The Wi-Fi Cameras are Coming 137
Vcullen writes "This week will see many 'new' digicams released at CES but few will be more than cosmetic tweaks and updates on current models. However Kodak have just announced something new (for them) - a Wi-Fi enabled digital camera that enables online photo sharing and viewing without the need for a computer. It also has 256MB of internal memory and stores up to 1500 images." Of course, to actually get on a wireless network, a special card is required for the camera, and the firmware has yet to support WEP, so one has to wait until a Q3 2005 update to join most authenticated networks.
yay! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:yay! (Score:1)
I give it 2 years and soon people will copyright their face so you can't take a picture of them unless you pay the poparazzi tax soon to be implemented by the Digital Picture Association of America (No it doesn't exist... YET)
Sarcasm /off
Re:yay! (Score:2)
A hem (Score:3)
1500 images? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:1500 images? (Score:3, Informative)
So postage stamp is a bit of an exegeration.
O
Re:1500 images? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:1500 images? (Score:2)
Re:1500 images? (Score:1)
of course... i just bought a new 8mp nikon....
Re:1500 images? (Score:1)
Re:1500 images? (Score:2)
That's great, and I'm not arguing with that, but "emulating 35mm film" and "3mp is the absolute minimum resolution for decent 4x6 printing" (which I was debating) are radically different concepts.
Re:1500 images? (Score:3, Informative)
"..people can upload the pictures and videos for near instantaneous electronic sharing with friends around the world.
On-the-spot sharing of up to 1,500 favorite pictures, synchronized with a person's PC-based picture collection..."
The camera itself has 256mb of memory, so it will fit a reasonable amount of pictures on, you choose your favorites and upload them to kodak.
You can then steer your family and friends and anyone interested to the site - instantly, certainly
Re:1500 images? (Score:1)
Wow, 256 millibits. That is like, a fourth of a bit. A person that can squeeze 1,500 real images in that has my respect.
Great (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Great (Score:2)
No WEP? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:No WEP? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:No WEP? (Score:2)
So...it'll be like X10 even if they add the security.
It remains unclear to me what the advantage is of even having a security protocol that is as vulnerable as WEP is. Perhaps the camera makers feel the same way.
Re:No WEP? (Score:1)
-Yikes-. (Score:2)
What neighborhood do you live in, and can I get an apartment? Because around here, it'd be a really, really BAD thing.
Hardly a first (Score:5, Informative)
hardly a first
Re:Hardly a first (Score:3)
Re:Hardly a first (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Hardly a first (Score:1)
This is the first consumer-level implementation... definitely a milestone. How many of your non-photographer friends would pay $1000 for an SLR that doesn't fit in their pocket and does WiFi?
$1000 for a SLR?
Where where??!?
Unfortunately technology is not that advanced yet. The top of the line SLR is still $11000
Re:Hardly a first (Score:2)
If you're not making a joke, where have you been for the past year?
Re:Hardly a first (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hardly a first (Score:1)
Re:Hardly a first (Score:2)
Re:Hardly a first (Score:3, Insightful)
Real Question (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Real Question (Score:1)
I found my next phonecam... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:NSFW - Please label this crap (Score:2)
Too easy. (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean a wifi camera is neaded by a lot of people. Let's say you are a jurnalist and want to take pictures where it's not exactly alowed. With wifi, the pics can get out imediatly so that if someone takes your camera to destroy incriminating pics you can let them have it (while recording that "transaction" too).
Re:Too easy. (Score:2, Informative)
This idea would allow me to take photos instead of beatings.
Camera on remote-control blimp or airplane? (Score:2)
Re:Camera on remote-control blimp or airplane? (Score:2)
Possible names (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Possible names (Score:1)
Wonderful idea! (Score:5, Insightful)
Average Joe would not only benefit greatly by not needing to connect cables to the computer to transfer files, but this is likely to open up a digital convergence gateway where cameras, computers, and phones can transfer photos to each other. We all know that media sharing has become the next big thing, not just in P2P, but in a hardware sense, too.
Think about it - how many times have you taken pictures at a party with your digicam, and your friends ask you, "I want a copy of that pic!" Now you can without batting an eye!
Except for professionals. And maybe consumers too (Score:2, Informative)
Yeah, except that photojournalists and ESPECIALLY sports photographers can't shoot RAW because of the additional delays in processing (much easier to FTP JPEGs directly to the photo department, and most prepress deadlines occur DURING night games - and there's far more overhead than just prepress); besides, no sane photojournalist would trus
Re:Except for professionals. And maybe consumers t (Score:1)
Re:Except for professionals. And maybe consumers t (Score:2)
Re:Except for professionals. And maybe consumers t (Score:1)
Just think about it though, for a moment. It may sound crazy...'CARRY a raid array around with you, that sounds crazy!'...but people also used to think a gig of ram in a laptop was insane. Well that isn't too uncommon anymore, and I think raid enabled devices such as this might become common one day.
Totally possible.
Re:Wonderful idea! (Score:1)
I'd almost prefer to port around the equivilant dollar value in consumer CF cards since my 6 MP dSLR makes _at least_ 48 MB/s of data shooting TIFFs in sny of the burst modes. Firing the files off at 55 Mbps without cache would bottleneck the image buffer and camera in about 2s, or 1s on a >10 MP real dSLR.
Also, if I'm putting a harddrive on my body, I'd use much faster USB2 or FW to tra
Re:Wonderful idea! (Score:2)
wasnt this supposed to be the purview of bluetooth. Wifi wasnt designed for this particular application, bluetooth however was and most new phones, laptops, etc ha
Re:Wonderful idea! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wonderful idea! (Score:3, Funny)
Ah, the eye-batting protocol, with its Bardot rate, IRIS interface and open flirtation technologies. Sad to see that one go.
Bluetooth!! (Score:4, Interesting)
Very useful for those working in the field needing to get photos back to the office.
Re:Bluetooth!! (Score:2)
Short story: The camera is a simple little thing that doesn't take good pictures (IIRC). The ONLY stand out thing on the camera is that it has Bluetooth. Only problem? Bluetooth is SLOOOOOWWWWWWWWWW. It's what, 721Kbps? So to download 128MB of memory, you would be waiting 1420 seconds (about 24 minutes). Just a single 2MP image is what, 1.2MB? That would be about 14 seconds. God help you if you had a high quality 5MP image or bigger. That would be what, nearly
Re:Bluetooth!! - Correction (Score:2)
Also found the camera, here [geekzone.co.nz]. Also note that while my times were theroretical (and ideal), they achieved about 10KBps (or 80kbps out of the theoretical 721kbps). That would make the 128MB take nearly 4 hours. Two mega pixel image? About two minutes. So the 5MP would be something like 5 minutes. Ouch.
Re:Bluetooth!! (Score:2)
Re:Bluetooth!! (Score:2)
you get the point though to much data to push through to small a pipe. Like everything these days faster's better
Re:Bluetooth!! (Score:2)
Re:Bluetooth!! (Score:2)
Actually most implementations use 115Kbps because of Serial drivers on the OS (Windows if you're using it).
the best web camera DOES run Linux!! (Score:3, Informative)
Authenticated networks? (Score:2)
Re:Authenticated networks? (Score:1)
Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:2, Insightful)
Why would I want a WiFi camera?
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:4, Informative)
The aperature is too damn small, everything comes out grainy, blured, and the quality is just plain crappy.
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:1)
will cameraphones get better cameras first, or will these 'wireless cameras' get... uh... phones first?
i'd say it's a safe bet that cellphones with better cameras will win.
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:2)
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:1)
> But Wifi is useless because I need to be within a few dozen feet of an open access point, which is only a few dozen feet from a USB port.
that's a pretty valid point, but as wireless networks become more common, and once they get WEP or WPA on the camera it may be more useful.
I guess they've got to start some
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:2)
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:1)
GPRS in Australia is charged at about 2c per k, with a 20c flagfall.
And for that, you get less than modem speed (20 - 40kbps).
I would love to get 150k, and whilst flat rate would be great I'd be willing to pay the same as metered broadband - ~10c per meg.
However, the two main telcos here have pretty much killed mobile internet through their pricing.
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:2)
Vodafone has a good GPRS data bundle, $50 for 500mb, but I would like something at a much lower cost. I haven't seen any new plans out of Telstra and Optus to compete with this either.
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:1)
Also, think fixed wireless.
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:2)
I agree with the grandparent, I think it's cheap lenses and / or sensors. I also think that the aperature is too small, but only because it then requires a much longer exposure and nobody bothers to tripod their phone.
Anybody have f-stop ratings for their camera phone?
Re:Why is this better than a cellphone? (Score:1)
An extremely small hole, however, can produce significant diffraction effects which will result in a less clear image.
Granted, that probably takes a smaller opening that (what I imagine) cell phone cameras have, but the next sentence mentions an additional effect:
Additionally, as the diameter of the hole approaches the thickness of the material in which it is punched, significant vignetting at t
wireless cameras have been here for years (Score:2, Interesting)
i just recently saw one with a 2 mega pixel camera in it, and i'm sure it's only a matter of time until we see great quality 4 mega pixel cameraphones (4 megapixels seems to be the break point for cheapish snapshot digital photos).
plenty of people already use their cameraphones to send images directly up to their blogs or internet services like flickr.com, it's just a matter of when wireless cameras meet with cameraphones.
then the
Re:wireless cameras have been here for years (Score:2, Insightful)
Megapixels are a dumb consumer selling point. (Score:5, Informative)
The megapixel count seems to be the big selling point to uneducated consumers. They think that the more megapixels, the better the camera. But in actuality the quality of the picture doesn't usually depend on the pixel count. You can have a crappy lens and a 99 megapixel sensor behind it, and you're going to get a very big blurry, distorted picture. Also, if the sensor is not a very good one, you'll get a picture made of a lot of washed out pixels.
Take an older high end camera where they put effort into giving it a quality lens and quality sensor and compare it to a heavily marketed modern camera with lots o' megapixels. The difference in picture quality will speak for itself. There are lots of 5 mp cameras nowadays, but lots of them still take crappy pictures. They're just BIG crappy pictures.
Re:Megapixels are a dumb consumer selling point. (Score:2, Informative)
So the first advice I always give to friends buying a camera is to check what the specs of the optics are. More often than not, this is also the reason for a significant difference in price between cameras that are otherwise identical. But
Re:Megapixels are a dumb consumer selling point. (Score:1)
it's a matter of what product will be more useful to consumers... wireless cameras, or phones with cameras built in?
i'd much rather carry a single item with all the gadgets i want (this camera is obviously marketed as a cheaper snapshot camera, which is what a cameraphone is) than carry around two things - my phone and a camera as well.
Barrel/Lense/Aperature size (Score:2)
Digital zoom sucks, you want at least 3x optical, preferable at least 4-5x
Megapixel is useless with a teeny barrel or crappy lense in most cases. Smaller lense/barrel == less light. Light makes pictures. Therefore more megapixel with less light == larger but grainier picture.
Re:wireless cameras have been here for years (Score:1)
> we see great quality 4 mega pixel cameraphones
great quality happens only when the lens is more or less as wide as the phone itself (you mean great quality, right?)... and when it happens, the phones wont be as mobile as you expect..
so it wont happen..
And I can hear the cheering of... (Score:1, Interesting)
Obvious Solution - Wardriving (Score:4, Funny)
GREAT even easier to put slutty pics online! (Score:1)
nothing to see here (Score:5, Informative)
Consumer camera yes, but Kodak is hardly the first to wifi in a digital camera [nikonusa.com].
Re:nothing to see here (Score:2)
It's not quite the same thing... (Score:4, Interesting)
WIFI features.. (Score:4, Interesting)
The cameras (after obtaining ip's, dhcp or static) should have a running webserver that streams video of exactly what the camera's lcd would display, A web-lcd per se. There should also be COMPLETE functionality of the ALL the camera's functions tied into controls on the web application. Basically, if you can use a function on the physical interface, it should be available for use over the air as well.
Is this too much to ask?
Re:WIFI features.. (Score:2)
Nikon has had something like this for a while... (Score:2, Redundant)
Nikon WT-1 Wireless Transmitter [nikonusa.com]
Nice headline.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, if you consider higher quality lens systems and much higher resolution a "cosmetic tweak", then um, we need to send you back to slashdot university for a while before submitting another headline.
The "Without a computer" part sounds more like marketing BS, too. Nine times out of ten, if you are in range of a Wi-fi router you have access to, you'll be within walking distance of your PC.
Yeah, I know someone will come in here and throw down their example of how this would be useful, but think about 99% of the other users out there. I predict this thing won't do so well, though a neat bit of technology.
Re:Nice headline.. (Score:2)
But at the same time I'm sure he wil be
Yawn..... (Score:1)
Ok...well...I'll jump on the band wagon as soon as Kodak invents a Wifi router and, say, network to go with it that fits in my pocket.
If I'm at home I can connect this camera to my computer anyway (read: unlimited picture storage).
Seriously, besides saving entire seconds in transfer time, what is the benefit? (btw, I didn't TFA)
Inject.
Chicken and egg (Score:1)
Bah, old tech (Score:2)
I was peripherally involved with a proposed project to port it's embedded software from vxworks to linux. It never got off the ground, because Ricoh US wanted it to happen but Ricoh Japan didn't. Ricoh US only had the documentation in japanese, but they wanted our US division and not our japan division to do it.
The deal was all messed up. But a very nice camera. We were sad to box it up and send it back after abo
X10! (Score:2)
GPS (Score:3, Interesting)
I want GPS coordinates in an exif tag (or something).
Re:GPS (Score:2)
Eventually you could build up a database of pictures that overlap so theoretically you could build a picture of the whole world - would be cool to get a open database of photos all over a town say - would make creating realistic games all the easier.
woah. sorry for the mind piss
Toilet Cam technology has had this for years (Score:3, Funny)
256Mb != 1500 images (Score:1)
My 2MP camera makes JPEGs of over 400K, so that makes around 500 images on a 256Mb card (I have one).
So are they refering to 1500 Webcam-style VGA images?
Police and pictures (Score:2)
The first case I heard of was actually a student (journalism I believe) who was arrested for "obstructing justice" and had her camera confiscated - even though she was taking pictures from across the street and was in no way obstructing the officer.
The second case was similar but - da da dum - they nabbed a lawyer instead... hopefully that will end up biting them in the
Re:w00t (Score:1)
Better question (Score:1, Offtopic)