Net Soup: Frank Beacham
Going Wireless: Is this TV Redux?
At a recent trade show, I was shown a nifty wireless
portable organizer/cellphone that displayed Peter Jennings reading
the ABC News in a color picture the size of a jumbo postage stamp.
"Now how cool is this?" the marketer demanded to know.
"Real cool," I responded, not wanting to
rain on this guy's enthusiastic parade by engaging him in a give-and-take
over why anyone would ever want to watch Peter Jennings on an oversized
cellphone.
In fact, I realized as I walked away, that I already
have such a device. It's a tiny battery-operated TV with a one-inch
display that can "wirelessly" receive Peter Jennings any
night of the week from my local ABC affiliate.
The little TV is at home in a drawer, where it has
remained untouched for years. Perhaps waiting for some unforeseen
emergency, but never once to catch Peter on the run.
The device I was shown, a Nokia 9210 Communicator,
will be on the market in the United States later this year. As technology
goes, it's a remarkable gadget. At about eight ounces, the Communicator
is not only a GSM cellphone, but a keyboarded wireless minicomputer
with built-in applications compatible with Microsoft Office. I had
seen Peter Jennings on the built-in RealPlayer from RealNetworks.
Wow, streaming media comes to cellphones!
I mean no disrespect to the technology. But after
the novelty wears off, how many people are going to find real utility
for such a complex gadget in their daily lives? A few, I expect,
but not anywhere near the mass market that Nokia covets.
Now that cellphone networks are moving to 2.5 and
3G (generation) systems that can handle the bandwidth demands of
video, what will most people use them for? It's the gazillion dollar
question that some telecom companies have bet the farm to find out.
SIMPLE AND PRACTICAL
Experience has taught me that no matter how convenient
these wireless gadgets appear on paper, their practical value often
falls short of expectations with daily use. The shortcomings slowly
emerge over time. Usually, this awareness comes long after the date
for a refund has expired.
Another observation is that the most advanced technology
often doesn't translate into a useful product. There's great virtue
in simplicity. The Palm organizer is a good example. Most people
still use the Palm's basic, simple features to find phone numbers,
addresses and appointments. The company termed this elementary approach
to computing "the Zen of Palm."
Yet manufacturers have repeatedly tried to turn these
easy-to-use organizers into sophisticated audio-visual pocket computers.
Predictably, the mass market has not yet responded to the added
bulk, greater complexity, higher cost and shorter battery life.
Now that the wireless Internet is upon us, what will
real people do with the technology? I'll bet they won't watch Peter
Jennings. I suspect they'll do simple things away from home or office
tasks like checking e-mail, airline flight delays and other
routine information needs that pop up on a daily basis.
But do we need a high-bandwidth wireless network for
that? One of the more practical of the new Internet-connected, wireless
gadgets I've recently experienced utilizes the least amount of bandwidth
on one of the nation's slowest data networks. At a transfer rate
of up to eight kilobits per second, it would gag on video, but that
doesn't matter. This new device a no-brainer to use
does a few very practical things well at a reasonable cost. It's
the new 5.9-ounce Palm i705 Handheld wireless organizer.
WORKHORSE
Essentially, the Palm i705 at $449 retail
builds on the platform's popular organizer functions by adding a
very efficient and flexible always-on wireless e-mail application.
Its built-in radio allows users to retrieve e-mail in 260 urban
areas over Cingular Interactive's Mobitex wireless network (originally
RAM Mobile Data), a packet-switched data-only workhorse from the
early 1990s that still outperforms most of the newer digital cellular
networks.
Accessing e-mail over this network a decade ago was
very expensive, with monthly costs usually exceeding $100. Palm,
through its Palm.Net service, now offers limited usage for as little
as $20 a month. Unlimited airtime is as low as $35 a month.
Designed specifically for e-mail and limited Web access,
the i705 targets people who need to keep up-to-date with their messages
wherever they might be. The device is amazingly flexible, allowing
encrypted access to just about any type of e-mail account
whether it be POP3, corporate, Hotmail, Yahoo or AOL. It also works
with AOL Instant Messaging. New messages are signaled by beep, vibration
or a flashing red light.
Another feature that I like is the ability to use
my existing e-mail address for responses to messages sent (or forwarded)
to the Palm.Net address supplied with the service. This means those
who receive messages from the i705 see your regular address and
not an unfamiliar one that can cause confusion.
For years, greater bandwidth has been held out as
the holy grail that will certainly jumpstart "anywhere, anytime"
Internet technology. Now, with the deployment of high-speed wireless
nearing reality, the same deficiency that has slowed wired broadband
adoption is back a lack of compelling applications.
THE WRONG PATH?
One wonders if the telecoms are embarking down the
same treacherous path that American broadcasters did with terrestrial
DTV that is, building another technology just for technology's
sake. Is streaming video on cellphones the best application the
industry can come up with to justify the new wireless infrastructure?
Let's hope not.
A new killer app needs to be found
and fast!
Or it may just be déjà vu all over again for another
Internet technology.
Frank Beacham is a New York City-based writer and
producer. Visit his Web site at http://www.beacham.com.
E-mail: frank@beacham.com
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