Matt Hamblen over at Computerworld has been pondering whether or not the iPhone 3.0 will have video conferencing capabilities amongst its other Photo and Video tricks.
The MMS software reports indicate to some observers that the next iPhone (due out July 17, according to some speculation) could support iPhone video chat, which would be possible with a good camera and microphone and a fast wireless connection.
There are some other factors to consider. First, the iPhone would need to have either a front-facing camera or a "periscope" type of mirror to bring the camera view over the top of the iPhone. Next, the hardware for video encoding/decoding would have to be pretty significant. You'll recall that even some older Macs have trouble with the more advanced features of iChat Video (below). We expect to see a faster processor and new architecture in the upcoming iPhone, but aren't sure that it will be able to produce the kind of quality encode/decode that Apple would expect.
Also, while AT&T's network has the capability for high download speeds and is even moving to double-fast 7.2Mbs speed, video chat also requires significant upload bandwidth. HSDPA, the wireless standard that AT&T's 3G uses, stands for High-Speed Downlink Packet Access. The current uplink speed is 128K. While this is theoretically able to handle 160x120 video (above), we all know that theoretical speeds and real-world speeds often don't mesh. We also know how much AT&T likes video applications on its network (see Sling). In this regard, Apple could make a service that only worked over Wifi. Like Sling's dilemma, this would eliminate the whole purpose of having an "anywhere device".
Lastly, does it fit within Apple's strategy? Perhaps long term, yes. But Apple hasn't even brought iChat to the iPhone platform yet. While you can IM with a number of third party applications, Apple hasn't made even the first move to bring its own client to the iPhone. An iPhone iChat client would be the first step in setting up a video conferencing ecosystem that allowed you to video chat with people on Macs (Apple would have to include this, right?).
The Computerworld articles mentioned third parties. Perhaps Cisco or Skype or some jailbreakers will make an effort to build video chatting into an application (remember Cisco is part owner of the iPhone trademark and has promised to take advantage of software development on the iPhone). But without Apple's blessing both in building a front-facing camera and allowing video chat capabilities into the App Store, it likely won't go far. In fact, there are already video chat apps floating around on jailbroken iPhones.
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iew4rXsorTw&feature=player_embedded"]YouTube - iPhone Video Conference[/ame]
So video chat on the iPhone? In our opinion, not likely, but we'd love to be surprised.
via 9to5mac
iDevice: iPhone[3G], OS 3.0, Lock to carrier, Jailbroken
MobileSubstrate Addons: SafariDownloadManager - AttachmentSaver - Yourtube - SbSettings - FiveIconDock - ReflectiveDock - UniversalSearch - Cyntact - 3GUnrestrictor - UAFaker - MailToAttachment - Cydelete - PreferenceLoader
i guess we just have to see and wait what happens "p
How about the squidge.app did anyone get that working yet??? I dl it but it just opens then crashes!!! Does anyone know or have a working version????
By the way if anyone is wondering its a video confewrenceing app that was wworking on the 1.xxx versions!!! But i dont know if anyone has it upgraded!!!!
that would be cool
wonder what else is in store for the next iphone?
heres hoping its true
doubt its part of it, maybe on the iphone 4th gen lol
iPhone 3G 16GB White - 3.1.2 Jailbroken
iPhone 3GS 16GB Black - 3.1.2 Jailbroken
Hopes it comes out to be true really excited to get new iphone