Solar Powered Cellphone Prototype:

Japan and South Korea get the coolest toys and this solar powered cellphone is but yet another example of this. Originally likened to a mini Nintendo GameBoy SP by British mag T3, the prototype runs on the energy provided by the sun's magnificent rays. Granted, if you live anywhere where the sun likes to play hide and seek more often than not (such as New York City), you might end up on a certain creek without a certain paddle.

HP iPAQ hw6945 Mobile Messenger

Trying to find my perfect smartphone has been causing me the same frustration as trying to find my perfect gear bag. The quest just never ends because I've come to realize that there isn't any one perfect phone (or gear bag) out there for me. The whole trick is to find one that comes as close as possible. This review is for the Hewlett Packard iPAQ hw6945 Mobile Messenger; a Windows Mobile 5 Pocket PC phone. The question is, will it become my new "perfect" smartphone?

INTERVIEW: Mike Hodgkinson, director of the "Oceans" video clip

Today we are very glad to host an interview with Mike Hodgkinson, the director of Rob Dickinson's "Oceans" music video clip which was shot using a cellphone, the Nokia N93. View the music video here, while you can also view the "making of" video here. Read on for what Mike had to say about the creation of the video clip.

Mike Hodgkinson on the right

1. Please tell us a bit about yourself and your directing experience.

Mike Hodgkinson: I'm a freelance writer '“ some travel features for the Guardian newspaper in the UK, and I also contribute to iTunes, Golf Punk magazine (a funky UK sports title), Los Angeles City Beat (weekly paper), the Times (of London) and the Los Angeles Times. A while back (over ten years ago) I shot a couple of videos on Super-8 celluloid for a great but obscure English band called Kaleida. They were signed to a label based in Madrid (Siesta Records) and they were my friends, so we did it for kicks really. No money changed hands. Apparently one of the tracks (shot in a small seaside town, using the local retired people as extras) ended up on a compilation video in Australia. I saw Rob Dickinson's first ever London gig with Catherine Wheel back in the day (early 90s) and lost touch with him until I heard 'My Name Is Love'? on the radio in LA, where I live, and hooked up with him again.

2. How did the whole idea of shooting a video clip with a cellphone came to be?

Mike Hodgkinson: Rob told me he needed a video for 'Oceans'? and I thought, hell, let's just do it. I won him over through sheer enthusiasm I think. He's a cracking songwriter and I wanted to do the track justice, as well as adding some kind of hook to the project so loads of people would get to see it and get into Rob's debut solo album, "Fresh Wine For The Horses". First, I thought of going down the low-tech Super-8 route again but then I saw on the internet that the Nokia N93 was supposed to have DVD-quality video capture. That was all I needed to know. No one had made a music video on an N93 before and I thought that by being the first, we would have the hook we needed. I had a contact at Nokia because I had written an article in May 05 for the Guardian newspaper about finding my way round Manhattan using advice from blogs, so I had borrowed a web-enabled Nokia 6682 phone for that. Nokia sent over a couple of N93s and we headed off the Palm Springs to shoot 'Oceans'?. We funded the project ourselves '“ only a couple of hundred bucks all in.

3. Were there any technical difficulties while shooting with a cellphone?

Mike Hodgkinson: No it was really easy - just point and shoot, basically. I thought that if the shots were well composed, they'd hold up well. Once I'd seen how well the N93 could capture video, I was confident it would do us proud and the results exceeded our expectations. We really tried to push the N93 to its limits, and took advantage of its (small) size '“ so we filmed underwater in an inverted plastic food tub, and got aerial shots by tying the N93 to helium party balloons from a local florist. I also adapted some clamps (using duct tape) so I could clip the phone to a regular camera stand. It was like being Hannibal & Co. from the A-team, where they had to make something (like a tank or an aeroplane) out of everyday household objects. We tried to be as ingenious as we could.

4. You did not use any artificial light during the shootings. How did you compensate?

Mike Hodgkinson: I didn't need to compensate. The light in Palm Springs is as helpful as anywhere in the world, and clouds are rare. It's the desert, basically. For the close-up indoor footage (where our actor, Liz, is holding a drink) I just used the in-built light on the phone. The salt crystals on the rim of her margarita reflected the light back in way I liked. All the outdoor footage came out really well '“ the colors were vivid and surprisingly cinematic '“ and I chose to emphasize the colors that stood out the strongest: the blue of the sky, the orange of Rob's car, the green of the grass etc.

5. What software did you use to edit the shot video? What effects and tricks you had to use in order to make the video more broadcast-quality?

Mike Hodgkinson: The mpeg-4 files were imported into Final Cut and the editing process was pretty straightforward. When it came time to export the finished video we had to experiment with various Codecs to make sure it didn't crack up. The H.264 Codec Quicktime conversion '“ set at 240x180, worked the best. The prettiest version was around 70MB. 'Oceans'? plays really well in an iPod, but at the premiere event we hooked it up to a big plasma screen and it stood up to the dimensions much better than we expected. Amazing, really.

6. Are you ready to do the same experiment with a digital camera or a consumer camcorder?

Mike Hodgkinson: Sure. I love the fact that all this technology is pretty much at everyone's fingertips. Francis Coppola got it right when he predicted the camcorder revolution back in the 70s '“ he knew that video gadgetry would bring out the best in amateur film-makers, and help free people's imagination. The N93 represents a new kind of video punk movement: the basics are so easy to master, we've just got to add the creativity.

Editor's note: Please await an interview with Rob Dickinson in the next few days too.

Zune review

Ok, we had a bit of a rough start after getting open the box and all, but we've given the Zune, and its software, sharing, wireless, etc. as good a looking over as we could hope to. We've got things we like, and things we don't; rough edges to go right along with the well thought-out niceties. We came away underwhelmed and not at all surprised -- and why?

O2 Xda Orbit review

O2 who have always been known for innovation with their ever developing Xda range have now excelled themselves with the O2 Xda Orbit. In the past we have seen slight case customisation as with the blue LEDs of the Exec, but with the Orbit O2 have designed an entirely new 'Cruiser' housing to contain their variant of the HTC Artemis.

Camera Phone Used to Shoot Professional Music Video Clip

Rob Dickinson, former band leader of "The Catherine Wheel" (and cousin of Iron Maiden's Bruce Dickinson), has shot the video clip of his new single, "Oceans" (iTunes), using a Nokia N93 cellphone. The Symbian-based smartphone has a 3.2MP camera that is capable of capturing VGA video at 30fps with its Carl Zeiss optics. You can view the video at Yahoo!'s Music site (with IE) or via VLC. When the N93 was first launched Nokia tried to market the phone as the first DVD-quality capture phone in the market, but this is the first time that such a device is used for serious, professional purposes.

All Business with the i-mate JAQ

Stylish is not a word that can be associated with the i-mate JAQ, though the Windows Mobile 5.0 PDA phone certainly is unique. Unfortunately, firmware issues mean that despite a great keyboard, shoppers should steer clear.

JVM vendor to offer full Linux mobile phone stack

Java virtual machine (JVM) specialist Aplix has licensed the Linux-based mobile phone software stack co-developed by NEC, Panasonic, and NTT DoCoMo. The company plans to offer reference implementations (RIs) based on the stack to handset manufacturers wishing to create handsets for use with NTT DoCoMo's 3G FOMA network in Japan, it says.

The Vodafone Palm Treo 750v, Vodafone Palm Treo 750v Review

Do you remember where you were the day Palm announced they were making a Windows Mobile device? OK, so maybe on a global scale it wasn't THAT important, but i'm pretty sure that it shocked a lot of people in the industry when Palm annouced that they would be releasing the Treo 700w, their first Windows Powered Treo in the USA. It sure shocked me! Check the 750v review.

Cingular 8525 (and the HTC TyTN too)

Mess with a good thing, go ahead. The Cingular 8125 which we praised highly in our February 2006 review, was loved not just by us but by our readers. That review has been one of our most popular in 2006 and the 8125 has sold incredibly well. In the US, large, pricey PDA phones are generally a small percentage of overall phone sales, and the 8125 was the first to challenge that balance.

Pages

Subscribe to Tuxtops  RSS