There's no doubt that the introduction of the first mobile cellular phone was a massive milestone in worldwide communication. However, another major leap in that area was made 20 years ago. In May of 1999, Japan was the launch pad for the Kyocera VP-210. It was the first such phone with a built-in camera that was sold commercially to the general public.
Of course, the idea of merging a camera with a mobile phone didn't come first from Kyocera. In fact, there seems to be some confusion online as to which device was actually the first camera phone (more on that later).
The camera phone prototypes and experiments
Before the launch of the Kyocera VP-210, there were plenty of designs made for mobile phones that had some kind of camera on board. In 1993, Daniel A. Henderson created two prototypes of a "wireless picturephone technology" device called the Intellect. It was a portable product that designed to receive and display images and video from a message center wirelessly. Those two prototypes are now in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.
A couple of years later, in 1995, the Macworld print magazine had an article that imagined what Apple might create. According to The Atlantic, Apple actually shared a design for a never released videophone that combined the look of the company's Newton PDA with a video camera and display.
In 1997, the first working camera phone was MacGyvered into place by Philippe Kahn. His wife was about to give birth to their first child, and Kahn wanted to quickly take pictures and share them with family and friends immediately. The Mercury News reported that he had a Casio QV-10 digital camera with an LCD display, along with a Motorola StarTAC flip phone and a laptop. While his wife was in the hospital, Kahn quickly created a hardware and software interface to connect the camera and the phone via the laptop.
Kahn managed to finish this combo in time for his wife to give birth. The result is that the first cell phone camera image ever made was of Kahn's daughter Sophie. Because of his work, he was able to quickly share this phone with 2,000 people.
The first camera phone was the Kyocera VP-210
As we mentioned earlier, Kyocera claims to have launched the first camera phone sold to the general public. The announcement of the VP (or "Visual Phone") 210 was covered by CNN in May 1999. The phone had an 0.11MP camera and could take up to 20 pictures before its onboard storage was full. It even had its own integrated stand so that users could take pictures of themselves. The price for the phone in Japan was 40,000 yen (~$325).
Samsung says it was first with the SCH-V200…
It took another year before another mobile phone with a camera went on sale. In June 2000, Samsung launched the SCH-V200 phone in its home country of South Korea. It could take up to 20 pictures at a resolution of 0.35MP, and you could see them on the phone's 1.5-inch TFT LCD. However, you couldn't use the phone to send the pictures to someone else directly; you had to hook up the camera portion of the phone to a PC and transfer the photos to your computer in order to do that.
Believe it or not, you can actually buy this piece of mobile phone and camera history. Someone is selling the SCH-V200 on eBay at the moment with the asking price of $599.86. Samsung recently posted an infographic claiming that the SCH-V200 was the first such phone with a built-in camera. As you can see, that claim seems to be "fake news."
… or was it the Sharp J-Phone?
In November 2000, the Sharp J-SH04 — better known as the Sharp J-Phone — went on sale in Japan as the third camera phone. The hardware of the phone and camera were truly integrated with each other, unlike Samsung's phone. This integration allowed the phone's owners to send the 0.11MP images taken with its camera directly from the device via email. One of the companies that helped with Sharp's efforts was LightSurf, which, according to B&H Photo, was founded by none other than Philippe Kahn.
The first U.S. camera phone: the Sanyo SCP-5300
It took awhile for the camera phone trend to hit the U.S. In November 2002, over two years since the Samsung SCH-V200 launched in South Korea, the Sanyo SCP-5300 (also known as the Sanyo Katana) went on sale in this country, via Sprint. It cost about $400, had a clamshell design, and a camera that could take 0.3MP images. Time magazine once put the phone on its list of the most influential gadgets.
The start of something big
Once cameras started appearing as a default feature on mobile phones, it was a bygone conclusion that the popularity of small digital standalone cameras would take a big hit. In 2003, The New York Times reported sales of camera phones were already higher than standalone digital cameras. In 2006, camera phones surpassed sales of both digital and film cameras.
Today, smartphones have features that were not even considered 20 years ago. We are seeing more and more smartphones with two or more rear cameras, along with cameras with massive sensors. We have software features that make editing images and video a snap, along with special effects like bokeh and more to make your photos look good. A smartphone camera can help us shop, translate text, and even let us play games with AR titles like Pokemon Go.
What do you think the next 20 years will bring in the era of smartphone cameras? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!
from Android Authority http://bit.ly/2W2M7SF
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