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To: Catcher who wrote (650)10/15/1999 4:08:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 12252
 
From Teros Company>

Posted 15/10/99 12:50pm by John Lettice

Ericsson, Symbian, Palm lead wireless Web alliance

Palm's dance card at Geneva this week has been pretty full. Hot on the heels of the
Palm-Symbian and Palm-Nokia deals, today we have the announcement of a GPRS
alliance consisting initially of Ericsson, IBM, Lotus, Oracle, Palm and Symbian.

Nokia and Motorola are mysteriously absent from the initial roster, and the mystery is
somewhat compounded by the claim that "The GAA was established in June with an open
invitation to the industry." This would appear to have been an extremely quiet open
invitation, as nobody much seems to have noticed it at the time, although the organisation's
Web site does have a release dated 22 June on it.

This however couches it very much as an Ericsson initiative, and in the interim a lot of work
will have gone into broadening it enough to make it credible. Nokia's absence can possibly
be explained by the different nature of the portfolios of the two rivals. Nokia has been heavily
involved in its own server application development for some considerable time, and may
not feel the need to share its secrets with the others.

Another absence, Microsoft, is less surprising, but sources tell The Register that MS was
indeed poised to sign up, but pulled out. If this happened at Geneva, it might have been
caused by the shock of Palm's foray into cellular-land.

The alliance itself, styled the GPRS Applications Alliance (GAA), is intended to boost the
development of mobile Internet applications using high speed GPRS (General Packet Radio
System) as transport. Several European networks are poised to offer this as an add-on to
GSM next year, but the GAA also seems to be aiming at the rest of the world. "GPRS," it
says, "is a first, vital step for GSM and TDMA operators in the evolution to 3G (third
generation) mobile networks."

TDMA is technically a near relation of GSM, and is widely used in the USA and South
America - by AT&T, among others. Active support for GPRS on TDMA (which is actually
the number two world standard) will therefore aid take-off of mobile apps in the US, on both
TDMA and the local GSM flavour, PCS1900. ®




To: Catcher who wrote (650)10/15/1999 10:00:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 12252
 
Jermemys Spoken, Spoken, Today!

Eddie is great!

im spinning......................

Go Yanks



To: Catcher who wrote (650)10/17/1999 1:01:00 AM
From: JOHN ASHBOLT  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 12252
 
Hope you enjoyed the info on PCHM, and you are looking at PHCM, great! Im a dedicated follower of ...... pharmaceuticals.
PHCM looks like its bolted and with the big crash about to happen I would not buy right now.
LIVE, "The distance to here" A very good CD. Latest.
JA