News is rolling tonight..
Jul. 12, 1999 (PCWorld via COMTEX) -- With today's workforce constantly on the move, from corporate office to branch office to home office, companies feel more pressure than ever to maximize their mobile investments and keep their users connected. 3Com's $299.99 Megahertz 56K Global GSM & Cellular Modem PC Card and Mobile Configuration Manager provides a cost-effective and easy-to-use solution to this problem. This small modem and accompanying software will ease the network and remote configuration processes both for information technology managers and end users. 3Com is targeting organizations of all sizes with its latest mobile computing tool. Xircom and Psion Dacom are close competitors in this market, but unlike this 3Com modem, none of their products currently support both cellular and global features. Easy Connection Setups The Megahertz 56K Global GSM & Cellular Modem comes with the Mobile Configuration Manager, which lets you enter all of the settings for a network or remote connection--and you only have to do it once for each. You can use the Mobile Configuration Manager to generate both LAN and remote settings, either storing the configuration files in a network directory for users to access, or e-mailing users the LAN or remote configurations. The Mobile Configuration Manager was easy to use, and I was able to set up my network and remote configuration settings fairly quickly. To activate a LAN or remote connection, I just had to be hooked up to my network or phone line and select the appropriate configuration name in the Mobile Configuration Manager. I liked that the modem card lit up when I made a connection, giving me a visual confirmation of my connection status. Other features include support for cellular and Personal Digital Cellular phones and Global System for Mobile Communications; WorldPort software, which lets employees use the modem worldwide; and several telephony features including speakerphone and fax software. Overall, this multitalented modem is a perfect solution for a mobile workforce.
And ANOTHER-----------
(COMTEX) B: Why Aren't More PDAs Wireless? Part 1 B: Why Aren't More PDAs Wireless? Part 1 Jul. 12, 1999 (PCWorld via COMTEX) -- The large number of wireless data transmitters for personal digital assistants exhibited at last month's PC Expo in New York suggests that a new era of portability has arrived. But long-standing technical and market hurdles remain that are likely to make ubiquitous computing and Web access a dream slightly deferred, according to analysts and vendors. Before the debut last month of 3Com's Palm VII wireless PDA, few manufacturers managed to squeeze cellular phone circuitry and antennas into normal-size PDAs. Most "wireless" PDA devices require a physical link to an actual cell phone for transmission--even the Socket Communications Digital Phone Card for Windows CE devices, which garnered much of the attention at PC Expo. But that should change in the next 18 months as phone vendors such as Nokia and Qualcomm introduce cell phones on a chip, says Bruce Kasrel, senior analyst at Forrester Research. Most wireless networks have their own proprietary standards, and no single network covers enough geographic areas to dominate. What's more, radio circuitry in the device will usually work only with one cellular standard, such as CDPD or GSM. So PDA makers typically pick one or two networks to support, then form partnerships with vendors of removable--and thus interchangeable--PC Card cellular modems, or with the network carriers themselves. It all adds up to a piecemeal setup that most consumers find cumbersome. Knowing this, 3Com wanted to make the Palm VII networkable right out of the box, so it joined with Bell South's Intelligent Wireless Network, a decade-old radio (not cellular) network available in most U.S. metro areas, to create Palm.Net. The new network will have special servers and other infrastructure designed expressly to store and download personal and public information to the PDA. "We designed the device and the service to be network independent," says Tammy Medanich, a 3Com product marketing manager; the company plans to support other cellular and wireless standards, she says. 3Com's strategy may point the way to an eventual solution to the wireless PDA puzzle. "The network shouldn't have to make much difference," says Kasrel, pointing out that a so-called 3G (for third generation) standard is likely to unify cell-phone networks anyway by around 2002. The real challenge for PDA vendors and major wireless networks is to build the additional Palm.Net-like infrastructure to deliver content that people want to read on their PDAs. "It's going to happen," Kasrel says, thanks to proven demand for such services and the need of cellular carriers to sell new products and services. Tuesday: Part 2: Telecom, computer, and Web worlds agree on ingredients for data-rich, wireless PDAs, but the right recipe remains elusive. Wednesday: Part 3: Centrally stored personal data and customized news may become the real product as wireless devices become more standardized and interchangeable. -0- |