Sony Presents Bluetooth Digital Camera 160
JeroenH writes: "Sept. 2, 2002, Sony announced the DSC-FX77. It's a 4 megapixel, fixed lens digital camera with a special feature: Bluetooth. When the camera takes a picture, it will be sent directly through the Bluetooth link to a nearby computer, giving you nearly unlimited space for your photos (well, at least as much as fits on your hard disk). At this stage the camera can only send photos to a computer, but in the future it should be possible to control the camera remotely.
Will the wardriving of the future include scooping up pictures? Time will tell..."
Range (Score:1)
Re:Range (Score:2)
Re:Range (Score:2)
Re:Range (Score:1)
Re:Range (Score:2)
Talks a lot about using the camera with a laptop. There are mentions of a cradle and USB. So it has to be able to store images, right?
Oh, Bluetooth is also slow. 47 seconds to transfer a full 4 megapixel image.
Re:Range (Score:2)
Maybe Tom Cruise could also use this if he plans a remake of MI2 (especially the moment when they're at the races and they need to collect some memory-card data).
Re:Range (Score:2)
Re:Range (Score:1)
As far as I can read from the article the camera will contain some kind of memory system (probably MemoryStick), but that isn't clear.
What would be really cool would be to have something like a harddisk based mp3 player that "bluetoothed" to the camera and sucked it dry once in a while. Something small enough to have in your bag or at your belt.
As for controling the camera from a PC - that has already been done, with a by firewire on the Nikon D1x DSLR [dpreview.com].
Bluetooth is nice, but I would rather use firewire to pull a gb of data of a microdrive...
(bluetooth max datarate is 723Kbit/s, which means that it takes about a day to transfere a gigabyte).
Re:Range (Score:1)
Arg! Not sure how I came to that, but the answer is more like 3½ hour ((((1024^3)*8)/740352) seconds)
Re:Range (Score:1)
Ride the wave.
Basic Misunderstanding (Score:2, Insightful)
It is not bluetooth enable so you take a picture, send to BT device, take another one.
You use it like a normal camera, but you can ALSO transmit your pictures to other BT devices, like sync with your computer etc..
what would be cool ... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:what would be cool ... (Score:2)
Not that small... (Score:1)
(Thankfully the RF testing guys down the hall haven't yelled at us yet!)
wardriving of the future? (Score:2)
It already does . .
Re:wardriving of the future? (Score:2)
47 Second Transfer Time (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:47 Second Transfer Time (Score:1)
Re:47 Second Transfer Time (Score:2)
<G>
Is a little bit of imagination too much to ask for? Why can't it have some 30 pics immediate storage (128megs?), and transfer the pictures in background. It's not that you're always near PC either, so the camera should be stand-alone anyways.
Re:47 Second Transfer Time (Score:2)
It's Sony, remember? MemorySticks are very cool litte items, that are pretty cost effective. I don't know of any recent Sony device that didn't use them.
Re:47 Second Transfer Time (Score:3, Insightful)
Come on, admit it - this is cool technology. So what if it has some kinks that need to be ironed out?
Re:47 Second Transfer Time (Score:2, Insightful)
You tell me what the camera default resolution is, and I'll tell you what resolution most people will be shooting at most of the time.
Re:47 Second Transfer Time (Score:2)
Having said that, when I go to download pics over USB I get a little agitated over the 2-3 seconds per pictures since it takes a few minutes to download the entire card's worth. If I had to wait 47 seconds *per picture* something would be bouncing off the wall. (Or I could cut down on the caffeine
Speaking as someone who worked on Bluetooth for a while at least 3 years ago this strikes me as typical of most Bluetooth demos/concepts I've seen - sounds really cool, not incredibly practical in real usage and not anything I'd spend extra to get....but that's just my opinion.
So multitask it! (Score:1)
If I had to wait 47 seconds *per picture* something would be bouncing off the wall.
That "something" would probably be the grenade launcher rounds in Quake III Arena, which you move to the foreground while the camera uploads your last 20 pictures in the background.
Re:47 Second Transfer Time (Score:2)
35mm pixel density... (Score:2)
However...
What pixel range you need is not a function of "equivalent to" but is instead a function of "used for".
If all you want are 4"x6" prints, 300dpi for prints is about the same as what you get from your standard cheap 35mm film developer/printer. Think Walmart photofinishing here. 300dpi at 4"x6" == 300 x 300 x 24 == 2.2MP. Most photographers and magazines (I believe) will talk about 240dpi, though. That's 240x240x4x6=1.4MP.
I've done 4"x6" prints from my 4MP camera. It looks *good*. I am more than satisfied, for that use. (It does nice 5"x7"s too.)
I wouldn't really want to use a 4MP camera for an 8"x10" print, though it would look okay. For that, I'll wait for a 20MP camera. 8"x10" x 300dpi = 7.2MP. Not enough of a change from what I have now. So instead... Doing an 11"x17" print is 11x17x300x300=16.8MP So assuming I don't break this one, my next digital camera will be in the 20MP range.
For showing on a screen? 1600x1200 is enough, and for a lot of people 1024x768 is actually what they run. Both of those are noticably under 2MP. Good reason to use less than the max resolution.
For showing on a web site? Unless it is a page background, you probably don't want anything bigger than 800x600, and maybe only half that size.
Yes, you'll probably get better results by taking the 4MP picture and downsampling in Photoshop or whatever, but that's an awful lot of effort for something where the camera can do almost as good a job itself, using less storage space, taking less time to transfer results, and less of your time in on-computer editing afterwards.
Figure out what your use is, and make selections based on that.
For my use? As I said up top, I never shoot at anything except the max resolution the camera supports.
Re:47 Second Transfer Time (Score:1)
Range and speed (Score:1)
Bluetooth is a radio frequency technology that lets gadgets within 30 feet of each other interact wirelessly. It is more powerful than infrared and can transport data at 1 megabit per second.
A one megabyte pic should therefore transfer in 8 seconds. 47 seconds should make the picture just under 6MB in size -- that's pretty huge for a single jpeg!
Re:Range and speed (Score:3, Insightful)
Bluetooth was designed around supporting low bandwidth cellular links between your phone and whatever device you have, trading business cards, doing voice (the protocol stack actually has a "bypass" for voice data built right into the spec), and synchronization type tasks. In reality, this camera should be using something like 802.11 if it wants to make that data link useful. (shoot 20 pictures and you're waiting more than 15 minutes for the pictures to transfer. For that kind of speed you could just hook up the USB link cable and have it done in a fraction of the time).
You keep saying, "in reality.." (Score:2)
Re:You keep saying, "in reality.." (Score:2)
Re:You keep saying, "in reality.." (Score:2)
Re:Range and speed (Score:2)
Of course, I could be wrong on the image sizes/colour depth & number of images.
Re:Range and speed (Score:1)
Re:Range and speed (Score:2)
Re:Range and speed (Score:2)
Anyways, that guy was probably talking about maximum quality JPGs... It's still much larger than a 1600x1200 should be (2mb) but JPEG compression takes time and some cameras skimp on it. I could see 2mb if they were used to shooting complex scenes and had everything cranked.
My Canon G2 averages about 1.1MB per picture at large, and one step away from maximum compression.
But with the Canon's, you don't ever really need to go higher than that. If you're considering going to a higher compression you switch to shooting in RAW and get all the benefits. Other cameras with TIFFs don't compress the image, but they adjust the white-balance and everything, which is lossy. And TIFFs are huge.
Re:47 Second Transfer Time - not important (Score:2)
* Ability to remotecontrol your camera
* Sending smaller pictures to your PDA, for say use in presentations
* Being able to send smaller pictures to the many new mobile phones (like the Sony Ericsson T68i))
* Bluetooth chips are getting cheap and massproduction gives Sony even cheaper chips for use in other devices
* Using an open standard that many operating systems and hardware will understand (at least sending images)
Bluetooth is the future. Apple has excellent support for it. Linux has good support with Bluez and Nokia's Linux bluetooth stack (Affix). Soon even Microsoft will support it.
Ciryon
linux drivers (Score:2)
Re:linux drivers (Score:2)
Bluetooth Vaios Next? (Score:1)
Re:Bluetooth Vaios Next? (Score:1)
Re:Bluetooth Vaios Next? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Bluetooth Vaios Next? (Score:2)
They were very new though.
Tim
Re:Bluetooth Vaios Next? (Score:1)
My mate bought his on Tottenham Court Road in the spring.
Forget Vaios, how about portable MP3 players? (Score:2)
Re:Bluetooth Vaios Next? (Score:2)
this SUUUUUXXXXXXX (Score:2)
So i have to wait 47 seconds after i take the picture for it to be written? I don't see any mention of on-camera cache, which means you'd have to wait 47 seconds in-between shots. My Canon G1 has about a 1.5 second delay between shots, and i thought that was bad, but 47 seconds is insane! the article goes on further to state that you have to wait 6.5 seconds for a THUMBNAIL!? No prosumer photographer is going to take this seriously, and it'll be too much stuff carrying around for laptops...
Ho there cowboy (Score:2, Informative)
Actually, the article says:
This gives a transfer time of 0.15 seconds.
Read the article again (Score:1)
Transfer rate of vga resolution image = 1.5 seconds per picture
Transfer rate of Thumbnail pictures = 6.5 frame per second
Also, zdnet [zdnet.co.jp]:
Starting time = 0.9 seconds
shutter time lag = 0.35 seconds
Time between shots = 1.7 seconds
It supports memory stick.
What idiots. (Score:1, Funny)
This is one of the stupidest things I have read all day. What a moron.
Re:What idiots. (Score:1)
This is a normal evolution (Score:5, Interesting)
This will make it easier for upgrading parts of your system, and only buying what you need (you start with the mobile phone, then buy a camera of low quality, a year later you upgrade that camera, but you can keep using your mobile phone). Expect more of this to come.
Re:This is a normal evolution (Score:1)
Also, can you imagine having to find multiple parts of your phone when it rings!
People are snooping now (Score:1, Funny)
Great! (Score:1)
Great!!! (Score:1)
I just think in a portable market, having a laptop open whilst taking pics is silly - esp. with the range of BlueTooth. I reckon a Bluetooth adapter on an iPod will be better, so you can upload pics in between shoots, clearing the local camera's storage.
What about video? (Score:1)
Are there any inexpensive digital cameras that handle video and sound? I haven't seen any for under $300USD.
Something other than MPEG-1 video too. The Panasonic AV/10 does MPEG-4, but runs $350+. The Panasonic site doesn't say how much video per MB can be stored, but I would guess about 7MB per minute.
Re:What about video? (Score:2)
Lets dissect this digicam (Score:2, Insightful)
So that gives you a really small radius around your PC to take pictures, if you're transmitting to a desktop PC. Although with a Laptop it should be fairly easy, but still, that's a lot of hardware to carry around. Not practical at all. The bluetooth technology really gets on my nerves. The range is horrible, and should be replaced by something better. It's not a God's gift to consumers. It's vapor.
Ok, lets say I have a Ericsson mobile phone, and it can intercept and store blootooth signals. I doubt there is a phone out there which will store massive uncompressed image data on a tiny memory block. Totally useless. I can see no further applications within the next couple of years. The technology isn't widespread enough, and the storage on BT modules are either a) tiny b) non-existant c) inpractical
Vapor.
Is that even a feature? I can transfer 32 Megs of high quality image data from my DSC F505 under 30 seconds, give or take a few.
Good. Someone should tell Sony that 1999 called. They want the digital camera back.
The only thing that's worth raving about with this digicam is the 4.0 megapixel spec (which is not much by today's standards). I just feel sorry for the people who will be paying lots of money for this overpriced POS.
Re:Lets dissect this digicam (Score:2)
Those features you're calling vapor exist, they're just pretty much useless.
Just being a pedant. Have a nice day.
Re:Lets dissect this digicam (Score:1, Insightful)
2. What is the purpose of a mobile phone? Communcation. Not storage. To store data I suggest to use the Toshiba Pocket Server (1.8 inch HD, 5Gb, ¥50,000).
3. Well, it is state of the art. There is no other universal modern wireless cable replacement protocol. And it lets you connect the camera to other Bluetooth devices. What point about it is vapour?
4. The point is, to transfer the Image, you have to connect it with a cable.
Now imagine, you have your notebook in a backpack, while tacking some pictures. You walk around and later, when you want to have a look at the pictures, they are already there. Pipelining at work.
Of course, when takeing lot of pictures, you'll have to revert to the cable.
Re:Lets dissect this digicam (Score:2)
So that gives you a really small radius around your PC to take pictures, if you're transmitting to a desktop PC
Yeah. Still a bit better than a cable. Plus you don't need line of sight - shove your camera in your bag and have it automatically upload the pictures when you get home.
The bluetooth technology really gets on my nerves. The range is horrible, and should be replaced by something better
Which shows how little of the technology you know. Certain devices can hit 100m and over with their range (and interoperate at that distance with the 10m class devices).
It's vapor
I'll bite my tongue, but you should really know that vapour-ware is typically understood to be non-existant technology. Bluetooth isn't. There are shipping mobile phones that are Bluetooth enabled, laptops as well. I work with Bluetooth everyday, and would be pretty pissed off to find it din't actually exist.
Ok, lets say I have a Ericsson mobile phone, and it can intercept and store blootooth signals. I doubt there is a phone out there which will store massive uncompressed image data on a tiny memory block. Totally useless. I can see no further applications within the next couple of years.
Oh, you better call Nokia, Sony and a bunch of others then to deliver your grand vision into their hands. They'll be ever so grateful. Phones do exist that can store images at *medium* quality, although certainly not lossless 1024*768 images in any quantity. But the point of the phone is to *forward* images, say to friends.
Henry
Re:Lets dissect this digicam (Score:2)
Certain devices can hit 100m and over with their range (and interoperate at that distance with the 10m class devices).
Does this seem to violate certain physics maxims to anyone else? Perhaps I need to know how the return signal from the weaker device somehow makes it the 100 meters out to the stronger device... it seems like if it could only go 10 meters before, there's no way it could go any further just because one device is stronger.
But please, if I am way wrong, let me know.
Re:Lets dissect this digicam (Score:2)
Think outside the box. Or at least open the box up a bit. Who says you even need a laptop? What a PDA device with bluetooth and CF card? Instead of using a CF card in your camera, and another in your PDA, you can just have your PDA in your pocket with the CF card, and share the CF card between the two pieces of hardware. And you know they're going to come out with a version of the camera with local CF card abilities as well.
The bluetooth technology really gets on my nerves. The range is horrible, and should be replaced by something better. It's not a God's gift to consumers. It's vapor.
This is such a lame comment. Bluetooth was specifically designed to provide short-range wireless communication that doesn't require line-of-sight like infrared, but a protocol specifically designed and standardized for data transfer in this short range. Therefore it can use less power and be cheaper than things like 802.11b. It's like wireless USB. It's perfect for what it's designed for.
Ok, lets say I have a Ericsson mobile phone, and it can intercept and store blootooth signals. I doubt there is a phone out there which will store massive uncompressed image data on a tiny memory block. Totally useless.
And yesterday there wasn't a camera available that could transmit it's images via Bluetooth. You do understand the concept of technological progress, right?
I can see no further applications within the next couple of years.
Based on your other comments, this hardly surprises me.
Wardriving (Score:1)
Probably not.
1. This seems like a very gimmicky feature, and hence won't be used much in the future.
2. Most people want to take their cameras away from the computer, and hence need some sort of on-camera storage.
3. Bluetooth's range is very short - only a few metres.
4. Bluetooth isn't particularly fast, so things like dumping the contents of a memory card across it is likely to be painful.
Which is why... (Score:2)
People hated it "Only 2 Megapixels" they whined. "CD-ROM isn't as whizzy as CF" they said.
They missed the point. There are two problems with a digital camera when used on vacations (a) You won't have a PC with you for 2 weeks (b) The battery life either has to be measured in thousands of pictures or be easily rechargable.
Well the Sony solved these two problems. It had 150M of storage space on cheap ($1) media. You moved it to your PC by moving the CD-ROM. Plus, the sony had enough space that the JPG compression used was light. I love these cameras that advertise 6 megapixels, and then they compress the images so much that it might as well be 1.5 megapixels. Plus, the camera's battery would last 150 pictures and be rechargeable in under an hour.
It was and is a great idea.
Yay! Lug around camera AND computer! (Score:2)
Plus, is it really that hard to plug a wire into your camera to download the pictures?
Sounds cool. (Score:1)
Why is it called "wardriving"? (Score:1)
It should be called "virgindriving" or "patheticgeeksdriving".
What don't I understand here?
Comes from "wardialing" (Score:2)
No idea where war figures into "wardialing" either, though, except that it probably sounded cool at the time.
Jon Acheson
Re:Comes from "wardialing" (Score:1)
Re:Comes from "wardialing" (Score:2)
It was coined in homage to the movie WAR GAMES [imdb.com] in the early 80s. Mathew Broderick's character (David Lightman) used a program to auto-dial numbers and identify open computer systems.
Before the movie, it was a little-known exploit. After the movie, every wannabe cracker script kiddie was running wardialers downloaded from a BBS. The first couple of months after the movie released, I don't think I went a day without being wardialed. Very annoying.
I.V.
Re:Why is it called "wardriving"? (Score:2)
I take it you are a non-geek who accidently stumbled onto
It's an extension of the term "war dialing" (dialing numbers and logging those where a modem answers) which comes from the 1983 movie WarGames [imdb.com] where the geek protagonist uses the method to modem into NORAD.
The movie by the way is perhaps STILL one of the best hacker movie out there. All the hacking is realistic, the hacker has no magic powers over computers (as most hackers in movies do) - he wardials to find computers, he finds or makes educated guesses for passwords, etc.
Bluetooth? (Score:1)
Re:Bluetooth? (Score:2)
(plus my 7650 can actually deal with ranges of about 25m).
Henry
Remember who this product is targeted at... (Score:1)
This product is not targeted at techies nor for photographers...
This is targeted at PHBs [dilbert.com] who need to show off their "cool" gear to other PHBs and to make a talking point at the next company party.
Move along people.... Nothing here...
Already doing this... (Score:2, Informative)
Bluetooth is a truely wonderful thing.
Lots Of Love
Bill Ray
Re:Already doing this... (Score:2)
But imagine that Bluetooth becomes ubiquitous, and you have multiple printers within range. Where does it print? Say you and I have adjacent offices. How do I prevent your nifty Bluetooth-enabled phone from printing on my printer?
Bluetooth is a wonderful solution to a very limited problem set. And that set, unfortunately, is not congruent with the problem set of "what happens when these things are everywhere?"
Me too! (Score:2)
Throughput was great too. PCMCIA does 8 Mbyte/second. Woops, who needs wireless when you have something simple like compact flash? I
It only goes to show... (Score:1)
Forget this. I'm going back to 35mm photography.
Flash is so cheap, what's the point? (Score:1, Insightful)
I take everything at 3 megapixels (2048x1536) and
the average size of 118 images was 801KB. That means
I can store 334 pictures. If you really need to take more
than 334 pictures then you probably have $90 for
some more flash memory.
Microsoft Bluetooth Mice and Keyboards (Score:1, Interesting)
I believe the story was on News.com a few days ago.
BTW, this is an old story. they'd announced this a looong time ago. i think we've read about it here on
Re:Microsoft Bluetooth Mice and Keyboards (Score:1)
New? (Score:1)
Send it to my cell phone (Score:2)
Digital postcards (Score:1)
Retrofit for Existing CF Cameras? (Score:2)
It might be useful to develop a Bluetooth-capable device in a Compact Flash form factor that acts like a memory card, but really stores its data on a remote device (like a laptop). Such a card could be inserted into any existing CF camera and used in the same way as the Sony.
An on-card cache could help it get past transfer time issues for the purposes of compatibility with existing cameras.
10Meter Range (Score:1)
Bluetooth has some nifty applications, but it's lowbandwith short range limits it. Why not a camera with built in 802.11b?
spooky and neat (Score:2)
The way figured it is that cameras can get smaller if the storage was moved off the device. I didn't really think about lugging a laptop around (though that is a good idea) but more a portable device like the iPod. Have your camera transfer pictures to the same device that's storing and playing your mp3s. I mean, with 20 GB of space, you could leave 3 GB free for pics for an afternoon. The iPod-type device is already on your person so range isn't an issue.
Physical space on cameras (Score:2)
The issue is really batteries. Those ultra-thin cameras get about 30 pictures on a charge.
Driving the LCD display takes a lot of juice. Putting in batteries that can drive the display for a reasonable amount of time takes more space than you want it to.
My Canon S40 can take about 70 pictures with the LCD on (low brightness level) and a mix of flash and non-flash. About 80 pictures with the LCD on, and no flash use at all.
Turn the LCD off and that jumps to about 150 pictures on a battery charge.
My Olympus Stylus point-n-shoot 35mm camera gets about 20 rolls of film on a disposable lithium battery 1/3 the size of the rechargable lithium the S40 uses.
You want smaller digital cameras, don't worry about the storage medium... Make a battery with 10 times the energy density. Or get the OLEDs working, they are supposed to be very low energy usage, aren't they?
Though otherwise, I tend to agree... a wireless link to a bluetooth harddrive you stuck in your backpack would give you effectively unlimited storage. But with my 1GB microdrive... I switch batteries 8 times before I fill up my storage media, so that really doesn't help me all that much.
What do you need on the computer end? (Score:1)
Any comments / suggestions would be appriciated.
Nick Powers
Not Bluetooth Only! (Score:5, Interesting)
The thing ships with a 16mb memory stick, and can take larger sticks. It also has USB and a cradle for faster transfers. 47 seconds is also for the largest format picture. It can also send video at several frames per second, or a VGA resolution snapshot in under two seconds.
Backing up, the point of Bluetooth isn't Raw Speed. The point of including Bluetooth in a device like this is automation: As soon as you come near the proper PC, this and the PC will detect each other and begin the exchange. You might not have taken the camera out of your pocket or done more than set it down on walking in the door before it finishes the transfer.
If you need the pictures more quickly, simply set it in the USB cradle, or pop out the memory stick and stick it in one of those PC drive bay memory stick adapters.
Later on, you'll be able to configure your Bluetooth-enabled cell phone as a conduit, so pictures can automatically ride a secure tunnel back to your machine wherever you are, giving you an effectively infinite amount of space for your pictures. That's what Bluetooth is for.
More details here [www.sony.jp] for Japanese speakers.
Linking with additional devices (Score:2)
WarDriving (j/k) (Score:2)
2) buy WarDriving equipment
The Future of Slashdot = Press releases? (Score:3, Flamebait)
It's bad enough that most so-called technology news and reviews sites don't amount to much more than a collection of regurgitated press releases and graft-driven prose -- most rampant in the games industry as discussed previously on Slashdot in two threads on fraudulent reviews [slashdot.org] and bribes, junkets and payola [slashdot.org] -- but does Slashdot have to promote them?
The item above is identical to the DSC-FX77 digital camera press release from Sony Europe's [sony-europe.com] site. Could the reason for posting a press release as news be more payola from Sony?
Everyone whines and complains about the problem but they keep helping and promoting sites lacking any integrity by providing them with traffic. The question I have is why do Slashdot's editors participate and add to the problem by directing traffic to them? I'm sure that the editors are concerned by the brochure-style content of more and more sites, although that wouldn't be apparent from posting this 'story'. I've found that Tim generally does a pretty good job of separating the signal and substance from the noise and fluff, but this one got past you.
If you want to see quality Web content, vote with your clicks and posts and discourage blatant product promotion by shills [letsgodigital.nl] for product manufacturers.
Frankly, these problems are what made us decide to start Geartest.com [geartest.com]. We figured that there should be some place on the Internet where people can find unbiased technology product reviews [geartest.com] that can be understood by the layperson. It's been difficult getting manufacturers to loan evaluation units because we specifically tell them that they will not necessarily receive positive coverage by virtue of sending their products -- but a few seem to be coming around to our way of thinking [slashdot.org].
Hopefully average technology users and Slashdotters will too.
tourist dream (Score:5, Interesting)
[offtopic]
While we're inventing stuff, let's say I have Bluetooth-enabled headphones with an MP3/OV decoder built in. (Heh, and make em solar powered, since they're sitting on top of my head.) They're pulling MP3s off the same file server in my backpack. I guess I'll lose the music stream while my camera stores a picture. I won't mind very much if the player is at least a little bit graceful in it's handling of the bottleneck.
Great. (Score:2)
Re:Sony's proprietary (Score:2)
Re:Sony's proprietary (Score:1)
Re:802.11b (Score:1)
more info here [dpreview.com]