Archives for November 2009

November 30, 2009

Phone camera rules needed to protect teachers

Mobile phones are being increasingly used as a teaching aid in the classroom despite the risk of students uploading footage on to video-sharing websites to name and shame their teachers. The Sydney Morning Herald reports.

quotemarksright.jpgIn the UK, guidelines are being developed to protect the privacy of teachers and students when mobile phones are used to film in classrooms.

The NSW Department of Education said individual schools were responsible for developing their own mobile phone protocols.

... A paper on the use of mobile phones in teacher training has been published in the latest issue of the British journal ALT-J, Research in Learning Technology.

The paper suggests that mobile technologies can enhance teacher and student learning.quotesmarksleft.jpg

Related:

-- Cell phones used in classroom learning

-- Links to articles related to cameraphones and school projects


November 29, 2009

Lawyer: Don't take camera phone to parties

English employment lawyer Jonathan Whittaker thinks camera phones should be banned from office Christmas parties to prevent photographs of workers misbehaving being posted on the internet.

quotemarksright.jpgNow, we've all been there -- or nearby: Christmas parties are full of silly, stupid or sometimes downright offensive little acts carried out by people whose judgment is severely impaired," he said. "The problem is that unless the subject or subjects of the photo give their permission, then it could be a sack-able and sue-able act."quotesmarksleft.jpg

[UPI via The Telegraph]


November 26, 2009

Best iPhone camera apps

The New York Times is offering a look at 15 of the roughly 2,000 camera apps that can help you capture, edit, enhance and share your images.


November 22, 2009

November 19, 2009

iCarte Turns the iPhone Into an RFID Reader

icarte.jpg

Earlier The Apple Blog reported that the next generation of iPhone might have an RFID reader built in, if rumors prove true. Well, there’s no need to wait that long. Wireless Dynamics in Canada has announced a device called the iCarte that will add both RFID and NFC capabilities to the iPhone. The New York Times/GigaOM reports.

quotemarksright.jpgA chip embedded in the iCarte turns your iPhone into a portable electronic wallet, able to process contactless payments. It can also transmit any information it receives directly to enterprise databases using Wi-Fi or 3G network connections, so that orders and purchases can be automatically input into your company’s home server.quotesmarksleft.jpg

Read full article.


November 18, 2009

CatPaint iPhone app adds cats to any photo

catpint.jpg Spotted on Macworld, CatPaint, an iPhone app that lets you add a cat to any photo on your iPhone.

You grab a photo, choose a kitten, and then tap to place it anywhere within the image. They mew too.


YouTube Direct: Why Citizen Journalists Shouldn't Care

182362-youtube-direct_original.jpg PC World on YouTube Direct, launched yesterday and which enables amateur videographers and reporters to upload their footage to news Web sites.

quotemarksright.jpgFor the mass media, it's a great tool. They get first-hand footage of breaking news without even having to look for it, probably for free (YouTube says the news sites can work out their own terms of service, which I assume would include the right to publish, transmit, re-publish, and so on). Precious time and money is saved.

What's in it for the so-called citizen journalist? Not much, unless you're still clinging to the idea that getting your name and 15-second video clip on a news Web site or broadcast is a big deal.

... YouTube Direct is a nice gesture from Google to the mainstream media. It's an attempt to connect news organizations to the citizen journalists they secretly loathe, but it assumes, falsely, that those citizen journalists need the news organizations in the first place.quotesmarksleft.jpg


November 17, 2009

YouTube launches channel for citizen journalists

youtube_logo-1.jpgYouTube has just launched YouTube Direct, whereby TV and online news editors can obtain video from so-called "citizen journalists" -- and even request such video be shot by amateurs seeking attention. [via Reuters]

quotemarksright.jpgNews outlets seeking footage can announce it in a variety of ways, including via call-out videos posted at YouTube. When a YouTube user has video they think will interest the mainstream media, it can make it easy for editors, producers and journalists to contact them.

Testing the service now are Huffington Post, NPR, Politico, the San Francisco Chronicle and a couple of Boston TV stations.quotesmarksleft.jpg


November 11, 2009

An idea instead of banning cell-phone cameras from courthouses

Here's an idea from The Chicago Tribune.

quotemarksright.jpgIllinois' long-standing ban on cameras in courtrooms is unnecessary and outmoded.

... Instead of banning camera phones, establish a $1,000 contempt-of-court fine and equipment forfeiture for anyone caught snapping a photograph inside a courtroom.quotesmarksleft.jpg

Click here for related articles on camera phones banned or approved in courtrooms.


November 10, 2009

Nicolas Sarkozy photoshopped in World Event photos

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After writing and posting a picture on his facebook page that he was in Berlin on November 9, 1989, chipping away at the falling Wall, Nicolas Sarkozy is unmasked by Libération and other newspapers who found official records of Sarkozy attending a General De Gaulle commemorative ceremony at Colombey-les-deux-Eglises in France on that very same day.

The fun part? the Web is being innunded with photoshopped pictures of Nicolas Sarkozy at major world events. See a selection here.

Above photo, Sarkozy, at Yalta. By dadavidov.


Jetstar to trial SMS boarding passes

airfrance-boardingtext-420x0.jpg

quotemarksright.jpgLow-fare airline Jetstar is about to trial a mobile phone technology that issues boarding passes via SMS. In a bid to reduce check-in times and long queues, the SMS ''passes'' can be scanned electronically from the phone's screen at the departure gate.

The product analyses the alphanumeric codes included in the SMS and relates them to the airline's database where flight and passenger information is assembled.

... AirFrance and KLM rolled out electronic boarding passes earlier this year. quotesmarksleft.jpg

[via The Sydney Morning Herald]


November 9, 2009

Turning a Cellphone Into a Microscope

articleInline.jpg Assistant professor of electrical engineering Dr Aydogan Ozcan has developed special software and adapted cellphones to substitute for microscopes and diagnose diseases. The New York Times reports.

quotemarksright.jpgThe adapted phones may be used for screening in places far from hospitals, technicians or diagnostic laboratories.

... In one prototype, a slide holding a finger prick of blood can be inserted over the phone’s camera sensor. The sensor detects the slide’s contents and sends the information wirelessly to a hospital or regional health center.quotesmarksleft.jpg

Read full article.

Related:

-- Phone gadget to diagnose disease - CellScope developped by California Berkeley researchers, works as a so-called fluorescence microscope that can identify the markers of disease.


November 7, 2009

Adding a ‘SixthSense’ to Your Cellphone

blogSpan.jpg

A camera-based device developed by an M.I.T. researcher Pranav Mistry turns walls into computer interfaces and allows users to issue commands through gestures. The technology is aimed at cellphone users.

[via Bits]


November 5, 2009

Nude It app shows your friends naked

Nude-it.com claims to be the "official US website for the revolutionary iPhone app that allows the user to see everyone stark naked".

Simply point your iPhone at a friend, and using Nude It, you'll see them totally in the nude.

As it is unlikely to be approved by the Apple store, it will be available for download in a few days on a Website called whoisthebadlguy.com.

Sounds like a joke, but there is actually a video demo.

[via The Huffington Post]


November 3, 2009

Kodak launches Pic Flick app for iPhone

KodakPicFlickapp.png Kodak has developed a clever app called Pic Flick that allows image upload to Kodak’s EasyShare wireless Digital Frames, the W1020 and W820, or print to the Kodak ESP 5250 Wi-Fi Printer.

Read full review in Unbeatable.


November 1, 2009

PicTranslator Turns app Your iPhone's Camera into a Language Translator

PicTranslatorapp.jpg PicTranslator app turns your iPhone camera into a translator. Just point-and-shoot to translate. It will also read the text in your pictures aloud, so you know how to pronounce what you see.

You just take a picture of the text you want translated, choose the language you want to translate from, and let PicTranslator do the rest. Once you know the (hopefully correct) translation, you can even ask PicTranslator to help you pronounce the foreign-language version.

Watch video demo on YouTube

[via Switched]