Expert Confirms WAP Users' Fears

Published: 1 December 2000 y., Friday
Wireless Application Protocol is supposed to be the first step towards a mobile Internet, but is failing miserably, according to the in-depth field study conducted in London, England, by the California-based Nielsen Norman Group. Although Nielsen has high hopes for a mobile Internet that will eventually run on more advanced technology, he heaps scorn on WAP. In doing so, he is one of the first experts to speak out against it, even though journalists have been saying much the same thing for several months. Nielsen advises companies to sit out the current generation of WAP while planning their mobile Internet strategies. It is just like the Web all over again, says Nielsen. His report is actually entitled: "WAP Usability -- Déjà Vu: 1994 All Over Again," alluding to a previous report from his company in 1994 which found the Web difficult to use in its early days. When the technology improved, more users adopted the Web and commercial use exploded. However, it seems clear from Nielsen's study that the two technologies are not really comparable. Even in pre-Mosaic days, the Internet was more rewarding to use than a WAP phone. One reason for the poor results, says the report, is that designers have carried over too many designs from the Web rather than re-thinking the interface specifically for the WAP medium.
Šaltinis: internetnews.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Bull Appoints Shahrom Kiani as new General Manager of its subsidiary AddressVision, Inc (AVI)

Bull has appointed Shahrom Kiani as new General Manager of its subsidiary AddressVision, Inc (AVI). more »

The man who invented the cash machine

The world's first ATM was installed in a branch of Barclays in Enfield, north London, 40 years ago this week. more »

Work Delivers High-Speed Business Services Over Cisco IP Next-Generation Network

Cisco Ethernet Fiber to the Business Solution Helps @Work Offer Business Connections Up to 1 Gigabit per Second more »