Event Highlights Wireless, Mobile Tools
Cell phone and PDA add-ons, network products showcased at Demo 2002.
George A. Chidi Jr., IDG News Service
PHOENIX--Wireless and mobile products are claiming much of the attention among the new technology on display at the Demo 2002 show here this week.
Some of the technology is already taking product form, soon to be marketed to consumers and business users. Others, however, are technological innovations in search of a home. They're being marketed to service providers, such as public networks and carriers, for packaging as part of a service plan.
Among the products being previewed at the event:
-
Digit
Wireless demonstrated a new keypad for cell phones, designed to
make typing short messages easier. The Fastap keypad has a 4-by-7-inch grid of
raised alphabetical keys (including a space bar) with a more standard numeric
set of keys nestled in the spaces between the grid. The keypad is designed to
eliminate the need to scroll through letter choices, like pressing the number 2
key three times for the letter C when entering text.
- New software for
Pocket PC personal digital assistants allows a user to attend a Webcast
conference--or deliver one--on the road. Presenter's
iPresentation Mobile Conference
is currently in beta test trials with selected customers and will be generally
available in April of 2002.
-
Mitigo
unveiled software that can convert the integrated digital camera of a PDA or
other mobile device into a barcode or matrix code reader. CodePoint software
operates on the device itself and not through the wireless network, requiring
sufficient processing power in a device. But if information can be encoded
densely in a matrix format, wireless devices with cameras could input larger
amounts of data without necessarily having it in an electronic format.
-
Virtual
Ink will take whiteboarding wireless with its Mimeo XI, a
device that snaps to whiteboards with suction cups. Using a digital signal
processor chip to process ultrasound and infrared input, the unit captures
whiteboard text and graphics, then stores them in flash memory. The flash
allows the device to store the recordings of a whiteboarding session, freeing
users from having to connect PCs to the Mimeo appliance.
-
Newbury
Networks announced its LocaleManager and LocaleServer software,
which allow wireless LAN administrators to define different access rights and
security procedures for different discrete areas of an 802.11-standard network.
The product could allow general Internet access from common areas like the
lobby of a building, but would only make a corporate intranet available in more
secure locations like workspaces.
- Security and performance-tracking
software for wireless networks emerged from
mFormation
Technologies. The company's Enterprise Manager software enables
organizations to secure and control wireless devices and data, monitor
performance, and pinpoint faults anywhere in a wireless network in real time
over the air.
-
Boingo
Wireless has a technology that offers a down-to-earth solution
to wireless connectivity. Boingo is an aggregator, offering a single sign-on to
what it believes will be the highly competitive world of public access network
providers, all using 802.11b access points in airports, coffee shops, and other
public spaces as the gateway to an IP network. Boingo software "sniffs out"
available networks and connects subscribers without making users key in a long
list of arcane sign-on codes.
- Wireless carriers could offer customers
the capability to call several people at once with a single command, and to
send mobile instant messages in a burst to several recipients, using new
technology from
Octave
Communications. Octave Improv allows customers to group phone
numbers so that a single command like "call soccer team," can be used to reach
an entire list of people by phone. After trying all of the phone numbers for
each person on the list, the system can optionally leave a voice message on an
answering machine or a text message via e-mail, page, short message service, or
an instant messaging system.
-
ArrayComm
is demonstrating its i-Burst broadband wireless Internet access system. Users
can access the Internet at bandwidth up to 1 megabits per second, according to
the company. ArrayComm plans to sell the technology to wireless carriers, which
would build it into their base stations and then sell i-Burst as an additional
service capability either on their own or to other Internet service providers
for consumer resale. The first commercial trials are set for later this year in
San Jose, California.
Ephraim Schwartz of InfoWorld contributed to this report.
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