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To: Logistics who wrote (19664)5/20/1998 12:19:00 PM
From: TokyoMex  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 34592
 

SAN FRANCISCO, May 19 (Reuters) - Intel Corp., IBM Corp.,
and other major computer and telecommunications companies will
announce a venture Wednesday to enable short-distance wireless
communications between computing devices.
The venture, led by semiconductor giant Intel, includes
International Business Machines Corp., Toshiba Corp. ,
Ericsson , and Nokia , who are announcing a
consortium on Wednesday. Puma Technology Inc., a developer of
software to synchronize handheld devices, is also attending.
Analysts said the companies will develop a specification,
which is a road map for hardware and software developers, to
make devices that will enable short-range communications
between a wide variety of currently incompatible devices.
"I think it's the most important thing to happen to
wireless in 20 years," said Andrew Seybold, editor and
publisher of Andrew Seybold's Outlook, a newsletter on portable
computing and communications, in Boulder Creek, Calif.
Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel will develop a small, very
low-cost semiconductor, that will fit in almost any device,
analysts said. The project, code-named Blue Tooth, will let
devices talk to each other, without wires, over about 40 feet.
Analysts said that with the plethora of diverse computing
devices - from handheld computers like 3COM Corp.'s PalmPilot,
devices running Microsoft Corp's Windows CE, to mobile phones,
pagers, notebook computers - most cannot share information.
"The question is how will they all interact with each
other," said Gerry Purdy, president of Mobile Insights, a
Mountain View, Calif.-based consulting firm. "No one has
stopped to create a technology so these devices can talk to
each other. This is soon going to be a big problem."
Officials at Intel, Nokia, Toshiba, Puma and IBM declined
to comment on what will be announced on Wednesday. Ericsson
could not be reached for comment.
Analysts said the specifications are expected to lead to
new products which could begin to be demonstrated as early as
November at the COMDEX computer trade show and finished devices
sometime in the fall of 1999. Communications will travel over a
short-range radio frequency that does not need to be licensed.
Computer makers and appliance makers have been using
infrared technology, which lets a user "beam" information from
one device to another, but it has not been widely adopted
because of its limitations.
"You can wear your phone on your belt and the devices will
talk to each other. Or I can have my notebook in my briefcase
and my desktop can be talking to my notebook without ever
having to take it out of the briefcase," said Seybold. "It's
going to be very widely adopted, very quickly, by 1999. It will
become a de facto standard to be built in handheld device