CSA Explains:
Wireless
by Tim Smith, PhD, June 17, 2002
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On Friday morning, 14 June, I had the pleasure of
attending the "CSA Explains: Wireless" event at the Lewis
Center of De Paul University. This was one of the best technology
and business seminars I had yet attended. Each speaker provided
clear insight into the technological developments associated with
Wireless and their perceived opportunities to translate the difficulties
and evolutions of the wireless world into business.
While Ari Kaplan, CEO of Expand Beyond, moderated,
Dan Ehrmann of Risetime Technologies, Michael DelCiello formerly
of Curious Networks, and Craig Goren, of Centerpost walked us through
the wireless landscape.
Mr. Ehrmann provided a strong factual orientation
to the wireless arena. As an adjunct professor at De Paul, he has
collected a number of fundamental facts of the wireless arena. One
such set of facts concerned the correlation of the technological
platform to the distance and throughput of wireless communication:
(1) RFID, used in I-Pass, the Mobile Speedpass, and
also for identification of military crates in Desert Storm, works
best below 5 meters of distance and is sold at volume prices around
$0.50 per chip.
(2) Bluetooth, the technology long in development
but slow in deployment, works best in the personal arena below 10
meters and is priced around $5 per chip.
(3) 802.11x, using a wireless IP networking protocol,
has been deployed in WiFi and corporate wireless networking. Its
best distance is in the 100 meter range, but members of the audience
note that they have successfully picked up signals at 5 km. 802.11b
was blamed for many of the security breaches that have made the
news lately, while it is anticipated that 802.11g will soon be released
and address many of these issues while importantly retaining backwards
compatibility.
(4) Finally, Cellular, 2G, 2.5G, and 3G, works within
the 100 m to 10 km
range.
Mr. DelCiello was very upbeat regarding wireless platforms.
In approaching the value proposition of providing data on a variety
of wireless platforms, heused the phrase "perishable data."
By this, he meant data which has a time-dependent value to the receiver
-- either email which requires a quick response, or less mundane
applications such as customer knowledge before a salesperson walks
in the prospects door, or near real-time pricing data, logistics
data, etc. Mr. DelCiello described the high variety of devices that
support wireless data, their form factors, memory size, user input
method, and user interface. Each separate combination requires a
different way to think about how the user will access and interact
with data on a wireless device. He highlighted the need for inter-applicability
of the wireless data and its deployment platform, ending with the
note: It's not just a technological question, determine the business
drivers, success metrics, and processes.
Mr. Goren changed the subject from "pull"
technologies to "push" technologies. While "push"
has not yet taken off in regards to the forwardingof location specific
information (for example, if a person is within 100 feet of a restaurant,
a server automatically sends a message telling him what's on the
menu and a discount), it was demonstrated to provide a high level
of value within specific applications. The application he demonstrated
was from United Airlines. In this demonstration, the pushed data
had a high degree of personalization and immediacy. It specified
the recipient, the status of a flight that the recipient was to
depart upon, and all updated information such as the gate, time,
etc. At the end of his talk, he outlined where automated pushed
information was inappropriate, and where it provides a high level
of value for the recipient.
At the end of the talk, Mr. Kaplan asked four excellent
questions: "Myths of Wireless? Favorite Gadgets? Industry Stage
in the Technology Life Cycle? The Role of Chicago?" To this
I added a question regarding the "Convergence of technology
or the proliferation of wireless?" Mr. Erhmann replied that
he foresaw a convergence in the underlying technology of wireless
but hundreds of different form factors and designs, dependent upon
the target market and the target application.
Mr. Goren anticipated a continued proliferation of
devices, but the consolidation of information within any one particular
device. And lastly, Mr. DelCiello also foresaw the continued proliferation
of devices, but the convergence of functionality. Their answers
imply that the fundamentaltechnology regarding wireless is maturing
to the point that applications can safely be developed and deployed
by large corporations, and it may be time to enter another up-tick
in the tech sector.
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My thanks goes out to the Chicago Software Association for hosting
this event and each of the speakers for their excellent preparation
and presentation.
---
Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach. www.wiglaf.biz.
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Also Appearing in
The May Report, TECH BUSINESS BRIEFS, June 17, 2002
Source Code, CSA's Electronic Newsletter, July 16
2002
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