Startup brings storage to wireless

NEWS The same technology that lets computer users store information remotely on the Internet is on its way to mobile phones. Beginning later this year, users of mobile phones that have an Internet browser made by Access, whose customers include Japanese wireless giant NTT DoCoMo, will be able to use files that once were off limits because they were larger than their phones were built to handle. The technology behind this is called "remote storage", which lets consumers take files, store them on the Internet, then access them whenever they want. It's been a part of the wired Internet's business for more than half a decade. Storage-system makers such as EMC and Network Appliance have built huge businesses selling their wares to corporations and telecommunications companies trying to organise vast sums of digital information. Access would like to tap a similar need in the wireless networking market. Access is using US company i-Drive to make this possible, according to a deal announced Tuesday. Analysts say there are more of these types of deals in the works. Access' service has a chance to take off, analysts say, especially in Asian and European countries where the cell phone is often the computing vehicle of choice. "I expect the most interest in the near term is from markets outside the United States like in Japan where there is a consumer base that wants to manage and access rich media," said Jupiter Research analyst Joe Laszlo. He and other analysts say that regardless of where the service is used, the idea is intriguing because it addresses one of the longest-standing problems that phone customers and the telephone industry have faced. There are tens of thousands of software developers right now trying to create new things for a phone to do. Telephone service providers are building networks to stream these same software applications to cell phones. Even handset makers have been preparing phones that can do the stuff that once was considered science fiction, like installing full-colour screens for videoconferencing, interactive game playing or global positioning. But one major roadblock has always been in the way: a cell phone is small for a reason -- it needs to be portable and unobtrusive. But sacrificing size also means sacrificing the amount of hardware installed on the phone. A typical phone comes with the ability to store about 2 megabits of information. A music file, on the other hand, is anywhere between 5 megabits and 8Mbits. But by using remote storage, the file doesn't have to live inside the phone's limited memory. Instead, bits and pieces are sent one at a time for a phone to use. The technique is known as streaming. "The reason this wasn't done earlier, quite frankly, is that the technology that we dealt with and the technology available to the mass market wasn't there," said Marty Smuin, Access' executive vice president. Take me to ZDNet Enterprise Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Click on the TalkBack button and go to the ZDNet News forum. Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom. And read what others have said.

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youefou

Why not say thanks for pointing out weaknesses and ridicule him for "ufo cover-up"? its a win win ! this is all major theater.

56 minutes ago by youefou on McKinnon review court date set
malca

Having one standard would be much better but not if that one standard means lower quality video.

1 hour ago by malca on Sting in the tail for web's video codec search
J.A. Watson

Hi Jake, I like your definition. I would add "Free to support, in whatever way you see fit and appropriate, or not." jw

2 hours ago by J.A. Watson on Free Software Definition condensed
Tezzer

From what I've read here and elsewhere Viacom stands to lose very heavily from this spat. They have already lost all public credibility since it...

4 hours ago by Tezzer on Google, Viacom trade blows in YouTube copyright spat
Tezzer

Still finding it difficult to get around the site. Some articles/comments seem to have reply links and some don't - only a link to the poster.

4 hours ago by Tezzer on ZDNet UK: faster, smarter, still IT all the way
Tezzer

Unfortunately the real problem here is that a very small number of very big companies want to make a great deal of money out of this. Every house...

4 hours ago by Tezzer on It's high time we had a manifesto for fibre
dava4444

this spam bot is exasperating

8 hours ago by dava4444 on I'd Rather Have a Bigger Byte Than a Little bit...Broadband
dava4444

:D I think the server exchange does slow down a bit round 5 to 7/8 pm but I find I mostly get 3 to 4 MBps on downloads and by that time there...

8 hours ago by dava4444 on I'd Rather Have a Bigger Byte Than a Little bit...Broadband
dava4444

night before last

8 hours ago by dava4444 on I'd Rather Have a Bigger Byte Than a Little bit...Broadband
dava4444

5MBps, I saw 5.8

8 hours ago by dava4444 on I'd Rather Have a Bigger Byte Than a Little bit...Broadband
dava4444

honestly I do get

8 hours ago by dava4444 on I'd Rather Have a Bigger Byte Than a Little bit...Broadband
dava4444

thank you for the support. ..but in

8 hours ago by dava4444 on I'd Rather Have a Bigger Byte Than a Little bit...Broadband
dava4444

if you download a BIG file from the MS site then THAT is your *true* speed.

8 hours ago by dava4444 on I'd Rather Have a Bigger Byte Than a Little bit...Broadband
dava4444

Hi Fat Pop Do Wop!

8 hours ago by dava4444 on I'd Rather Have a Bigger Byte Than a Little bit...Broadband
dava4444

it filters the word 'aittude' mis spelled intentionally

8 hours ago by dava4444 on How to build a GUI for a toaster
dava4444

but with a fair amount of work, possibly. God Bless Dava

8 hours ago by dava4444 on How to build a GUI for a toaster
dava4444

But I think Googles idea could be developed into an able paradigm. right now, no.

8 hours ago by dava4444 on How to build a GUI for a toaster
dava4444

took there repos down for Ubuntu (I think there back now but they took a few months). I don't think there is a perfect answer,

11 hours ago by dava4444 on How to build a GUI for a toaster
dava4444

but the community coding and ideas would be gratis, maybe that's why OEM's can be 'slackers' when it comes to Linux. they just sit back and let...

11 hours ago by dava4444 on How to build a GUI for a toaster
dava4444

continued the bad point about that is hardware, a rival OEM can take your development and use it themselves and to retaliate you would have to go...

11 hours ago by dava4444 on How to build a GUI for a toaster

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