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Communication and Information Technology |
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Just press a phone button and read your mail |
Now mobile professionals can communicate with their office without much ado. PRAMIT MITRA tells you how
ou hear a lot about wireless Internet these days but there aren't too many takers. Mobile phones are incredibily popular, but we still use them almost exclusively for talking. Now consider this situation: You are in a rush to get to office to check an important e-mail. But as luck would have it, there is a mile-long traffic jam and yes, it's on your route. Now, wouldn't it be wonderful if you could just get that mail on your mobile phone and respond to it? 
Sure, sounds like a simple plan. But the problems are myriad. Slow connections, small screens, and limited Internet services (which can be displayed properly on small screens) are just part of the problem. People are, for the most part, frustrated and bored by the new services available on their phones.
That is precisely why companies around the world are scrambling to improve wireless technologies. There are ambitious early experiments trying to unlock the nascent wireless Internet using mobile phones equipped with new technologies. The broad idea, however, remains the same throughout: How to get mobile users to communicate with their office essentials - e-mail for instance - without much ado.
One such company trying to unlock the nascent wireless Internet using mobile phones is Bangalore-based Unimobile.com (known earlier as Graycell). They have come out with a free Internet tool, Unimobile, which can be downloaded from www.unimobile.com . This is how it works: Users install the software on their desktop and after the preliminary registration formalities can start using the software to send short messages to mobile phones, hand-held devices, like Palm Pilot, and pagers, practically anywhere in the world. Anywhere where these gadgets work, of course.
Let's now consider some figures: It's estimated there will be one billion cellphone users worldwide by 2003 - a hudge increase from today's 400 million. Secure payment using a phone is now possible and the technology to make brighter colour screens and faster connections is evolving quickly. Add the Internet aud, well, you catch the drift here 0 you may very well stop lugging that laptop with you. The 4-year-old company has no doubt got a potential winner on its hand, provided it is able to market itself properly.
Another attraction of Unimobile is that it can be used as an instant messanger, just like the AOL or Yahoo! Versions. If you friend downloads the software, you can send instant messages (which will pop on his screen within seconds), provided you are both online. Fine-tuning the software, by creating so called "buddy lists", makes the process even easier. Of course, as with all similar applications, it is great if you have a decent Internet connection.
Unimobile wants to extend its services by tying up with Internet service providers (ISPs) and cellular operators. The plan appears to be working so far. The product is being used in over 110 countries and, in India, the company has specific tie-ups with 42 telecom operators. One area of development that the company is keeping a close eye on, and which will determine its success in future, wireless application protocol (WAP) - a way of sqeezing as much information as possible through phone networks designed only for talking. Unimobile.com will be releasing its advanced WAP by mid-May in full production mode. It has already WAP technology on its product in beta mode (read test mode).
But just as in the early days of the Web, wireless Internet is still in its infancy and there are some limitations. For instances, right now many phone companies preventing their customers from receiving any WAP services other than the one they sell with the connection.
The good news is that unlike the original Web, which started with no content to speak of, wireless Internet services boast a wealth of content. WAP is built on some universal Internet standards, so most Internet content can be tweaked a little to be viewed on a handset.
But there's so much more to come, thanks to wireless Internet technologies.
The Times of India, Mumbai
May 21, 2000
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