Camera Phone Tips 286
Darren writes "It is getting hard to find a cell phone WITHOUT a camera in it - as a result millions are flooding the internet through moblogs with camera phone images - many of which are poor quality.
I'm sick of seeing poor quality camera phone images being posted to moblogs and so have collected a series of camera phone tips and links that will hopefully help us all improve our camera phone images."
Here is a good tip... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here is a good tip... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Here is a good tip... (Score:3, Interesting)
The other person usually opts to call back later unless it's something urgent, in which case the message is stated, then the conversation stops.
Want high-quality? Get a real camera! (Score:5, Insightful)
The tips on the site seemed pretty obvious to me...get close, increase resolution, don't use digital zoom... the site even states they are obvious. From my brief look at the other linked sites, it looks like there are a few slightly more interesting points, but also a lot of repetition (between the sites).
I think if anyone is a budding photographer, interested in building a gallery on their site, they should get ahold of a "real" digital camera (a device whose primary function is as such). It seems to me that people running "moblogs" aren't going to be too bothered about having high-quality photos anyway.
Re:Want high-quality? Get a real camera! (Score:5, Interesting)
but for mobility, i love my camera phone. the number of times i have my phone but no other camera seems to increase. but the real bonus of having a camera in my phone is that i get a good insurance policy from my phone company (orange) so i am never afraid to take it out with me when i go drinking. i'd never be that fearless with a camera costing lots more.
oh - and lets not forget that it's probably only a matter of time before mobile phones get camera compnents the quality of a good digital camera - it'll only get better!
Re:Want high-quality? Get a real camera! (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd actually say that's unlikely. Part of the problem with current digital cameras is that their sensors aren't big enough, and thus you wind up having a lens focusing a tiny amount of light onto the sensor.
Now, in 5 years I'm sure that you will have cell phone/PDAs with fairly high resolution cameras. But there's still going to be a lot of situations where it will be difficult to take a decent picture because:
- lack of light and no flash
- lack of ability to control aperature/shutter speed
- problems focusing
If this was all about megapixels, the 2MP camera-phones wouldn't take pictures far shittier than my years old 1.3MP digicam could.
Re:Want high-quality? Get a real camera! (Score:3, Insightful)
Step 1... (Score:5, Funny)
Select the camera with most pixels (Score:3, Informative)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Select the camera with most pixels (Score:2)
Re:Select the camera with most pixels (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Select the camera with most pixels (Score:2)
Re:Select the camera with most pixels (Score:5, Insightful)
There's more to it than that though. The cheap plastic lens on these phones isn't really capable of taking high quality photos, even if you had a high megapixel system behind the lens. This becomes especially true after the thing rattles around in your pocket for a while and you get lint, sand, fingerprints, etc on it.
Another poster had it right: if you want good photos, get a good camera. If you're not worried about being the next Ansel Adams, use your camera phone.
The beauty of camera phones isn't that the picture quality is worth a damn -- it isn't. The great thing is that you always have the thing with you, so if something interesting happens you've got the ability to capture it on the spot without having to run home for your Nikon, by which time the moment will inevitably have passed.
If you want spontaneous pictures that are also of high quality, lug around a nice Nikon SLR -- the D70 looks fantastic. If on the other hand you'd rather not lug around an expensive camera body and a bag full of delicate lenses all the time, then the Lo-Fi, cheap-o camera on modern phones or PDAs can do in a pinch.
But don't bother mixing the two -- I can't imagine wanting to carry around a phone that doubled as a high megapixel camera. Think about it: the image sizes will be far too big to send to other camera phone users, which is a big part of the appeal with camera phones. You could have some kind of removable media, but at that point you have a crappy, expensive camera-phone hybrid that is cumbersome as a phone and inept as a camera. Why bother?
******
Composition, on the other hand, is a different matter entirely, and it has nothing to do with the quality of the image. Look at the ways movies & magazines do photography, and copy what they do. Random examples off the top of my head:
Re:Select the camera with most pixels (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it's the one with the best optics. I'll tell you right now, I'm not getting full use of the 640 by 480 CCD I have right now. A better lens would do me wonders, but increasing the CCD resolution would give me higher-resolution blur.
Re:Select the camera with most pixels (Score:3, Informative)
And I suppose the best processor is the one with the most megahertz?
Serious photographers have known for years that fewer cleaner pixels beat more, noisier pixels every time. That's why Nikon sells a 4MP D2H to pros and Sony sells an 8MP F828 to consumers. Megapixels, like megahertz, only tell a fraction of the story.
My tips (Score:5, Interesting)
- Take a lot of pics in different modes
- Don't be afraid to throw away the crap ones
- Don't trust the display on the phone, your monitor has a lot better quality.
Just a few simple but handy tips I use
Re:My tips (Score:5, Funny)
1) Find a subject in a well lit location
2) As far as subjects go, the shorter the skirt the better
3) Without acting too suspsicously, get as close as you can to your subject.
4) Discreetly aim the lens perpendicular to the floor level and directly between the legs
5) Snap!
Escalators can be a very handy tool.
Oh wait, you mean people take normal pictures with these things?
Re:My tips (Score:5, Funny)
Re:My tips (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't be afraid to throw away the crap ones
YES!
The biggest improvement an amateur photographer can make is a simple matter of self-discipline:
Throw away 8 of every 10 photos you take, before showing them to anyone.
There are many reasons why this works. If you adopt this practice now, by the end of the summer you'll have discovered several of those reasons on your own. You'll also have taken many more pictures than you would have otherwise, yet have fewer to show for it. OTOH, you'll start getting more compliments on your work.
Later on, if you decide you like this and want to go to the next level, you can start reading about digital photography and throwing away at least 9 of every 10 shots.
Lint (Score:5, Insightful)
Too many features, (Score:5, Insightful)
Not mutually exclusive (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Too many features, (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll second that - in fact, I preached that gospel myself before.
A phone is for making phonecalls with, allthought I'll be happy to point out that an SMS (or text-message if you prefer) is a nice way to convay a fair chunk of info in a fast way without having to talk to the answeringmachine.
A camera is for taking pictures with - or short videos.
A PDA is for pretty much everything else - reading ebooks, to do lists, calendars, list of numbers and adresses and so on and so forth.
My portable gameconsole (i
Re:Too many features, (Score:2)
I feel the exact opposite. I don't want to carry a pager, a phone, a gaming console, a radio, a PDA, a camera, and an MP3 player. That's too many devices to buy, too many to carry, too much money to spend, and too much to worry about getting stolen. I just want one device that can do all those things well, and cost less than $500.
We have the technology. Yes, I understand your point about how the individual devices can be "o
"All-in-one" (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Too many features, (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Too many features, (Score:3, Informative)
It's not a niche market. Most of the technology and financial companies for which I do consulting and training have prohibitions against cameras on the premises. I read somewhere that Samsung employees cannot carry many of the phones that Samsung manufactures on company premises due to a similar policy.
If a government contractor is doing work that requires a secured area, carrying a camera phone into it can
Re:Too many features, (Score:2)
I really don't understand these type of comments. How bad is the telephone system in the US? The past 3-4 mobile phone devices that I used over the past 6 years or so (which were _all_ free with a service plan, as I'm a cheap bastard), all had a battery that lasted at least 72 hours on average use (my T39m lasted for about a week) and the coverage (Greece & UK) was/i
Re:Too many features, (Score:3, Interesting)
I really don't understand these types of comments. Although I've always heard no one actually TALKS on their "mobile" in Europe because everyone is sending millions upon millions of SMS messages. If that's all you're doing then, yes, I can understand how your phone can last a week on a single charge. We have better devices for that function over here. They're called Blackberries.
Stateside, since we don't real
Re:Too many features, (Score:2)
You're not supposed to be able to understand the person taking your order at the Chinese place! It's not your phone causing that!
Other problem... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Other problem... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Other problem... (Score:2)
Re:Other problem... (Score:5, Informative)
(Leaving your phone at the door was taught at a security course and has been implemented at the places I've been.)
Re:Other problem... (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah? but I bet they'll be listening in for ages before they hear anything interesting...
Re:Other problem... (Score:3, Informative)
For most secure areas in government buildings, cell phones are allowed, but conversations are prohibited, as are cameras. As far as I know, it's up to the person in charge of the building to determine if you have to le
Re: Other problem... (Score:5, Funny)
Apparently, one of the research scientists working at a secured site. When he came to the gate and was inspected, they saw his beeper, and asked if it was a radio device. Now, on this site, beepers were allowed, and by "radio device," they really meant any kind of broadcasting or recording device. But being a scientist, he said, "Yes." And it got confiscated. He tried to reason with them, and explained how a beeper worked, but they said it was not allowed on site.
So after he passed through the gate, he took out his ballpoint pen and said into it with a stage whisper, "They got the radio device!"
The guards were not amused and detained him for several hours until some supervisors and management got it sorted out.
Re: Other problem... (Score:3, Interesting)
They did let me have it back at the end of the day
Re:Other problem... (Score:2)
I know there are many other places where you don't want hidden cameras - swimming baths for example (too many paedophiles taking pics of half dressed kiddies apparently, according to the popular media).
The public should take note, too. (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm an employee and I'll
Re:Other problem... (Score:2)
Camera Detector (Score:3, Funny)
Baz
Google Cache (Score:5, Informative)
google cache link [google.co.uk]
Next up: webserver tips (Score:4, Funny)
These tips will work for all digital cameras (Score:3, Informative)
But most especially, DON'T USE THE DIGITAL ZOOM! You can crop the final photo a thousand times better with a desktop application after the fact.
Wanted: (Score:3, Interesting)
I know that most slashdotters can't help me but this is just something for that someone who may be in the right place at a camera manufacturer.
Re:Wanted: (Score:3, Informative)
I carry an extra battery, cause battery life with this camera suck, which is lightweight too and fit in the carrying case.
When this camera came out, it was the camera with the fastest boot time (less than 2 sec.).
The other advantage of this camera is that the zoom is inside the came
Re:Wanted: (Score:2)
edit-orial (Score:2)
How did I ever survive without one... (Score:2, Informative)
I just got a samsung x600 (capable of 640x480 pics) and for the first time ever have a camera phone (or for that matter a phone that does anything more than sms and phone calls).
Its amazingly good, as long as you're in sunlight. If you're not in sunlight, then the pictures only look decent when displayed on the tiny phone screen.
Re:How did I ever survive without one... (Score:3, Informative)
If so, it's because of the camera optics. See, the lenses are small, so they receive a small ammount of light.
So either the image gets too dark or the exposure time must increase to compensate. The problem with it is that any movement or camera shaking will blur the image.
This problem will most certainly disappear once sensors gets enough sensitivity. Then they'll show a nice image, even though they receive little light.
This too will pass... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This too will pass... (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know what's happened to make me so curmudgeonly. I used to love new technology.
Here's one reason why... (Score:3, Interesting)
I take pics with mine a lot -- most of the time they're cutsie pics to send to my girlfriend of interesting things I see. The one real useful thing I do with it is snap pictures of things I see in a store I want to look up online later and get for cheaper.
There have been more than one book I've snapped a photo of so I could look up later.
Now, its kind of stupid to blame the use of the phone since I could write them down too, but maybe thats their logi
More tips (Score:5, Informative)
* Get close. Camera phones don't have telephoto lenses so if you take a photo of a person or building that's far away, the main subject will be tiny. For most photos you'll get a much better shot by filling your phone's screen with a close up of the subject.
* Send from a good cellular coverage area. If you're transmitting a photo in an area where the cellular signal is weak, it could take longer to send the photo than when you're in a strong signal area. If you're paying for airtime to send a photo, it could make a difference in the price. Although photos generally are transmitted in under a minute, if it goes over 60 seconds, you will pay for another minute.
* Beware of distortion. I just mentioned that you should move as close as possible to the main subject of your photo. You should be aware that moving very close could produce some distortion, something like a "fisheye" effect. The effect could be fun, or your subject might not like the fact that his/her nose appears much bigger than in reality!
* Enter a title for each photo. If you're not used to entering text on a keypad, it can be a frustrating and slow process. But don't skip this step or you'll have to click on each photo to determine if you wanted to see 006 or 022. Title the photos before you send/save them or wait until you go home and enter names for a bunch of them.
* Make sure you know all the file quality settings. For example, cameras phones often have three quality setting: Low, Medium and High. Snap the same photo at all the different resolutions and look at the size and quality on your phone and your computer screen to determine which resolution you prefer to use. It's easy to change the resolution, but you'll probably set it at one resolution and not change it often.
* Shoot at the highest resolution. Camera phones generally top out at 640 x 480 (except for some phones with one megapixel in Japan), and that quality is good enough for viewing on the Web. The lower the resolution, the worse it looks. Assuming the cost of transmitting a photo is the same regardless of the resolution, go for the highest resolution. It will look better.
Photos with higher resolutions produce larger files and take longer to transmit. If you're paying by the minute and/or by the number of packets, you need to compare the value of higher quality with higher costs to you.
* Clean the lens. Camera phone lenses aren't immune to dust, dirt and fingerprint. Periodically clean the lens with a lens cloth, which is easily obtainable at photo shops.
* Create "quick phrases." Most cellular phones with messaging capabilities enable you to create and store phrases that may be used for the subject or text of your messages. If you know you're going to be taking photos at, for example, Yellowstone Park, create a phrase that reads, "Yellowstone -- 8-8-03" and store it in your phone. That way you won't have to enter the same phrase for each photo.
(If you're going to Yellowstone, please take a good digital or film camera in addition to a camera phone!)
* Avoid using the digital zoom. Some camera phones include a digital zoom feature. Digital zooms employ software to increase a photo's size but they also decease the quality by merely "blowing up" a segment of the picture. Even people with multi-megapixel digital cameras typically use the optical zoom, not the digital feature. Feel free to check out digtal zoom, but you'll probably dislike the result.
* Explore the white balance. If you've never used a digital camera, you should be aware of the "white balance" feature, which changes the photo color based upon the lighting conditions: Sunny, cloudy, dark, etc. There's also an "auto" feature that works fine most of the time. But if you have time and you don't like the way the photo looks on your LCD, change the white balance to see if it makes a difference.
* Turn on the lights indoors. If you're shooting indoors, it's easy to
Gym (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Gym (Score:3, Interesting)
Being on call is one thing but I think some people are owned by their mobile phones instead of it being the other way around. They interrupt their tr
Re:Gym (Score:2)
Re:Gym (Score:2)
I like the lowtech charme of camphones. (Score:4, Interesting)
Btw: Here's my "moblog" [blissx.co.uk], more pics here [blissx.co.uk].
Please feel free to ignore the mistakes in the lyrics. I am german and not a native speaker!
Re:I like the lowtech charme of camphones. (Score:2)
Re:I like the lowtech charme of camphones. (Score:2)
Re:I like the lowtech charme of camphones. (Score:3, Funny)
Fine to a point (Score:3, Interesting)
As a neat toy or way to document sudden events, the phone is certainly good enough, but if you find yourself bitten by the photography bug, you really should take the plunge and get a semi-serious camera. No need to get some hideosuly expensive, huge monstrosity with removable lenses or anything; a mid-price camera with good optics, good resolution (5-6 megapixels) and decent control over the image taking will go a very, very long way. It is of course true that equipment never is a substitute for talent, but, on the other hand, lack of decent equipment certainly doesn't help either.
need non-camera phones (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:need non-camera phones (Score:2)
Don't forget... (Score:2)
While an image of the inside lining of a pocket may be original, having a dedicated pocket-cam isn't my idea of value for money. Although at least I know where I left my keys...
Re:Don't forget... (Score:2)
Camera phones suck (now) (Score:4, Interesting)
The quality of camera phones out there now is way worse than the quality of very cheap digital cameras 6 years ago. Granted, the Kodak DC120 swimming in my desk drawer could probably whoop my V400's ass, it's also enormous.
Back to my point; there will be better camera phones in the next year, I've seen some (Samsung?) which will have macro mode and "real" flashes. The closest I've seen to a camphone with a flash was one that used white LED's and that was only as a framing aid.
Bottom line: don't waste your money now unless like me, you don't care about the quality of the camera because the phone is the primary function. If you want good quality, give it till the end of the year.
I'm surprised that there isn't a website (like www.imaging-resource.com) that reviews the actual camera of the phone and gives concise reviews based on quality, light sensitivity and optics. I guess camphones are still too much of a niche market for that.
It's really weird... (Score:4, Funny)
I see phones w/o cameras all the time (Score:3, Informative)
Perhaps Im missing something, but I dont need the latest whizbang stuff on my cellphone. All I want is caller-id, contact list, and TXTing abilities. Hell, mine came with tetris... That was a nice bonus, but not required.
I mean, there _is_ a market for lower end, cheapie cellphones.
Re:I see phones w/o cameras all the time (Score:2)
Re:I see phones w/o cameras all the time (Score:3, Interesting)
The network share has been static as people's social groups since most charged 4x more for calling another network than their own. Things are beginning to change now though, despite the regulator sitting on it's hands.
Camera phones (Score:2)
This is true of most technology (Score:5, Insightful)
Check out the UI on the phone (Score:2)
People typically use a single service to post their pictures to, so make sure being able to send an image to an entry in your phone book is EASY.
Useful hints in another direction.. GPRS, webcams (Score:3, Informative)
Also, with GPRS you can actually turn a few phones into a webcam. (yes seriously). How?
1/ get a phone running on Symbian OS (Nokia 3650, 6600, 7650 for example) and a GPRS provider so your phone can come 'online'
2/ get the 'RemoteS60' software (which is, as the name implies, a remote desktop controller)
3/ connect to the remote desktop with your PC and on your PC, run a program like 'luminosity softcam' that makes a webcam out of a screen area on your desktop.
presto.
Incidentally RemoteS60 now also comes with a 'webcam' feature but its not as useful as this.
Other than that the only tip I can give you is LIGHTING LIGHTING LIGHTING.. crappy mobile cams dont work in darker spots.
Phones I know to have decent camera's are again the nokia's, the Nec 400i and Panasonic S341i
In other news... (Score:3, Funny)
A Nokia spokesperson stated, "Our marketting department has determined that using cell phones like, well, a 'phone' is something that our target demographic's grandmothers would use. Today's generation is much more inclined to broadcast poor quality digital photos of the dog stuck in the sewer grate, text their buddy lists, and generally annoy passers-by with the 'beep-speak-beep' of walkie-talkie conversations."
Performance? (Score:3)
all i want (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, I am currently employed in the mobile industry, and I have some shocking news for you. Not only are the camera phones here to stay, but look forward to built in MP3 players, video recorders, PDA, online shopping and plenty-o-porn! All this is available now of course but in the next few years (with increased storage), these will become truly functional. Hey they've just bought out some 1.1 megapixel camera phones, so its only a matter of time.
digital keys for home/office/car, payment systems (instead of swipe cards), the idea is that youve already agreed to carry a mobile with you, now why dont we add a few things to it so you dont have to carry your PDA, camera, music player, video player, keys, wallet etc etc..
Mobloging - only for the interesting (Score:5, Funny)
So I fired up the old web-o-matic and cranked out an interface to allow me to upload pics and blogs with minimal effort. Bingo! Time to let the hits roll in...
Shortly after putting it on the site, I realised that nothing remotely interesting happened in my life that was worth uploading and sharing with the world.
I never came face to face with a yeti. Never saw a UFO. Never witnessed a daring bank heist. Never so much as saw a woodland animal doing a cute thing with a peice of bread.
I'm now contemplating taking the moblog bit off, because it only serves to highlight to myself how deeply unexciting my life is.
Bah!
Stupid trend... (Score:2)
Seriously though, camera phones are being banned by quite a few companies (including Samsung!) -- yet it is very difficult to find anything but the lowest-end (and largest) phone without a camera.
Don't even get me started about color screens...
I don't want no blinkin' camera-phone (Score:3, Interesting)
Have you tried to find a high-end GSM phone (Tri-band, GPRS and Bluetooth, decent contact manager and calendar, etc. etc.) without a camera lately? It's simply impossible if you want a recent model.
So I ended up buying another Ericsson R520m phone [expansys.com]. It's gone out of production years ago but it still does the job I need done better than any other phone I've been able to find.
I have a blast with mine... (Score:4, Informative)
Anyway, it's at www.mobog.com/weave [mobog.com].
One of the nice charms of that site is that there is no censorship of content or comments by the site's owner (the infamous Pud of fuckedcompany). It does make it hard to share with some people though, even though I don't get into shoot pics of my dick like some people do...)
My point, yeah, they suck as cameras, but I'm having fun and that's all I care about right now...
Don't Bother (Score:3, Insightful)
As a sometime professional photographer, I've given any number of hints similar to what I expect is on this list (love the
If people want good photos, all they have to do is look at their own photos as art and then work to make them look better.
Best use of camera phones ever (Score:3, Informative)
Mobile Asses [mobileass.nl]
Mobile Asses [mobileasses.dk]
Camera Phone image tests (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:3, Informative)
some things are fads, but text mesages (and to a lesser extent WAP) are not
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:5, Interesting)
Pardon?
All I can think of is that you must be in the US. In Europe, I would go so far as to say that the primary use of many mobiles sold is for text messaging. I know I send far more texts than I make voice calls.
I can't speak for Japan, but I believe there's a similar situation there. I thought that the US was going the same way, but I'm prepared to be corrected on that.
As for cameras being silly, I disagree. I often take around ten a week, and I imagine I'm only in the midrange. The reason? I have children, and I very often don't have my full-blown 5mp digital camera with me but do have my mobile on me. Snaps of my kids playing in the park are good fun for those who are interested, and utterly dull for the rest of the world. Some get kept, most get discarded.
I have other uses too. For example, on Friday an A4 sheet had been left at a railway station detailing proposed changes to the timetable and who to get in contact with to protest them (the changes are bad from this town's point of view - Maidenhead). There was only one sheet left, so I took a couple of photos with the phone and left the sheet there for someone else to pick up. I read the information later on my laptop after transferring the pictures there.
The combination of a camera phone which is bluetooth equipped and having a bluetooth'n'wifi equipped laptop (that works - I use a Powerbook, I've heard of terrible problems with MS's stack and Nokia phones) immediately opens up a world of fast snapping, fast editing and fast publishing. Don't knock camera phones - they're useful things.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:2)
I can't speak for Japan, but I believe there's a similar situation there. I thought that the US was going the same way, but I'm prepared to be corrected on that.
Consider yourself corrected. US users just don't text message nearly as much as EU or Japanese users.
For one thing, most people don't have
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem is that people misuse it. They seem to think the camera phone is there to replace your camera. Right now it isn't!
Since getting a camera phone I have enjoyed taking pics. But at no point did I think they were going to be of high enough quality to be printed out and framed or put up on a web site. But, the ability to take a picture of something and MMS it to a friend (usually to find out if I'm looking at the correct thing), has proved invaluable a couple of times already.
My fa
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:2)
As almost everyone else has pointed out, you can't be european...
An SMS is a cheap (at least over here) way to send condensed information - like phonenumbers, adresses, names and so forth (yes, I know that other uses it for pure comunication too, but I speak mostly for myself). Much better than leaving a voicemail, particulary since it's easy to backtrack thru the SMSs and make sure you actually understood it.
Mind you, if you really are from the US as other have guessed, I think I know one reason why it h
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:2)
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:2)
Re:Camera phones are silly (Score:2)
For the exact same reason that people send an email instead of picking up the phone and make a call: asynchroneous communication. Also, here in Europe sending an SMS is far cheaper than making a call. This is quite important for the heavy-duty SMS-users, i.e. teenagers.
Re:Poor Australians.... (Score:2)
Re:Poor Australians.... (Score:2)
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Re:invention disclosure (Score:2)