News, Reviews and more from Australia's Macintosh Authority
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How many megapixels can you squeeze into a cell phone? At the big Mobile World Congress wireless telecom trade show in Barcelona, Spain, the race is on. At pre-show press conferences, Samsung and Sony Ericsson between them unveiled three handsets, each with cameras boasting at least as many megapixels as my current Canon point-and-shoot (a PowerShot SD1100 with 8 megapixels).
The winner, thus far, is Sony Ericsson's prototype Idou (pronounced like a wedding vow) handset, with a 12.1-megapixel handset and Xenon flash. Idou won't necessarily be the brand name (although I think it's no worse than others I've heard), but whatever it's called, Sony Ericsson says it will be out in the second half of this year. Idou will be based on the upcoming Symbian Foundation operating system (the open, royalty-free mobile platform based on the Symbian and S60 platforms).

The Sony Ericsson W995.
Can't wait for Idou? At a news conference so crowded you'd think a rock star might be in attendance, Sony Ericsson also announced a new Walkman phone, the W995, which should be out by mid-year. You'll have to settle for a mere 8.1 megapixel s, but you'll get a handset that also promises a bang-up movie and music playback experience. No word yet on carrier or price. These phones come a week after Sony Ericsson announced a couple of other phones, but none with such high-end cameras.
Samsung's Memoir, meanwhile, trailed with 8 megapixels, but it's more of a here-and-now deal: It will go on sale February 25, exclusively from T-Mobile USA. The Memoir also delivers a slew of features you once only saw in pretty good cameras, including Xenon flash, CMOS auto focus, 16x digital zoom, and advanced controls for brightness and flash. (To stress the sophistication of the Memoir's camera capabilities, Samsung hired photographer and model Helena Christensen to introduce the handset at its news conference. You can see images Christensen created using the Memoir on Samsung's Wxeb site.
Other features include blink detection, face detection, anti-shake to reduce blur, and geo-tagging, white balance adjustment, five different shooting modes (single, continuous, panorama, "smile shot" and mosaic), and presets for a dozen or so types of photos.
The Memoir also has a couple of widgets, built-in software that provides one-touch access to apps and information from the Web. A weather widget delivers the forecast for the city you're in, and a camera widget lets you easily access your images and move them to social networking and photo-sharing sites such as Facebook and Flickr.
The Memoir will set you back $US300 ($A460) with a two-year contract and qualifying data plan. It supports T-Mobile's 3G (HSDPA) network and also features assisted GPS (meaning its GPS functionality depends on being connected to T-Mobile's network). [ed. -- No word yet on Australian availability.]
What's behind the megapixel marathon? It's no secret that the iPhone's camera is one of its weakest points. Seems to me the competition is looking for vulnerabilities and has identified imaging capability as something they can deliver that the iPhone so far hasn't.
Nova media has updated its iSync phone plug-in software to version 6.0. The new release costs $US9.95 (updates are free for users who have bought the software in the past year). Nova media’s iSync phone plug-in enables Apple’s iSync software to synchronise data with 158 cell phones that Apple’s Mac OS X doesn’t support itself. Those include models from Nokia, Samsung and Motorola. Version 6 adds support for new models from Samsung, Nokia and Sony Ericsson. Supported models now include Samsung’s SGH-i520, SGH-i550, SGH-i560, SGH-G800, SGH-U700 and SGH-Z150; Nokia’s 2600 classic and 6263; and Sony Ericsson’s P1i, W380i, W960i, Z555i and Z770i models. System requirements call for Mac OS X v10.4.9 or later or Mac OS X v10.5.2.
Peter Cohen | Apr 8, 2008
Worldwide sales of phones reached nearly 305 million in the second quarter, 11.8 percent over the same period last year, according to research released by Gartner. While that reflects that there are some bright spots, growth was tempered by economic slowdowns in some regions. In mature markets like Europe and the US, buyers are favouring mid-tier phones over high-end devices, the researchers found. Also, fewer people are choosing to replace their phones as high fuel and food costs compete for dollars.
Nancy Gohring | Aug 29, 2008
Automatic face recognition headlines an update to Google's Picasa application and Picasa Web Albums photo sharing site, allowing users to automatically tag and group photos together based on the people in them.
Jackie Dove | Sep 3, 2008
Sony and Panasonic will both unveil new digital SLR (single lens reflex) cameras next week, the companies said Wednesday.
Martyn Williams | Sep 4, 2008
App Store developers will now be able to reach customers in 13 new countries, according to an announcement on the iPhone Developer Program news page.