Location-Aware Images - Camera-Phones to Annotate Photos and Videos
Future Image Announces Research Study on Location Annotation by Camera-Phones; Topic to Be Examined Further at 6Sight Future of
Aug. 27, 2007 11:00 AM
SAN MATEO, CA -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 08/27/07 -- In preparation for the upcoming 6Sight®
Future of Imaging conference (www.6sight.com), event co-host Future Image,
the leading independent center of expertise on the convergence of imaging,
technology, and business, announces the publication of "Location-Aware
Images - Using Smart-Phone Capabilities To Automate Rich Metadata." The
report is the latest in Future Image's series of research studies examining
technology developments that will change how imaging products are made,
marketed and used.
To enjoy and use their photos, people must be able to find them. That was
hard enough with a few hundred film pictures filed in shoeboxes or albums.
But digital photography has caused an explosion in picture taking: people
who once took a few dozen shots a year now take hundreds each month plus,
increasingly, video clips. With thousands of images stored on a PC hard
drive, each with a non-descriptive name assigned by the camera, finding a
photo or video they want to see or show has become a daunting challenge for
average consumers.
Statistically, pictures are typically remembered, and therefore searched
for, either by subject(s) -- e.g. "who" is in it, or according to the
occasion -- e.g. "where" was it taken. Annotating images with information
about location and event would therefore make them much more searchable,
shareable, and useable. They could be automatically sorted, filed, or
organized based on the data and a search query. They could be easily
accessed and searched by the picture-taker and by others as well: one
family member could instantly find all the photos of gathering at a certain
date and location from within another's otherwise unsorted collection of
photos, for example.
"Location-Aware Images - Using Smart-Phone Capabilities To Automate Rich
Metadata" examines the prospects for technology that will allow people to
search for and find photographs and videos much more easily, by having them
contain information about the location where they were taken. While GPS
(Global Positioning System) devices are just now starting to become
available for digital cameras, the greatest potential for offering
consumers this enormous value-added lies in the direction of camera-phones.
All mobile phones today have processing capabilities better than the
average desktop PC of 20 years ago thereby making camera-phones, in effect,
"smart cameras." GPS chipset prices have fallen drastically in recent
years, and the FCC's E-911 mandate ensures that US wireless phone carriers
be able to determine the location of a cell phone to within 50 meters.
Phones knows who you are, where you are, and, by accessing your calendar,
what you are doing and who you are seeing. These smart cameras could
automatically add that information to every photograph and video, as first
described at a recent Future Image event by LightSurf founder Philippe
Kahn, who is widely acknowledged as the "father" of the camera-phone and
will be a keynote speaker at this year's 6Sight.
"Location-Aware Images - Using Smart-Phone Capabilities To Automate Rich
Metadata" is a 25-page report that examines the prospects for future
implementation of the technology in mainstream applications, the technical
and economic obstacles, and the likely timetable. The report is presented
in the form of a roundtable interview that poses 12 standardized questions
to ten key executives at leading companies in the field:
-- Adobe Systems: Gunnar Penikis, senior product manager for Adobe Bridge
and XMP.
-- ComVu Media, William Mutual, CEO.
-- Hewlett Packard: Aaron Weiss, general manager, HP Snapfish Mobile
Imaging, Leo Blume, manager and senior architect, HP Snapfish Mobile
Engineering, and Evan Smouse, CTO of digital photography and entertainment.
-- Microsoft: Mike Calligaro, senior development lead.
-- Nokia: Andrew Elliott, director of experiences, Multimedia Business
Group.
-- ShoZu: Jennifer Grenz, senior marketing director.
-- uLocate Communications, Walt Doyle, CEO.
-- Verizon Wireless: David Burmester, associate director, Advanced MMS
Services.
"The average consumer wants their images to have information added
automatically, rather than having to add it personally at a later time --
or risk being unable to find them in years to come," says report author
Paul Worthington, Future Image's senior analyst for consumer imaging.
"Location-aware imaging will help people everywhere to find, share, print,
and otherwise enjoy their pictures. In this report we have focused on
phones, as they are closest to combining the camera and computer into a
smart photographic device. At 6Sight, we will extend this conversation by
looking at the development of a geo-imaging infrastructure by companies
such as Google, Microsoft, and Earthmine, and how location-aware images
will interact with this infrastructure in the future, as well as the
prospects for annotating images with information about 'who' is in them."
"Location-Aware Images - Using Smart-Phone Capabilities To Automate Rich
Metadata" is available now from Future Image's web site. For more
information, and to view the Table of Contents and sample pages:
http://tinyurl.com/2cshoj
About 6Sight® The Future of Imaging
6Sight® The Future of Imaging is an executive-level conference that
explores the transformative impact of recent and forthcoming imaging
technologies on businesses, homes, and communities. Technologists,
marketers, futurists, artists, educators, high-volume users, and members of
the media come together annually to preview breakthrough technologies,
envision innovative uses, and spark new ideas and alliances that promote
the interests of the participating companies and the industry as a whole.
The program emphasizes interactivity, rich media presentations and
high-level connections among participants. 6Sight was created by Future
Image Inc., an independent center of expertise on imaging technology and
publisher of The Future Image Report, and is co-produced with the
Association of Imaging Executives® (AIE®), a PMA® member association
of photo imaging leaders who shape the strategic growth of the global
imaging industry.
About Future Image:
San Mateo, CA-based Future Image Inc. (www.futureimage.com) is the leading
independent center of expertise on the convergence of imaging, technology
and business. Future Image hosts the 6Sight and Mobile Imaging Executive
Summit conferences, and publishes two continuous information services, The
Future Image Report which monitors the impact of new technologies on the
imaging industry as a whole, and the Future Image MIR (Mobile Imaging
Report) which focuses on camera-phones and the intersection of imaging and
wireless communications. Future Image also underwrites and publishes
primary research studies on the impact of emerging, imaging-focused
technologies or business trends, and provides consulting services to
vendors, investors and large-scale users. Future Image is the official
information and research partner of the International Imaging Association
(I3A).
Media Contact:
Joe Byrd Email Contact
Future Image
520 South El Camino, Suite 206A
San Mateo CA 94402
V: +1-650.579.0493
F: +1-650.579.0566
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