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To: Caxton Rhodes who wrote (2741)11/17/1999 10:00:00 AM
From: Mika Kukkanen  Respond to of 34857
 
What a shame, you must of missed the (E)TACS vs AMPS vs NMT fight in analogue a few years ago!!

Anyway, if it aint the industry leading standard, I would love to know what is and your definition of "industry leading"? I ask that, because as a writer in the business I need to know - rather than weighing things up and making due considerations ;-)

If you want hype, go to the CDG...they have it down to a real art! CDG's "Rent-a-quote" is brilliant at it.

M
PS. Yes I am having a bad day...2000 words by Friday for a mobile mag and I can't get through to some contacts for an interview. Aaaargh!! Of course I could always go to "rent-a-quote"...I don't think that he knows much about GPRS though (the article's subject matter).



To: Caxton Rhodes who wrote (2741)11/17/1999 1:14:00 PM
From: Mephisto  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 34857
 
Nokia sees 600 mln WAP phones in 2005 - paper

HELSINKI, Nov 17 (Reuters) - The head of Finnish telecom
equipment group Nokia [NOK1V-news][NOK-news] expects the
market for mobile phones with the Wireless Application Protocol
(WAP) to grow rapidly, business daily Kauppalehti reported.

"The number of WAP phones is projected to rise to 600 million in
2005," Chairman Jorma Ollila was quoted as telling experts in New
York.

WAP is a new standard giving mobile phones access to data
services on the Internet, and Ollila said he expected WAP to become
the leading route for accessing the Internet.

"It will become the same kind of standard for mobile phones as the
World Wide Web is for the Internet," Ollila told the paper. "The next
five years will be the time when the Internet and mobile phones
converge."

WAP mobile phones are only now reaching the market after Nokia
began shipping its 7100 series at the end of September.

Nokia's Swedish rival Ericsson [LMEb-news] has earlier said that
more than half of all mobile phone users would have WAP-enabled
phones by the beginning of 2001.

By the end of this year, the number of mobile phone users in the
world is forecast to be 450 million, but Kauppalehti quoted Ollila as
saying the number could exceed 1.2 billion in 2005.