Video Cameras


wireless cameras & New & Video Cameras & Tech & Gadget News & Multifunction Mobile Phones04 Jan 2005 01:58 pm

Kent emailed us this:

T3 - News - Super 3G! It’s like 3G, but, erm, super!
“Super 3G! It’s like 3G, but, erm, super!
It’s ten times faster than current 3G technology, but it’s in no hurry to get here. Super 3G hardware and services are scheduled to launch in 2009
Many of the world’s biggest telecommunications companies, including Vodafone, DoCoMo and Siemens are joining forces to develop Super 3G technology. It’ll enable the transmission of high-resolution video at ten times the speed of current 3G communications. But it’s going to take a fair few years to get Super 3G off the ground. The new service and hardware are only expected to become a reality at the end of this decade. We’ve no doubt that there’ll be stacks of gossip and announcements surrounding Super 3G at the CES show starting this Thursday (6 January 2005). Watch this space for all the latest details and developments.”
http://www.t3.co.uk/news/default.asp?pagetypeid=2&articleid=33607&subsectionid=753

View the complete post here.

Blogs Bloggers & wireless cameras & Video Cameras & Tech & Gadget News02 Jan 2005 01:56 am

This is an interesting post:

We sre slowly getting some of these ideas implemented on this blog below for video.
Check it out, we have a streaming server for the videos also.

http://bestgadgetbuys.com/Elk-Grove-video-blogger.html
What about online viewing for websites?
What do you like the best, watching or reading?
Would you like to see webcam style or straight video?
Email me: sactowndude2004-live @yahoo.com no spaces
I disabled my comment due to spammers! Sorry!

Read the full post here.

New & Blogs Bloggers & Video Cameras & Web Browsers & Gadget News & Tech & Google30 Dec 2004 11:59 am

Here’s a great post:

[print version] Internet use cutting into TV viewing and socializing | CNET News.com: “Internet use cutting into TV viewing and socializing
By John Markoff
http://news.com.com/Internet use cutting into TV viewing and socializing/2100-1026_3-5507547.html
Story last modified Thu Dec 30 07:48:00 PST 2004
The average Internet user in the United States spends three hours a day online, with much of that time devoted to work and more than half of it to communications, according to a survey conducted by a group of political scientists.
The survey found that use of the Internet has displaced television watching and a range of other activities. Internet users watch television for one hour and 42 minutes a day, compared with the national average of two hours, said Norman H. Nie, director of the Stanford Institute for the Quantitative Study of Society, a research group that has been exploring the social consequences of the Internet.
‘People don’t understand that time is hydraulic,’ he […]

You can see the rest here.