Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Notes for Educators: AMA Teaching Methods
- Chapter 1 Collaborative Engineering
- Chapter 2 Software Architecture and Integration Technologies
- Chapter 3 From a Specific Task to “Integration-Ready” Components
- Chapter 4 Integration with Voice
- Chapter 5 An Introduction to Knowledge Technologies
- Chapter 6 Write Once
- Chapter 7 The New Generation of Client–Server Software
- Chapter 8 Wireless Technologies
- Chapter 9 Programming Wireless Application Protocol Applications
- Chapter 10 A Single JavaCard Identity Key for All Doors and Services
- Chapter 11 The J2ME Family
- Chapter 12 Speech Technologies on the Way to a Natural User Interface
- Chapter 13 Integration with Knowledge
- Chapter 14 Distributed Life in the JXTA and Jini Communities
- Appendix 1 Java and C#: A Saga of Siblings
- Appendix 2 XML and Web Services
- Appendix 3 Source Examples
- Index
Chapter 8 - Wireless Technologies
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Notes for Educators: AMA Teaching Methods
- Chapter 1 Collaborative Engineering
- Chapter 2 Software Architecture and Integration Technologies
- Chapter 3 From a Specific Task to “Integration-Ready” Components
- Chapter 4 Integration with Voice
- Chapter 5 An Introduction to Knowledge Technologies
- Chapter 6 Write Once
- Chapter 7 The New Generation of Client–Server Software
- Chapter 8 Wireless Technologies
- Chapter 9 Programming Wireless Application Protocol Applications
- Chapter 10 A Single JavaCard Identity Key for All Doors and Services
- Chapter 11 The J2ME Family
- Chapter 12 Speech Technologies on the Way to a Natural User Interface
- Chapter 13 Integration with Knowledge
- Chapter 14 Distributed Life in the JXTA and Jini Communities
- Appendix 1 Java and C#: A Saga of Siblings
- Appendix 2 XML and Web Services
- Appendix 3 Source Examples
- Index
Summary
The wireless music box has no imaginable commercial value. Who would pay for a message sent to nobody in particular?
—Reply by corporate executives when urged to invest in the radio in the 1920s.This chapter is a brief overview of the basic principles and standards driving the world of wireless applications.
Unmatched opportunities in the mobile and wireless areas are attracting the attention of business and development. Wireless markets, including personal area networks (WPAN), local area networks (WLAN), and wideband local-area networks (WWLAN), have an estimated value today of several billion dollars according to the Gartner Group (http://www.gartner.com/5 about/pressreleases/pr11mar2003a.jsp)
According to Gartner, increasing focus on teleworking and corporate mobility to improve enterprise performance, and trends such as the move toward the real-time enterprise, will not merely exploit mobility but will demand it. At the same time, the relentless push by vendors, virtually giving away wireless capabilities with significant price/performance improvements, is fueling demand for wireless technology in the corporate marketplace. United States federal regulators are expanding the radio spectrum for wireless internet users to help bring broadband connections to rural areas.
The number of wireless devices on the Internet is growing fast. The stock of IP addresses is now almost exhausted, so it is about time to extend the Internet with Internet 2, which replaces the current IPv4 protocol with the latest IPv6 protocol and drastically increases Internet capacity and improves Internet security.
A great competition for multiple markets, running different wireless technologies, has just begun. The winners will be those wireless Internet service providers (WISPs) and wireless application service providers (WASPs) that can offer connection and content services and optimize development solutions with a unified approach across multiple client devices.
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- Integration-Ready Architecture and DesignSoftware Engineering with XML, Java, .NET, Wireless, Speech, and Knowledge Technologies, pp. 257 - 266Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2004