Cell Phone Cameras Get Personal

My colleague Lane's Kitten
Other subjects among the folks I polled was food, friends, sunrises, flowers, bugs, to-do lists, and beer.
Another colleague at FH runs the popular @thisbeer Twitter account where people share photos of the beer they are drinking and @thisbeer retweets.
I use my iPhone to take pictures all the time — of my dog, things I eat (I’m a food blogger, after all), and things I’d want to capture with my regular digital camera but may not have with me. I also use it for taking photos of images that I want to share on Facebook or Twitter. Funny signs and that sort of thing.
The only thing missing for me on my iPhone 3GS camera is a flash — something that will be available with the iPhone 4 (note: AT&T is a client).
Do you use your cell phone to take pictures? What are your most common subjects? What do you like/dislike about taking pictures with your cell phone?
I don't have my smartphone yet, so I rarely take pictures. I can't wait to get mine at the end of the month!
The new iPhone? Watch out world — Marc Matthews with an iPhone cannot be stopped.
cuuute picture choice Jodi! and a great post.
i have about 1,200 pictures taken on my iphone, everything from white board notes and things i need to reference back to for work (most recently), to my pets and my best friend's baby nephew. oh man, can't imagine how bad it'll be when the new iphone comes out and there's a flash.
I have over 1600 pictures on my iphone. I take pictures of everything- art in museums, fish that I catch fishing, sunsets, family and of course my doggies.
I use it to remember parking lot/spaces and white board notes too.
Cindy
Taking pictures of parking lot locations to remember where you parked is a GREAT idea, Cindy!
Dell Aero smartphone hits the US market but unlikely to be a hit
Dell, which earlier launched Streak, a 5-inch Android-based tablet, teamed up with the nation’s No.2 wireless carrier AT&T to launch its new smartphone Aero earlier this week.
The Aero boasts of impressive specifications – it has a 3.5-inch capacitive multi-touch display (with 640?360 pixel resolution), a 5-megapixel camera with 8x digital zoom and LED flash, full HTML browser, virtual Qwerty keyboard, email support, Wi-Fi, 3G, Bluetooth, GPS, and a microSD card slot that allows you to bump up the memory to 32GB (the Aero ships with 2GB card to help you get started). How to Use a French Press: Step-by-Step rn rn rn1. Use water that is slightly cooler than boiling. rnBring water to a boil, then wait a minute or two. Or cool the boiling water with a shot of cool or cold water. rn rnUse fresh water that has not been boiled before for the best taste. The reason is because the water we drink (from the tap or bottle) has been aerated and has dissolved gases that make the water taste better. Boiling removes the gases and leaves a “flat” taste. (I’m not 100% convinced of this and am usually too lazy to empty the electric kettle of previously-boiled water. But this advice has been handed down for generations, is often quoted by tea and coffee connoiseurs, and the explanation sounds reasonable.) French press instructions