honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, August 27, 2004

Camera phones aren't kid stuff anymore

By Therese Poletti
Knight Ridder News Service

SAN JOSE, Calif. — San Francisco real-estate agent Eve Barron uses a camera phone to instantly e-mail clients photos of hot properties that have just come on the market.

Her phone also comes in handy during home inspections when she spots potential problems. "I photograph all the points, so when I go back and write up my inspection, I have it in my phone. ... It gives you that one extra thing that you have that perhaps other agents don't have," said Barron.

Camera phones are not just for teenagers and tourists any- more. What started in Japan as a fad has now become a must-have feature for many buyers of new cell phones, including business people. And the chip makers that develop the image sensors used in the devices hope to grab a piece of the ever-growing camera phone pie.

"When these phones were first introduced, I thought it was a dumb idea," said Shyam Nagrani, a principal consumer electronics analyst with market research firm iSuppli. "But now you are seeing some really interesting uses. ... There are a lot of professional uses."

Last year, for instance, the BBC gave its London reporters video camera phones so they can record brief video news clips if they don't have a camera crew with them.

"Their view is that a poor video is better than none at all when you can beat your competition," said Alan Reiter, president of Wireless Internet and Mobile Computing, a consulting firm in Chevy Chase, Md.

Byron Riffenberg, a mechanical engineer with Air Systems in San Jose, said he uses his Palm Zire 71 hand-held device to take photos of clients' sites. Air Systems installs heating and air-conditioning systems at Silicon Valley companies and Riffenberg brings the photos back to his office to jog his memory when he is describing a job to colleagues.

"It probably saves me a couple of hours a week," said Riffenberg. "If I forget to look at something and I have a picture of it, I can look at the pictures and I don't have to go back to the site."

This year, sales of camera phones are outpacing digital cameras, with 100 million of the phones expected to be sold vs. 20 million digital cameras.

So it's no surprise that sales of the image sensor chips that turn a cell phone into a camera phone are soaring as well. Chip sales will grow at an average rate of 23.7 percent over the next four years, estimated iSuppli's Nagrani. He said camera phone chips could be the fastest-growing segment of the semiconductor industry in the next few years.

Still, camera phones' usefulness as a business tool remains limited by the low quality of the photos they take. Riffenberg and other camera phone aficionados said the photos don't make the grade for client proposals or other important documents.

Riffenberg noted that other technicians at his company usually use digital cameras for photos that need to have higher resolution. Insurance adjusters, too, prefer to use digital cameras and download photos into a notebook computer.

But as chip makers keep improving image sensor chips, the quality of camera phone photos will begin to approach those taken by megapixel digital cameras.

In the United States, camera phones that take photos with 1.3 megapixel resolution are just starting to come on the market. In Japan and South Korea, however, companies sell 3-megapixel phones that take photos closer in quality to digital cameras.

As the market heats up, some chip makers are looking to buy their way into the business.

In June, Cypress Semiconductor of San Jose spent $100 million to buy FillFactory, a Belgian company that develops high-performance sensor chips.

Micron of Boise, Idaho, acquired Photobit for $50 million in 2002. A small company spun out of Pasadena's Jet Propulsion Laboratories, Photobit is becoming a player in the market.

"We believe that cameras are going to be the next thing that are going to become very prevalent in cell phones," said Cypress CEO T.J. Rodgers. "Anything that goes into cell phones is going to be high volume and the winner will be the company that can manufacture high volumes at low cost."

Rodgers intends to bring Cypress' high-volume manufacturing capabilities to FillFactory, which has developed high-end sensor chips used in professional cameras, mammography equipment and satellites. Cypress plans to continue to sell the higher-cost chips but it also will enable FillFactory to design lower-price image sensors that can be produced in big volumes.

Other chip makers are looking at the camera phone chip market and there is no shortage of startups to choose from, said David Creamer, a managing director of Broadview Jeffries, a technology-focused investment banking firm.

Image sensor startups in Silicon Valley include IC Media and Foveon, both in Santa Clara, and Pixim in Mountain View. Foveon, which develops higher-end chips for digital cameras, counts among its investors National Semiconductor.

"In the next few years, it will be increasingly difficult to find a phone without a camera," said Reiter, the wireless analyst. "And once we start getting the 2- and 3-megapixel camera phones, that's going to start eating into the high end of the digital camera market."

Nels Nelson, a project manager at construction firm Engineered Structures in Boise, said he thinks camera phones are the wave of the future. His company has given a few project supervisors out in the field camera phones so they can e-mail daily updates on construction sites to managers at headquarters.

"I can come in every morning and log on and view a project in central Washington and one in Phoenix," Nelson said, adding that the other supervisors have been using digital cameras to send their reports via laptop computers.

"Instead of having to carry two tools, a cell phone and a camera, they can carry one," he said.