"The industry is trying to move the desktop metaphor to mobile devices," says Craig Peddie, a messaging-technology executive with Motorola Inc. At the JavaOne developers conference in San Francisco last week, Motorola unveiled a download server that phone companies can use to support games, instant messaging, shared calendars, and other services. MmO2, formerly BT Cellnet, is the first to test the server, called Mobile Services Café, which is based on Java 2 Micro Edition. Motorola says it has shipped 4.5 million Java-enabled phones in the past year and plans to ship 6 million this year. Nokia, which sells eight J2ME phones, says it will sell "tens of millions" of the handsets this year.
"When I talk to CIOs, they say the BlackBerry is no longer a communication device, it's a corporate computing asset," says Research in Motion VP David Yach. "It's a big shift for them." Some 13,000 companies use the BlackBerry for everything from recording gas meter readings to tracking client time for lawyers.
Southern Linc, an Atlanta telco subsidiary of Southern Co. that serves 250,000 business and government customers in the Southeast, signed an agreement last week with Tira Wireless to offer its subscribers J2ME-based apps. According to Julie Pigott, Southern Linc's VP of marketing, the company is still considering what apps to offer.
More straight-business uses of Java-enabled wireless devices would follow the anticipated consumer boom. Motorola and Research in Motion Ltd., whose new BlackBerry handheld includes a cell phone, last week demonstrated an application that can access back-office systems using Java-enabled phones so salespeople, for example, can verify order status.
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