Nokia’s new Cellular phone offering – Enhanced Mobile Browsing Experience
Nokia’s new phone sets the hot area for wireless service providers.
The Fact: High bandwidth and cheaper fees make it more attractive to connect your wireless device to web
The Chanllange: Limited computing power, shorter battery life and small display screen of your device
The Oppotunitity: Enhanced service that attracts customers to replace their computers with mobile phones, replace laptop computers with PDAs.
The Technology: Web2.0 enhanced websites that target PDA users.
Business Model: You can apply all the tricks used on internet
Then, all of us will have a cell phone that labels “Intel Inside”, “AMD Inside” or Microft Inside, or Google Inside
Cellular and WiFi on a device-based collision course
With national cellular wireless networks becoming more of a 3G data monster these days — finally — WiFi in all its shapes and forms is becoming just as ubiquitous in major metro areas, from local hotels and restaurants to covering entire cities. This begs the question — when do traditional cellular networks mesh with WiFi networks, since they are both datapipes for voice and data? How about right now.
We are seeing more UMA-enabled handsets from major vendors and my guess is that more handsets will feature both traditional cellular connectivity and WiFi access at the same time, for many reasons. But, will we see total convergence of the two standards? I doubt this, although supreme interoperability may be looming on the near horizon.