · · Score: 1

      > But... it'll happen some day. Lots of people always working on better smaller lenses.

      I'm no expert in optics, but I doubt that you'll ever get a really decent lens which fits in a normal sized phone (eg 10cm x 4cm x18mm deep) because the physics of it means that a physically small lens simply can't gather enough light such that the exposure times would be acceptable. Even if the lens was perfect and the image was really clear, the pictures would have to be exposed at the equivalent of ISO 1600 because of the tiny amount of light coming in though the 3-5mm lens which is going to be VERY grainy or cause an exposure time that's so big that everything is always blurry. In fact this is my experience of all current camera phones! This might be OK for blog pictures, but hardly acceptable for all your holiday snaps. Especially if they're taken in low light conditions.

    15. Re:camcorder phone by loraksus · · Score: 1

      Besides, most cell phone lenses are plastic - apparantly for durability.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    16. Re:camcorder phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Heck, much over 5MP in a snapshot camera is worthless, for that matter. You will see NO gains.


      Thing is, that the greater the number of pixels the bigger you can blow-up the image for printing or what have you.

      I can think of quite a few times I would have liked to have printed a photograph on a A0 printer at full coverage and still not see the grains.

    17. Re:camcorder phone by Manitcor · · Score: 1

      very true. Not to mention the fact that it is becoming increasingly popular to ban camera phones from business, goverment buildings and other secure areas. It seems to me having a camera on your phone would be more of an inconvience as there are even less places you can take a camera phone than a regular cell phone.

      Granted banning of camera phones is still new but I imainge the more popular they become the more places of business that have something to protect will ban thier use and perhaps noteven allow them onto thier property.

      Besides, its a phone. I have a camera for pictures and a console for games. Why does my phone have to do 100 things only 1/4 as good as a dedicated device when most phone makers and providers still have trouble providing thier primaray service.

      Why not perfect the technology of the phones themselvs and thier ability to carry service rather than research how to jam yet another device into a phone.

      Its almost impossible to buy a phone today that doesnt have games, internet access, high res color screens and a whole bunch of features that I will never use. Internet access is really the only useful feature to me and even that is limited when surfing using a mobile device). When I replace my phone I can't help but feel ripped off when I have to pay for features I have no need or use for.

      Of course if you want a good multi-band phone that has decent signal reception and can travel internationaly you have to buy a bunch ofr crap you dont want or need.

      Take all this extra crap out and give me my ear
      bud cell phone with voice control and Ill be happy. I can buy a camera if I want to take pictures.

      --
      "Don't mess with him, he taunts the happy fun ball."
    18. Re:camcorder phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why all the complains about size/image quality. Sony P100 digicams take some of the best 5MP pictures on the market, and the whole camera is about the size of a larger cell phone. And this device already has battery, PC jacks, speaker, microphone, and memory.

      Therefore, addition of cell phone features to this or similar camera needs not being sacrificial for its dimensions, and one (at least in principle) may expect very nice shots from it.

    19. Re:camcorder phone by Thing+1 · · Score: 1
      A response said 4 MB/s. So once we have 3G, we should be able to have just a small amount of memory in the device itself, for taking pictures; when recording video, it streams it back to some central office (either your PC if it's on the internet and can talk fast enough, or you pay for their or someone else's servers to handle the data).

      The huge benefit to this is, if you're recording something dangerous like a cop beating up a protestor and the cops then detain you and smash your device -- well, you still will have the video you just took.

      Espionage uses as well.

      Personally, I'd like such a device in a head-mounted form factor (perhaps embedded in my glasses?) so it's constantly recording everything I do, everywhere I go, every conversation I have. That way I'll have a complete record which I can review, and aid my memory (and also provide alibis, if necessary).

      --
      I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
  2. That .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    was a quick slashdotting.

    1. Re:That .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least click the link before modding up. It loaded for me in under 1.5 seconds. I wouldn't call that slashdotted.

    2. Re:That .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its dead, Jim.

    3. Re:That .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It still loads for me in under 1.5 seconds. I even cleared my cache to be sure it was actually loading.

    4. Re:That .... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah still loading here, dipshit.

  3. Well.... it would depend on the target market. by shockingbluerose · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I think that alot of young people would opt for the camera phone, and therefore not spend the money on a point in shoot.....and a phone. But, I think that our older generation would most definently prefer the standard point and shoot camera seperate from their cell phone. I see it as a decreased market, but not a dead one.

    --
    My name is a variety of floral rose, and no, it's not blue :)
    1. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      APERTURE!!!

      Who needs megapixels wghen the 80% of the pixels are grainy??
      What these cameras need is higher aperture ... dont they get it??

    2. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously not.

    3. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by shockingbluerose · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You have a good point :)

      --
      My name is a variety of floral rose, and no, it's not blue :)
    4. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Joey7F · · Score: 5, Funny
      You will never get mod points by simply agreeing with the parent poster. (In fact, you simply waste the readers' time.) The key to Slashdot is to add something extra that the community might find interesting into your reply.


      Totally agree

      --Joey
    5. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You will never get mod points by simply agreeing with the parent poster. (In fact, you simply waste the readers' time.)

      Ok I understand you were trying to provide guidance to an 810x series, but WTF?? Reading at +1 and you're bitching about wasting time??

    6. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree, how would they get a decent flash on that thing without killing the batteries anyway?

    7. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by wheany · · Score: 2, Funny

      What are you talking about?!? Everyone knows more megapixels means better camera. My 2 megapixel camera is better than current camera phones, but the 7 megapixel camera phone is 3,5 times better than my phone.

      Numbers don't lie.

    8. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by DaneelGiskard · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Depends on who "they" are. If "they" are the manufacturers, then be sure that they got it a long time ago. Unfortunately they only listen to that other group of "theys", namely the customers. And customers care only about megapixels, similar to how they only care about megaherz when it comes to computers ...

    9. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Neophytus · · Score: 1

      You don't get karma for being modded funny. RTFAQ

    10. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Urkki · · Score: 2, Informative

      Indeed, at lens size needed for 7 megapixels, they should be talking about a camera that has an integrated phone in one corner, instead of the other way around...

      Of course it might be that it's only 2 megapixel camera that interpolates to double resolution or some other marketing gimmick...

    11. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by tom17 · · Score: 0

      Hmm it worked for you... Given that, I agree too!

    12. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      The problem is that any fool can get mod points these days

      No - a lot of people have been silently banned from moderating, myself included. At least, given that I've not had mod points in a couple of *years*, I assume I'm banned. Doesn't bother me though. If they don't want me to help, I won't.

    13. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by rainman_bc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, I'm almost 30, and I think there's something to be said about having a camera in the phone. Living in such a deeply litigious age, it's almost handy to have something that can give you evidence. A phone you'll always have on you, but your camera you might not have on your persona. Sometimes a photo adds a lot of credibility.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    14. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by jetmarc · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > What these cameras need is higher aperture ... dont they get it??

      A larger aparture (less depth-of-field) would create the necessity
      of focusing. This in turn would require adding focusing mechanics
      (focus ring), focus feedback (deep zoom on LCD, or "good/bad focus"
      indicator based on edge contrast detection, or auto-focus (motored
      focus ring for large lens, or piezo mount for small lens).

      All this would either add to the cost, size and weight, reliability,
      and/or easy-to-use-ness of the product. The best choice for the
      manufacturer is to simply go with small apartures (= fix-focus) and
      crank up lightness of dark pictures in software (increasing pixel
      noise as well).

      After all its a camera phone, not a phone camera.

      Marc

    15. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by BarryNorton · · Score: 1

      Actually the FAQ is ambiguous on this point - maybe you should read it again and look for the second reference...

    16. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by BarryNorton · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps due to your moderation being meta-moderated unfair?

      And the irony is that this happens, in my shorter experience, exactly when you do something useful and mod something redundant or off-topic... if you just go around modding things funny and insightful (I've seen very little insight here really) no one disagrees and you keep getting points!

      It's like a positive feedback loop of dross...

    17. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      would somebody please mod the parent to this post as a troll.

      mod points don't lie.

    18. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Well your human eyes have small aperture, and they work ok.

      So it is possibly to get good image quality with a small sensor and no flash.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
    19. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by wwwillem · · Score: 1

      Do you know how many megapixel an eye is. This is not just to be funny (my eyes are 8 MegaPixel, what are yours? :-), but seriously I'm wondering if the comparison could be made.

      --
      Browsers shouldn't have a back button!! It's all about going forward...
    20. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 1

      Let me be the first to draw your attention to the fact that the parent poster may actually be seen as a technical pun on the term "good point", which may be a reference to "focal point".

      I'll grant you that it is not clear whether or not this pun is intentional.

      Thomas-

    21. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by InfiniteWisdom · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure you have neither a phone nor a camera on your persona :)

      In your person, maybe.

    22. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      typo - you know what I meant :)

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    23. Re:Well.... it would depend on the target market. by Hal_Porter · · Score: 1

      Lots

      http://wdv.com/Eye/EyeBandwidth/

      They reckon 90-100 million rod cells. I guess you could call this 90-100 million pixels.These are sensitive to luminance, i.e. black and white. The colour sensitive cells are much less common, ~ 2 million pixels. That BTW is the reason that JPEG and most video standards use less bits for the colour information than the luminance.

      The really cool things about eyes are the sensitivity - they can recognise single photons, at least for luminance. Also, all the neurons in your visual cortex are dedicated to image processing, so any problems with the sensors can be worked around in post processing.

      --
      echo -e 'global _start\n _start:\n mov eax, 2\n int 80h\n jmp _start' > a.asm; nasm a.asm -f elf; ld a.o -o a;
  4. A thought by The+Ancients · · Score: 4, Interesting
    How will this affect traffic charges over GPRS or 3G? Will network providers charge more, considering how much more data a 7MP camera will push, in comparison to a 1MP (pretty much the current highest.

    In many places providers have been moving to flatrate, so they better haul ass and make sure they've got 3G (or at leat 2.5G) and the backhaul to carry this off. That and there's the small matter of porn as well...

    1. Re:A thought by plover · · Score: 1
      That's the beauty of this phone, isn't it? They can keep the data rate the same -- but if you're going to send 7MB for a photo (OK, 2MB of JPG) you're going to use an awful lot more of it. Ka-ching!

      I figure we'll be a lot more tempted to send those big hi-res pictures than a 50x50 chunk that is supposed to be a beautiful girl at a bar, but comes out looking like Spacecataz on my crappy Sony Ericsson.

      --
      John
    2. Re:A thought by Frogbert · · Score: 1

      Actually there is a limit to the number of pixels you can send in an MMS message, the camera would have to round it down to fit the message size.

    3. Re:A thought by jettoblack · · Score: 2, Informative

      Like all current high-res camera phones, it will likely have a 7MP mode which saves only to the memory card, and a low-res mode (320x240 or maybe 640x480) which can be sent by email.

      I don't know about the current crop of American camera phones, but Japanese camera phones can automatically downsize your pics when you email them.

    4. Re:A thought by Bega · · Score: 1

      Charges probably yes. I highly doubt it'll be GPRS though. With UMTS and EDGE-GPRS coming their way around the corner, things will probably speed up a little. I think the providers will probably lower the costs of transfer/MB (at least so I'm thinking by my experience here in Finland) as these things become more common, or alternatively, they'll have more "air-bandwidth" available to offer for a cheaper price. Of course, the providers could keep the prices sky high, but that would be another matter.
      Here in Finland, there's a service called Muistikuva - a service where you can send your phone taken pictures over MMS or e-mail from your phone to your personal album/gallery (Incredulous, blatant SPAM/plug !!) - it's been pretty popular, since the GPRS costs with many operators have come down to a pretty reasonable price -- around 1.10€/MB IIRC. The cheapest are the new operators, which have been starting to break into the market, since there are still many conservative operators who charge 6€ per transferred MB. Went a bit offtopic there. O:)

      --

      THIS IS THE INTERNET. PLEASE PICK UP YOUR SERIOUS BUSINESS SUIT AT THE FRONT COUNTER.
    5. Re:A thought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also total kilobytes in an MMS is limited.
      I'm not sure if all phone manufacturers obey this, but I know a 100k limit was slapped on a model which I'm working on.

  5. Worrying... by NiTr|c · · Score: 4, Interesting

    With the introduction of higher resolution phones like this all over the place what are the privacy implications people face? 7 megapixels is quite clear indeed, and depending on the zoom (if any) you would be able to take some very intense candid photos. Also, as previously mentioned on slashdot, photographing sections of books or magazines in stores could grow in popularity. Depending on memory in the phone, one could walk into a store, snap photos of all the interesting articles of numerous magazines and then leave with a fantastic digital reproduction. So many evil intentions with these things...

    --
    Try actually thinking for yourself. It's quite refreshing.
    1. Re:Worrying... by The+Ancients · · Score: 5, Insightful
      No - what's worrying is the worst 'evil intention' you could come up with is photographing books or magazines :p

      <whispers> there's real people out there, dude...</whispers>

    2. Re:Worrying... by Hido · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That exact same problem is happening over here in Japan. The way they are combating it is by having the devices make a sound when a picture or video is being taken. That way if your taking a picture of a school girl going up a escalator with a skirt or pictures at a book store "big brother" will know that you are doing it.

      --
      Havin' it large, livin' the life, Welcome to the land of the rising sun.
    3. Re:Worrying... by NiTr|c · · Score: 3, Interesting

      You're most certainly correct. You wonder if these will start getting banned in all types of public areas, similar to cigarettes. I can't say it would surprise me to see the image of a phone with a camera on it in the middle of a red circle with a slash through it. Might just be the next big thing. I smell regulation time!

      --
      Try actually thinking for yourself. It's quite refreshing.
    4. Re:Worrying... by OmniVector · · Score: 4, Funny

      this guy worries about people taking pictures of magazines, and what comes to mind for you? taking pictures of girls wearing skirts! ahhh slashdot :)

      --
      - tristan
    5. Re:Worrying... by jsgates · · Score: 3, Insightful

      7 megapixels is only clear if their is a decent lens attached. Given that it's going to be on a cellphone...I'll stick with my 3 megapixel point and shoot, or my 6 megapixel DSLR.

    6. Re:Worrying... by Hido · · Score: 3, Informative

      The problem is not about taking pictures of girls wearing skirts. Its about people using there phones to take pictures "inside" their skirts. If this happened to be your daughter who was getting pictures taken of would you be very happy as a parent? To me this is a serious privacy issue and not something to be laughed at.

      --
      Havin' it large, livin' the life, Welcome to the land of the rising sun.
    7. Re:Worrying... by PorkNutz · · Score: 0

      How good is the quality going to be with a 7Mp camera phone? The optics can't be that good. If the camera has crap optics then it wont matter if the camera has a high res ccd or cmos, the picture will still be blurred crap, it'll just take more space to store it and more bandwith to transfer it.

    8. Re:Worrying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhm, first he mentioned: what are the privacy implications people face? 7 megapixels is quite clear indeed, and depending on the zoom (if any) you would be able to take some very intense candid photos.

    9. Re:Worrying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I, for one, welcome our 7-Megapixel Camera Phone Privacy-Violating Overlords.

    10. Re:Worrying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. Let me know if you ever run across any, Condescendo.

    11. Re:Worrying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, well why don't you come down from the mighty mountaintop and tell us all what acceptable concerns are regarding these cameras, so we know. Obviously you're better than everyone else, so give us the scoop.

    12. Re:Worrying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So offense, but your sig is sort of stupid.

      Perhaps you shouldn't try to compete with the sig masters. You're out of your league. :D

    13. Re:Worrying... by imroy · · Score: 1

      Forget the parental fears. Try some more homophobic ones. Imagine being photographed in the changing rooms of your local gym or pool. I've heard that many gyms/pools have outright banned all phones in their changing rooms. Or imagine using the public facilities (Americans are embaressed by the word 'toilet') and having a camera-phone quickly stuck over the door of your stall. How would you like those photos posted on some fetish website?

      Or try similar scenarios with children for some pedophilia-phobia (pedophobia?). And how about privacy concerns? Imagine someone re-programming your phone so that it takes a photo every x minutes and secretly sends the images to someone. It could be anyone with the right tools, information, and connections. CIA? DHS? The mob? The pervert down the street? They'll get lots of photos of the inside of your purse/bag/pocket/etc but will also get enough of your workplace and anything else to be of use. This works better than a hidden camera because you trust your camera-phone. You own it, so you control it. Don't you?

    14. Re: Worrying... by Alwin+Henseler · · Score: 1
      That exact same problem is happening over here in Japan.

      And the reason for a total ban on cameraphones in some Arab state(s).

      The way they are combating it is by having the devices make a sound when a picture or video is being taken.

      Or having the flash enabled by default. A clear 'click' only alerts a victim in a quiet environment like a changing room, but does nothing when used in a disco or on a noisy street.

      Pretty useless if you ask me. As with most 'features' that are meant to keep users honest (copy protection, scanners/printers/software that recognise dollars bills, etc): If the user is honest to start with, such a feature has no added value, at best doesn't bother the user. Dishonest users will quickly find ways around it. With the technology getting smaller/cheaper all the time, the potential for abuse grows right alongside with intended uses.

    15. Re:Worrying... by Blue_Wombat · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not necessarily - 7MP of itself is enough to show detail with very good clarity. However, the system is only as good as its weakest part, and if the lens is still 3-4 millimeter plastic then all the pixels in the worls won't improve the image. I have a Canon G3 with is only 4MP. However, we did some A3 blow-ups of photos at work and mine blew away comparable camera, and some shots from 6MP cameras. The reason was the G3 has great glass - and is both good at resolving images, and being an F2.0 lens can use an acceptably high shutter speed in normal lighting conditions. In order for more pixels to be any use in resolving the image, the glass has to be good enough to be able to capture it in the first place!

    16. Re: Worrying... by Mycroft_VIII · · Score: 1

      A minor totaly useless nit, But I think a flash in a disco would just about as noticeable as a beep.

      The rest I agree with, too easy to bypass a flash (swap for a resistor would probably do it), and probably not that hard for a beep depending on implentation.
      Besides a really clever person could even disguise a digital cam so many ways that the one on his/her phone could be just one of many.

      Mycroft

      --
      https://signup.leagueoflegends.com/?ref=4c3ed6600b6ea
    17. Re:Worrying... by Wonko · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Imagine being photographed in the changing rooms of your local gym or pool. I've heard that many gyms/pools have outright banned all phones in their changing rooms. Or imagine using the public facilities (Americans are embaressed by the word 'toilet') and having a camera-phone quickly stuck over the door of your stall.

      Why is this all of a sudden a big deal when you put the camera on a phone? Small, very concealable cameras have been available for quite a long time.

      Or try similar scenarios with children for some pedophilia-phobia (pedophobia?).

      Yeah, because you can't take pictures of kids with a regular camera...

      Imagine someone re-programming your phone so that it takes a photo every x minutes and secretly sends the images to someone.

      You will have to worry about this in the future just as much as you will have to worry about somebody using your cell phone for voice recording. But they can do that right now... Maybe the paranoid just need a shutter on the camera and a physical mute for the microphone. Maybe you should go work on that mute button right now, eh? :p

      This works better than a hidden camera because you trust your camera-phone. You own it, so you control it. Don't you?

      You own the phone but have no control over the software running on it. The more processing power you put on a phone, the more complex the software will get. The more complex the software gets, the more bugs there will likely be.

      I don't think anyone should be scared of their phone though... If someone wants to snoop on you there are currently much better ways than your cell phone. I'll bet the people who are paranoid about camera phones are the same people who think all the current security at airports "makes us safer" and isn't just there to make the sheep feel like the government is doing something :p.

    18. Re: Worrying... by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      but does nothing when used in a disco

      Speaking from experience, I challenge you to get a decent shot in a club with a phone camera. Even when people are posing for it the image is far less than perfect...

    19. Re:Worrying... by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      That way if your taking a picture of a school girl going up a escalator with a skirt or pictures at a book store "big brother" will know that you are doing it.

      "Big brother"? You object to giving the girl the chance to confront the guy?

    20. Re:Worrying... by geo_2677 · · Score: 1

      I agree. And in the hands of immature people it could turn out to be nuisance too. Check out this link http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/937 032.cms a shocking use of the cell phone.

    21. Re:Worrying... by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "With the introduction of higher resolution phones like this all over the place what are the privacy implications people face?"

      This problem is looming whether phones do it or not. Technology always gets better. The more connected we get, the less privacy we get.

      Is this worrying? Depends on what your values are. The more we dabble in the electronic world,the more evidence we leave of our existence. What do we do? We adjust. Let's say, for example, that naked photos of everybody start popping up. It'll be shocking at first, no denying that. Consider, though, that the more it happens, the less shocking it is, the less of a big deal it becomes. Remember when it was taboo to talk about looking at porn on the internet? Now, it's well established pretty much all of us look at porn. Just isn't shocking anymore. No shock, no real interest.

      I really don't think this'll be that big of deal. Maybe I'm naieve, definitely a strong possibility. I just think society is more adaptable than a lot of people fearing loss of privacy typically imagine.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    22. Re:Worrying... by hippo · · Score: 1

      Not worrying at all. Mobile phones are an easy fit into someones rectum so that should stop them.

    23. Re:Worrying... by Zorilla · · Score: 1

      this guy worries about people taking pictures of magazines, and what comes to mind for you? taking pictures of girls wearing skirts! ahhh slashdot :)

      You laugh, but I saw this exact sort of thing discussed in a police mini-documentary on Japanese TV - with reenactments and everything.

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
    24. Re:Worrying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is this all of a sudden a big deal when you put the camera on a phone? Small, very concealable cameras have been available for quite a long time.

      Some people are more worried about this because most people don't have little spy cameras. But, a whole lot of people have cellphones, and cameras are starting to be a standard feature. I do happen to have a little spy camera, but I hardly carry it anywhere, because I never expect to be taking pictures. But people do carry their phones everywhere.

    25. Re:Worrying... by Cygnus78 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, because you can't take pictures of kids with a regular camera...

      The problem is that more and more people will have access to a camera _all_ the time. Most people do not happen to have an ordinary camera in their pocket but a camera enabled cellphone is another matter. And I think much of these intimate photography is made on impulse.

    26. Re:Worrying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The answer seems fairly obvoius to me - many (phone)cameras make a loud shutter-type noise when you take a photo, which makes it fairly obvoius. Simply make it a legal requirement that all cameras make a noise of suitable loudness when taking a photo...

    27. Re:Worrying... by imroy · · Score: 1
      Small, very concealable cameras have been available for quite a long time.
      Yeah, because you can't take pictures of kids with a regular camera...

      It all comes down to the purpose of the device. A camera takes photos and nothing else. If you get caught with a camera, it's pretty obvious that you'd be using it to take photos. But modern mobile/cell phones have cameras incorporated into the device. A camera-phone is more innocuous because it still looks like an ordinary phone. And they're a much more common part of everyday life than a camera. They're something that a person carries with themselves everywhere, just a part of the scenery.

      Now, merely being *seen* with a camera in a sensitive area automatically raises suspicion that you just have or will shortly use the camera to take a photo. But you don't necessarily get "caught" when someone sees you with a mobile/cell phone, unless (or until) you're clearly pointing it at a subject to take a photo.

      You own the phone but have no control over the software running on it.

      Well of course. We know that. But most people probably don't realize the possibilities. Or that they could possibly (?) be reprogrammed remotely without the mobile/cell phone ever leaving their possession. People just naturally trust their own devices. That's what I was trying to get across. People have this natural assumption that if something is theirs that they control it.

    28. Re:Worrying... by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
      I can't say it would surprise me to see the image of a phone with a camera on it in the middle of a red circle with a slash through it.

      So, I take it you've never taken a stroll through the red light district in Amsterdam? Taking photos is not allowed there, and the symbol is just as you describe. It's not illegal, just will likely get your camera taken off you.

    29. Re:Worrying... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      torrent plz?

    30. Re: Worrying... by gid · · Score: 1

      The rest I agree with, too easy to bypass a flash (swap for a resistor would probably do it), and probably not that hard for a beep depending on implentation.

      Or just put some electricians tape over it :) Heck, that would probably work to put the beep or click as well. Face it, these things aren't going away, we're going to have to deal with them.

      Personally, I blame the mobile phone companies for the search of more advanced features to drive up the price of phones.

    31. Re:Worrying... by M_de_A · · Score: 1

      "Why is this all of a sudden a big deal when you put the camera on a phone? Small, very concealable cameras have been available for quite a long time."

      Right, but you didn't have millions of people wandering around with those cameras everywhere. One would probably not go as far as buying a small camera for the purpose of taking pics of girls legs but if they have the device embedded in their cell they already carry then hey, why not...

    32. Re:Worrying... by brad3378 · · Score: 1

      Why is this all of a sudden a big deal when you put the camera on a phone? Small, very concealable cameras have been available for quite a long time.

      Camera Phones can send pictures directly to others over the internet potentially making the "damage" permanent.

      --

    33. Re:Worrying... by Fweeky · · Score: 1

      "7 megapixels is quite clear indeed"

      Having seen plenty of sample shots from prosumer 7MP cameras with huge well designed lenses.. I'm gonna have to disagree with you here. There's a reason the sensors are comparatively enormous on dSLR's next to their compact cheapo counterparts; this sort of density comes at a huge noise and sensitivity penalty, and with the tiny, dim, distorted lens they're doubtless going to be coupled with to squeeze them into a phone-sized form-factor (as if they're not already bad enough on cheapo compacts), I don't see them being much more than gimmics. Which I guess is half the point, really ;)

      I dunno, maybe they'll squeeze an Ixus type camera into a slightly larger than average phone and maybe it'll be vaguely ok.. most people seem almost blind to noise and "grain" anyway, hence the silly overly-compact overly-noisy megapixel race :/

    34. Re:Worrying... by debest · · Score: 1

      Precisely. A poor lens with a hi-res CCD means that the terrible blurriness of your photo will be captured in vivid detail :-)

      I've got digicam almost 5 years old (Nikon Coolpix 990). Only 3.3 megapixels, and still capable of taking shots that blow the doors off most of today's cheaper 5MP cameras due to its awesome quality lens.

      --
      Look at the tomato! Isn't it sad? He can't dance! Poor tomato!
  6. Coral Link, so it doesn't get /.ed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.livingroom.org.au/photolog/news/lg_plan s_for_6_or_7_megapixel_camera_phone.php

    1. Re:Coral Link, so it doesn't get /.ed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's not a link. That's a URL. A link has tags around it.

  7. but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    does it make a phone call?
    /duck

  8. boring... by bdbolton · · Score: 0, Troll

    Woah a 7 mega pixel camera! what next! an 8 mega pixel camera!?

    1. Re:boring... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hitchhiker: You heard of this thing, the 8-Minute Abs?
      Ted: Yeah, sure, 8-Minute Abs. Yeah, the excercise video.
      Hitchhiker: Yeah, this is going to blow that right out of the water. Listen to this: 7... Minute... Abs.
      Ted: Right. Yes. OK, alright. I see where you're going.
      Hitchhiker: Think about it. You walk into a video store, you see 8-Minute Abs sittin' there, there's 7-Minute Abs right beside it. Which one are you gonna pick, man?
      Ted: I would go for the 7.
      Hitchhiker: Bingo, man, bingo. 7-Minute Abs. And we guarantee just as good a workout as the 8-minute folk.
      Ted: You guarantee it? That's - how do you do that?
      Hitchhiker: If you're not happy with the first 7 minutes, we're gonna send you the extra minute free. You see? That's it. That's our motto. That's where we're comin' from. That's from "A" to "B".
      Ted: That's right. That's - that's good. That's good. Unless, of course, somebody comes up with 6-Minute Abs. Then you're in trouble, huh?
      Hitchhiker convulses
      Hitchhiker: No! No, no, not 6! I said 7. Nobody's comin' up with 6. Who works out in 6 minutes? You won't even get your heart goin, not even a mouse on a wheel.
      Ted: That - good point.
      Hitchhiker: 7's the key number here. Think about it. 7-Elevens. 7 doors. 7, man, that's the number. 7 chipmunks twirlin' on a branch, eatin' lots of sunflowers on my uncle's ranch. You know that old children's tale from the sea. It's like you're dreamin' about Gorgonzola cheese when it's clearly Brie time, baby. Step into my office.
      Ted: Why?
      Hitchhiker: 'Cause you're fuckin' fired!

    2. Re:boring... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thats 7 mega pixel camera PHONE, ass!

  9. More power!!! by krez · · Score: 1, Funny

    What?!? A new product thats much better than the last generation of the same product?? Holy cow: maybe that Moore guy was onto something... (as in the law, not lard-assed docu-comedy director).

    --
    =U= "Just because you're not paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get you"
    1. Re:More power!!! by bdbolton · · Score: 1, Informative

      "lard-assed docu-comedy director"
      There's moore than one...

  10. death of the digicam? by laurent420 · · Score: 0, Troll

    are we seeing what will be the death of the entry level point and shoot digicam?

    hell no! despite being tech savvy, i always have and always will refuse to subscribe to cellular service for various reasons. i know im not alone.

    1. Re:death of the digicam? by Cecil · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I hate cellphones too, and do not own one. I hate the phones, I hate the pricing, I hate the services, I hate the companies involved. ... however, curious little devices like the Nokia 6820 are starting to woo me towards the dark side. As data fees continue to decrease, Mobile Internet is starting to become attractive.

      Bastards!

    2. Re:death of the digicam? by welshmnt · · Score: 1

      Yeah! I know what you mean. I had one once.....people kept 'phoning me! Seriously anoying :) Really dislike telephones. An I on my own? Have Fun Jo

    3. Re:death of the digicam? by phalse+phace · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I know what you mean. There's no point in having one. I once had one, but no one ever called me since I don't have any frineds.

      Sucks being a geek.

      *Sigh*

    4. Re:death of the digicam? by mewphobia · · Score: 2, Informative

      you don't have to use it as a phone, dude.

    5. Re:death of the digicam? by jvj24601 · · Score: 1

      despite being tech savvy, i always have and always will refuse to subscribe to cellular service for various reasons. i know im not alone.

      I was the same way for a long time. Actually, I had cell phone in the early 90's. Cool for a while, then just got plain annoying. Ditched it for my work pager in '95.

      However... I have a kid now. It got a certain point that not having a cell phone handy was just plain incovenient. And the first time your school calls because he accidentally eats something with peanuts (and triggers a violent allergic reaction), you're happy that your cell phone gets you out of that office meeting.

  11. Use da Coral by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    Quick! A preventative coral link found here.

    1. Re:Use da Coral by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How's this a troll?

    2. Re:Use da Coral by Zorilla · · Score: 1

      They probably glanced at nyud.net and thought they saw nyud.info

      "HEY, EVERYBODY! I'M LOOKING AT GAY PORNO!"

      Yeah, that one.

      --

      It would be cool if it didn't suck.
  12. It'll be real good if it comes out.... by I+kan+Spl · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the article "'LG Electronics' spokesman comfirmed Thursday, "LG is considering the development of 6- or 7 -megapixel camera phone with Japanese companies including Canon." LG does this pretty often... I would be surprised if they have done anything more than blueprinting at this point. The company I work with deals in their products, and quite often they annouce the product like three or four years before they even have a working prototype...

    --
    My UID is prime and so is this number: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0.
    1. Re:It'll be real good if it comes out.... by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

      I'm considering building an unstoppable army of a million killer robots, and hire them out to the highest bidder in a plot to rule the world. Can I get a Slashdot story also?

      I'll have to wait until someone else designs the robots, and I'm not quite sure how I'm going to buy them, or why I wouldn't just rule the world myself, but that doesn't really matter right now. I'm just considering it.

      --
      Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
  13. Optics by jessohyes · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What people don't realize is that the optics are just as important as the megapixel count. I'd take a two megapixel camera with a nikon lens over a 7 megapixel camera phone any day.

    1. Re:Optics by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

      Also, the zoom would probably be digital and not optical.

      The funny thing is that this appears to be in consideration, not development or ready for sale:

      "LG is considering the development of 6- or 7 -megapixel camera phone with Japanese companies including Canon."

    2. Re:Optics by jsgates · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just as important? I'd say more so. If your lens doesn't focus properly, reproduce colors/etc, no amount of megapixels will save it. Sorta like sticking an EF 28-90 on a 1Ds MKII...what a waste. I'll stick with my canon L glass where I can.

    3. Re:Optics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      WHAT? Nikon ED, bitch! (and one of the more underground holy wars comes to light on /. at last)

    4. Re:Optics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. It could be a 50 megapixel camera, and if the lens was poor, then it would look terrible. There's not much point having a super-powerful CCD if it is being used with a tiny, poor quality lens.

      So, with this camera you can have poor quality photos and large file sizes.

    5. Re:Optics by TheShadowHawk · · Score: 1, Funny

      NEVER!!!! Canon L glass all the way baby...
      Just had to get in the last word!

      --
      Friends don't let Friends use Internet Explorer.
    6. Re:Optics by sahonen · · Score: 1

      Exactly. I work in television and appreciate the value of a good lens, which is usually more expensive than the camera head, epsecially when you're talking about the big sports lenses with tons of zoom.

      --
      Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
    7. Re:Optics by femto · · Score: 1
      > If your lens doesn't focus properly, reproduce colors/etc, no amount of megapixels will save it.

      Not true! If you have the camera's point spread function (or a way to estimate it) you can restore an out of focus shot with a deconvolution operation. Here's bit of software which can do such an operation. The web page includes an example. A further example is the image processing which was done on Hubble when its mirror was found to be the wrong shape.

    8. Re:Optics by Djupblue · · Score: 1

      And how would your phone look like with that nikon lens attached to it? Bulky yes?

      Of course a larger lens means more light. But then again not all pictures are taken in a dark enviroment.

      Most people dont want a huge ass lens that sticks out of their camera and still they want good pictures.How do you solve that? By progress of course.

      CCDs getts better, small lenses get better, sooner or later we are going to have phones with great cameras, just like that!

      7mp camera in a mobile phone IS progress. It might not be perfect and it might not even be the best way to do it. But it is progress. Stop being so negative!

    9. Re:Optics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed! Megapixels does not equate to quality. Do a google search on "megapixel myth". cheers

    10. Re:Optics by xs650 · · Score: 4, Funny

      " And how would your phone look like with that nikon lens attached to it? Bulky yes?"

      Is that a camera phone in your pocket, or are you glad to see me?

    11. Re:Optics by zmollusc · · Score: 0

      Such a shame that all that money is spent on equipment and then it is used for dull-assed sports coverage. Why not cut back a little and buy an extra handicam for the news reporters so that they can produce more than 30 seconds of endlessly repeated news footage.

      --
      They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
    12. Re:Optics by sejanus · · Score: 1

      hope you are enjoying your dodgy 16-35L and 17-40L :)

      When canon work out how to make a decent wide angle lens let me know ok? :)

    13. Re:Optics by TheShadowHawk · · Score: 0

      You dare insult my 17-40L?!? o_O

      Bah.. begone nothingness! :)

      Heh. what lens do you have?

      --
      Friends don't let Friends use Internet Explorer.
    14. Re:Optics by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 1

      they need an arbitrary numbering system for the lenses on these things, so that maybe the cell phone camera manufacturers can point at it and say "Look! Our camera is better. It has a 5X SuperImage(TM) lens!" Then perhaps there will be some advancement in the lens quality front on these things, instead of just upping the resolution but not image quality.

      --
      Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
    15. Re:Optics by mikrorechner · · Score: 1
      Is that a camera phone in your pocket, or are you glad to see me?
      And you could use this to impress the ladies (or scare them).
      --
      "Oh, a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-my-own-Grandpa." - Dr Hubert Farnsworth
    16. Re:Optics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't know much about photography, do you?

    17. Re:Optics by sahonen · · Score: 1

      'Cause sports and news production entities, even if they're branches of the same company (i.e Fox), are still quite separate, and often don't even own the equipment they're using anyway. It's a common practice to just rent equipment from a nearby broadcast rental company when they're covering a remote event, news and sports alike. Blame the broadcast rental company for including so many cameras in their truck packages, I guess. I suppose you could rent an 8-camera truck to cover a news event, but I don't think it would be worth it. The sports people make much more money than the news people, and a cameraman is a bit over $300 a day.

      And I must say as someone who is sports cameraman today (and will be a news cameraman the day after tomorrow =D) that I'm saddened you find sports coverage "dull." We really do try our best to make it interesting, but I suppose you can only be so interested if you don't like sports.

      --
      Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
  14. Easier to Record in Theatres by mrs+clear+plastic · · Score: 1

    Now they will ask you to check your cell phone at the ticket counter when you go into the movie theatre.

    --
    Cleara
    1. Re:Easier to Record in Theatres by satoshi1 · · Score: 1

      Keep it in your pocket, we can't tell. Seriously, with how small these phones are, us ticket-tearers can't really tell if you even have one on you.

      "Yea... um... I need you to empty out your pockets... Why? You may.. um... have a cellphone in there. While you're at it, might as well take your pants off."

  15. right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    LG-electronics are the same people that make the electronics for many cheap sub 80$ cameras. the ones that advertise 1.3 megapixels that actualy use a 300k sensor then enlarge with software to 1.3 megs. Its a safe bet it will be the same with the camera phones

    1. Re:right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Prove it or shut up.

  16. Move along... by shikra · · Score: 3, Informative

    Nothing to see here, Samsung already has a 5-megapixel digital camera available.

    And it has a sliding cover ala the Matrix phone to boot.

    1. Re:Move along... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um... But this is a 7 megapixel camera.

  17. Some people still want the entry-level cameras by chjones · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I know very little about digital cameras. I've never been much of a picture-taker, and the last camera I bought (a fairly nice, though entirely unprofessional, one) has sat in a closet for years, if I still even have it. I'd never buy a phone for the camera feature.

    However, with the typical day-after-Thanksgiving sales tomorrow, one of the local superstores has HP's entry-level model, the Photosmart 435 3.1 megapixel, for less than $50. I'm going to pick one up. It's certainly not the best, but it's a camera, and it'll shoot 4x6's just fine.

    The point is, I don't care about a feature, and I don't look for a phone that'll minimize the number of gadgets I have---especially since I don't even know if I'll use a digital camera. This won't be the beginning of the end of entry-level digital cameras, because the entry-level ones are the ones people get when they don't even know if they want one. This could be the end of gadget-lovers buying them. This could even be the end of the "high-end entry-level" position.

    But some people will just want an entry-level camera, without paying for a cell phone.

    --

    Christian Jones
    Medicine. Mathematics. Mediocrity.

    1. Re:Some people still want the entry-level cameras by nEoN+nOoDlE · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but you're gonna pay for a cell phone eventually when your current one breaks or you get sick of it... And then your only option will be to buy one with a camera in it. It's hard right now to find a cell phone without a camera in it.

      I recently visited Japan and was shocked to find that people were using their cell phones to take pictures on their vacation! From that, it's obvious that the regular joe/jane is willing to sacrifice the image quality of a real camera for the convenience of having a camera/phone combo. So yes, I think it's the death of the entry level digital camera.

      --
      Don't trust a bull's horn, a doberman's tooth, a runaway horse or me.
    2. Re:Some people still want the entry-level cameras by loraksus · · Score: 1

      Friends don't let friends buy HP [Cameras].
      You don't really care for under $50 though.

      --
      1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
    3. Re:Some people still want the entry-level cameras by shic · · Score: 1

      I used to think exactly the same. I was given an SLR camera 20 years ago and I probably took a hundred or so photos with it as a teenager. 3 years ago I bought a 2MP point and shoot digital - and I've taken around 30 to 40 photos so far - and kept 2 or 3 (as digital images.) I'm no photographer - most of my digital photos were to document things - I bought the digital to document where someone had driven into my car then driven off. I thought "another camera - how could that possibly be valuable to me?"

      Keeping that thought in mind - I've found dozens of occasions I'd have made use of one... just not for taking snaps of people, or places. I frequently find myself noticing a sign with a phone number or a closed shop or restaurant with opening hours posted in the window. I never seem to have a pen or paper (and copying down a list of opening hours would be very tedious anyway) - but a photo of the sign taken using my mobile would be perfect... it would take only a couple of seconds, and I wouldn't loose the information (unless I loose my phone.)

      I expect to become a convert.

    4. Re:Some people still want the entry-level cameras by chjones · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right about finding a phone without a camera---it's another bane to me. (But then, I'm still annoyed I can't find one without "multitone" rings.) Trouble is, this isn't (for a long time at least) going to be an entry-level phone. Will camera phones in general get rid of entry-level cameras? I still don't think so, but I can see your point. Will this camera phone? Unlikely.

      --

      Christian Jones
      Medicine. Mathematics. Mediocrity.

    5. Re:Some people still want the entry-level cameras by chjones · · Score: 1

      That's very interesting---I'd never have thought of it, and it makes complete sense. Just out of curiosity, are the pics you take (say, of store opening hours) legible on the phone's screen, or do you have to upload them somewhere to read them accurately? If such a thing is easily readable, you may have just sold me.

      --

      Christian Jones
      Medicine. Mathematics. Mediocrity.

    6. Re:Some people still want the entry-level cameras by shic · · Score: 1

      My own camera phone is on-order... so I can't say for sure... but I strongly suspect that the screen will prove inadequate for any complex text - I expect a phone number, street name or some such would be legible (from what I've seen on others' phones) - though for my own use I'm not so bothered - I can easily display the images on my desktop/laptop when I'm at home or in the office... which (luckily) happens to be when I find I wish I remembered such details.

  18. What about the lens? by mattkime · · Score: 2, Insightful

    7MP might sound like a lot, but I have a hard time believing that it would look as good as a 3 MP point and shoot.

    Its the lens!

    While your phone can get smaller and smaller and still function as a phone - not so with a camera. Bigger lenses have better optical quality and larger sensors give better detail. Further, if I can carelessly shove it into my pocket, its unlikely the lens will even stay clean.

    I don't think we'll see the day when phones are compared based on image quality. (...but I'm not betting on that...)

    --
    Know what I like about atheists? I've yet to meet one that believes God is on their side.
    1. Re:What about the lens? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Further, if I can carelessly shove it into my pocket, its unlikely the lens will even stay clean.

      That's one reason why I went for the Samsung E800 when I recently got a new phone. It slides open/shut to reveal/hide the keypad, and when shut, the camera lens is protected by the battery compartment. It's not perfect, but it's a whole lot better than being permanently exposed.

      I don't think we'll see the day when phones are compared based on image quality.

      Maybe not by the maufacturers (although most try to show off the image quality, often with very carefully chosen and composed scenes), but try googling - you may be surprised just how many forums there are dedicated to just that.

    2. Re:What about the lens? by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1
      Postprocessing. Human eye has an abysmal-quality optical system. All the chromatic aberrations and inaccuracies are however handled by the processing power of neural networks attached to the sensor matrix in retina.

      Is there a reason why a digital image postprocessing shouldn't take care of at least the chromatic problems?

    3. Re:What about the lens? by MadHobbit · · Score: 1

      The human eye is also only really decent in the center of the image. Anything outside the central part of your retina is pretty poor image quality (try to read an entire line of text without moving your eyes).

      Chromatic abberation can probably be dealt with in a single-lens system, because you know exactly how bad the CA is at each point. In a fixed-lens camera phone, if the image quality is high enough that CA is evident, and the lens can't be improved to remove it, I'm willing to be that a sufficiently motivated group could take a bunch of reference images to map the CA for each part of the image, and reverse it in software. Not perfectly, but better than nothing.

      This does assume that the lenses are being manufactured in such a way that they all have the same (or similar) characteristics. Since people report differences even among individual same-model SLR lenses costing several hundred bucks, this strikes me as unlikely...

  19. Death of the beginning. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Camera phones will never take over DSLRs or serious digital cameras but are we seeing what will be the death of the entry level point and shoot digicam?"

    Or the death of a basic cell phone.

    Soon all phones will be of the "singing, dancing" variety.

  20. Megapixels sell cameras by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Because people are stupid and can't understand more than a single simple measure for a camera (or any other piece of technical equipment) the camera with the most megapixels wins. This is what sells these ridiculous camera phones despite the fact that you don't need more than 2 megapixels for an A4 print and most of these camera phone snaps won't be shown at higher than 320x240 res anyway.

    Those phones have shitty lenses too, so the results are crap anyway. Sigh.

    1. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      But imagine the upskirt photos kiddies can get with these in public places - then print them full quality on A3 paper....

      Hrmmm... maybe these phones are not such a good idea....

    2. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't confuse stupidity with ignorance. With constantly changing technology, it can be hard for people to keep up.

    3. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by irote · · Score: 1

      yes, every single time there's a story about cameras we get the same set of comments: "it's the optics, stupid." this is obvious, and probably news to noone. Much more interesting, however, would be to know if there's any combination of manufacturing or processing technologies which could compensate for this wee little lens... Is there anyway a DSP could compensate for the the small aperture? Would it be possible to create some kind of concave CCD to share some of the focussing burden of the lens? Would an extremely sensitive CCD with 32- or even 64-bit colour depth be able to extract a better picture from a small-aperture lens? Or would all that extra colour depth just produce more noise? could you produce a small lens which would be exceptionally transparent, letting through lots of light, which would also have very high refractivity? a diamond lens, perhaps? that seems to me the crucial question... if there is no way of doing this, then clearly camera phones will always be something of a gimmick...

    4. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it can be hard to keep up with technology, but with so many other examples of people applying limited to no brain power to purchases (or dare I say it, elections), I'll stick to my theory that people are plain stupid. Oh, and lazy too.

    5. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by Mocenigo · · Score: 1

      yes, like megahertz for assessing the speed of a computer...

    6. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by varjag · · Score: 1

      I agree to your point but should mention that you can't make any decent A4 print off a 2mp image.

      With some care one can blow them up to 20x25cm, but above that interpolation gets too obvious.

      --
      Lisp is the Tengwar of programming languages.
    7. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by MadHobbit · · Score: 1

      Well, your best bet would be the extremely sensitive CCD. Colour depth isn't the issiue - the problem is that with the size of the aperture, not much light is getting in. It's almost entirely a question of signal-to-noise ratios.

      If a sensor (CCD, CMOS, or something else entirely) could be developed that was extremely light-sensitive, or extremely low-noise, then a small aperture would still allow you to take noise-free images. Very clever processing circuits can also help here. That's the first half of the battle.

      After that, you start to get into questions of focusing, image sharpness, chromatic aberration, and all sorts of other fun topics. A lot of image quality issues that aren't apparant in a low-res pic become visible in a high-res snap, and will also be more evident in a noise-free image.

      Because this is for a hypothetical -phone-, not a camera, I'd suggest using a fixed-focus lens, focused at the hyperfocal distance (i.e. everything from some point X meters from the camera out to infinity is 'in focus'). The more features you add (variable focusing, optical zoom), the more complex your optical system needs to be. Stick with a medium-resolution sensor (at 2MP, each pixel of the sensor gets ~3x the light that pixels from a same-sized 6MP sensor will get). A phone camera that takes 2-3MP pictures, of good enough quality to be printed at 4x6 and be indistinguishable from a typical 35mm camera, is not outside the bounds of reason.

      Get too ambitious, and you have to make decisions about how much of the physical bulk of the phone you want your camera to take up.

    8. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      What I haven't seen mentioned yet is a comparison to the human eye, a device which is quite small (though the computer attached to it is rather large), yet can see in an extremely wide range of light conditions, and has extremely large dynamic range. Ultimately, the best camera sensor technology can evolve to is to be on par with the human retina; anything better would be pointless as we wouldn't be able to see the difference in photos without having artificial retinas.

      So, while it might be theoretically possible to make a camera sensor for a phone which produces images equal to or better than that of a full-size SLR, it would probably require a new type of image sensor technology, or a vast improvement on the current CCD or CMOS variety, which has much greater light sensitivity than current sensors, and a better signal-to-noise ratio as well. A larger dynamic range is probably also necessary.

      The concave-shaped lens you mentioned would also probably be a help, but I think that would only affect things like distortion, and maybe chromatic abberation. The primary problem, as others have pointed out, is that sensors made with current technology just don't perform that well when the pixel size is so small, because of noise, and because a small lens just can't gather enough light to focus on that small area, making the camera useless in low-light conditions. Only fixing the light sensitivity and S/N of the sensor will fix this.

    9. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by mblase · · Score: 1

      you don't need more than 2 megapixels for an A4 print

      This is true; however, as someone who's got a sizable archive of family digital photos, the extra megapixels are useful when you want to crop down a photo. If you start with a 2-MP file, you can make a good 4x6 print, but if you have to crop half of the picture away (or more) you won't have that print anymore.

    10. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, I accept that 2MP is on the limit at A4 size, but I have an absolutely beautiful A4 print I made from a 1.9MP crop from a 4MP original.

      Certainly you don't need more than 3MP for A4, and current 4MP and 5MP cameras are already overkill. I have an excellent A3 print I made from my 4MP camera.

      If I want for anything, it's lower noise, not more megapixels.

    11. Re:Megapixels sell cameras by m1dlg · · Score: 1

      some of my pictures taken by my phone, have been used in criminal investigations, if research is being done, to improve picture quality in handheld mobile devices, then i will find it easier to produce a very good quality picture for 'wanted' posters for the company i work for. the future holds no bars. i do agree the lens quality must be taken in to account but if the image is made up of large no. of pixels per inch, then the picture has more power for repoduction over a lower no. the possiblitys are ever more increacing as time goes on.

  21. No, consumer digicam death is over-blown by Dancin_Santa · · Score: 4, Informative

    The fact is that in order to improve the quality of a digital photo, the CCD or CMOS must be enlarged. The smaller the area of the sensor is, the more crowded it becomes for each photosite.

    Have you ever taken a digital picture with some bright point in it and seen a white stripe from that point up to the top of the picture? That is a CCD photosite area getting overloaded and spilling over into adjoining areas. It NEVER happens with film because film does not rely on electricity to save the image.

    The way to avoid this and other digital 'noise' is to put more space between each photosite, which of course requires either less photosites (like cutting sensors by 1/3 by using Foveon) or increasing the sensor area.

    If you want Foveon, you will be paying out the nose for it.

    If you want a larger area, you had better be prepared to upgrade the lens as well as the camera body. Thicker body and wider lens, IOW.

    A phone has a limited amount of volume that it can grow to. Current phones may seem small, but operators are loath to accept larger phones. So even though this LG phone may sport 7 megapixels, it is unlikely that it will be rendering pictures with any sort of acceptable quality.

    7 megapixels of noise is still noise.

    1. Re:No, consumer digicam death is over-blown by sejanus · · Score: 2, Informative

      Not always in the real world at the moment though - with DSLR's anyway.

      i.e. the Canon 20d has 8mp, but is only on a 1.6x sensor and has the best noise / high iso qualities out of all the DSLR's at the moment. Better than the (larger) 1.5x, 1.3x and 1.0x sensors.

      As much as I dislike the Canon bodies (looks fondly at Nikon kit) it's the truth at the moment.

      One of my cameras is a Kodak SLR/N which is a larger sensor - full frame, and though it's absolutely stunning below 400 ISO, above that the Canon 20d spanks it well and truly.

      Moving into the even larger sensors, i.e. medium format digital backs - it's the same story.

    2. Re:No, consumer digicam death is over-blown by MadHobbit · · Score: 1

      Canon claims that a lot of this is dependant on their DIGIC processor. Could be true - their processor/CMOS sensor combo has been remarkably low-noise since it was introduced, and it keeps getting better.

      If the processor can make that big a difference, then this technology can be applied to camera phones...if the manufacturers are willing to invest that sort of power, die space, and research into that area.

  22. lame by pHatidic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    what would really impressive me is if LG came out with a phone without a camera at all. I would kill for a black and white razor phone without a camera (i know i know its motorola but still)

  23. Easier to Record in [Competitors stores] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Now they will ask you to check your cell phone at the ticket counter when you go into the movie theatre."

    Or Best Buy.

  24. Did you memorize... by bdbolton · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    that whole thing? Thats really damn funny. I love those books! I've read the whole trilogy twice. I can't wait for the movie.

    1. Re:Did you memorize... by UserGoogol · · Score: 1

      Uh yeah, that's from There's Something About Mary. Adams is Adams, and Farelly is Farelly, and never the twain shall meet.

      --
      "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." -- Hanlon's Razor
    2. Re:Did you memorize... by tom17 · · Score: 0

      The movie?

      This isn't HHGTG you know

  25. nope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    just hopefully entry level digital cameras become cheaper...i'd love to see a 2MP go for $20

    1. Re:nope by flynns · · Score: 1

      You missed it, dude. Radioshack, yesterday. :P

      fucking pr jerks didn't publish a flier.

      [http://www.livejournal.com/~dejaflynn contains my decompensation for said action, and details.]

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
  26. Entry level cameras ... by mvpll · · Score: 1

    ... are great for entry level photographers, some of whom have no need for a mobile phone, with or without a colour screen.

  27. Worrying...Self-Control. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    "I smell regulation time!"

    If people could excercise some self-control? You wouldn't be smelling anything.

    1. Re:Worrying...Self-Control. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      If people could exercise some self control, there'd be more room on trains.

  28. Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by ewhac · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Has anyone checked the current cell carrier-imposed limits on MMS messages? Last I heard it was something below 200KiB (and probably as little as 75KiB). Now, unless you're taking a picture of an evenly-lit solid white wall, there aren't many seven megapixel images I can think of that will crunch down into 200KiB.

    So unless the cell carriers are going to allow the phone to hook directly up to a PC (fat chance; they can't bill for that), seven megapixels seems a trifle huge for a phone.

    Schwab

  29. Don't know about this... by laughingcoyote · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Really, the way people seem attached to their cellphones, I'm surprised Samsung isn't working on a way to hardwire the thing to someone's head. I really doubt if anyone would be able to take the phone away from their ear long enough to take a picture.

    --
    To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
    1. Re:Don't know about this... by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      well, to be fair there ARE headsets available...i know whenever i used to call my parents once a week with my cellphone from uni, i'd use a hands-free so i could work on my gamin-err...homework you don't need the cell on your head to talk, so this frees up the phone itself for taking pictures

    2. Re:Don't know about this... by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      and it always sucks when you post an entry with html formatting by accident, and you lose all your pretty carriage returns

  30. Ehhh, its not about the megapixels by Razzak · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...a lot of it is about the lense.

    For example, my 1 megapixel v710 looks like complete ass. Its photos are dark and worst of all very, VERY grainy.

    DigiCams still have another 3-5 years left in'em.

    1. Re:Ehhh, its not about the megapixels by davejenkins · · Score: 2, Insightful

      DigiCams still have another 3-5 years left in'em

      Oh? And what, pray tell, will replace them? There is no way we are going back to chemical film-- the media costs, processing time, and lack of easily transmitted imagery have killed that whole scene (except for professionals and studios shooting on the big box cameras).

      Do you realize that the vast majority of amatuer photography are people taking snaps of their friends, sports events, gaudy frontages in Vegas, or the big donut in LA?

      I am assuming you are some photography professional, but the rest of us slobs love digital cameras for the easy stuff. If I can consolidate one more item out of my pockets, I am all for it.

      Currently, my DoCoMo phone is:
      - my telephone
      - my quickcam
      - my mp3 player
      - my rolodex and scheduler
      - my email pager

      I am saving up for the model that plays TV signals and will help me sign Karaoke (they exist).

    2. Re:Ehhh, its not about the megapixels by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      I think thy have plenty longer than that. Barring any revolutionary discoveries, there's no way around the basic laws of physics that govern optics. It boils down to the fact that you need a large lense to get a good picture, way too large to fit on a phone. Good ones are larger than the phone.

      The little camera on the phone isn't intended to be a replacement for a good digital camera, it's inteded to let you have the ability to take simple pictures whenever you have your phone with you (which most people always do).

    3. Re:Ehhh, its not about the megapixels by jdaily · · Score: 1
      ...will help me sign Karaoke

      Wow, finally Karaoke I can enjoy: signed! I can just sit back, close my eyes, and enjoy the silence.

  31. New Spec by TrevorB · · Score: 1

    I think there needs to be a new spec for camera phones.

    Number of photos transmittable/cell phone battery charge.

    At 7MP per pic, even on the fastest of cellular networks, how long would it take to transmit the entire picture to another cell phone?

    (I'm assuming "thumbnails" would be transmitted to other phones, but still...)

    1. Re:New Spec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would you have to know?

      There's no reason your phone has to freeze up when sending an MMS attachment. You'll be dealing with multitasking operating systems on these devices, so spawning a thread to handle the file transfer is a piece of cake.

      Then you hit Send, the phone says OK, and you're back doing whatever you're doing.

  32. I guess it's about being "good enough" by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

    Obviously the phone won't be as good as a dedicated camera with a proper lens.

    At the end of the day though they may be "good enough" for most purposes that the extra expense and hassle of carrying around a seperate low(ish) end "happy snap" digital just doesn't seem worth it. I wonder how close we are to that now. I know the camera in my Nokia 7250i is pretty much useless but I'm sure there are better camera phones these days.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  33. an idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    What would really be cool is if they could split the camera off from the phone and just sell both separately. For instance without the components necessary for the phone to function, you could add more sophisticated photography features like a bigger lens or a more buffer space. I see a big marketing opportunity here.

    1. Re:an idea... by techotter · · Score: 1

      dont know if this is the idea your talking about, but sony actually tried something similar to this a while ago, making a line of digital cameras with integrated bluetooth, so you could take pictures and send them over to a bluetooth (i.e. phone) device. dont know if that ever worked out...

    2. Re:an idea... by jcostantino · · Score: 1
      The Motorola T720 and Sony-Ericsson T68i were like that. You would buy (seperately, of course) the camera module and snap it on to the bottom of the phone. It was something like $120 to buy the OEM camera but of course there were knock-offs on Ebay.

      I don't believe they ever went above 640x480 though - that would be an oppurtunity to innovate by producing a higher resolution imager.

      --
      Reviews with a twist! http://www.sardonicbastard.com
    3. Re:an idea... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and, how about a separate PDA function as well? that way I could look at the PDA and talk on the phone at exactly the same time, whoa talk about convenient...

      and even better, then I could upgrade the phone, camera, and pda functions separately as each improves over time; in fact I could select exactly the right solution for me in each case without making compromises on any of them, whoa talk about managing my money intelligently...

  34. Re:Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Last I heard it was something below 200KiB (and probably as little as 75KiB). Now, unless you're taking a picture of an evenly-lit solid white wall, there aren't many seven megapixel images I can think of that will crunch down into 200KiB.

    nerd == you

  35. Probably looks terrible, too by sahonen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When you are putting a tiny, sub-optimal lens in front of a CCD the size of your fingernail, then trying to fix 7,000,000 pixels on it, your image is *going* to look like crap. For best image quality, you need to funnel as much light onto each pixel as possible. That means a larger lens, a larger CCD, and a smaller pixel count. That's why broadcast television cameras are so large.

    --
    Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
    1. Re:Probably looks terrible, too by Engineer+Andy · · Score: 1

      We're all working on the premise that they will use the smallest lens possible. What if they manage to cram the phone electronics around the photo circuitry, have a decent sized lens (optical zoom could be hard to get), and have a lens cover to protect the vulnerable bits.

      The form factor for a point and shoot is largely based around what is easy to carry and hold as a camera (and battery size).

      I'm not a phone engineer but it can't be impossible to do

      --
      "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World" 1 John 4:14
    2. Re:Probably looks terrible, too by putaro · · Score: 1

      Once you do that it's more of a camera than a phone, isn't it?

      Personally I'd rather have things integrate over a network rather than have all the functions stuffed into one gadget. It would be nice if my digital camera could send things out over my cell phone and that my PDA/address book could initiate calls over the phone and also display photos from the camera, etc.

    3. Re:Probably looks terrible, too by albamuth · · Score: 1

      Is that why people (well, anime-geeks) find anime-girls so attractive? Are we programmed to select women for the amount of light they can focus on their retinas with their tea-saucer sized eyes?

      (so off-topic, but what the hell...)

      --
      [pink beam of light]
    4. Re:Probably looks terrible, too by sahonen · · Score: 1

      Yes, I suppose those anime girls could see VERY well in the dark as a result... Hmm...

      Anyway, I think it's because they're proportioned like very young children, only with boobs. Therefore, anime fans are pedophiles. Sorta.

      --
      Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
  36. Re:Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny. That cable i use to pull the pictures off my Nokia cam phone must be a figment of my imagination. I should have been MMS's the pics all the time.... I'm silly.

  37. Re:Optics AND the CCD by Concerned+Onlooker · · Score: 2, Informative

    Right on. I would add to this that the quality of the CCD and the image software makes a huge difference as well. I recently bought a Casio z40 and while I love it for the features the images are not nearly as good as my old Nikon 950. Dark noise, sharpness and "bloom" are all much worse in the 4MP Casio than the 3MP Nikon.

    --
    http://www.rootstrikers.org/
  38. If you don't want people looking at your panties by Fleet+Admiral+Trollt · · Score: 0, Troll

    then you shouldn't have worn a skirt.

    If you wear clothing that is open to the world, then you have no right to complain about people looking through the natural opening. If your goal is to hide your underwear from the world, you should wear clothing that doesn't have openings through which your underwear can be seen.

  39. cat got my tongue by atari2600 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Camera phones will never take over DSLRs or serious digital cameras but are we seeing what will be the death of the entry level point and shoot digicam Wow - that's gotta be the observation of the centry.

    Of course they wont - it is like saying that a laptop can never take over the Ipod even though the laptop might have a cutting edge audio-subsystem built into it. Where is the slashdot i used to read and enjoy?

  40. Not the death of entry level cameras by Excelsior · · Score: 1

    are we seeing what will be the death of the entry level point and shoot digicam?
    How exactly does a device that likely costs upwards of $200 and packs an anual fee of upwards of $600 cause the death of a camera I just paid $150 for?

    1. Re:Not the death of entry level cameras by eraserewind · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because you (or at least a huge % of "they") are going to buy a phone anyway that's how.

  41. Mobile Providers Want This by mcleodnine · · Score: 1

    Talk rates and text messaging packages don't cut it for providers of cell services. This genre has been relegated to commodity status and is only profitable when oversold (sell "packages" where users will rarely tap peak usage).

    Camera phones provide the necessary excuse to bill a per-packet rate to subscribers who want to push giant images to their IM friends. Upping the pixel density pads thier resource model.

    This is not a leading-edge technology enhancemment on handheld devices, but rather a method to improve the billing cycle returns.

    Don't get me wrong, it's nothing untoward, we all need to make a buck, but please don't try to sell it as a significant technology push. In fact, bragging rights go to the first one to provide it.

    --
    one better than mcleodeight
  42. PQ sucks with camera phones by doormat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Even with the new megapixel phones, the picture quality is crapola. They need a 10-fold increase in the quality of the lens/optics before they start ramping to 4, 5 or 7MP.

    --
    The Doormat

    If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
  43. Yeah but which one would you buy? by Tomfrh · · Score: 1

    Those are all good points. But I would still prefer a 7 megapixel phone to VGA phone!

  44. I used to work for Cingular... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    back in the days where TDMA/Analog was the standard and color screens and picture/video messaging was just a wet dream for the account executives stuck selling the phones at drastic discounts and expected to draw in huge numbers each month.

    Everyone in the corporate world kept telling me - just give me a phone that works in my coverage area. It can be a basic black.....or silver - so long as it has a flip! Oh, and I want my names and numbers ported from my old phone to the new phone. Oh - and it needs to be NOW!

    Who uses the picture taking feature of a cellphone anyhow? (Besides the obvious up-skirting, cleavage shots, and other absurd pornography) This is just another waste of space on a device that is becoming more and more of a distraction to anyone within a 5 mile zone!

    IMO, outside of the introduction to the color screen and PIM into cellphones - the rest is just fluff that gets the average consumer that wouldn't otherwise purchase a unit to clamp down and find the extra $80 in their wallet to cough up for new service.

    I long for the days where a 3360 or 7160 (both Nokia TDMA handsets) were "in style" and you wouldn't feel ashamed walking around with them. (I also long for the days where I could afford them!) Until then, I'll take comfort in the fact that I don't need a cellphone for the short term since I work out of a small town.

  45. I hate to sound old fashioned by toby · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But I suspect a camera will always take a better picture than a telephone. For the same reason, I go to a restaurant to eat great food instead of catching a plane.

    --
    you had me at #!
    1. Re:I hate to sound old fashioned by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      McDonalds is the world's most popular restaurant, and their quality is probably worse than most airplane food.

      Most consumers don't care as much about quality as we in the tech industry think. Lots of people (myself included) actually convert their whole CD collection to low bitrate MP3 because ease-of-use matters more than quality. Medium format photos are better than 35mm, but that level of quality isn't needed by most people.

      A dedicated camera will always take better pictures than a cell phone, but once the cell phone quality is good enough most consumers won't bother with 2 devices.

  46. What I'd like to see.... by skids · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    ...is a laser scanning system *combined with unpowered physical objects* that simply tracks the user's hands and the objects, and maybe draws a few things here and there, to give full keyboard/mouse/stick/wheel/powerglove functionality.

    I'm no big fan of the projected keyboards -- I want a physical keyboard where I can feel the keys go down, and same for the mouse. But I think that would be doable by providing unpowered keyboard/mouse objects that you can manipulate -- colored indicators mechanically activated could allow such a system to provide buttons on the mouse. The laser would just read them (think: the little orange "I'm unlocked" stickers on your car doors.)

    Capslock leds and such could be drawn on the keyboard object by the laser, and I'm sure a lot of other uses for objects drawn in the input area could be found, though really as any good typist will tell you (not that I am one) your eyes should be on the screen.

    Needing line of sight might be a bit tacky for people who like to recline, but I'm sure that could be dealt with by re-angling the laser from above or something.

    (Such a product may sound like it would never be commercially viable, but just think of how 1337 you'd look with those red tracers flying around your hands. I'm sure it would sell just on that basis :-)

  47. Very handy by phalse+phace · · Score: 1

    for those photo bloggers.

  48. The heck with 7M pixel... by cbdavis · · Score: 1

    I'd take a 4M pixel phone, with 256M of memory, and decent optics. I think the industry needs to make decent 2-4M pixel camers first, and sell a bunch. My Sanyo has about a 1.2M pixel in it and the pictures are, well, just this side of crummy.

  49. OT: Yuck! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where did they find the nasty looking model? Well its actually more the photographers fault. Badlighting, makeup, and no photoshoping her teeth to make them non-brown.

    The kyocera 7135 would be in my hands now if I had the money, I still have my 6035.

  50. Storage by zackeller · · Score: 1

    My camera phone has a 5MB memory integrated and no expansion. Verizon charges $.25/picture to send it and locks my phone so I have to use their service.

    So here we get a phone that takes pictures that are hundreds of times the size of a normal phone. Are the carriers going to charge extra to email them, seeing as data rates are so high?

    1. Re:Storage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In the mobile industry $$ rates are set by the market, not the actual cost of providing a service. The rate will be whatever the carriers think customers will pay.

  51. How is this a troll? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    It's entirely true. People whine all the time these days about what the world "owes" them and how everything they don't like should be illegal. When really, they should just be living their own lives and letting others live theirs. Modern society has gotten pathetic with political correctness, censorship, and supression of individual liberties.

  52. Not anytime soon... by Omega697 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would gladly accept a lower resolution on my camera phone if the lens would be better. There's no way they're going to sell me an N-megapixel camera on my phone until it comes with a decent lens. My 4 year old Olympus digital still takes pictures that look better than ANY camera phone I've seen, and that's all because it has a decent lens. The problem with the camera phone industry is that it is suffering from the same problem as the CPU industry was - for CPUs it was all about MHz, now it's all about megapixels.

  53. I would love a good quality camera/phone by smallstepforman · · Score: 0

    Why is everyone so uptight about increasing the resolution of camera/phones? I for one would love to have a decent quality camera phone. Why is everyone afraid of technological advancement? You do know that in a few years, a camera will fit into your shirt button, just like in the old spy movies of lore...

    --
    Revolution = Evolution
    1. Re:I would love a good quality camera/phone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why is everyone so uptight about increasing the resolution of camera/phones? I for one would love to have a decent quality camera phone

      Because the megapixel count is just a marketing number. A 7 megapixel phone simply won't give you anything near 7x the quality of a 1 megapixel phone. Other factors are more important, like the lens, which will still be teeny tiny, and therefore image quality will stink.

      Why is everyone afraid of technological advancement?

      I don't think people are. Just because it's new doesn't mean it's any good. I'd be happy to have 7 megapixels in my compact digicam. However, if I could pick one upgrade, it'd be an optical image stablilser.

      You do know that in a few years, a camera will fit into your shirt button, just like in the old spy movies of lore...

      Not with any kind of quality...

  54. I just can't help myself. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "then you shouldn't have worn a skirt.

    If you wear clothing that is open to the world, then you have no right to complain about people looking through the natural opening. If your goal is to hide your underwear from the world, you should wear clothing that doesn't have openings through which your underwear can be seen."

    Yeah! It's all your fault I can't control myself.

    1. Re:I just can't help myself. by Ensign+Trollback · · Score: 1

      You have no right to tell people that they can't look at certain things in a public place. Anything in a public place is fair game for observation.

      Your comment was wrong and pointless.

  55. If the optics are good enough, this is useful by Animats · · Score: 1
    If they ship something with optics suitable for an imager that big (which means a lens about 2cm in diameter), this would be quite useful for press photographers.

    If they ship it with a dinky lens, the exposure times will be too long for a handheld device.

  56. Not phones with cameras but cameras with phones by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the 7x mostly just gives them an amazing digital pan & zoom which would greatly increase their value (both in hand and mounted).

    Think the other way around though. Take those fancy lenses & ccds and put any old wireless backend on it. Studio photogs could view the photo just taken on a full sized display without putting the camera down. Reporters could submit photos instantly and safely again without even putting the camera down.

  57. Re:If you don't want people looking at your pantie by Hast · · Score: 2, Informative

    Besides that this is a troll I just thought I should point one thing out. In Japan (and many other countries I presume) a skirt is part of the school uniform. As such they don't really have the "option" of wearing one or not.

  58. It Means... by ArchAngel21x · · Score: 1

    This just means those naughty upskirt pictures will be better quality.

  59. Razor Phone? by uberdave · · Score: 2, Funny

    Do you call a lot of people while shaving?

  60. One gigapixel? by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 3, Interesting
    Well if your camera phone is gonna be a 7 megapixel, then maybe the new DSLRs of the next few years will be, like, 100 megapixel.

    That would be cool, because you could shoot film-quality photographs at poster size if you wanted.

    I can't wait until the first gigapixel camera. Which reminds me of the time an old friend of mine and I were talking about computers. I had a whole whopping 150 megs of hard drive space. Your cheapest computer today comes with more megs of RAM than that. He was a hard core computer geek, though, and he had around 300 megs of hard drive space. I thought that was a ridiculously large hard drive. It seemed like an endless amount of space that would never fill up completely. Anyway, he told me about this guy who had a "gigabyte", pronouncing the first "G" in "gigabyte" like the "G" in "giant"... Nobody pronounces "gigabyte" like that anymore. I was like, "What the hell is a gigabyte?" He said something along the lines of, "I don't know, but it's a LOT of space!" I was like, "Holy shit." Nowadays the cheapest hard drive has like 20 gigabytes, and most computers come with at least 40. And that space fills up so fast with applications and junk that it's not enough. I can't believe that shit.

    So I can't wait until the first gigapixel camera. Shit, you'll be able to shoot a 60' by 40' photograph and get film-quality results. We could send that thing to like Mars or something.

    1. Re:One gigapixel? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I know you mean to say "film quality" in the nicest possible meaning, but it's actually incorrect.

      Digital sensors are a little larger than a square centimeter in size. Most of the difference is in the width being wider than the sensor is tall.

      Even at that small area, the quality of digital prints is indistinguishable from 35mm film. As you go up in the price ranges, you come to the Canon 1-Ds which has an 8MP 35mm sensor which can create images that rival medium format film images. At that sensor size, it blows 35mm film out of the water.

      Square millimeter per square millimeter, digital is actually better than film. It's hard to believe, and film fanciers will always claim differently, but film does not have the resolution of an equivalently sized digital sensor.

      The problems with digital sensors are:
      1) cost. It costs a lot to build the sensors and put them in cameras. That's why there are only a few 35mm-sized digicams. Most of the Pro-level stuff is APS-sized and the consumer digicams are much smaller than that.
      2) sensitivity. There are problems with the current technology that include things like blooming, dead pixels, and pixel overload. The technology is getting better, but for very high-contrast scenes, the sensors can sometimes be fooled.
      3) lack of profiles. With film, each film type has its own particular qualities. As photographers become acquainted with these qualities, they tend to use more of a certain type than another. Fuji vs. Kodak. Negative vs. Slide. Fuji Reala vs. Kodak UC. And so on. With digital, you are essentially stuck with whatever the makers decided to put in there. Even when shooting in RAW, you are limited to the sensor and sensor layout that the maker built into the camera. If you are getting pictures that are routinely too green or too red, there's nothing you can do except post process the image in Photoshop. With film, there are so many different types that you will eventually find the one you like the best and stick with it (Everyone eventually finds Fuji Reala).

    2. Re:One gigapixel? by sejanus · · Score: 2, Informative

      just a couple of corrections, the Canon 1Ds is 11mp, not 8.

      The Canon 1Ds Mk2 is 16.7mp which is a bit more potent.

      The only competitor to the 1Ds at the moment is the 14mp Kodak slr/n & slr/c - Nikon is taking a while to catchup and is releasing their 12mp (though 1.5x sensor) in janary.

    3. Re:One gigapixel? by sejanus · · Score: 1

      Dude, we were there 2-3 years ago. Today we are outdoing film in overall tech quality, we just need more dynamic range and it's all over.

      "That would be cool, because you could shoot film-quality photographs at poster size if you wanted."

    4. Re:One gigapixel? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      while i wholly agree when it comes to sensors sizes and that the digital cameras and also that they are expensive. but digital cameras have one teething problem which the traditional ones dont have - dead pixels - once yu get them yur camera is f***ed. cant do much other than filling them up later and with each of the snaps! traditional ones will be left out sooner or later since they need to be digitised for any practical purposes! these days everything runs on computers, besides the film scanners are slightly expensive and cumbersome. we are already at a situation where the dslrs have ARRIVED, d70, evolt, rebel are prmising and are under 1k usd. rebel is the cheapest - 650$ at buydig.com ! so we do have a situation where digital is going to be defacto, sonner than later.

      the profile thing - doesnt canon, nikon, or fuji have thier trademark colors / tones/ etc ? they are more or less trademark nikon/ canon. but yeah yu are stuck with the sensor as opposed to various films.

    5. Re:One gigapixel? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.four-thirds.org/en/about.html

      this one gives a fair deal - with this system - cameras/ lenses can be freely interchanged - while the film cannot be replaced - since the cmos/ sensor would be the same - the sfware/ lens could be interchanged - some sort of a compromise!

  61. Not as long as . . . by WinterpegCanuck · · Score: 1

    . . . service providers keep trying to charge to transfer pictures from the phone to the computer by forcing you to e-mail them to yourself.

  62. Impractical by HaloZero · · Score: 1

    I'm not satisfied that they've got the 'phone' right, yet. I mean, seriously, until I can make a CLEAR call, and communicate with some semblence of quality, I don't want them cramming more shit into my phone. Having one is bad enough, but that's for work purposes, mostly. I'd rather not have them try to make two devices, and fail to do a quality job with either.

    Now, I will admit that I would be highly interested in a camera/phone/PDA, that can take photos, store images/information/phone clips even on an SD card, or xmit wirelessly across a network (PAN, WAN, whatever), but I think the techology is pretty far away to make a decent device that can do that.

    --
    Informatus Technologicus
    1. Re:Impractical by flynns · · Score: 1

      I mean, seriously, until I can make a CLEAR call, and communicate with some semblence of quality, I don't want them cramming more shit into my phone ...because you -know- that extra camera feature is interfering with your calling capabilities.

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
    2. Re:Impractical by HaloZero · · Score: 1

      I'd rather them implement one technology with quality, before trying to cram two in one device in a very crappy way.

      --
      Informatus Technologicus
    3. Re:Impractical by flynns · · Score: 1

      True true.

      --
      'If you're flammable and have legs, you are never blocking a fire exit.'
  63. Can't Wait! by mr_gerbik · · Score: 1

    This is great news. I can't wait for this technology to come to the States in 4 years.

  64. No surprises. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this is just technology doing what it always does with what was cutting edge professional stuff eventually ending up in a bargain bin somewhere for anyone to play with.

    Phone cameras may creep up to 7 megapixels but entry level point and shoots will creep up higher still along with DSLRs.

    There's still a long way to go before digicams can match the effective resolution of film.

    The other obvious problems with lenses etc have already been noted repeatedly.

  65. funny thing, size does matter! by krayfx · · Score: 1

    the funny thing is that it took years (6, infact)for the mainstream cameras to develop the regular point and click digital cameras. but the newer phone cameras are there within a year, if I am not wrong! well, must be an awful feeling in the gut for the guys who spent a bomb on that *latest* cameraphone with a 1.3 *megapixel* camera!

    speaking of 7 megpixel cameras - wonder where will they find the space to fill in all those photos ? an average 7 megapixel photo will be at least 4-8 mb! and with current memory rates - is quite expensive to lug a 7MP cameraphone! here are a few links that show the megapixel stuff for the un-initiated:
    http://www.megapixel.net/cgi-bin/fs _loader.pl?p=ht tp%3A//www.megapixel.net/html/articles/article-meg apixels.html
    http://www.photo.net/equipment/digit al/basics/
    http://www.pixagogo.com/tutorials/digi talphotograp hy/Tutorials.aspx?p=MegaPixelsResolution

    i bet the camera phone wouldnt have the features that regular point and click has. here's a link to the samsung 5 MP camera:
    http://www.dpreview.com/news/0410/0410200 1samsung_ schs250.asp

    but what really matters is the sensor sizes on the camera. if you take your time to check this it would be well worth it!
    http://www.photo.net/equipment/digital/sensor size/

    a camera is not always abt MP its the same argument as in computers - again - Mhz doesnt always matter. AMD beat intel hollow with thier lower clocked CPUs. the quality of pixels matters. (although having more pixels does help.) the camera is always a package - lens, cmos, sfware. i wonder if the cell phone companies will leave us with a phone-camera or will they end up with a camera-phone! time will tell!

    1. Re:funny thing, size does matter! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fucking hell, it typing
      <URL:http://example.com> that fucking hard!?

      WANKER

    2. Re:funny thing, size does matter! by krayfx · · Score: 1

      yeah - sorry abt that, will do it for sure the next time!

  66. Blame the rapist, not the victim. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Basically his argument is the same one used by rapist. If she hadn't dressed like that, I never would have raped her.

    We'll see by tomorrow if the mods come to their senses.

    1. Re:Blame the rapist, not the victim. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Not the same at all.

      People get LOOKED at all the time. It's just a fact. They don't get RAPED all the time. Rape can be helped. You can't help looking at someone.

      If a girl wore shorts, then complained guys were looking at her legs, what would you say? Yeah... wear long pants.

  67. "Oh, but it is the lens! The LENS!" by zmollusc · · Score: 1, Insightful

    To the vast crowds of whiny would-be photographers bleating about how the lens on a camera phone is so much crummier than the one on a digital camera, I would like to say 'No Shit, Sherlock!'.
    The phone manufacturers are competing on pixel count at the moment (because it is easy to measure and quote), when they all get to a few megapixels then they will compete on visual quality and you will see better lenses.
    I will be glad when they put hard disks into phones so i can use it as data transport.
    Oh, and while I am ranting :"Make phones bigger and heavier by fitting more batteries and sockets! The western world is overweight and drives everywhere. We don't need to design phones to be so tiny that we sacrifice use time or keyboard operability FFS! "
    I feel better now.

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  68. Re:Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So unless the cell carriers are going to allow the phone to hook directly up to a PC (fat chance; they can't bill for that),

    I find it fascinating and distburbing to see that in the US the carriers disable the direct phonePC data transfer capabilities just to make money. All the phones I've had in the last 4 years featured a data port and I've had no problems transferring data between my phone and my PC.

    I would feel, well, cheated if I bought a camera phone and I would not be able to transfer my photos to my PC while I knew the phone was technically capable of theat action. I would consider the phone severely crippled.

    Oh well, it's all about money, I guess.

  69. Anyway by Scorillo47 · · Score: 1

    ... I think that 5 megabit pixel will be the norm in five years... with some models including built-in software to automatically correct distorted images due to dirty lenses (remember that the "eye" of such a cell phone will be very exposed to potential physical damage, dirt, etc.

    --
    Don't try to use the force. Do or do not, there is no try.
  70. It's not just the lense... by ntxb229 · · Score: 1

    The problem with the majority of camera phones right now is that they use CMOS sensors which SUCK. The reason they use them is because they are cheaper and consume less power. The Motorola V710 while 1+MP, uses a CMOS sensor and that's why the pictures are terrible. I saw a post on a message board that had a ton of pictures taken with a LG VX-8000 (soon to be released). The phone features a 1.3MP camera with a CCD censor. The pictures are absolutely stunning for a camera phone and will be more than acceptable for a lot of people. I'd post a link to the thread but all the images on it are dead. If I can find more I will post them and I think that most of you will be pleasantly surprised.

  71. Unfortunately by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    Megaplixes has become the "goodness" number for people and there's little that can be done about it. People want a simple number that can sum up how good or bad something is as compared to other things. IQ, horsepower, MHz, all the same thing. People latch onto a number and try to use it as a general purpose rating.

    Not supprising, either. Optics are comlpex to explain. I can't give a single number that tells you if it's better or not. The closest thing is bigger, but people don't want a big lense.

    So you are going to see this continue. Companies will release cmaeras with absurdly small lenses and absurdly high MP counts since that's what people want.

  72. What a boon to photojournalists! by randolph · · Score: 1

    There will be some sort of wireless networking capability in most future digicams, I think. It may be Bluetooth or 3G. Bluetooth, working in conjunction with a regular cell phone, I think is very likely.

    1. Re:What a boon to photojournalists! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      low end journalists would love this ! anything above that he'd a DSLR!

  73. mmm ... big numbers.... by MAdMaxOr · · Score: 1

    Do I really need 300hp for my commuter car?
    ... 3GHz for my word-processing
    ... 7MP for my camera phone

    Marketing guy: Of course!

  74. It's just marketing by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    People have latched onto megapixels as the "goodness" rating of a digital camera. More MP = more good in their mind. So, the phone companies are jumping on board and releasing higher MP cameras. It'll sell.

  75. You can design one, if you like by Taco+Cowboy · · Score: 1



    The thing is, you don't need to wait until someone-else to design one for you. You can do it yourself.

    The world of electronics has changed. You no longer need to do everything from scratch. The supply-chain of the eletronics is such that there are modules available - and all you need to do is to find a way to put them together.

    If you are interested, read the EDN-type of trade magazines for more info.

    --
    Muchas Gracias, Señor Edward Snowden !
  76. Re:If you don't want people looking at your pantie by sejanus · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Please do not encourage girls to stop wearing skirts.

    We just got a new receptionist the other week, 19 years old, a incredible figure you'd die for. Flat stmach, toned long legs, the works.

    The first 2 days she wore tiny miniskirts and mega high heels and lowcut tops. sexy as all hell. Then some inconsiderate manager had a word to her and she now wears boring long pants.

    Us techies are still in shock about what we are missing out on.

    So again, please encourage girls to continue wearing skirts :)

  77. worry about something else by albamuth · · Score: 1
    I see police surveillence cameras in Chicago nowadays (mostly in "bad" neighborhoods) in clearly public spaces, and there's literally millions of surveillence cameras all over public spaces nowadays so it would be clearly hypocritical for some sort of regulation banning picture-phones or cameras or whatnot in public places, not to mention totally impractical.

    I remember reading a story about some skateboarders travelling to Beiruit and not getting in trouble for skating, but getting in trouble for filming (the Hizbollah would confiscate their cameras but not their boards). No, public filming for private use is here to stay as I doubt any of our governments (as in Westernized governments, I'm assuming of /.'ers) would do something so Orwellian.

    Privacy is and shall be no more! (I guess that's my point?)

    Parallel to this will be an increase in interest in retaining privacy in private areas (think jammers, scramblers, encryption, and all the counters and counter-counters to that). Why, I even read what you wrote before you posted it with my VanEck-phreaking-unmanned-aircraft. You should invest in a TEMPEST helmet before someone sells your deepest sexual fantasies on DVD on a NYC streetcorner with Mandarin AND Cantonese subtitles...

    --
    [pink beam of light]
  78. Society by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
    I know many people here are saying its the optics that really matter, and they just want a phone without a camera, etc.

    I can respect what you say, but the vast majority of people just want a simple decent resolution camera that they are practically guaranteed to have on them at all times.

    Now, for all you non-photo people out there, a cellphone is probably the electronic device you are most likely to carry around with you everywhere. I know that instead of a new digital camera, I'm looking for a camera phone now, so that its one less device I have to carry around with me.

    And as the file size increases, and as the prices on wireless internet transfers drop, a camera with the ability to send pictures to a home base wirelessly is going to start being in big demand since you won't have to buy massive memory cards for it.

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  79. Re:Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by Tim+C · · Score: 1

    Has anyone checked the current cell carrier-imposed limits on MMS messages?

    The last time I sent one (2 weeks ago?) it was 90KB.

    So unless the cell carriers are going to allow the phone to hook directly up to a PC (fat chance; they can't bill for that)

    Huh? I wouldn't even consider buying a phone (especially with a camera) that couldn't be connected to a PC. In fact, I don't think I'd be *able* to do so even if I wanted to. If it doesn't have Bluetooth and/or IR, chances are it'll have some custom data port that connects to a serial or USB port.

    Maybe the situation's different where you are (I'm in the UK), but charging just to directly connect two pieces of hardware together? Beyond the cost for any physical connector, what possible justification could there be?

  80. Re:If you don't want people looking at your pantie by Diabolical · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Insightfull my ass,

    Do you think it is perfectly legal or moral to dive under a girls skirt to take a look at her panties (or to check if she wears any)?

    Using a camera doesn't make it any more legal or moral....

  81. It's progress by areve · · Score: 1

    I've hoped for many years we would see something like this... I don't think they should be putting cameras in phones rather phones in cameras. I'm not to bothered now I can put a 1gig SD card in my camera but I wishes for a long time I would be able to send the photos on my camera straight to my ftp or something, esp. whilst on holiday. Why should I carry a two cameras around with me? (one on my phone, which is rubbish, and a decent kodak 3megapixel one with 4xZoom.)

  82. multi-thingy by __aahlyu4518 · · Score: 1

    "... are we seeing what will be the death of the entry level point and shoot digicam?"
    Not anytime soon. There are still people that just use a phone for calling people. Not to make a sandwich with.
    All these features (for which you have to pay a small fortune, just for the data transfer if you use the phone for these things) are wrecking the batteries. I hear people that have to recharge their phones every other day, and in the manual is stated that it is not a luxury to buy a new battery every 6 months !!

    I have a phone (ericsson T39m) that does what it is supposed to (phonecalls, sms) and it does it very well. I recharge it maybe once a week and the battery is as old as the phone (almost 3 years).
    I don't need my phone to sound like a hifi stereoset and don't have to watch video's on it. Sure... in 10 years lots of people might have those all-in-one gadgets and they could be very useful indeed... but as long as there are enough people who just want to buy stuff that they actually use, there will still be a market for 'just phones' and 'just cameras'. Even though the manufacturers are pushing the 'multi-functional' down our throats.

    1. Re:multi-thingy by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      I just recharge mine every night, it's an Ericsson T100. It lasts a few days, but what is the point of letting it run down? Just lowers the battery's lifetime.

    2. Re:multi-thingy by __aahlyu4518 · · Score: 1

      "Just lowers the battery's lifetime.

      Like my example of the 3yr old battery clearly demonstrates ... ??????
      I'm not letting it run down completely btw... It could run maybe 8 or even 9 days (with not to much calling) without recharging... 1 week is just convenient.

    3. Re:multi-thingy by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      What sort of battery? I have a Li-ion, which will need to be replaced every 18-24 months probably, but in return, I get a phone that is under 100g.

      Ni-cd/Ni-mh batteries last longer, but they are heavier and bulkier for the same capacity.

    4. Re:multi-thingy by __aahlyu4518 · · Score: 1

      It says Li-Polymer

      what's that?????

    5. Re:multi-thingy by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      Lithium polymer, relatively new type of battery. I'm only 15, so haven't got the money to get one to play around with ;)

      For some (basic) information on power storage tech, try here.

    6. Re:multi-thingy by __aahlyu4518 · · Score: 1

      New type ? My Phone is almost 3 years old !!! and it probably was the last they ever sold of this model !! LOL

    7. Re:multi-thingy by lachlan76 · · Score: 1

      Well I haven't seen one in Australia yet ;)

  83. Megapixels don't matter! by nmg196 · · Score: 1

    I have posted a comment like this in the past, but it's more relevant here:

    Adding a 7 megapixel camera to a phone has been done mainly for marketing reasons. People who don't know anything will see the bigger number and think that it's better. The problem is, you need VERY decent optics to take advantage of a sensor with a 5 megapixel resolution. The TINY lenses that you will *always* get in a camera phone (unless you want your phone to be the size of a brick) will never be able to do justice to a 7mp CCD or even a 5 megapixel CCD for that matter. Apart from anything else, a lens that's only a few millimeters across cannot gather enough light to let the camera expose the picture for a short enough time for it to still be sharp at that resolution. What I'm trying to say is, your pictures will have camera shake nearly all the time - even when a normal camera with a decent lens wouldn't have even used it's flash.

    Basically - don't bother spending money to get a phone with 7mp instead of 1mp. 1mp is fine for instant snaps to put on your blog, but you're never going to want to print out your holiday-of-a-lifetime photos taken on a telephone with a 7mp camera coupled with a 3mm plastic (or glass if you're lucky) lens. Especially if the aforementioned lens has been in your sweaty pocket for a few months and smashed against the tarmac a few times!

    If you want decent photos, get a decent camera with a decent zoom lens. Lens sizes for cameras with more than 1 megapixel should be measured in CM - not in MM!

    Don't try and take photos you want to print out with your telephone! That's NOT what telephones are for - contrary to popular media hype.

    I recommend http://www.dpreview.com/ [dpreview.com] for reviews of digital cameras.

  84. No way by flyingsquid · · Score: 1
    Combination devices rarely work. We have the technology to combine the functionality of cameras, PDAs, cell phones, MP3 players, etc. into a single unit. But people still buy the individual devices. Why? Because a camera designed to be a camera- nothing more and nothing less- will always be better (in terms of performance vs. price/ease of use/portability) than a camera which has to simultaneously try to be a cell phone/swiss army watch or whatever.

    The trend is obvious: it's towards MORE single-function devices, not fewer, multifunctional devices. Personally, I own a digital SLR to use when I want to take photos, a cell phone for when I want to call people, a laptop for work, a desktop for gaming, a PDA for taking notes, a scanner for scanning documents, a watch for keeping time, an MP3 player for listening to music on the go (or I did until I lost it) a stereo for listening to music at home...

    Read Adam Smith, 1776. If a system (say, a worker, or a device, an organism, or whatever) is specialized to do only X it will do it better than if it has to do X, Y, Z, and Q simultaneously. In general, the technological trend is towards functional specialization, not multifunctionality. Sure, there are exceptions (Swiss Army Knives and Leatherman tools) but my money is on specialization, not generalization. That, and I'm incredibly skeptical of whenever someone predicts the death of some technology. I remember in the nineties when everyone was predicting the imminent demise of the desktop computer...

  85. then add a lens! by randalx · · Score: 1

    how about making an add on unit that basically comprises a higher quality lens. the cell phone provides all the smarts/memory/control/display and the standard cheapo lens for everyday use but when you go on vacation you bring along the extra lens unit and snap it into place. you can now take better pictures and still benefit from the phones' ability to upload the pictures to friends/mblog/storage.

  86. Why 6 megapixels should be enough for anyone... by nmg196 · · Score: 1

    I don't get it.

    If you want to view your photos on a screen, the maximum resolution you would need is 1600x1280, which is 2 megapixel. 98% of people will probably never print out their pictures at a size more than about 8"x6". But I've got a 5mp and a 6.3mp (EOS 300) digital camera, and both cameras produce pictures which are INCREDIBLY sharp when printed out at that size. Ie, so sharp that it's difficult to actually see all that detail with the naked eye. So why would you ever need 7+ megapixels in a consumer camera? All it does is make the picture files really big and the noise level for low light photographs quite high. 7mp cameras would only be necessary if you need extremely high res pics for printing at sizes around A4 (US Legal-ish) or above.

    I reckon 6 megapixels should be enough for anyone ;) Until someone can produce an affordable 7 megapixel+ 19" monitor within a few years and prove me wrong. I really wish they would!

    1. Re:Why 6 megapixels should be enough for anyone... by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1
      I reckon 6 megapixels should be enough for anyone ;)

      Objection: What about zoom? If I get a film, I can take only a part and magnify it to a photograph. An image with "too many" megapixels contains many images with "just enough" megapixels.

  87. Re:If you don't want people looking at your pantie by Zorilla · · Score: 1

    then you shouldn't have worn a skirt.

    Welcome to Japan. It's weird, but it's common to see women wearing skirts (sometimes while outdoors) even during the winter - especially where I am where we get craploads of snow.

    --

    It would be cool if it didn't suck.
  88. Cameras are still way better by _iCeb0x_+(1337+and+k · · Score: 1

    These guys don't get it... I mean, let's keep "purpose" on the top of the list! I don't need a 7MP camera phone with a fixed focus lens, crappy digital zoom, no manual modes (aperture, shutter, exposure bracketing, et. al.). Heck! I don't need a camera with my phone! Phones are meant for voice communication, so it should be good at what its purpose is! If camera phones begin messing with the entry-level camera market, most people will have to get an annoyance with their cameras: a cell phone! Well, I doubt this would ever be the case because of the reasons I stated before... We can rest assured that people with real photography needs will stick with real, full-fledged camera.

  89. Off-topic but nonetheless... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    So I have these 2 computers: a laptop P3 650MHz (running W98SE) and a P4HT 2.6GHz (XP)

    I compiled (BCC5) an image processing algorithm (mostly int and unsgined char additions,if tests, no floating point) which I time with a timeb structure which gives out milliseconds. (millitm)

    So in my quest to compare apple to oranges, I time my main loop on both machines and this is what I get: P3: 160ms P4: 47ms Yup, the P4 is faster, but only by a factor 3-4. Okay, I do run more shit on my P4 at the same time, but when people ask me why I still run a P3 650 with 98SE, this is what it's down to: A factor 3 to 4 on what I'm doing doesn't justify me ditching my laptop for a faster one.

    Think bout it, you're being constantly lured into buying faster computers, but are you really getting what you expect you're getting?

    Same with a 7MPixel camera...

    • Crap lense means you'll get crap images
    • Big images and small memory cards mean you will have to reduce the image quality anyway
    • Try and send a 7MPixel image by email to friends and familly... you'll probably want to reduce the image size to something manageable, like 800x600.
    I guess there's no need to get pissed off at the world in general, things are pretty much the way they are... Step back, relax, think for one second and take advantage of what's available (like a 2Mpixel camera which is so 2 years ago but won't cost you a mint and still takes good photos + built quality constantly drops...)
  90. Re:If you don't want people looking at your pantie by kfg · · Score: 1

    If your goal is to hide your underwear from the world, you should wear clothing that doesn't have openings through which your underwear can be seen.

    I deal with that issue by the simple expedient of not wearing any (with the exception of when I'm on stage).

    I suppose anyone sneaking up from behind who has become confused by the skirt and the ponytail is in for a rude awakening though.

    KFG

  91. Re:Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by CmdrGravy · · Score: 1

    Just as well my phone can transfer stuff to the PC with bluetooth then isn't it !

  92. Re:Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by loraksus · · Score: 1

    The cell carriers are going to allow the phone to hook directly up to a PC (fat chance; they can't bill for that),

    Sure they can. $30+ for the cable and $20 for the software that is inexplicably sold seperately. Sprint does it this way at least.

    --
    1q2w3e4r5t6y7u8i9o0pqawsedrftgthyjukilo;p'azsxdcfv gbhnjmk,l.;/
  93. Optics makes the real resolution. by wizz+da+blizz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This is just a marketing trick, the only thing you get from a 7Mpixel camera phone is large crappy pictures instead of small crappy ones. 7 million pixels would demand larger optics than what I think is possible to cram in to a reasonably sized mobile phone.

    1. Re:Optics makes the real resolution. by JSBiff · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's the truth. In fact, that's exactly the reason (well part, anyhow) I've been so hesitant to invest in a digital camera. Most of the 'consumer'-priced digicams (I can't afford $1000+ for a camera. Maybe $200-300 at most) seem to me to have kind of cheap, low quality lenses. I've been waiting for the market to mature enough that there are affordable digicams with decent optics at reasonable prices. That, and I've been waiting for some standardization in the memory storage that the camera uses, and the resultant mass production and drop in price of 512M storage cards. I was looking at some stuff awhile ago that makes it look like, for the most part, the camera makers are starting to standardize on one storage solution, at least.

  94. Re:Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by snillfisk · · Score: 1
    This can be answered by looking at the MMS conformance spec 2.0.0, where the following is stated:


    Minimum supported message size shall be 30 kBytes.
    From a terminal manufacturer's point of view this means, that the terminal has to support receiving of messages of at least 30 kBytes.


    So, 30 KB is the max size that anyone really can expect to receive per message. In addition, there is a size restriction on the image size for MMS messages (that should adhere to the conformance document):


    The maximum image resolution for which interoperability is guaranteed is 160x120 pixels.


    Seems like it's time to update our standards and move along.
    --
    mats
    One man's ceiling is another man's floor.
  95. Who is surprised... by InadequateCamel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Megahertz sell computers, and megapixels sell cameras; this shouldn't surprise anyone here.

    Just so long as these marketing cretins don't forget that some people JUST WANT A FREAKING CELL PHONE and don't need cameras and milk steamers and tazers built into their phones, I couldn't care less about what crap parents buy to appease their children.

    /cranky after just waking up

    1. Re:Who is surprised... by jonr · · Score: 1

      I would love a phone with tazer...

    2. Re:Who is surprised... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > JUST WANT A FREAKING CELL PHONE

      But I don't want a cellphone either, I'm fine with my personal message-delivery boy thank you.

      And if I need a picture taken, I'll just give him a piece of cardboard and a crayon.

    3. Re:Who is surprised... by InadequateCamel · · Score: 1

      Yeah, me too.
      shhhh....don't tell

  96. Oh dear by ceeam · · Score: 1

    It's like having a 30" dick. Not even impressive. Just gross.

  97. Re:Um... How Are You Going to Send It Anywhere? by Querty · · Score: 1

    Now, unless you're taking a picture of an evenly-lit solid white wall, there aren't many seven megapixel images I can think of that will crunch down into 200KiB.

    The noise that tiny, little CCD will produce will make very sure that the image won't compress well, no matter how perfect your wall is ;-)

  98. Re:Well in that case.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Totally disagree

    --Anonymous Coward

  99. How much woul it cost to send MMS? by phelix_da_kat · · Score: 1

    7M CCD.. imagine the size of your files when you send these to your friends. In the UK it costs about 30p (50cents) for each photo you send by MMS. If you send a pic from a 7M pixel camera by accident.. whoops.. huge phone bill..

  100. LG products by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    lets hope LG makes better phonecams than they do CDrom drives, i have bought a LG CDrom drive brand new only to crap out in less than 6 months :^(

  101. photo adding credibility by brlewis · · Score: 1

    I've been lucky enough not to be in a car accident yet, but I always keep a single-use camera with flash in the car just in case. I suspect one of those would make much more credible pictures than a camera phone with a tiny lens and no flash. It's also less likely that the battery will be low at a critical time.

    1. Re:photo adding credibility by rainman_bc · · Score: 1

      The only unfortunate thing about those cameras is they have an exipry date - the film doesn't last forever either...

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
  102. What right do you have? by Gendou · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You have no to tell people in a public place that they can't look at certain things.

    Rape involves touching someone, which is a violation of their freedom if done against their will. But in a public place, you have the right to look at anything that's being displayed for public viewing.

    If a person is walking around naked (voluntarily) in a public palce, you have the right to look at them. If they didn't want someone looking at them naked, why did they go out in a public place?

    Similarly, if you wear a skirt, and thus display your panties to the world (from the right angle, anyway), what right do you have to tell people that they can't look at you from a certain angle? None.

    Looking can not and should not be a crime.

  103. Can you read? by Gendou · · Score: 1

    Of course it's not legal to lift up a girl's skirt without her consent (nobody actually made the statement you seem to have a problem with), because that involves touching her or her clothing, which you would need permission to do. However, you don't need permission to look at someone. If she's wearing a skirt and walking on a glass floor in a public place, why should it be illegal for you, standing below, to simply look up?

    It's an evil society that makes looking a crime. That's one step away from 1984.

  104. VOLUNTARY decision by Gendou · · Score: 1

    If they voluntarily wear clothing that, when viewed from certain angles, reveals things that they don't want others to see, then they made a poor choice of clothing. If, for some reason they care so damn much about concealing themselves, then they're wearing the wrong clothing. If, however, they don't care, then they should continue to wear clothing that's open to the public.

    Personally, I don't think they should care. What are they so sensitive about? Most women who are secure with their sexuality don't care if bystanders catch a fleeting glimpse up their skirt. The age of puritanism is over, folks.

  105. What? by Gendou · · Score: 1

    What gives you the right to tell people what they can and can't look at in a public place? Why should people have to control themselves when they're doing nothing wrong?

    You do not have the right to exert control or force over the life of another person. By telling someone that they can't look at something, with an implicit threat of force (imprisonment), you are exerting control over that person's life.

    Are you going to make it a crime for your eyes to accidentally intersect with someone who doesn't want to be looked at? What about people who don't want their hands looked at, but go out in public without making any effort to conceal them? Should you throw people in jail for looking at those people's hands, even if they have no way of knowing that the person doesn't want his/her hands looked at?

    It's sheer insanity.

  106. Cell phones already banned by Kombat · · Score: 1

    You wonder if these will start getting banned in all types of public areas

    This is already the case around here (Ottawa, Canada). Many fitness clubs in the area prohibit bringing cell phones with cameras into the locker rooms.

    --
    Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
  107. The heck with xM pixel by kelzer · · Score: 1

    I'd take a phone with NO camera, NO games, NO PDA functions, NO mp3 player, and NO radio, if the thing consistently sounded like, and was as reliable as, a land line.

    Heck, as long as I'm on this rant, here in the US we have no competition between the service providers. Thanks FTC, for allowing 2 of the existing big 4 to merge. The 7000 being laid off thank you as well. If Cingular, Sprint, and T-Mobile can each afford to put a retail outlet in every strip mall in America, they're obviously making way too much money, and could easily afford to give us unlimited use (including text messaging, data, etc.) for $25 a month.

    Sorry for the off-topic rant. I feel better now.

    --

    ---------------------------------------------
    SERENITY NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  108. Re:If you don't want people looking at your pantie by Kombat · · Score: 1

    Welcome to Japan. It's weird, but it's common to see women wearing skirts (sometimes while outdoors) even during the winter - especially where I am where we get craploads of snow.

    Isn't it also the country where you can walk down the street and see a vendor with his table set up on the sidewalk, selling ziplock baggies containing a pair of panties, and a photo of a Japanese girl wearing (usually just) those very same panties?

    Creepy.

    --
    Like woodworking? Build your own picture frames.
  109. For all the people complaining about the lens... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is a viable solution: http://www.yenra.com/samsung-camera-phone/

    This is Samsung's 3 megapixel phone with 3x optical zoom.

    Sure it looks more like a phone with a camera on it, but it's a much better lens than comes on all the other camera phones...

    Video phones here in South Korea (probably Japan too) can do about 100 minutes of video...

  110. Kepler telescope = 1/3 gigapixel by peter303 · · Score: 1

    The Kepler space probe will watch one piece of the sky constantly for five years to discover planets. It will use the transit method, i.e. looking for the dimming of stars when the planets cut in front of them. Maybe one in two hundred planetary systems would be oriented correctly to see transits. These in turn may on only happen for a couple hours every couple decades. However, if you watch several hundred thousand stars with a 350 megalpixel camera for five years, you'll porbably catch many of these. Plus a ton of asteroids you never knew were there.

  111. Yeah, that's great but when are they going to. . . by Fantastic+Lad · · Score: 1
    Make a phone with a cork-screw?

    But honestly. . .

    I think this is great!

    It means that the idiot cell-phone market, (and yes, I'm talking about YOU), is going to drive down prices on actual cameras.

    I'll be happy when I can pick up a solid multi-megapixel camera for a instamatic prices.

    The health of the economy is entirely a product of public perception. A mass hallucination controlled by the media. --So quit loafing about and start picturing something other than what the fucking pundits tell us! This whole dropping dollar thing sucks, and it sure isn't my fault. If Bush's handlers, (and their handlers) succeed in destroying the dollar to create cannon fodder for their asinine military, how the heck am I going to be able to get a hundred dollar camera with lots and lots of megas?

    Come ON people! I want to shoot pictures of red-eyed puppies and nerdy friends making dumb faces in front of national monuments!


    -FL

  112. The death of the point an click camera... by __aavljf5849 · · Score: 1

    ...will come when phone manufacturers realize what a flash is and why a camera intended to take snapshots of your friends when you are partying is useless without one.

  113. Camera phones will never take over DSLRs or seriou by syntap · · Score: 1

    Camera phones will never take over DSLRs or serious digital cameras

    yeah, just like that stupid personal computer the HP guy said I wouldn't want thirty years ago.

  114. But of course by sczimme · · Score: 1


    I go to a restaurant to eat great food instead of catching a plane.

    Who would go to a restaurant to catch a plane?

    :-)

    --
    I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
    1. Re:But of course by Zangief · · Score: 1

      Maybe if you go to that restaurant in the airport, it could work.

  115. when did we ever see a perfect v1 product? by FractiousWeasel · · Score: 1

    I've been waiting for a phone that can be a high-quality camera at the same time. This phone is not the one, due to the fact of the poor optics. This is the first phone in an entire generation of high MP camera phones. It's a rare day that someone releases the killer app on the first try. In fact, I've never seen a high-quality version 1 of any product. The market will ensure that subsequent 'versions' of high MP camera phones will produce greater quality pictures. So I agree that there is 3-5 years left stand-alone low-end dig cameras. Physics be damned, subsequent versions of high-MP camera phones will have the quality issue figured out by then. hehe I'll be able to have a sweet new high quality cam-phone AND a new President. Woo hoo!

  116. Re:If you don't want people looking at your pantie by Zorilla · · Score: 1

    I live in a more rural area, so I don't have to worry about evading giant tentacles or anything of that nature. I think someone I know did see one of those picturebooks of Japanese women's hands in one of the bigger stores around here that you see in J-List ads on Something Awful.

    --

    It would be cool if it didn't suck.
  117. I see something useful out of this by krunchyfrog · · Score: 0

    Underskirt peeking! 7 megapixels!!! Now that's something I'll use! ;)

    --
    printf($randomline(sigs.txt) \n "-- "$randomline(authors.txt));
    -- myself
  118. everyware by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1

    We've all been talking about "convergence" for years, and how every device (maybe every particle ;) will have an IP# (and maybe a webserver :). So now "cameraphones" are displacing lower-quality standalone cameras - the "phones" are just the way to converge cameras with everything else, putting them on the Net. "Entry level digicams" aren't "dying", they're evolving into the ubiquitous networked devices we've been predicting for years.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  119. Point lost by phorm · · Score: 1

    This misses the point though, because you cannot print it on a full page without grain.

    Think of it this way... have a big light in one room, open the door to another and - without flash - take a picture (in the room without a light on).

    Now, in the same scenario, close the door so it's only 1/4 of the way open. Take another picture.

    The first picture things will probably look decent, on the second you're losing detail and probably getting static.

    Why, because not enough light is entering the room to produce a good picture. A 4MP camera with good light adjustment is going to have a picture just as good as a 7MP, because the 7MP is just giving you higher-resolution static. Light is your photo, as it's really a refraction of light that you're capturing. Less light=crappier picture.

    Now think along the same lines but with the barrel/lense of the camera. You're getting the same amount of light, but trying to divide it among a great space. Result, the picture looks just as craptacular at 7MP, and as far as printing it's not really any different than resizing up a 4MP picture.

  120. phonescoping by moorhens · · Score: 2, Informative

    Birders use a digital camera/spotting scope combo to get increasingly good pictures of distant birds. This is digiscoping. A device that allowed that same clarity and to send pictures to your mates would have great appeal. Send two: 1) here's a stupidly rare bird I just found; 2) here's me scaring it away so you can't see it. Well, when I said mates . . . A guy in Finland (where else, eh?) is already starting to do this with his 3G phone and the results are starting to impress. I don't deny the lens issue among others, and this isn't a replacement for high-end cameras, but don't write off the potential value of a hig-quality phone/camera combo for some pretty geeky pursuits.

  121. too late for me. by brad3378 · · Score: 1

    I would have loved to have had one of these in College. I hated taking notes off the chalkboard in classes with lots of symbols like Heat Transfer & Diff. EQ. Taking notes with a laptop just isn't practial although I don't know much about the new webpads.

    With something like this I wouldn't have to keep going back & forth between my notes & the chalkboard and could have paid more attention to what was being discussed.

    --

  122. Entry Level Cameras Will Not Die by Papermaker · · Score: 1

    I am as much a gadget guy as the next, but I choose not to use a camera phone--no matter how cool or useful they are. My job requires me to visit many facilities where cameras are not allowed because of the customer's proprietary processes and technology. Because I choose not to use a camera phone, my phone is not taken away from me for the duration of my visit. Now, I don't know how many people are in that same situation, but I venture to say I am probably not the only person. Of course there is the question does the average person really know how to tell a non-camera phone from a real one? My guess is no. Oh well.

  123. Kill the digital camera, NOT! by PalmKiller · · Score: 1

    I doubt it seriously, camera phones have shitty lenses and I doubt they put in a decent lense. I myself have a seperate digital camera, seperate dv camcorder which has a snapshot mode I will not use, and a cellphone. Since I don't picture blog I see no need for a crappy image taking device that uploads to web pages, and those that do blog as such will not care for a huge quality 7mp image to be sent up the cell network.

    Its a useless marketing gimick folks

  124. LG Phone? I think not! by malachid69 · · Score: 1

    My wife and I spent $400 on top-of-the-line LG phones 4 years ago only to find out that over 1/2 of the features the phone advertised were "not yet implemented". How screwed up is that?

    Personally, I won't trust that company again. What a rip-off.

    --
    http://www.google.com/profiles/malachid
  125. What kind of geek ARE you!? by lonb · · Score: 1
    "...a 7 Megapixel Camera Phone which to me seems like overkill..."
    You should hang up your /. hat right now. There is no such thing as overkill when it comes to hardware or power. Has Tim Allen taught you nothing!?

    "Camera phones will never take over DSLRs or serious digital cameras..."
    Again, you clearly have not learned from the past. Need I point you to a list of classic historic quotes where people said silly things like this and were made to look foolish by gigs of RAM in desktop machines or even "desktop" machines themselves!? Why would anyone carry around a DSLR or SLR when they can have a single device which serves as a communicator, a information holder, and a full-service camera?

    --
    "Ain't I a stinka..." - Bugs
    1. Re:What kind of geek ARE you!? by Lord+Flipper · · Score: 1
      Why would anyone carry around a DSLR or SLR when they can have a single device which serves as a communicator, a information holder, and a full-service camera?

      one word: Lenses

      not enough words? Phone interruptions in a 'shoot', [with 'set to vibrate' being even dumber]

      If everyone could use a pro-line Leica, with the Zeiss (or, rather, Summicron lenses) for a weekend, they'd puke when looking at their digital "camera's" output

      I have an idea: Instant Messenger pop-ups in the viewfinder!!!

    2. Re:What kind of geek ARE you!? by lonb · · Score: 1

      You're doing the same thing that the previous fellow was... thinking solely in today's technology. I imagine that within a short time either lenses will drastically reduce in size (and weight in many cases) but also be available via digital manipulation rather than optical.

      Also, many multi-tasking devices already allow you to disable singular functions. My SE P800 allows me to disable the radio device (for cell and bluetooth) for "safe" airplane use.

      --
      "Ain't I a stinka..." - Bugs
  126. But they do have a dynamic aperature... by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 1

    plus your eyes have a long "exposure" (although it's not synrconous... this allows for a compromise of quick motion detection plus fine-detail resolution in dim light)

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
  127. *All* phones can downsize when you email... by Ayanami+Rei · · Score: 1

    of course, the quality of software bundled varies from network to network.
    I would be surprised if it didn't in most camera phones here because most people would be too stupid to know any better, and they'd complain if the email was too slow.

    --
    THIS THING CAN TURN ON A DIME, MACROSSZERO STYLE ALSO FUCK BETA, ~NYORON
  128. "Just because" is not good enough anymore. by momus_radar · · Score: 1

    I have a 4MP Pentax Optio 43WR that absorbs battery power like a chamois absorbs water simply because there are a lot of power hungry components within it. I can't imagine a device, which has to power a 7MP sensor along with receiving and transmitting cellular signals, being remotely energy efficient. I can appreciate combining two devices for practicality, but this does not seem practical to me. I mean, why not build an MRI with a rice cooker in it?

  129. double standard by mitchellandrews · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Think for a second; if someone built a phone inside a digital camera you'd be like, "This is fukin' retarded." So why in the hell would someone buy a 7 megapixel camera inside a phone?

  130. My phone by Jarvo · · Score: 1

    My phone (in Japan, though) can record directly to an SD card. A 256MB card gets me ~80 minutes of 320x240 pixel MPEG-4 video (Sharp V601SH). The video bitrate is about 440kbps.

    However, the downsides are:
    - Battery life. Recording and encoding video (and showing it on the screen) sucks a lot of power.
    - Lens quality / resolution. Although it has an auto-focus lens, a person 10-20m away comes out as an unrecognisable blob about 10 pixels tall.
    - Light balance. The camera software has trouble compensating for an overexposed target (at the centre of the image).

    If I want to take decent home videos, I'll go out and buy a camcorder. That can't beat the convenience of a phone and camera the size of my palm.

  131. Great by ExHGamer · · Score: 0

    Now you can see even more those details on people face that "you don't want to see". Now you are really going to hate that "Party man" that always bring his damn camera and likes taking the worst shots of you as he can.

  132. Tutorial on optics and resolution by goombah99 · · Score: 1

    First your post is mostly wrong. Here's the deal.

    First the smaller the size of the sensor area (all the pixels) the easier it is to make a good lens. Making flat field lenses is hard, so making lenses that gather light unifromly and in focus over the entire sensor is hard. So in this sense smaller is better.

    Second, the smaller the pixel, all else being equal, generally the lower the noise level and thus the better the signal. Many forms of noise scale with pixel area so smaller can be better as long as the same number of photos hit both sensors. The catch is the "all else being equal". There tends to be more dead area per pixel are as you make the pixels denser. Those are lost photons. Also if there is leakage due to pixel crowding that's worse too.

    So what it comes down to is photons per pixel. This has nothing to due with pixel size directly. A more powerful lens of the same diameter can concentrate the same number of photons in to the smaller sensor area.

    However as you make lenses focus tighter the abberations tend to rise. At some point the lens becomes so curved it cannot feasibly become more curved. You can hold this off a while by making the lenses out of exotic high index materials. But by and large yo never see anything better than F1.

    Those small lenses can gather as much light as a larger lens. Sometimes this can be an illusion however. A large lens run through a small iris may be gathering less light than a smaller lens with a big iris. Besides limiting light the iris changes the depth of field and corrects for abberations that affect the sharpness of the focus. The ultimate camera is the pin hole lens which has a tiny diameter, and because the depth of field is practically) infinite needs no lens and has no distortion. But it also gather almost no light.

    So anyhow it's possible to make a dense array that is sharp but you have to work at it. But you dont lse light as you say until you are pushing F1 on the lense.

    --
    Some drink at the fountain of knowledge. Others just gargle.
    1. Re:Tutorial on optics and resolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You had me right up until "the smaller the pixel, all else being equal, generally the lower the noise level and thus the better the signal" and "Those small lenses can gather as much light as a larger lens", and "The ultimate camera is the pin hole lens which has a tiny diameter, and because the depth of field is practically) infinite needs no lens and has no distortion."

      You're partially right on point A. Sure, the larger the individual sensor, the more chance it has to catch a stray photon that just wasn't meant to be there, that's a given, and that's why you use good glass, because it's also an issue with film... But, where you fail it is the fact that many (most point and shoot, and phone-camera) sensors are so freakin' small that they've got to use some heavy duty amplification of that signal, OR they've got to use incredibly low ISO times (25-50), OR BOTH. Amplification == noise from the circuits in the camera, from cosmic rays, microscopic elves, electric water buffalo or whatever. There's no avoiding it. As we say in the industry: "Garbage In, Garbage Out" Yeah, you can run that noisy ass picture through some algorithms to help smooth it out (and indeed they do that to a limited point in the camera), but it's going to suck still. Especially in LOW light conditions, where they're practically trying to create something from nothing, and it's going to blur to shit if so much as an eyelash bats on the person holding the phone-camera, because they're already using redicliously long exposure times. ---here's where they'd be better off dumping their research money---because PRACTICALLY NOBODY takes pictures in good lighting conditions

      Point B (about small lenses gathering as much light as a big one).. "It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt." You simply can't catch photons that don't intersect the lens. If you think otherwise, I've got a bridge you might be interested in.

      Point C (about pinhole lens and infinite depth of field being highly desireable)... Photography would be the most boring thing in the world if everything were taken with a infinite DoF camera. Sure, it's great if you absolutely need it, like on a security camera, or something of the sort.

      Personally, I would NEVER want to take a meaningful picture with such a thing. Photography is about seeing what the photographer wants you to see, how he sees it in his mind, and with his eye, in about that order. I can't relate to a infinite DoF camera; my eyes don't work in such a way. Perhaps this would be appealing to insects or birds or fish, but not to me or many other people.

      My point still stands, 7MP in a tiny camera sensor for a phone is overkill, and it's not going to show any discernable benefit over a ~2-5 MP camera, except in having more resolution (not always a good thing), and undoubtedly killer noise.

    2. Re:Tutorial on optics and resolution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sigh...once again, As I explained the first time, A large lens with a tight iris (related to the f-stop) gathers less light than a small lens with a wide iris. The size of the lens aperature is a realtively poor estimator of the final effective speed of the lens. Large lenses generally have larger distortions so they end up irising more to remove these. One is playing a little game, trying to increase th elight gathering power by making the lens aperature wider while not throwing away all you gained correcting for the abberation introduced. It gets even worse when the detector area (all the pixels not just one) is wide compared to the lens, since flat field lenses have worse aberations. Thus small pixels leading to smaller detector sizes can benefit light gathering. The trade here is that the power of the lens has to increase and that makes the abberations worse. So it's again a trade off between tighter focusing and requiring less of a flat field.

      but the first point is that your big honking lens that subtends more sterradians fron the opject (more "rays") may not actually manage to deliver them effectively to the detector. Hence the paradox you appreciated.

      The other point is that by ultimate lens I did not mean ultimate in creative control. I mean ultimate in aberration free. In your case you happen to like the depth of field loss normal lenses produce. That's fine most people do, it's why they let you open up the f-stop iris. But that's besides the point because were not talking baout using pinhole cameras on phones. The point that got lost was that irising is the commong way to remove abberations, but at a large cost: photons. Which once again brings us back to the first point about why large lenses frequently gather fewer usuable photons than you might expect: abberation reduction by irising.

      Finally the sources of detector area dependent noise is not just stray photons, although I note that a higher f# lens potentially has fewer non-signal photons since more of the phase space is used for signal. No the other sources of noise are the electrical recombination noise, dark currents, intrinsic deffects, and capacitive noise which scale with area.

      You are correct that given a fixed number of photons that subdividing these amongst fewer pixels means each pixel gets fewer. But you are wrong that this neccessarily requires greater amplification. If you are measuring voltage then the charge density is the same so capacitance times charge is a constant as the area shrinks, so the voltage is the same. If instead you are using a transimpedance amplifier as you should then you are measuring the charge on each capacitor (pixel). As long as you have note placed stray charge from noise sources on the capacitor then this only matters when you approach the shot noise limit of your signal.

  133. Ok it's cool BUT.... by BrittinFLA · · Score: 1

    Is it just me or are CellPhones now reaching "Feature Bloat"? Seems like it is getting more and more difficult to get a Cell that is JUST a cell phone!

    Am I the only one who wants a cell to only make and receive calls?

    --
    ---START SIG It is better to know that you have lost than to NOT know that you have won! ---END SIG
    1. Re:Ok it's cool BUT.... by Lord+Flipper · · Score: 1

      No, you're not alone. I go back a ways, but for purposes of this topic, ten years'll do: A Motorola flip phone with 'security' [a little 'beep' that signified your actual 'cell' was not adjacent to any other active 'cell']-- cell meaning the circuit, not the 'thing'. It was a privacy feature. What a great phone. Had a 250 dollar a month plan with 3000 daytime minutes, and evenings started at 5pm, days started at 8am. A bit pricey. Great coverage [Montreal-Ottawa-Toronto-Eastern seaboard to Miami... clear as a bell [no pun intended, but it was AT&T/Cantel]. Made some clients a small fortune in Motorola stock too, mid-nineties. When the Star-tac [you know the 'mini'] was released by Motorola, I knew it was the beginning of the end. And it was. Phones in the US suck, networks in the US suck... and..well, never mind. And yeah I'm a Yank, and have the no-Medical coverage/full-time salaried job to prove it.

  134. "Unix philosophy" ? by Iluvatar · · Score: 1
    Actually, with all the junk I am carrying in my pockets anyway (most of which I basically use for one thing, but it still tries to duplicate functionality present in other devices without doing it quite right), I think I'd like to see devices that do one thing right.

    Think about this: ideally, a "cellphone" for me would be a tiny box that has only three things:

    • a battery (can't do without it)
    • a GSM tranceiver (to talk to the outside world), and
    • a Bluetooth tranceiver (to talk to the "world" that lives in my pockets anyway).
    It won't do anything else, but will do these basic functions right!

    Now, this thing, I can just leave in my pocket. As for: (a) Talking? A small, cordless headset (w/ voice dialing and a voice interface for the common functions). I carry one anyway. (b) Keypad? A small PDA (to control the more advanced functions, say SMS and web-browsing), which has a screen already. I carry one anyway (when I need it). (c) MMS w/pictures? (not that I ever send any of these, but anyway) I carry an ultracompact digicam (Kyocera SL400R) anyway, when I want to take pictures. A Bluetooth interface shouldn't be that hard. (d) More serious stuff? Well, every laptop now has Bluetooth, pretty much. The phone can still stay in my pocket and double as a GSM modem.

    If you think this is far-fetched, check this out:
    Nokia Wireless Image Headset
    Now, this, I can carry only when I need the "extra" functionality!

    As for Bluetooth cameras, well someone has thought of it already:
    Concord Bluetooth Camera
    But it still needs to go some way towards miniaturization (which should be doable).

    So: Do one thing and do it right! If modularity works for programs living in a PC, why not for hardware that lives in my pockets? Seems possible to me with the "new" technology. Just my 2c...