James Seng wrote:
> Not sure if it is relevant but i-mode is working on an end-to-end IP
> system now which will be deploy sometime next year.
Really? I am in Tokyo and follow wireless developments, especially i-mode,
quite closely, and I've never heard of such a plan.
Can you elaborate?
Thank
"Taylor, Johnny" wrote:
In addition to this point I would
like to also state WAP is the front runner in regards to linking
wireless apps to the Global Internet and her sub-nets.
I'd have to disagree there. The 8 million non-WAP users in Japan are unarguably
enjoying the most prolific, robust, an
Graham Klyne wrote:
> At 07:12 PM 6/30/00 +0200, Anthony Atkielski wrote:
> >Why use SMS instead of just voice?
> >
> >Has anyone considered the ergonomics of WAP? Even if it works perfectly,
> >how many people are willing to work on a screen smaller than a credit card?
Well, 10 million Japane
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Fri, 30 Jun 2000 19:12:26 +0200, Anthony Atkielski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> > Anyway, I have a really good instinct for picking technology winners, and
> > thus far I put WAP in the same category as MiniDiscs, bubble memory, color
> > fax machines, and quadrapho
I don't think WAP Mobile Internet any more than TCP/IP is Internet.
The Mobile Internet is data/communication devices you carry around with you.
Here in Japan we have 8 million non-WAP mobile internet users, plus another 2
million WAP users, and the numbers are exploding.
But, and I know this may
I find it fascinating that nobody's mentioned cHTML as a viable
alternative to WML.
Here in Japan, inarguably on the forefront of wireless internet, NTT
DoCoMo's I-Mode service enjoys almost 8 million regular users of cHTML
over PDC packet-switched network.
cHTML is simple, easy to migrate to xHT