The following text is copyright 2000 by Network World, permission is hearby given for reproduction, as long as attribution is given and this notice is included.
Three means a trend
By Scott Bradner
Last month Japan became
at least the third country after Israel and Finland where there are more people
subscribing to mobile phones than fixed line phones. In a harbinger of things
to come the Wall Street Journal reports that a factor in the recent increase in
the popularity of mobile phones is a service that enables users to surf the web
from their cell phones yet is not the highly touted WAP technology.
Nippon Telegraph and
Telephone Co. (NTT) already has 5.7 million subscribers to its year old
"I-mode" service and is on track to double that number by the end of
the year. This is more than 10% of the 56.8 million subscribers to mobile-phone
services and is quite impressive when compared to the 55.4 million subscribers
using analog phone lines.
We had a talk about
I-mode at the just completed IETF meeting. It was one of three plenary talks on
different approaches to Internet support on mobile devices. The other two talks
were about the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) and a pure Internet
connectivity model for mobile devices. The I-mode talk was informative and
cute. The speaker demonstrated an I-mode Karaoke application. The words to a
song are displayed on the cell phone screen and the music (if that is what one
calls the series of sounds that can be played on such a small speaker) emanates
from the cell phone, so the user can sing along. Glad they don't allow cell
phone use in airplanes.
I-mode is NTT's own
proprietary approach to bringing Internet to mobile devices. The major
standards-based effort is by the Wireless Application Protocol Forum
(www.wapforum.org) which is defining the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP.)
Both of these approaches seem to one degree or another to not be willing to
accept the Internet that they are trying to connect to. WAP in particular
assumes that there are servers in the network, generally provided by the
service provider, that mediate communications between the user and the Internet
and that the protocols between these servers and the phones are not standard
Internet protocols. A rational for this design is that the bandwidth and screen
size limitations of mobile devices mean that directly connecting to, for
example, CNN's web page would not get anything useful. But a byproduct is that
a service provider may be able to control what servers their customers can
connect though and reduce the user's flexibility to pick services and
applications.
Even with these
limitations cell phones with Internet connectivity look like they will become a
major way that users get to use the Internet. I-mode has already made NTT the
biggest Internet service provider in Japan. This trend may have a major impact
on the all too many web sites that seem to think that their users have gigabit
connections to high-resolution displays. That would be a blessing.
disclaimer: Smart people
can still design dumb web sites. That may or may not apply at Harvard but the
opinions are mine.