J-SH04

The J-SH04 was a mobile phone made by Sharp Corporation and released by J-Phone (SoftBank Mobile). It was only available in Japan, and was released in November 2000. It was Japan's second phone with a built-in, back-facing camera. It has a 110,000 pixel CMOS image sensor and a 256 color display. The phone weights 74g, and its dimensions are 127 × 39 × 17 mm. It was succeeded by the J-SH05 flip phone, which was released just one month later. It is also considered to be one of the first phones with polyphonic ringtones.

SHARP J-SH04
ManufacturerSharp
Availability by region1 November 2000
PredecessorJ-SH03
SuccessorJ-SH05
Dimensions122 x 32 x 13 mm
Display256-color display
Rear camera110,000-pixels CMOS camera

While the J-SH04 popularized the concept of a camera phone and was the world's first fully integrated camera and telephone over a cellular mobile network, it had a number of predecessors. In December 1997, Kyocera released the VP-110, which was a PCMCIA videophone adapter with an 80,000-pixel CCD camera that swiveled 210° and attached to the DataScope DS-110 and DS-320 mobile phones.[1] Kyocera released the first commercial mobile camera-phone in September 1999, the VP-210 Visual Phone which had a front-facing 110,000-pixel CMOS camera enabling both video calling and sending photos over the air.[2] The VP-210 could send its still images as mail attachments or send video at 2 frames per second over a PHS network.[3] In contrast, the J-SH04's camera on the back of the phone was designed to take photos facing away from the user, which was a more popular way to use digital cameras at the time than video calling and selfie photos. The SH04 was the transformational moment for the camera phone.

Samsung's SCH-V200 phone equipped with a VGA camera was released in South Korea several months before the J-SH04.[4] The Samsung SCH-V200's camera was inside the same case as the phone and used the same battery and memory, but it was not integrated with the phone function. It could not convey an image "at a distance," which some regard as part of the definition of a "camera phone."[5] Instead, photos taken by the SCH-V200 had to be transferred to a PC in order to be sent over a network.

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