My Photo

Reiter's Consulting

  • Wireless Internet & Mobile Computing

    I have been analyzing wireless communications for more than 30 years. I am president of Wireless Internet & Mobile Computing, a pioneering consulting firm that helps create new and enhance existing wireless data businesses in the United States and abroad.

    Previously, I created the world's first wireless data newsletter, wireless data conference, cellular conference and FM radio subcarrier newsletter. I was instrumental in creating and developing the world's first cellular magazine.

    I also helped create and run the first association in the U.S. for the paging and mobile telephone industries.

    E-Mail: reiter@wirelessinternet.com
    Phone: 1-301-634-1586

Mobile TV Events

Search


  • Google

    WWW
    www.mobiletelevisionreport.com

Twitter Updates

    follow me on Twitter

    Reiter's Weblogs

    Camera Phone Favorites

    • My Own Photos
      www.flickr.com
      This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from Alan A. Reiter. Make your own badge here.

    « Sprint PCS, Bell Mobility offer U.S. - Canada picture sharing using LightSurf | Main | Sprint PCS offers National Enquirer, Weekly World News »

    Tuesday, February 24, 2004

    Cellular operator(s) to remove ability to save photos to handset's memory card?

    Shane Conder, a BREW developer at wireless software company Rocket Mobile, posts on his Weblog that cellular operators are going to require that camera phone users transmit photos only wirelessly via MMS rather than also being able to save photos on memory cards. Here's what Shane wrote:

    "Carriers will be hindering quick snappers by not allowing images to be saved to external cards (so what are they for?!) by requiring all images that move off a phone to go through MMS. I know this from stuff I can't post specifics about. I also hope market forces make it change before it's a reality. Unfortunately, I know that my current project has to implement it (the restriction). :(

    "This, alone, certainly limits the range of uses on some camera phones. Another megapixel camera phone doesn't even have a memory slot. Of course, at high jpeg compression it could store 200 1.3 megapixel images!"

    Seriously stupid

    If cellular operators are going to prevent users from saving photos to memory cards in the phone, this is a seriously stupid thing to do. The harm to consumers is so obvious that I'm not even going to discuss it!

    But it also could harm the cellular operators. Although I'm not a fan of the intelligence of the human race (I definitely am not a "man of the people" -- nor do I want to be), users will quickly learn that they can't save photos to a memory card -- when other cellular operators don't disable this feature.

    Also, I wonder whether disabling the ability to save photos to a memory card also will carry over to saving any type of file -- music, video, text, etc. In addition, if the cellular operator(s) is/are so user-hostile as to prohibit transferring data to a memory card, I wouldn't be surprised if it would be impossible to transfer data via a cable, infrared or Bluetooth.

    Head it off at the pass

    If a cellular operator is indeed disabling the memory card function -- and I have no first hand knowledge of it -- perhaps adverse publicity could make the cellular operator think twice. Of course, using a word "think" in conjunction with a cellular operator that would consider disabling memory card functionality does a disservice to the word "think." Thinking has nothing to do with this decision (again, if it's true).

    If you want to play a guessing game...since Rocket Mobile develops only for BREW, you could look at cellular operators that offer BREW and wonder which one (or ones) is/are going to do this.

    I can't imagine that cellular subscribers would stand for this.

    TrackBack

    TrackBack URL for this entry:
    http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451cb2a69e200e5501e143d8833

    Listed below are links to weblogs that reference Cellular operator(s) to remove ability to save photos to handset's memory card?:

    » Devious: Remove Ability to Save Photos to Memory Card from picturephoning.com
    Not sure if this will acutually happen, but Alan Reiter reports that cellular operators are going to require that camera phone users transmit photos only wirelessly via MMS rather than also being able to save photos on memory cards. And... [Read More]

    » Crippling the Camera Phone from VirtMem
    I don't have a cell phone with a camera in it, but I've been following the market, waiting for a... [Read More]

    » MMS Pricing and Camera Phones from Om Malik on Broadband
    Techdirt Wireless argues that by charging so much to send a photo, the wireless carriers are actively discouraging people from actually using the camera part of the camera phone. This only gets worse if they don't allow people to store... [Read More]

    » MMS Pricing and Camera Phones from Om Malik on Broadband
    Techdirt Wireless argues that by charging so much to send a photo, the wireless carriers are actively discouraging people from actually using the camera part of the camera phone. This only gets worse if they don’t allow people to store... [Read More]

    Comments

    If they institute this, how many days will it be until someone cracks the security and reenables this function? I'd give it a month max.

    Can't see it happening, myself. People are already used to SD and Compact Flash cards in cameras. Also, 1 or 2 megapixel images won't really compress enough at decent quality for the usual maximum 100kb MMS size. <100kb would be OK for snapshots sent via email, but would look lousy if printed or shown as holiday pic on a PC or TV screen at full size.

    One additional thought: What MIGHT happen is that the phone encrypts/encodes the image on the card so it can't be read as a normal JPG on a PC, but CAN be read by an operator's PC client software (for a fee) or by a Kodak/Fuji/etc partner's kiosk in a photo printing lab.

    Dean Bubley
    Disruptive Analysis

    I personally hope it doesn't actually happen.

    But I'll also say this:

    Doesn't it follow that as image size increases and features such as video are added to handsets that that they will not only be able to store more on their own but they'll also be able to send more?

    Perhaps good can come out of it: If everyone does send images and it swamps the network then the big "they" have to build out bigger, better, faster, and cheaper networks. ;)

    So here's a question:

    I snap a picture with my trusty 4megapixel pocket camera, pull the SD card out of it, and drop it into my trusty cell-phone-come-pocket-broadband link. Can I send this huge image? Can I do anything with it on the handset? Do any handsets in the world allow anything currently?

    In other words, why bother using the internal camera if the phone has a card slot to use images from a real camera.

    What I've always wondered is why carriers let the SD slots get added to the phones they sell. I can clearly see the benefit as a consumer, but memory slots, Bluetooth, sync cables, etc. are all ways of putting data on and off a handset without traveling over the cellular network. Carriers show varying resistance to all the above (see any Bluetooth on US CDMA?), but they seem to have let the SD slots slip by. They've let the genie out of the bottle, and now (thankfully) it won't go back in.

    Verify your Comment

    Previewing your Comment

    This is only a preview. Your comment has not yet been posted.

    Working...
    Your comment could not be posted. Error type:
    Your comment has been posted. Post another comment

    The letters and numbers you entered did not match the image. Please try again.

    As a final step before posting your comment, enter the letters and numbers you see in the image below. This prevents automated programs from posting comments.

    Having trouble reading this image? View an alternate.

    Working...

    Post a comment

    May 2008

    Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
            1 2 3
    4 5 6 7 8 9 10
    11 12 13 14 15 16 17
    18 19 20 21 22 23 24
    25 26 27 28 29 30 31

    Imaging Ads


    Categories

    What I'm Reading