Over the past year, Webmasters have seen the hype about wireless technologies come and go. For a while, wireless was the hot new thing, but just as with B2C and B2B, the hype machine for Wireless ...
When the Wireless Applications Protocol (WAP) was introduced in 1997 by Unwired Planet (now Openwave), Ericsson, Motorola, and Nokia, it was expected that millions of users would soon surf the ...
A Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) gateway sits between the Internet and your mobile device. The gateway parses websites into a readable format for mobile devices using the Wireless Markup Language ...
The WAP Forum recently released the next revision (Version 2.0) of specifications for the Wireless Application Protocol (WAP). As an evolution of the open wireless standards for delivering ...
We have all heard the phrase killer wireless application. Unfortunately, those killer apps are more complicated than they look. Competing standards, myriad devices, and different browsers create a ...
Uptake of Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) will be slow throughout western Europe, according to the latest report from researcher IDC. The analyst said that a number of factors, including competing ...
Wireless Application Protocol, or "WAP," was once the industry standard for serving mobile Web pages. However, the iPhone supports HTML instead of WAP by default with ...
On October 28, 2001, Ghanaweb launched its functional Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) service, becoming the first Ghanaian site to have a WAP service that enabled mobile phone users, to view ...
When it comes to accessing Internet-based information while on the move, wireless customers have said they want personalized, timely and precise information delivered securely to a variety of devices, ...
Yes, the Wireless Application Protocol! What other WAP could there possibly be? This long-dormant cellphone standard is now once again available on the web, thanks to [Sean] over at ActionRetro ...