Java will displace Wap, says Gartner

Wap will be replaced by Java technology as higher speed mobile services become available, but for now it remains a viable tactical choice.

John Leyden at Gartner Symposium/ITxpo in Florida

Wap will be replaced by Java technology as higher speed mobile services become available, but for now it remains a viable tactical choice.

Nick Jones, research director at Gartner, said as more sophisticated handsets come to market Wap will be seen as "the lowest common denominator" for service delivery.

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Speaking at Gartner's Symposium/ITxpo this week, Jones said that despite Wap "being about as exciting as using a 3270 [an old IBM workstation] with a screen the size of a postage stamp", deployment of the technology makes sense for projects that can show a rapid return on investment.

However, problems such as limited graphics, security weaknesses (particularly at the Wap gateway) and a lack of development tools bode ill for the long-term future of the technology. The risk of fragmentation, increased by so-called browser wars between phone.com and Nokia, is another problem for the protocol, according to Jones.

"We see Wap as a 'tactical' technology that will be absorbed by 2004 as the poor bandwidth and latency deficiencies of mobile networks are resolved," he said.

Jones added that Java will be one of the technologies that sidelines Wap, because it provides superior usability needed for functions such as maps, device independence and, crucially, better gaming opportunities.

"Wap's greatest crime is that it is boring," said Jones, who added that Microsoft's Windows CE and Symbian's Epoc will also provide a way of delivering real applications to mobile devices.

Wap should still be considered where returns of investment in around six months can be shown, and will be dominant in geographies such as Europe until 2003.

Jones advised the consideration of SMS for low-end services, and that service providers should above else "concentrate on the quality of the user experience" in delivering Wap to users.

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Further reading

Enterprises warned of m-commerce minefield

Enterprises should be careful when choosing a platform as the basis of their mobile ecommerce strategy, Giga Information Group has warned, because any of the four major players could be out of the running by the end of the year.

Microsoft won't defeat Java

Users will have to support both Microsoft and Java application server standards for several years, and application server software will complement middleware, rather than replace it.

Pocket PC gets wireless upgrade

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