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Printable version |
From: | "David Reid" <aspex@ix.net.nz> |
Date: | Sat, 16 Sep 2000 19:55:32 +1200 |
Hope you are wrong. I have a bucket full of
Tadpole. See below:
M-business leader's Endeavors Technology business unit releases
new, real-world web software for WAP phones and web-enabled devices Cambridge and
Carlsbad (CA), June 20, 2000 - "It's a new and better way for the growing
population of WAP-enabled phone users and web-enabled devices to do business on
the move," says Bernard Hulme, group chief executive of mobile business
computing specialist, Tadpole Technology plc.
He adds: "MagiWAPTM software transforms the
mobile phone into a smart remote controller that can access, read, move, fax, or
print documents stored on a desktop, laptop, or palmtop, whatever their
location, without first downloading data or documents to the device."
Hulme's comments followed the announcement that Endeavors Technology, Inc.,
Tadpole's recently-acquired web technology software business unit, had today
launched the second release of its innovative open-source MagiTM tool suite. Called MagiWAPTM, it joins Endeavors' authoring plugin, MagiDAVTM.
The latest software extends Magi architecture to WAP-enabled mobile phones.
For the first time, they can be used as a remote control device to fax a
business letter from a distant home PC to a customer, or to print a business
plan located on a trusted co-worker's PC to any networked printer. MagiWAP also
allows mobile phone users to read and check the contents of a quotation on their
office PCs, to then email it to a customer, or to move a proposal from a home PC
to a trusted co-worker's PC in their office - all accomplished via any number of
commercially-available WAP phones, without having to sign on to an intermediate
service, and without the document having to be downloaded to or from the phone.
"MagiWAP blazes a trail towards the next generation of mobile Web
applications," says Rohit Khare, CEO of KnowNow, Inc. and 4K Associate.
Tom Arkwright of Sun Microsystems, Inc. adds: "MagiWAP fulfills the Java
promise by unifying a vast world of cooperating devices where documents and data
are manipulated anywhere, anytime, on any device."
Forrester predicts there will be 41 million mobile Internet users in the UK
alone by 2005. More than two-thirds will have multiple Internet-enabled devices
- handhelds, desktop computers, Internet TVs, and portable computers, for
example. Endeavors' MagiDAV technology gives the web-enabled population
controlled, two-way Internet access to documents on all disparate Internet
devices, as well as to documents on devices of trusted workgroups.
MagiWAP takes MagiDAV a stage further and gives real-time, up-to-date access
to all business data, or that of trusted colleagues, from a WAP phone (or from
Magi-enabled computers or laptops), wherever it's located -- and the technology
to move it to the right hands - whether beside your computer, away from your
desk, or on the other side of the world where your documents are located.
Instead of just using WAP phones to read public broadcast information, such
as stock prices, weather, business news, and sports scores, MagiWAP allows phone
users to securely obtain "private broadcast information" - business plans, price
lists, research documents, quotations - as well as those of colleagues within a
trusted workgroup. It allows the mobile user to read, move, email, fax, or print
these documents, all from a WAP phone.
The latest Magi release is now available on-line, and can be downloaded
freely from website http://magi.endeavors.org/
About Magi Endeavors' MagiDAV architecture addresses the mounting problem of managing
and processing uncoordinated, unsynchronised information scattered randomly on
web-enabled devices. It allows an individual to get at and work on any
information held within that individual's desktop computer, laptop computer, or
palmtop handheld device from any online remote wireless web-enabled device,
anywhere. Once that information has been worked upon, the individual can also
share it, simply, directly and dynamically, with defined groups of colleagues or
collaborators, identified as "buddies", without needing intermediate servers or
services requiring time consuming and complex interactions.
About Endeavors Technology About Tadpole |
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