Sharp forecasts the death of the consumer digital camera

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The digital camera has been devouring much of the market share once enjoyed by its traditional film-based rival in recent years, but Sharp claims this interloper may itself be defeated by the rise of the camera phone.

At a press conference to unveil its latest products, Sharp claimed that the arrival of one- and two-megapixel camera phones was a sign of eventual doom for the consumer digital snapper.

"For mobile phones with cameras, we have reached a resolution which allows the assumption that, sooner or later, the handset with a camera is going to replace the digital camera, at least for private use," said Helmut Engel, president and chief executive of Sharp Electronics Germany.

Although the CeBIT 2004 show doesn't officially start until Thursday, Sharp unveiled its GX30 mobile phone for the first time in Europe on Wednesday. Like its predecessors the GX20 and GX10, it will be available through Vodafone Live.

With its 1,144x858 CCD sensor, Sharp claims that the GX30 is the first megapixel camera to launch in Europe, but Nokia also announced a megapixel device on Wednesday. The 7610 will go on sale in Europe in the second quarter of 2004, while Vodafone should start selling the GX30 later this month.

Japanese mobile users already have the chance to buy a two-megapixel camera phone such as Sharp's V601SH -- proof, the company says, that the camera phone format has a bright future.

But with the latest crop of digital cameras offering between eight and 14 megapixels, camera phones have a long way to go before they can claim to offer comparable performance -- even though many experts point out that there's more to image quality than just the number of megapixels on the sensor. 

Sharp was clearly in the mood to put older technologies out to grass, also announcing that it would no longer make any televisions using cathode ray tubes and would concentrate all its efforts on LCD TVs instead.

"Originally, this step had been planned for 2007, but the dramatic development of the market has made this historic move possible," said the company.

Talkback

Sounds like marketing hype to me. I'm sure Sharp's camera division won't be too impressed.

The current crop of phone cameras don't take good photos, period. The reason for this is because the lens is tiny. For a phone to take a good photo, the lens needs to have a large aperture, and have a reasonable level of optical zoom on it. These are _physical_ limitations that no amount of microelectronic trickery can get around, so any phones having them will need to be too big to be useful.

via Facebook 18 March, 2004 01:36
Reply

No, Phone cameras will be the new point and shot device ( I would guess this is about 90% of all photos taken ). The integration of complimentary devices ( at little extra cost ) means this WILL happen. Just as there are point and shoot film cameras and SLR's, there will be point and shoot Phone cameras and mid/ high end digital cameras. Phone cameras may never take the quality pictures, but they will get the picture because the device is there and ready. Remember these are for the general public and they just want a device that works and ( within limits ) who cares about the quality of the result

via Facebook 18 March, 2004 09:04
Reply

could be like the so called "death of vinyl" true connoisseurs will still pay for quality but the herd will buy what ever crap the companies push at them

via Facebook 18 March, 2004 15:07
Reply

and the cost of a top end dual device..

no doubt such devices phones with adequate cameras will exist,

but not for everybody to carry around daily in their pocket..

via Facebook 18 March, 2004 15:19
Reply

2 megapixel camera phones? Thats the starting point for proper digicams now. Just wait for the 8 megapixel cameras as small as an Ixus, and £250, not far away IMO.

via Facebook 18 March, 2004 15:57
Reply

No, Phone cameras will be the new point and shot device ( I would guess this is about 90% of all photos taken ). The integration of complimentary devices ( at little extra cost ) means this WILL happen. Just as there are point and shoot film cameras and SLR's, there will be point and shoot Phone cameras and mid/ high end digital cameras. Phone cameras may never take the quality pictures, but they will get the picture because the device is there and ready. Remember these are for the general public and they just want a device that works and ( within limits ) who cares about the quality of the result

via Facebook 26 March, 2004 13:36
Reply

No, Phone cameras will be the new point and shot device ( I would guess this is about 90% of all photos taken ). The integration of complimentary devices ( at little extra cost ) means this WILL happen. Just as there are point and shoot film cameras and SLR's, there will be point and shoot Phone cameras and mid/ high end digital cameras. Phone cameras may never take the quality pictures, but they will get the picture because the device is there and ready. Remember these are for the general public and they just want a device that works and ( within limits ) who cares about the quality of the result

via Facebook 26 March, 2004 13:37
Reply

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