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The ability to take pictures is one key to our dream mobile device. I think camera phones will be one of the most interesting consumer electronics product over the next year. In anecdotal evidence, a camera phone is the first geek gadget my friend MB has shown interest in (and don't think she doesn't hear breathless recounts of every type of gadget that comes along.)
I think the days of stand alone cameras are numbered. I don't mean for professional photographers - but for everyone else. Still, there are some interesting things going on with digital cameras. Sanyo has a prototype of a WiFi enabled camera. This camera from Concord (who?) is supposedly shipping now, with Bluetooth wireless bulit in. And Ricoh tops them both with the Caplio G3 which can have WiFi, Bluetooth, and GPS capabilities added with expansion cards (although it's unclear to me if you can have more than one of these options at the same time.)
I think this sort of product will lose to mobile phones with bulit in cameras, but it is interesting none the less. The urgent need to to collapse the cycle of steps now needed to take pictures, download them to a computer, and then upload them to the internet. The goal is to have one step: from snapping the picture to posting it on the internet. These cameras are not there, but they show that people are thinking about how to do this.
In general, we can no longer think about the taking of pictures as seperate from the sharing of those pictures. These now seperate tasks need to become one action.
Convergence. That's the dream. I only want to carry one computer device, so it has to do everything. The perfect product does not yet exist, but we are quickly closing in on it.
I've had the T-Mobile Sidekick (which is the rebranded Danger Hiptop) since it's introduction on October 1, 2002. I have been wildly happy with this device. It is a mobile phone, with a qwerty thumb board for entering text. It does email, AOL instant messenger, and basic web surfing. For me email is king, and I use it constantly. It also comes with a plug in camera attachment, but the photos are so small as to be basically unusable.
A new color (screen) version has just come out. And with a much better camera, although it sill lags seriously behind other camera phones on the market.
I might upgrade to the new version, but I think I will probably end up with the soon to be released Handspring Treo 600 instead. I liked the original Treo (pictured for comparison on that page,) but it was just a little too big. The 600 solves that problem. It has the thumb board which I like (over stylus entry like a palm pilot, or like the Sony Ericsson P800 uber phone.) I guess this is personal, but I've got to have the keyboard. And it has a built in camera which will hopefully have decent resolution.
But this is still just an approximation at best. But getting closer. Hopefully it will be out by October first.
This weekend was perfect here in NYC. Spent Saturday in Central Park under beautiful blue skies. Hot, but with a breeze in the air. Very nice.
I'm going to try to return to blogging more regularly. I didn't exactly intend to take this long break, but that's what happened. Went through some difficult things, but also some nice things that just aren't possible to write about here. Both have made me a little stronger. My energy feels very focused now, although to what exact end I am still unsure.
I love NYC, in case I haven't said that recently. Summer absolutely kicks ass.
I'm still going to write some about my personal life here (I don't really think it is a blog if you don't provide this sort of real life context for your other posts,) but my rather vague plan is to otherwise tighten the focus a bit. I'm still overly interested in Apple, but only to the extent that I see them as having the best chance of building the mobile computing device that I am really interested in. This yet to be realized product will be the axis around which most future posting will revolve.
Bet you can't wait, huh? Well, hopefully it will be better than nothing.