Nokia 7650 Modified to Record Video Clips 126
rocannon writes "T-Mobile has started offering MPEG4 video messaging on the Nokia 7650 with a modified software created by the Finnish company Hantro. This is the European debut of the service that allows users to record, save and play back video sequences, up to a maximum of 95 Kbs in size, on their mobile phone. Clips can be transmitted and received to/from peers via (MMS) e-mail."
Re:pr0n phone (Score:1)
Now I just wish someone started making usable WAP services...
Re:pr0n phone (Score:2)
Now I can... (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, but (Score:1)
Do you really need video for that?
Cool, but I still want a P800 (Score:2, Interesting)
Maybe I'll just get a Hiptop. Out now, apparently. To be officially released on October 1st via CompUSA/T-Mobile.
Re:Cool, but I still want a P800 (Score:2, Funny)
Come on man! It's not that bad is it? Sure the price is high, but not worth commiting suicide over!
Re:Cool, but I still want a P800 (Score:1)
The recently announced Nokia 3650 [slashdot.org] will have video-recording capabillities by default as well, and cost ALOT less than the P800 while still being a Triband phone, with SymbianOS, memory expansion-slot(MMC), Bluetooth, etc. I won't pay almost three times the price of the 3650, just to get a slightly bigger thouchscreen, more built in memory, and an inabillity to use the phone effectively with one hand.
95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:2, Insightful)
Isn't that a measure of streaming speed, and not absolute size?
In any case, one can think up of many "innocuous" uses facilitated by its innocent facade. "Oh dear, I dropped it again."
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:2, Interesting)
Jody
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:1)
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:1)
From Nokia's MMS faq [nokia.com]:
How big can an MMS message be?
The standard does not specify a maximum size for an MMS message.
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:1, Redundant)
What is the maximum size of an MMS that the Nokia 6650 phone supports?
The maximum size is 100 kB. All of Nokia's MMS-enabled phones support the recommendations set in the MMS conformance document that defines minimum requirements for MMS and has the backing of 3GPP and the WAP Forum.
In terms of characters, how much text is it possible to include in an MMS message sent from the Nokia 6650 phone?
In practice, the number of characters is unlimited. The only limitation is the maximum size of an MMS (100 kB).
How big of an audio clip is it possible to include in an MMS message sent from the Nokia 6650 phone?
The only limitation is the maximum size of MMS (100KB) or the remaining space in phone's memory.
What is the maximum size of a picture that can be included in an MMS?
The only limitation is the maximum size of an MMS (100kB) and the phone's available memory.
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:4, Insightful)
The unit 'Kilo' in physics, meaning 1000, is written 'k'
The unit 'Kilo', in CS, meaning 1024 is written 'K'
Bytes is written 'B'
bits is written 'b'
Seconds is written as 's' or '/s' as in 'per second'
Then, 95Kbs is logical to interpret as 95Kilobits per second, and that, my dear watson, is a unit for streaming capacity.
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:1)
Besides, it is a 7650, it can't even stream video at that speed.
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:2, Insightful)
I'm guessing it was a simple slip of the fingers to indicate a plural, but it's always fun to get to play "Captain Pedantic"[1] for a day, isn't it (bigger grin!)
[1] There is no such character as Captain Pedantic, to the best of my knowledge, but I could be wrong! - General Comment, DFC and (cash) bar.
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:2)
Re:95 Kbs in *size*? (Score:2)
Nope, the (somewhat recent) ISO standard says Ki, that is 95 KiB for CS-type "kilobytes". Harddisk manufacturers use 1000 just to inflate their numbers... (128 MiB =~ 130 MB)
Re:Who cares? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Who cares? (Score:1)
Here's why. (Score:1)
If the telcos had got their act together and standardised on a single system (like GSM across Europe), then maybe it would be easier for the handset manufacturers to bring these toys to the market.
Imagine, for example, that you had to have a different car radio if you wanted to listen to tunes in the next county over. That would suck. And there probably wouldn't be nearly as many cool and innovative car radios, because the manufacturers were pouring all their budgets into making 15 or 20 versions of each product and their production runs were a fifteenth or a twentieth what they could have been.
I love being able to take my T68 (which I just got flashed to T68i, so I get MMS without the girly case) anywhere in Europe, and knowing that it'll work. I don't love taking my T68 all over Europe and finding that it's far cheaper than in .uk :(
Re:Here's why. (Score:1)
Different car radios in the next country over does actually occur, as I found out when I hired a Japanese import car in New Zealand and could only pick up half the band cause the radio only covered the band from 76-92MHz and not 88-108MHz.
As for taking the phone all over Europe, it's great knowing that the phone will work, SMS will work (most of the time), but don't go trying to use MMS yet. There are no roaming agreements for it. So at the moment, using my 7650 consists of taking photos and emailing them from there or bluetoothing them across to my laptop. I could easily have spent £50 now if they did have roaming agreements. Will they ever learn? Judging by the inability to send texts between Orange and SFR probably not...
not to mention bandwidth... (Score:1)
Northamerica will catch up... maybe(Re:Who cares?) (Score:1)
If you only complain on /., it won't help much. Not that writing them will change the current situation, but maybe they'll act differently in the future. Maybe.
I assume the same goes for Canada? How's the cellphone market there? Is the entire North-American continent incompatible with the rest of the world?
Which reminds me, how come most of the time GSM/GPRS is mentioned in US press, it's referred to as the standard mostly used in Europe and Asia or something similar? AFAIK, most of Africa uses it too, and Australia &c. So it's everyone but North-America - or is South American wireless market just as messed up?
Yoik! Video ringers! (Score:4, Funny)
I can understand the appeal... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I can understand the appeal... (Score:1)
Re:I can understand the appeal... (Score:1)
One could see this as a proof of concept or the opposite depending on how it works in real life. Take WAP as a example, sounded great but real life use of it is a pain in the butt.
Re:I can understand the appeal... (Score:3, Informative)
In practice this means that you will pay the price you are ready to pay for that service.And it is up to economists to figure out what you're ready to pay, not up to you.
Re:I can understand the appeal... (Score:1)
Re:I can understand the appeal... (Score:1)
Please explain. (Score:2)
Re:I can understand the appeal... (Score:1)
concerning GPRS and most of the 4 carriers available. So with 95 kb you will stay below 50 cent which is not so much more than the price of an SMS. When I think about the popularity of SMS in Europe and the popularity of this new Nokia SymbianOS-Camphone among my friends, I'm sure that MMS will be used frequently in the future.
On the other hand GPRS is (and UMTS will) be far too expensive for other video-on-demand or video-phone applications than short (and bad quality) clips. The licences for UMTS had its price:
In Germany alone 50 Billion EUR.
So I'm using GPRS only for ICQ and IRC (low traffic) because it is really great to chat with your friends whereever you are for hours and paying not much money. But surfing the web is much too expensive.
Nokia 6650 (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course, it supports MMS, polyphonic ringing tones, Bluetooth and what-have-you. Large color screen, hefty weight and unbelievable stand-by time.
Do you notice, btw, that phones grow bigger in size nowsdays?
More about the features of 6650 (Score:4, Informative)
- Weight: 141 g
- Dimensions: 132 x 52 x 25 mm
- Talktime: 2 h 20 min (WCDMA), 2 h 40 min (GSM)
- Standby time: Up to 350 h
- Key features: Integrated camera for taking video and still images, new WCDMA air interface, fast connection: up to 128 kbps, multimedia messaging (MMS), large graphical color display, multitasking: talk and send simultaneously
- Operating frequency: Tri-band mobile phone for WCDMA and GSM 900/1800 networks
- Imaging resolution: Image/video capture at 640x480/128x96, more than 10 frames/second
Full specifications are here [nokia.com].
So althought the product from Hantro is interesting, it seems to unfortunately have entered the market 6-12 months too late to do a difference. These (and better) capabilities will be a standard feature too soon.
Re:More about the features of 6650 (Score:1)
Re:More about the features of 6650 (Score:2)
from here [burn.com].
3G in US is a far cry! (Score:1)
Anyways don't get your hopes high on 3G atleast for a couple of years with this economy.
Wont be out until 2003 though (Score:1)
So it looks like 7650 still has some time left on the market.
What is that with this 'antenna' we still use? (Score:1)
Re:What is that with this 'antenna' we still use? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:What is that with this 'antenna' we still use? (Score:1)
Now either my high-school physics have deteriorated dramaticaly (possible, as I haven't needed that for years), or it just doesn't matter what direction an antenna is pointing,over short distances?
Now of course picking up signals is quite different, but not broadcasting them...
Re:Nokia 6650 (Score:2)
Re:Nokia 6650 (Score:2)
I wonder if that's a usability thing and nothing to do with the technology. Take the Nokia 8210 for example: it's too small. It's uncomfortable (for me at least) to use, and it's easy to lose. My 6210 feels at lot more comfortable in my hand, the buttons are easy to use, and the speaker and microphone are the right distance apart, closer to that on a landline handset. Some people may like miniaturization, but for me, it's not a selling point at all - I want a bigger handset anyway, so why not pack in as many features and as much battery life as possible?
I think I should be the first to point out... (Score:4, Informative)
-dk
Re:I think I should be the first to point out... (Score:1)
mpeg4? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:mpeg4? (Score:1, Informative)
7650 Camera Resolution (Score:3, Insightful)
Photos using the Nokia 7650 can be viewed at nokia7650.fotopic.net [fotopic.net]
I'll try and get round to installing this video stuff and do some messing though. The 7650's not a bad phone, pity Nokia's SDK sucks so much.
Re:7650 Camera Resolution (Score:1)
Re:7650 Camera Resolution (Score:1)
Resolution on the 7650 is pants.
It's a mobile phone not a professional camera. There is no zoom, the focus is not great, but it's not bad as a phone that can take photos as well. VGA resolution is pretty good for that, I don't know what you were expecting?
Completely agree about the SDK though. It might be free, but that isn't an excuse.
Re:7650 Camera Resolution (Score:2)
I guess my gripe is that no matter what conditions, it looks like someone's smeared vaseline over the lens.
Re:7650 Camera Resolution (Score:1)
Great... (Score:3, Funny)
*ring*
Yeah, hi, I'm not going to be able to make it in to work today because I strained my *sound of fingers accidentally hitting button*
*Picture of you standing on beach appears on boss' cell*
Beach? What beach?? No, seriously! Fired? What? Hello? Hello?!
One step closer..... (Score:5, Interesting)
motion video device. I can't wait. Especially
when the video is automatically shot through the
air to somewhere else and can't be taken away,
destroyed, etc. So many good uses:
#1 When your girlfriend calls you a liar about
where you've been
#2 When the cop lies about what he said and did
in traffic court
#3 When your boss tries to take credit for
something you did
#4 When that coworker gets fitshaced at the
office party
#5 etc.
You get the idea.
Re:One step closer..... (Score:1)
Riight, like you're going to be standing with your camcorder pointed at the traffic officer as he comes by youyr car to fine you.
That also means you're going to be filming all you do/say, plus all the people around you, basically not doing work at the time. Let's not even talk about transmission costs or limited storage available in the phone. That, and everybody has a webcam anyway..
Yeah that sounds more realistic already :) But then, see webcam point above...
CowboyNeal (Score:2)
Come on, stop the flow...
CowboyNeal, just the thought of a huge fat geek 'enjoying' his porn on a tiny screen..*shudder*
Babelfish... (Score:1)
with java included it may be cute (Score:1)
Re:with java included it may be cute (Score:1)
But Why Will This Be Used? (Score:2, Insightful)
People are already worried about traffic accidents [apparently] caused by cell phones. Imagine if people are not only talking on cell phones but also watching them when driving?
Re:But Why Will This Be Used? (Score:3, Insightful)
Because no-one is interested in walking to a certain FIXED place, and wonder out how on the earth THIS SPECIFIC videomeeting thing works. When those services are available on your pocket, through a relatively simple and relatively standardized interfaces, you might actually use it. Also, I don't believe their main use will be as video"phones", instead they will be used to send images and videoclips. Atleast I never have a camera with me when I would have needed it.
PORN....as always (Score:2, Insightful)
Video! (Score:1, Insightful)
One wonders (Score:3, Insightful)
The Neue Zurcher Zeitung [nzz.ch], which features one of the best Media & IT section from any German speaking newspaper tested the MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service) capabilities of the 7650 and the Ericsson T68i three weeks ago.
In a nutshell: It sometimes works. But only if the sender and the receiver both have the same phone. If you have the T68i and I send you an MMS from a Nokia you either get gibberish or nothing at all.
If we have the same phones we also better be with the same carrier, otherwise: see above. Regardless of success you're anyway billed 55euro-cents per message.
After WAP and some exorbitantly overpriced UMTS licenses mobile services could see their third Waterloo here by giving up simplicity and standards and bloating those devices with extremely complex and buggy sub systems, for which they weren't designed for in the first place.
The beauty of SMS lies in its simplicity and its standardization (partially basterdized by carriers in the US), which is adhered to throughout the European GSM network. Adding crappy features that nobody wants or needs and that rarely function the carriers and manufacturers do themselves a disservice.
Besides, I don't think that the business user (the one generating the most revenue) is very interested in sending 95KB video clips (or fotos for that matter) around the world. The guy wants a reliable phone, which is connected without hiccups after leaving the plane in Basel, Barcelona or Bangalore.
Re:One wonders (Score:1)
Re:One wonders (Score:1)
Same here (Switzerland). Nevertheless telcos really love their business clientel for the same reasons as airlines love them:
They spend most per contract.
For a fun phone the 7650 is just too darn expensive.
Re:One wonders (Score:1)
In a nutshell: It sometimes works. But only if the sender and the receiver both have the same phone. If you have the T68i and I send you an MMS from a Nokia you either get gibberish or nothing at all.
It may not be just the handsets - the MMC (multimedia messaging centre) may be to blame as well.
My company did some MMS apps, back when you could count the number of MMS-capable handsets without taking your socks off and we didn't have any of them :) All we had was a vague standards document, which said that the T68 would support "a subset of SMIL" (which is an XML-based presentation language). At this point I didn't know of any Nokia handset, and if it existed whether it would even support the same "subset of SMIL". We tested using a media player that could handle SMIL.
With the MMC we were using, nothing happened. Nothing. We racked our brains for ages. Eventually we discovered that the MMC didn't like the whitespace in our nicely-indented SMIL. It wanted the whole thing on one line without a single extraneous space. I'm sure it's quite concievable that both handsets are outputting perfectly valid messages, even identical messages, and the MMC in the middle is screwing it up.
It's easy to blame the handsets, and I'm sure they're far from perfect, but I can't help wondering how good the infrastructure is. I also can't help wondering why it's so hard to send what is, to all intents and purposes (at least in transit), a multipart email.
Token Jp vid phones links (Score:1)
Then there's J-phone's video sha-mail which is more like animated-gif mail [zdnet.co.jp]... but hey.
AU/KDDI's A5301T [toshiba.co.jp] Toshiba brand video yay.
Costs five bajillion gazillion jillion yen... monthly as Dr. Evil-san and those companies know.
Aha (Score:1)
I'd been wondering where all that spam was suddenly coming from. Thanks, Finland.
Streaming porn ...live to your handset (Score:1)
8 to 15 seconds of video for EUR 0.20 to 3.00 (Score:1)
Their three GPRS-rates are EUR 0.29 per 10kB for occasional use, EUR 10 for 1MB/month and EUR 40 for 20MB/month. So, this makes about EUR 0.02 to 0.26 per second of video.
The Nokia 7650 provides 3.6MB of RAM, but MMS size is limited to 100kB as has been pointed out already.
Would you use it? (Score:1)
I remember the japanese were using it and one of their commercials promoting their services shows this guy bowing profusely to appoligize to his girlfriend
But would the average john doe do the same for his girlfriend? Or for other matters?
The other factor would be cost, it's already prohibiting when they first launched data services over GSM/CDMA networks, now even with GPRS i doubt there would be much drop in pricing.It would be nice if telcos were to evaluate their charges for data =)
Breaking new ground in dirty phone calls (Score:2)
sample files (Score:1)
Software was distributed by t mobile in germany. t mobile [t-mobile.de]
Doom for 7650! (Score:1)
Re:Doom for 7650! (Score:1)
Re:Doom for 7650! (Score:1)
It works quite well, but is a bit buggy. Once they sort out the Bluetooth 2 or more player version, then it will be good. Shame it uses up most of the memory though, I need to be able to take photos as well.
Getting out of hand? (Score:1)
Last Post! (Score:1)
during games in Chicago in January, only more intelligent.
-- Dave Barry, "Sex and the Single Amoeba: What Every
Teen Should Know"
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Re:english (Score:1)