Japan’s wireless Web network will open to outside providers
Published:
24 March 2001 y., Saturday
In a country of about 125 million people, the Japanese wireless Web service has signed up 21 million subscribers as of the middle of this week, beating its own optimistic forecast of 20 million by the end of March. Delivering color graphics and even sound from i-mode-enabled websites to the screens of mobile telephones, the service has been a runaway hit for DoCoMo, the wireless subsidiary of Japan’s dominant telecom, NTT.T’S THE ONLY success story in the world of wireless Internet; European and American attempts to market phones using the Wireless Applications Protocol (WAP)have met with resounding consumer indifference.
Now DoCoMo plans to expand i-mode’s reach. At a Thursday press conference in Tokyo, company president Keiji Tachikawa announced plans to give outside providers, including not only Internet service providers but also rival telecommunications companies, access to the i-mode network. “We didn’t expect this service to grow as much as it has,” Tachikawa told reporters. “We have judged it would be better for customers to use the service in a greater variety of ways,” he said. Current uses of i-mode include e-mail, stock-price lookups, movie listings and restaurant information. Users can even download images of cartoon characters, and play a fishing video game. Indeed, it’s expected that online gaming will become a an ever more popular important i-mode feature, especially among game-crazy Japanese teens. Already Sony has said it will market cables to connect i-mode phones to its Play Station game consoles. And not just in Japan. Earlier this month, DoCoMo said it expected to make i-mode services available in the United States in the first half of 2002, through its American partner AT&T Wireless. And in Europe, the company has joined forces with KPN NV of Holland and Telecom Italia Mobile to offer i-mode over the coming generation of mobile phones based on General Radio Packet Services (GPRS). This may occur in the second half of this year.
Šaltinis:
msnbc.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
The fate of blue fin tuna hangs in the balance this week as a complete ban on the trade is debated by MEPs.
more »
A $100 million pledge from the Government of Japan has helped to secure the funding base and launch the operational phase of two new climate programs supporting forest management and renewable energy investments in developing countries.
more »
Europeans quite happy with their personal situation, but less satisfied with economic and social climate in their country.
more »
Spain wishes to “make as much progress as possible” to ensure the EU becomes party to the Council of Europe's Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms soon, according to the Spanish Minister for Justice, Francisco Caamaño, at today's opening of a seminar on the challenges and possibilities arising from the Treaty of Lisbon coming into force.
more »
According to Belarusian tradition, a stork brings good fortune to the village it settles in while in western culture the stork is commonly associated with childbirth.
more »
The World Bank Board of Directors today approved an additional financing credit to the Republic of Moldova in the amount of US $20 million for the Social Investment Fund II Project.
more »
The Spanish Health and Social Policy Minister, Trinidad Jiménez, and the European Commissioner for Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities, Vladimir Spidla, addressed the press in Madrid on the launch of the European Year for Combating Poverty and Social Exclusion 2010.
more »
The European Commission and the Spanish Presidency of the EU will tomorrow launch the 2010 European Year for Combating Poverty and Social Exclusion.
more »
Smoking at a restaurant like this one in Spain could soon be a thing of the past. Spanish lawmakers want to stub out the habit in public places like bars and restaurants. But it's an unpopular proposal in a country where around 30 percent of the population smoke.
more »
As President of the European Economic and Social Committee, I would like, on behalf of all the Committee's members, to express my sympathy to the victims of the earthquake in Haiti.
more »