Open Mobile: Open yes, interoperable, maybe. (Stub Files).If there's one tech industry sector that's determined not to repeat the mistakes of the past, it is the mobile phone market. Vexed by multiple software development platforms, various vendors using proprietary service infrastructures, and declining revenues, mobile carriers and phone OEMs--particularly those in the US--have been seeking the "one true path" to unify wireless services and, hopefully, build revenue. In June, a number of vendors joined together to form an unlikely alliance designed to reach these goals. Dubbed dub 1 tr.v. dubbed, dub·bing, dubs 1. To tap lightly on the shoulder by way of conferring knighthood. 2. To honor with a new title or description. 3. the Open Mobile Alliance (OMA (1) See Object Management Architecture. (2) (Open Mobile Alliance Ltd., La Jolla, CA, www.openmobilealliance.org) An organization formed in June of 2002 by the consolidation of the WAP Forum group and the Open Mobile Architecture Initiative. ), it promised to deliver workable recommendations--in the form of technical specifications--that would unify this fragmented market and help consumers benefit from next-generation technologies without fear of compatibility problems. At Comdex in November, the OMA delivered. It announced the OMA Release Program, which will include seven so-called enablers, or "building blocks" for various aspects of next-gen wireless services. The announced enablers include mobile browsing, multimedia messaging service See MMS. (MMS (Multimedia Messaging Service) An enhanced transmission service that enables graphics, video clips and sound files to be transmitted via cellphones. Developed as part of the 3GPP project, MMS phones are generally backward compatible with SMS and EMS. ), digital rights management (DRN DRN Dark Room Notes (band) DRN Data Release Number (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) DRN De Rerum Natura (Latin: On the Nature of Things) DRN Disaster Response Network 4), domain name service DNS (Domain Name System) A system for converting host names and domain names into IP addresses on the Internet or on local networks that use the TCP/IP protocol. For example, when a Web site address is given to the DNS either by typing a URL in a browser or behind the ) lookup, mobile content download, email push notification, and user/device profiles. Other enablers, including instant messaging Exchanging text messages in real time between two or more people logged into a particular instant messaging (IM) service. Instant messaging is more interactive than e-mail because messages are sent immediately, whereas e-mail messages can be queued up in a mail server for seconds or and presence service (IMPS IMPS Instant Messaging and Presence Services (telecommunications) IMPS Interface Message Processors IMPS Infinite Monkey Protocol Suite (RFC 2795) :-) IMPS Interactive Mathematical Proof System ), are expected to be added later, and the OMA expects to shortly integrate standardization efforts from several other wireless forums, including the Mobile Games Inter-Operability Forum, the Location Interoperability Forum and the Mobile Wireless Internet Forum See forum. . The goals of the OMA are straightforward and commendable. Companies that abide by the group's recommendations will not use competing technologies at the underlying architectural level of phones and services. Rather, they will use the enablers to create interoperable devices that are differentiated at the design level and in the number of functions that they support. Users benefit because they will be assured that their new mobile devices can communicate and exchange data with devices from other manufacturers on other services, not simply those subscribing to the same network: Protocols and interfaces are not locked to proprietary technologies, applications can run on multiple networks, and architectures are independent of the operating system operating system (OS) Software that controls the operation of a computer, directs the input and output of data, keeps track of files, and controls the processing of computer programs. . For example, a user will not be tied to his home network if he wants to use a phone-based application: He can do so while roaming on another service. Theoretically, all this will broaden the market for and create revenue from new devices and services, which telecom companies and device OEMs sorely need. As always, though, the devil is in the details. The OMA includes strange bedfellows, including Microsoft, Sun, Oracle and Nokia. In particular, Nokia and Microsoft have proven to be bitter rivals in the mobile market, particularly at the OS level. And, while the OMA seems to be leaning toward Java in several of its enablers, if history is any guide, Microsoft is unlikely to support Sun's platform as a standard in any of its devices. Indeed, the entire premise of the OMA--the separation of the OS from the application and service layers of a device--seems to run contrary to Redmond's proclivities. How the OMA will deal with such seeming contradictions as it seeks to create a world-wide mobile device standard is anyone's guess. But unless and until vendors see more value in compatibility than in proprietary solutions, the current levels of service and device fragmentation will continue. And the mobile market will be condemned to repeat the sins of the past. |
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