Game Boy Gets Videophone Attachment 27
Thanks to the San Jose Mercury News for their article about a new videophone peripheral for the Game Boy Advance, being launched in Japan this December. According to the article, "The 13,000 yen (US$110) Campho Advance... slips into the top of the Game Boy Advance just like any video-game cassette. When connected to an analog telephone outlet [and someone with the same equipment], the display shows live video of the person on the other end of the line... Your own image will show up in the corner of the display." There's also a picture of the Campho Advance over at Famitsu.com.
Re:New GBAs (Score:1)
Re:New GBAs (Score:2)
how long.. (Score:4, Insightful)
just had to do it, sorry
Re:how long.. (Score:2)
N-cage? (Score:3, Interesting)
This thing has the same bad design flaw it looks like. The n-cage you gotta take apart to change the game. Here you gotta change the game to make it a phone :) and just how the fuck do you dial?
Oh well at $110 I think it will share the same success as the n-cage. To expensive for something that can be done by dedicated hardware so much better and more easily.
Now if it were cordless (Score:1)
Now all they need to do is build it into a watch and make it holographic, yeah I would buy that.
Not surprising. (Score:3, Interesting)
I always thought they should make a cartridge with a mini hard drive and USB connector (to load it at a PC) for having a nifty Linux platform too, provided all the applications on the drive are made to work with the joypad rather than some sort of keyboard emulation kludge.
Re:Not surprising. (Score:1)
The GBA does indeed have an MP3 device available for it, JTLYK
Yikes. (Score:1)
cool (Score:1)
I'd like to see screenshots (Score:2)
Given that phone lines are limited to about 33.6K on a good day (56K only works if you've got an ISP picking you up at the first switch before you get filtered),
The crappy thing about it on a classic GBA, (Score:2)
GBA SP (Score:1)
the same equipment (Score:2)
This is the real tragedy of video telephony systems. They all use different standards. The technology has been there to do it in one form or another for years, but who would go and buy one if you can only talk to other people using the same device?
This gadget sounds promising - it's fairly cheap, and goes after an existing userbase - but all the same if the technology isn't an open standard, or if it can't talk to devices made by other manufacturers, it will remain a to
GameBoy SP (Score:1)
This practically posts itself (Score:1)
Toss in some web software... (Score:2)