Taking The Camera Out Of The Camera Phone
from the backwards-thinking... dept
We've had a lot of stories in the last six months or so about shortsighted companies deciding to simply ban camera phones outright. In the past, I wondered if such rules would have an
impact on mobile phone sales, but I didn't expect the carriers to jump on this topic so quickly. Put me in the same surprised boat as
Alan Reiter to hear that carriers are convincing mobile phone handset makers to
offer multiple versions of their phones: one with a camera and the other without. I really thought that with only a few companies overreacting and missing the point about camera phones, it would blow over, and a decade from now we'd be laughing at silly companies banning camera phones. At this rate, that might not be true. This is going to be a huge waste of money. Designing a new phone will take some money, and will create a phone that offers less value to the customer (and less opportunity for revenue for the carrier). However as camera phones begin to find more acceptance in the marketplace, people are going to get angry when their boss tells them the expensive phone they just bought can't be brought into the office. They're not going to want to buy the version without the camera if part of the reason they're upgrading is for the camera in the first place. This is a (costly) over reaction to a technology that will do nothing to stop the real problem (theft of corporate secrets or invasion of privacy), but will cost lots of money and anger many people.
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the other reason non cam versions are good
anyway i really enjoy the site, just wanted to put in my 2 cents
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That should keep everyone happy,,, for the most part.
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Options Have Been Done
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Same Old, Same Old...
So now let's ban cell phones AND PDA's with cameras, and a year from now we'll add in tablet PCs that embed them for videoconferencing, etc., etc. - even as I walk in the door with a slim profile digital camera and snap away, and even as I Xerox confidential reports and walk out the door with paper.
If you don't approach this through trying to orient peoples values around a code of behavior, it's ultimately a pointless exercise.
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interesting
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