- Videophone
A videophone, also known by the trademarked name "Picturephone", is a
telephone which is capable of both audio andvideo duplex transmission . It differs fromvideoconferencing in that it expects to serve individuals, not groups.Early history
In 1955, Gregorio Y. Zara, a Filipino engineer and a graduate from the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology , invented the first videophone, known as the "photo phone signal separator network."Meanwhile,
AT&T conducted experiments and demonstrations of a Picturephone product and service in the early 1960s, including at the1964 New York World's Fair . The demo unit was usually in a small oval cabinet on a swivel stand, intended to stand on a desk. Videophones, possibly AT&T units, were featured at the Telephone Association of Canada Pavilion (The 'Bell' Pavilion) atExpo 67 , an International World's Fair held inMontreal ,Canada in 1967. Several demonstration videophone units were available for the Fair-going public to try, who were permitted to make live video calls to recipient volunteers in the United States. Color was not employed. The equipment packaged a Plumbicon camera and a small CRT display in the cabinet. The camera was located atop the screen, to help users see eye to eye.Video bandwidth was 1 MHz with
vertical scan rate of 30 Hz,horizontal scan rate of 8 kHz, and about 250 visible scan lines. The equipment included aSpeakerphone hands free telephone, with an added box to control picture transmission. Each Picturephone line used threetwisted pair s of ordinary telephone cable, two pairs for video and one for audio and signaling. Cable amplifiers were spaced about a mile apart (1.6 Kilometers) with built-in six-band adjustableequalization filters. For distances of more than a few miles, the signal was digitized at 2 MHz and 3 bits per sample DPCM, and transmitted on a T-2 carrier.The Picturephone was offered to the public in
New York City ,Washington, DC ,Chicago , andPittsburgh in 1970. The screen was larger than in the original demo units, approximately half a foot (15 cm) square in a roughly cubical cabinet. Picturephone booths were set up inGrand Central Station and elsewhere. With fanfare, Picturephones were installed in offices of Westinghouse in Pittsburgh, and at other progressive companies. Hundreds of technicians attended schools to learn to operate the Cable Equalizer Test Set and other equipment, and to install Picturephones. New widebandcrossbar switch es were designed and installed into5XB switch offices, this being the most widespread of the relatively modern kinds. Unrelated difficulties atNew York Telephone , however, slowed the effort there, and few customers signed up in either city. A6 September 2001 report on CNN said the Picturephone service only had a total of 500 subscribers at its peak, and the service faded away by 1974.AT&T sold the VideoPhone 2500 to the general public in 1992 to 1995 with prices starting at US$1,500 and later US$1,000. [http://www.bellsystemmemorial.com/telephones-picturephone.html] It was limited by connecting by analog phone lines at about 19 kbit/s; the video portion was 11,200 bit/s, [http://discover.com/issues/oct-92/features/1992discoverawar131/] with a maximum frame rate of 10 frames per second, but typically much lower. The VideoPhone 2500 used proprietary protocols.
In 2007, the Smithsonian's
National Museum of American History received a wireless picturephone prototype known as intellect, developed in 1993 by inventor Daniel A. Henderson [http://americanhistory.si.edu/news/pressrelease.cfm?key=29&newskey=611] . This system and device was designed to receive pictures and video data from a message originator to a message center for transmission and display on a wireless portable device such as a cellular telephone. See alsocamera phone .Lack of public acceptance
Early AT&T Picturephones had few users, in part because the service was expensive. It cost approximately USD$90 per month in 1974. However as modern technology reduced the costs to nominal (see: webcams and UMTS), videophones continue to be marginaly used. This contrasts to the unanimous certainty of pundits through many decades that videophones would be an obvious, highly sought-after technology. One reason may be that even today videophones are a poor analog for face-to-face conversation. Primarily, users mutually look at the video screens and not at the video cameras, causing the eyes to take on an unnatural and unnerving sideways glance. Another reason may be that people actually desire less fidelity in their communication, as evidenced by the popularity of written conversation (ie texting and instant messaging, which is available on all video-enabled cell phones and webchat programs).
Protocols
The original Picturephone system used contemporary crossbar and multi-frequency operation. Lines and trunks were six wire, one pair each way for video and one pair two way for audio. MF address signaling on the audio pair was supplemented by a Video Supervisory Signal (VSS) looping around on the video quad to ensure continuity. More complex protocols were later adopted for conferencing.
Call setup
Videoconferencing in the late 20th century was limited to theH.323 protocol (notably Cisco's SCCP implementation was an exception), but newer videophones often use SIP, which is often easier to set up in home networking environments. H.323 is still used, but more commonly for business videoconferencing, while SIP is more commonly used in personal consumer videophones. A number of call-setup methods based oninstant messaging protocols such asSkype also now provide video. The principal open systems SIP source is Counterpath Corp., which provides support for British Telecom, Deutsche Telekom, Sprint, Telmex, AT&T's Callvantage, and the unified communicator of Cisco and Verizon.Another protocol used by videophones is
H.324 , which mixes call setup and video compression. Videophones that work on regular phone lines typically use H.324, but the bandwidth is limited by the modem to around 33 kbit/s, limiting the video quality and framerate. A slightly modified version of H.324 called3G-324M defined by3GPP is also used by some cellphones that allow video calls, typically for use only inUMTS networks.Video compression
The most commonly used video
codec s areH.263 andH.264 . Skype uses the proprietary protocolVP7 . VZOchat uses proprietary Visicron codec.Current use
The widest deployment of video telephony occurs in
mobile phone s, as nearly all mobile phones supportingUMTS networks work as videophones using an internal camera, and are able to make video calls wirelessly to other UMTS users in the same country or internationally. As of Q2 2007, there are over 131 million UMTS users (and hence potential videophone users), on 134 networks in 59 countries. [ [http://www.gsmworld.com/technology/3g/statistics.shtml GSM World - Statistics] ]Videophones can be used by the
deaf to communicate withsign language over a distance. In the US theFCC pays companies for providingVideo Relay Service to deaf and hard-of-hearing individuals, where they use a videophone to talk through a sign-language translator to people using audio phones. Videophones are also used to do on-site sign-language translation (Video Remote Interpreting ). The relatively low cost and widespread availability of mobile phones with video calling capabilities have given deaf people new possibilities to communicate with the same ease as others, with some wireless operators even starting up free sign language gateways [ [http://www.mobil.se/ArticlePages/200710/04/20071004122329_MOB_Administratorer908/20071004122329_MOB_Administratorer908.dbp.asp Gratis teckentolkning hos Tre ] ] .Videotelephony is used in large corporate conferencing setups, and is supported by systems such as
Cisco Unified Communications Manager , and similar systems from companies such asTandberg , Radvision, andPolycom .Today the principles, if not the precise mechanisms of a videophone are employed by many users world-wide in the form of
webcam conferences using personal computers, with cheaply available webcams and microphones and free instant messenger programs. Thus an activity that was disappointing as a separate service found a niche as a minor feature of products intended for other purposes. A videophone can be created by using an old or inexpensive computer and dedicating it to run a videosoftphone .In 2004 Telmex, the biggest telephone service provider in
Mexico , introduced Videophone service over regular phone lines (apparently H.324). The service, as of March 2006, had not enjoyed widespread adoption. Telecom Italia supplies LG-Nortel videophones, which also appear to be used by Telmex.Trivia
* In many
science fiction movies and shows that take place in the future, videophones are used as a primary method of communication. One of the first movies where a video phone was used is Fritz Lang’s Metropolis. Examples of videophones include the Picturephone from "Pee-wee's Playhouse ", , and "Blade Runner ", and on the British cartoonDangerMouse , in which the title character regularly communicated with headquarters via videophones in both his home and his car. Another similar device was featured in the 1944Warner Bros. cartoon,Plane Daffy , which the female spyHatta Mari used to communicate withAdolf Hitler .
* A device with the same functionality has been used by comic strip character Dick Tracy since 1964. Called the "2-Way Wrist TV", the fictional detective often uses the phone to communicate with police headquarters.
* AT&T VideoPhone 2500prototype s are visible in the movie .
* InFuturama , the videophone is often used in the delivery service spaceship.
* [http://www.globalcoms.com/video%20streaming%20solution.asp CNN was first to use videophone via Inmarsat-phone for live broadcast]ee also
*
List of videophones
*Comparison of videophones
*Camera phone
*Information appliance
*Mobile phone
*Mobile VoIP
*Smartphone
*Videoconferencing External links
* [http://www.3gp.com/ Mobile video players and converters]
* [http://archives.cnn.com/2000/TECH/computing/09/05/picture.phones.ap/index.html CNN news article: "Video phones: Why is no one calling?"]
* [http://www.globalcoms.com/video%20streaming%20solution.asp How CNN streams Video(phone) via satellite-phone]Dedicated videophones
* [http://www.useeisee.com/ UseeIsee]
oftclient videophones
* [http://www.wigiwigi.com/ WigiWigi]
* [http://www.vzochat.com/ VZOchat]
* [http://www.kapanga.net/ Kapanga Softphone] SIP client for telecom applications
* [http://www.linphone.org/ Linphone ] An open source SIP videophone for linux and windows OS.
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