Nokia wireless camera enables mobile spying

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A wall-mounted surveillance camera that can send images directly to a mobile phone will be available this summer, according to maker Nokia. The Observation Camera will launch in July in the US, executives for the Finnish phone giant said on Tuesday, and is set for imminent launch in the UK as well. The sub-£300 device is among the first to use so-called machine-to-machine (M2M) technology, which lets machines use cellular telephone networks to communicate with computer systems or other machines. M2M has attracted some big-name supporters, including Hewlett-Packard, IBM and Intel, which are all trying to capture a bigger slice of the emerging market for wireless monitoring gear. Wireless Data Research Group expects worldwide sales of such devices to blossom to $28bn, or about £18bn, a year by 2007, as companies rip out the wiring now needed to accomplish the same tasks. But for now, devices and buyers remain few and far between. Nokia has released just one other product, a GSM connectivity terminal. Meanwhile, customers for M2M gear are limited mainly to security firms or large manufacturing plants, said Michael Lang, president of wireless equipment provider Airdesk, which plans to sell the new Nokia-made cameras in the United States. Lang said each cameras will cost $350 to $400 and in the US will be coupled with cellular service from either AT&T Wireless or T-Mobile, both of which have approved the device for use on their networks. O2 UK is offering discounts on the camera when bundled with a mobile phone contract. The machine-to-machine concept, introduced two years ago and heavily backed by Nokia, would provide a cellular phone number and phone radio to the billions of machines on the planet. That way, they could automatically communicate their needs, such as when they require repairs, by sending a message over a cellular network. The camera has its own subscriber identification module (SIM) card, the thumbnail-sized chip inside mobile phones that contains key subscriber information such as account numbers and pass codes. By adding a SIM card, which is easily removable from mobile phones, the camera has its own phone number. With a few programming tweaks, any mobile phone can send it a blank text message, and the camera replies with a photo of something snapped just moments earlier, said Nokia spokesman Keith Nowak. The pictures can be viewed directly on a multimedia-enabled handset, or can be redirected to an email account for viewing on a PC.
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