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To: quidditch who wrote (37488)8/2/1999 9:57:00 AM
From: Michael  Respond to of 152472
 
Web-surfing cellphones coming to the United States
By John Borland Staff Writer, CNET News.com
August 2, 1999, 4:00 a.m. PT

After many years of hype, mobile phones that allow users
to surf the Internet are finally coming to U.S. shores.

Analysts and ambitious companies for years have painted
pictures of a world where access to email and the Internet
could be as close as the nearest cellphone. But with the
exception of a few slow services and spotty coverage, the
United States has seen little in the way of genuine wireless
data offerings.

Europe to date has led the market, as some companies
already offer slow but more ubiquitous access to email and
other data services through wireless phone connections.

The technology, however, is finally making its way across the
Atlantic. AirTouch Communications is now
demonstrating a wireless data service to be introduced in a few
U.S. cities. GTE and the WirelessKnowledge consortium,
in turn, said they would have a product ready for GTE
subscribers in 26 cities by this fall.

The introduction of the service marks a critical step in the
development of the nascent U.S. market, analysts said.
"The floodgates have just been blown open by plastic
explosives," said Ray Jodoin, a wireless analyst with Cahners
In-Stat Group. "No one has seen water come down the channel
yet. But when it does, watch out."

GTE's announcement marks the first tangible move from the
WirelessKnowledge coalition, which includes Microsoft,
Qualcomm,
and a long list of other cellphone providers. This
coalition is important to breaking into the corporate market,
where internal network security is a critical concern, said Andy
Seybold, editor-in-chief of the wireless data-focused Outlook
newsletter.

AirTouch's service is not a WirelessKnowledge offering,
although the company is part of the coalition and will have
future services that will fall under the group's umbrella.

The new services will allow wireless telephones to be easily
connected to an ordinary laptop computer to access the
Internet while on the road. The GTE system also utilizes the
small screens on cellphones to download email or other small
text messages.

The data transfer speeds of this wireless technology are slow,
limited to about 14.4 kilobits per second (kbps), or about a
quarter of the speed of a standard dial-up modem. But industry
supporters say this is sufficient to allow off-site employees to
upload files or send email in critical situations.

Wireless data connections aren't foreign to the United States.
Metricom's Ricochet modem, for example, provides
connections speeds of up to 28.8 kbps. The service areas
supported by the modem are scattered, however, and analysts
say the product hasn't caught on well in the marketplace.

Some cellphones already support data services, but they are
slow and haven't been marketed heavily. Pacific Bell and New
York's Omnipoint, both of which operate on the same technical
standard as most European systems, are capable of offering
data connections at slightly slower speeds than AirTouch's or
GTE's products.

According to market research firm Dataquest, the United
States had about 1.4 million wireless data subscribers in 1998.
This is expected to double by the end of the year, but explode
to nearly 36 million subscribers by 2003, giving the market
more than $3 billion in revenue.

The AirTouch and GTE offerings are the first of many
similar services that will connect laptops and cellphones
soon, analysts say. Sprint is in trials with a similar
service, and other Wireless Knowledge partners will
have their own offerings ready for market before long.

"I think we're going to see a lot of it come out a month
at a time over the next six to nine months," Seybold
said.



To: quidditch who wrote (37488)8/2/1999 10:35:00 PM
From: idler  Respond to of 152472
 
I noticed that in the WSJ article today on new chips incorporating Java technology by SUN, they mentioned "digital communications" capabilities. I don't know to what extent that might overlap with anything Q is doing.