makin harum aja nama treo ini.....

ps: gue post di id-pocketpc jg, karena emang skrg udah rada bersaudara :)

NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) - When a single-engine plane crashed into 
an Upper East Side apartment building on Wednesday, Fox News Channel 
delivered early live video to its viewers from the crash site using a 
hand-held mobile phone souped up with streaming video.

Scott Wilder, a cameraman for the network, had been about 20 blocks away 
on another assignment when the crash occurred. Wilder ran uptown and 
reported live from the scene using a hand-held Palm Treo smartphone that 
uses the existing mobile network to transmit video to the Fox News 
control room. From there, Fox News sent it out live on TV to supplement 
other video being shot by local traffic helicopters.

Wilder's work represents one of the first instances of a network using 
video captured via mobile phone camera live on the air. Fox News has 
experimented with the practice several times in recent weeks with 
CometVision, software designed by Ohio-based Comet Video Technologies.

"We've been waiting for the opportunity to get live pictures on the air 
from inside a cellular network, and we wanted to take it to the next 
level, make it easy for people and make it portable," said Ben Ramos, 
director of field operations for Fox News.

TV journalism already has deployed a digital-video camera attached to a 
mobile phone to transmit a live picture. In addition, most if not all of 
the networks have used mobile phone video, but not live. Ordinary 
citizens have made use of them at incidents including the London transit 
bombings and the South Asia tsunami, capturing footage for later use 
before any news cameras arrive.

The live picture quality from the crash site wasn't spectacular, with 
scattered shots of the scene and little movement. Wilder talked to 
"Studio B" anchor Shepard Smith as he held the camera; the control room 
fed live pictures over the network to accompany Wilder's commentary.

But Wednesday's phone-borne report provided a different perspective in 
the early moments after the crash, when satellite trucks hadn't reached 
the scene and the coverage was dominated by overhead shots. The video 
quality provides illustration for phone interviews that didn't exist 
before without much more equipment.

CometVision runs on a Palm Treo 700-series PDA via the Windows Mobile 
operating system. The technology is able to transmit video over non-3G 
networks, using much less bandwidth than would normally be needed, Comet 
CEO Howard Becker said.

"We have it set up so you can push one button" and then it starts to 
work, Becker said. That includes automatically connecting to a computer 
at the Fox News studio, and sending an e-mail to a producer or anyone 
else at the network who has a link to the live stream.

No one at Fox News is suggesting that CometVision will ever replace 
video cameras; the technology is just another choice and it might, at 
some point, be used more often.

"The best use of it is still playing out, and that's the beauty of 
24-hour cable news," Fox News vp newsgathering John Stack said. "You're 
playing without a net, so to speak. Ideally, you'd like to have a 
state-of-the-art live shot, but you don't always have that luxury."

Fox News stumbled upon CometVision when a Los Angeles-based engineer 
stopped by Comet's booth at this year's Consumer Electronics Show in Las 
Vegas. Comet wasn't marketing the application for TV news, but Ramos 
said that Comet and Fox News began working together toward that goal.

Now every Fox News bureau has at least one or two of the Treos for 
photographers and other staff members to bring with them in breaking 
news or where it isn't possible to bring a full-fledged camera for live 
coverage.

The first usage of CometVision was October 2, when correspondent Rick 
Leventhal drove from New York to Nickel Mines, Pa., to cover the Amish 
school shooting. "Studio B" anchor Smith introduced the video, shot out 
of the front window of Leventhal's vehicle.

A Fox News staffer also used it recently in covering a story from an 
Atlanta courthouse. Both videos looked better than what was shot at the 
site of the plane crash, in part because cell phone network congestion 
seems to affect the picture quality, Becker said.

It was perfect for use in Wednesday's early coverage because, even in 
media-heavy Manhattan, it's not always possible to televise live 
pictures immediately from the scene of a breaking news event. That 
usually takes satellite trucks, which are slower to get into position 
than a reporter or photographer carrying a Treo.

There are still drawbacks, which should be eliminated as cell phone 
networks move to third-generation platforms and as a WiFi backup is 
developed.

"It'll be used more when the picture itself is of higher quality," Stack 
said. "It's OK now but it could get better. It depends on the nature of 
the story. If it's an important enough story, we are more forgiving of 
picture quality and hopefully the audience is more forgiving."


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20061013/tc_nm/treo_dc



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