Java Embraced by Telecom

Ian Andrew Bell fork@ianbell.com
Thu, 28 Mar 2002 14:34:08 -0800


http://news.com.com/2100-1033-868025.html?tag=cd_mh

Mining Java's developers
By Ben Charny 
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
March 25, 2002, 12:40 PM PT


Sprint, Research In Motion and Motorola intensified their hunt Monday for
Java software developers to create new things for wireless phones and pagers
to do. 

All three companies unveiled new or updated versions of "toolkits" which
provide the technical detail needed so Java software creators can write
programs for phones and pagers that the three companies sell.

Java is a software language that lets different types of computers or cell
phones communicate with each other. The version of Java in a cell phone also
lets a phone owner download different software programs over the air.

 

The announcements, made Monday at the JavaOne conference, highlight the
importance the wireless industry is putting on Java. Carriers have spent
billions of dollars expanding their networks and are looking at new ways of
making money. The carriers hope to sell downloads, such as new games, to
cell phone owners, and Java is the software they're using to make it
possible. 

Nextel Communications already sells Java phones and has scores of different
programs that consumers can download for a fee. Sprint and other carriers
plan to follow suit in coming months with more phones and complex programs
such as multiple-player games and accessing corporate databases on the fly.

Success or failure of this Java-powered effort ultimately falls on the
wireless carriers that own and manage the networks these devices work on,
analysts say, as opposed to Sun Microsystems, which controls the rights to
use Java. 

"Carriers have most on the line because they are the ones who own the
network," said IDC wireless analyst Keith Waryas. "Without the network,
every device is dumb. Carriers will be the ones who really push this
market." 

Nextel was the first to sell Java phones in the United States. On Monday,
the company said it plans to sell a color-screen Java phone, which will also
be the first of its kind in the United States.

The color phone, available this summer, is made by Motorola, which released
a new version of its toolkit for Java software writers on Monday.

Also on Monday, Motorola unveiled new Java cell phone software programs,
including "Digital Cyclone," which sends weather conditions, a nine-hour or
seven-day forecast, and notifications regarding severe weather to Motorola
cell phones. 

Sprint plans to sell Java phones in the next few months. The company on
Monday released a wireless toolkit to prepare for the launch this summer of
a faster phone network capable of downloading information at the speed of a
regular dial-up Internet connection.

RIM put Java into the latest version of its BlackBerry pager, which is being
sold by VoiceStream Wireless and will soon be offered by AT&T Wireless.
Hutchison Telecommunications will sell the new BlackBerry in Hong Kong.

The 5810, which costs about $500, is initially being sold only to corporate
customers. 

VoiceStream Wireless is offering the 5810 with new service designed
specifically for corporate environments using Microsoft Exchange or Lotus
Domino. For $40 a month, customers can get voice service, unlimited e-mails
and a megabyte of data to download. For another $5, consumers can get AOL
Messenger or other types of text messages.