AMITIAE - Saturday 26 May 2012
InstaCRT: Analog Output for for iOS Devices - Nice Idea, Local Problems (Updated - a Confirmation) |
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By Graham K. Rogers
Do I miss this? Not at all, and yet the occasional foray into classics now only available on YouTube (such as Quatermass and the Pit) bring back the essence of what viewing was like. So when I saw an outline (Tom Warren, The Verge) of an app that reproduces an image by use of a real analogue camera (in Sweden), I just couldn't resist this. The very pointlessness of such an app and its output (at least in one way of thinking) would perhaps change the original image -- with a bit of help from our friends -- into an example of Art. Yes, I know I am stretching the idea a bit, but in my armoury of iOS filters, editors and effects there is nothing that is able to produce such an odd yet interesting image format as InstaCRT. Ah, but only if I could get it to work.
The app interface milks the monochrome idea: it is all in shades of black, grey and white. The cost is $1.99 and the process of developing an image using the app is part of its charm. As well as the iPhone camera, users may select an image from the Photo Album. I use the word, "develop" deliberately as the image is not instantly available, but needs to be sent away for processing and is then returned, albeit in under a minute. At least, that is the theory. I first tried with some photographs in the Photo Album of the iPhone, but each time, when the spinning wheel stopped, there was nothing to see. I also tried using the iPhone camera, but had the same result. I would have accepted one or two failures out of a batch of, say 10 images sent, but a failure rate of 100% is not what I want, especially from a paid-for app. As well as the FAQ, there is a disclaimer on the site which is not all that encouraging:
The concept of InstaCRT is built on 80s electronics that might blow up and make the app useless. We don't have any spare parts laying around which means there's no guarantee the app will work. But having said that we've had it up and running for more than six months (during beta testing) without a problem and we hope that it'll keep on running forever.
The speed of the mail and the comments were encouraging, so I tried some more. I tried resetting the iPhone. I deleted the app and downloaded it again into iTunes, I tried landscape, I tried portrait mode. I tried the iPad. I tried shouting.
I used an image from the Photo Album and sent that to Sweden. That one did return. I tried a couple more before sleep: one failed, but one was OK.
I turned off wifi on the iPhone and sent a photograph using 3G. Although the time was shown as about an hour again, there was no black screen and the connection was maintained. I expect that the main problem is this end and could be linked to the ISP settings. As local users are aware, Thailand does not have the best connections in the world: there may be some form of cut-off working here when I use the wifi and broadband connection. The 3G is with another company, so their connection would have different settings and perhaps takes a different route out of the country.
The results I have are not brilliant in terms of photographic output, but this is such an unusual way to produce images that I am willing to wait and see. I hope that the connections improve and that more reliable output is available to me. Perhaps the extra use this met after leaving beta has been enough to put the old tech in overload. A shame that. Update - Confirmation and ClarificationEarly morning here, there was no change with the behaviour of my wifi link (see above) and using 3G gave a certain reluctance with a predicted time of a finished imaged given as an hour.I gave InstaCRT a bit more of a try-out while shopping. At a large mall on the western side of Bangkok, I tried a couple of images with the app: one from the camera and one from the Photo Album.
Graham K. Rogers teaches at the Faculty of Engineering, Mahidol University in Thailand. He wrote in the Bangkok Post, Database supplement on IT subjects. For the last seven years of Database he wrote a column on Apple and Macs. |
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