Wireless Video Phone 46
Switch writes "This article from CNN introduces the latest and greatest wireless technology. NEC is going to produce a "viewer" that includes a CCD camera, microphone, and 2" LCD display for wireless communication with video. And to make it cooler, the communication takes place via a radio link to your cell phone which could be in your pocket, briefcase, etc... " I don't even own a cell phone yet, but these look pretty cool.
US Digital Cell Phone services aren't so great. (Score:2)
The U.S. is just so pitifully behind in their digital cell phone services. Anyone ever try travelling around the U.S. with one? Whatever network you choose, it's far from all-encompassing. Now head over to Europe or Asia, and see just how much better their phones work. And how many more things you can do w/ it (pay bills, text-message, etc.).
And the accessories that are available to phone users. Like the bland outer casings for them Nokia phones that are marketed here PALE in comparison to the smorgasbord of designs you can get in - of all places - the Philippines. (You'd be surprised at just how many people in this poly-island country have cell phones. And text-messaging is now part of the youth culture there.)
Also a beef I have w/ the U.S. digital cell phone services is if you wanna switch companies, you have to buy a freakin' new phone for it. Because the phone you'd been using was meant to be used for just that one cell phone company. This explains why there're no longer long-term contracts like they had w/ the analog phones. This is how they getcha!
Check this article out. It's entitled Why your cell phone stinks [pathfinder.com] from TIME. They blame the standards wars (CDMA, PCS, GSM) of years past to why the U.S. is behind.
NO! NO! Not the MALL! (Score:2)
I don't like shopping much anyway, but malls are the pits...
Re:The down side of video conferencing (Score:1)
Make videos of yourself in different settings, suit and tie, boardroom in the background etc, be easy to do especially at this resolution.
mmmmm (just don't mix up the themes)
Ok so what happens if you want to lie to your boss (Score:2)
On the fly image editing.. (Score:1)
Zipwow
More practical device ? maybe. (Score:2)
Re:The down side of video conferencing (Score:1)
it just goes on and on my friend,
some people started clicking it not knowing what it was,
and they'll continue clicking it forever just because this is the link that never ends. .
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
Soccer Mom + Video Phone + SUV = Me Dead (Score:2)
To continue on that line of thought, when are they going to start adding features to cell phones to make them safer.
As a motorcyclist (and geek) I am constantly on guard against the morning commuter who feels the need to chat on the phone and check out something on their lap top, never mind what lane their Volvo just drifted into. Unfortunately, I think it will take a well loved celebrity being killed by one of these drivers to wake up the general population and have some changes made. I'm nomiating the Back Street Boys for this dubious honor.
What they really need to do is make more voice operated phones that can tie into the cars speaker system so people can pay attention to the road and not the phone in their hand.
Hello Kitty! (Score:1)
PHS is kind of neat: The voice-only handsets are unbelievably tiny. PHS also has fixed-mobile intergration that works. You can get relatively inexpensive home base stations that enable you to use PHS handsets on your home wireline connection (and wireless PBX systems for work). PHS can move data at 64kbps, so it is adequate for mobile or in-building wireless Internet access. PHS also supports a widely used pocket e-mail terminal system in Japan.
PHS is popular with kids in Japan for casual use. You can get handsets in sparkly pink colors. There are even "Hello Kitty" PHS phones. So I doubt the picture capability will be used to enhance business transactions.
Why this is likely to fail... (Score:2)
But it hasn't picked up with the majority of the population, which is why it's something of the past. The reason is, the phone provides instantaneous communication. That's its fuction and purpose. The purpose is not to see the other, most of the times. Who would want to run out of the shower to answer an important call, then have to hide behind a sofa to speak on the phone?
So, this gadget will only be bought by senior management who somehow manage to bull$hi7 the accounting department into saying this is useful. Sure, on the off-chance that you're stuck in the bathroom (heh, little AY2K joke) for an important video conference call, it's gonna be great. Other than that, I think very few people will actually bother with it.
Yeah, it's cool. So that leaves senior management and geeks to buy it. :)
"There is no surer way to ruin a good discussion than to contaminate it with the facts."
Re:Do we really need video phones (Score:2)
That said, I can say with authority that phone conferencing does NOT work. It's a pain in the ass. You never know if someone is there on the other line, or if they've left the room, or if they even showed up to the meeting in the first place. That's just one minor issue. Then you don't get facial expression, so people don't bother trying to make jokes, so meetings consequently end up very boring, then there are times when knowing who said what is very important. Being able to connect a face to a voice, and by association, a name, distinguishes the content of what they said. Over a speakerphone, half the time you have no idea who's saying what.
So, for personal use, I think videophones probably have no future, but for business use, I don't see how we're going to survive without this technology, as the trend towards globalization and mega-mergers continues.
"The number of suckers born each minute doubles every 18 months."
Re:Soccer Mom + Video Phone + SUV = Me Dead (Score:1)
I'm glad I live in an area where three lanes in one direction is something pretty darn unusual.
Re:US Digital Cell Phone services aren't so great. (Score:1)
The mess you are referring to (CDMA vs GSM vs PCS) is being resolved in the 3GPP committee. 3GPP is the next generation cell phone consortium. All the major players of devices are supporting this, as are most of the service providers. If you are really having trouble sleeping, check out http://www.3gpp.org/ ^_^
Lots of fun stuff coming up in that network. You'll have a lot more capability than the limited stuff in GSM or CDMA. I'm still learning all the bells and whistles they are putting in...just need more coffee to get through some of the documentation.
MPEG4 (Score:1)
Re:ABout time (Score:1)
Wasn't it the 1939 world fair when these video phones were demonstrated for the first time? Or maybe it was 1960. Or maybe it was another year entirely.
In any case, the prospect of video phones being just around the corner has become almost an urban legend.
Oh yeah... (Score:1)
But it is still very important. Once a major company introduces a product onto the market, other companies will try and refine the concept in order to steal some of the action. So it's a matter of time before someone slims it down, adds a color screen, and throws in a cellular modem and TCP/IP layer [drool, drool....]
They could be useful... (Score:2)
As far as pizza guys/bathrobes, etc, I see the video portion of a call being off by default. So you're at home watching TV, the phone rings and you pick it up on the cordless phone and retire back to the couch.. It's the gf/wife - or someone else you care to see - so you hit the video button, and the picture pops up on the TV via the set top box interface (Bluetooth wireless connection again, perhaps). You could switch it to speaker phone too, if you wanted.
BTW, 300K bps is actually pretty good for MPEG-4 or H.264. The older Picturetel video conferencing setups used 128K, and were OK, even using what was probably worse compression.
The video phone portion is not the most important. (Score:1)
The videophone is a great gimmick - I'll be able to see my otherhalf on the phone - probably no-one else because not that many people will buy them.
However it's not the main reason I'd buy one - my palm pilot makes a great organiser - but it cant connect to the net without a phone connected by a lead or pointing directly at it. Yeah bluetooth would be nice but it's a fair while off yet.
I want a machine that will give me information when I want it - not stuff I've already filed away or synced with the device - but anything I want. Train times when I go visit my mum, travel information if I'm stuck in a traffic jam, a street map when I'm on my way to a friends. Yeah the display will be small but I'll still be able to make sense of the information.
Orange are promising to make fast and easy wirefree internet access a reality - they should, within the next two years, be able to bill based on data throughput - untill then they're offering uncompressed speed of 28.8kbps wirefree - faster than my first modem - heck even GSM's basic 9.6kbps is faster than my first modem.
I think that with the right design and spin these devices will become powerfull tooles - enabling people to get things done quicker and easier without reliance on data collation before the event - this is what is going to revolutionise internet access.
M@t
ABout time (Score:2)
The difference? This time it looks like it might actually happen.
And if it actually does work at 384kbps... coolness epitomised.
Both cool and not (Score:1)
Old hat... (Score:1)
Cool Toy, But... (Score:1)
The down side of video conferencing (Score:2)
I was talking to him the other day about his work habits. Generally, he crawls out of bed early in the morning in his underwear, teleconferences with some people on the east coast, then maybe shaves, maybe showers, and most definitely sits down to a day of work. His most amusing comment was, "Thank god I don't have videoconferencing"
Personally I agree. I'd love to work at home, but most of the benefits come from being a slob in privacy. I personally work better that way. Videoconferencing has a nasty way of spoiling things.
'Course, if its only from the neck up, I guess he could throw on a tie and still sit around in his underwear...
-konstant
I can't wait.... (Score:1)
Re:ABout time (Score:2)
Theres no (no) technology that can't be misused to the extremely prejudicial detriment of the hapless luser. I'm willing to bet some moron accidently killed himself by choking on cotton balls.
Great Framerate (Score:1)
I hope that the new phones are at least in the 10 to 15 fps range
As usual all opinions are probably wrong.
Re:ABout time (Score:2)
I don't really see the use for a cellular vidphone. Maybe nice to prove the capabilities of the WCDMA, but come on now. Can you imagine someone driving down the road with one of these? I'm not joking. They'll do it.
I could see the use for business people (the old seeing-your-opponent-while-making-the-deal thing), but other than that this is *definitely* within the realms of Cyberclysm.
Although it would be usefull to be driving down the road, see an accident, and be able to show it to the police before they get there. Maybe get a doctor on the other end in case there is a major injury?
In that case, I'm wrong.
So is it, or is it not cyberclysm-ish?
Do we really need video phones (Score:2)
Likewise, for routine conversation/communication, a video connection seems undesirable. I don't want to see the pizza guy's face, and frankly I probably don't want him to see mine. Just the idea of hearing the phone ring and saying, "oh crap, it's the phone, let me put something on" is revolting. In the case of obscene/malicious calls, the added video stream could actually put people in danger. (oh, I see that you are home alone). Single women would probably need to switch off the video inputs of their phones just for safety purposes.
Fundamentally, it seems like a big can of worms, and not the tasty gummy kind either.
Re:Do we really need video phones (Score:1)
But the proverbial "they" said the same types of things about the horseless carriage, electricity, html framesets, and pretty much every new technology to come along.
In the course of human events I'm sure the videophone will find its place, grow in size, and be useful for at least half of the things it proponents advocate.
Re:videophones are boring (Score:1)
Killer app? (Score:2)
Can you say vaporware?
Another Video Phone for th UK market (Score:1)
GPS + Map (Score:1)
videophones are boring (Score:1)
UMTS is supposed to show up in 2-3 years (at least here in Europe, don't know about the states). It will offer 384kbps (up to 2 Mbit theoretical max), data services included. Wireless videoconferencing on the Internet. Cool? Yes.
However the question is: will the cost/benefit make it attractive?
Radio bandwith is a scarce resource for a wireless network operator. When you have sufficient subscribers (which is the case with GSM in almost every country), would you rather serve one guy at 384 kbps (video) or 24 subscribers at 16kbps (audio)?
That means you can expect your video call to cost 24 times as much as a normal phone call. I doubt that people find each others face that attractive...
It would be cool to use the higher bandwith together with devices like the Sony Vaio C1, where I can record and edit pictures and videos, combine them with documents, etc.
How much more interesting than a videophone...
Re:ABout time (Score:1)
It would also be a big risk to hand these devices to most people. I already get freaked out when I am driving and I see a minivan with mom driving while talking on her phone and telling the kids in the back to be quiet. Does she or any other driver really need another visual thing to worry about?
Give me that 384kbps connection while I am walking through the mall, I would love that.
--[Patryn]
Re:Do we really need video phones (Score:1)
Anyone remember what happened cu-seeme, and later on, micros~1 NetMeeting?
The first application of any new technology is almost always pornography. (grinning, ducking, and running)
Convergence between computers and TV (Score:1)
Just realize though that while everyone on
I do however agree that videophones are overhyped technology at it's finest. Anybody who can afford one of these can afford a computer and a cam for it which is a TON safer considering your average soccer mom doesn't know how to hook up a laptop into her car, etc etc.