News
Web services invade wireless world
- By Rich Seeley
- February 12, 2003
Microsoft believes technology is aligning to make 2003 the year XML Web
services ''take off'' in applications for mobile devices, according to Steve
Lombardi, technical product manager, Microsoft's MapPoint .NET.
He points to MapPoint .NET, Microsoft's first commercially available XML Web
service, as the vanguard of this trend. With cell phone manufacturers offering
Web browser capabilities and built-in GPS, he said, the mobile hardware is now
becoming available to make mobile Web services applications practical.
Dollar Rent A Car Inc. is already using the MapPoint Web service on its
desktop Web site (http://www.dollar.com/)
as a locator to help customers find the company rental office nearest to their
location.
Microsoft's Lombardi sees the next step in this technology moving to mobile
devices where travelers can get directions to the Dollar office on cell phones
and other mobile devices as they step off a plane at the airport.
This is only the beginning of the potential applications Microsoft envisions,
which, according to Lombardi include giving real-estate agents information on
homes for sale in a neighborhood they are visiting with a customer. The locator
system would link to a back-office database of housing listings and neighborhood
demographics that the agent could view on a mobile device, he added.
For mobile workers doing inspections or repairs in the field, the MapPoint
Web service could help them not only with directions to trouble sites but also
by automatically documenting where work was performed, he said. Supervisors
could later review the locations fed back from the mobile device to analyze
whether electrical service outages, for example, were occurring in a geographic
pattern that indicated a larger problem with the power grid, he added.
All this will be possible because Web services technology allows developers
to build mobile applications that meet the thin-client requirements of handheld
devices, noted Lombardi.
''You can build very thin clients,'' he explained. ''On my Smart Phone, I'm
running simple little MapPoint applications that I use for driving directions.
They take up no client-side storage.''
This is important because maps are very data heavy.
''Just the base map data for North America is a couple gigabytes,'' he
explained. ''You can't even begin to put that kind of storage on a handheld
device. So Web services lets us conceal that complexity.''
To support development with mobile Web services, Microsoft includes Visual
Basic, Java and C# tools for building mobile applications in the latest version
of Visual Studio .NET, Lombardi said. The MapPoint Web service, including WSDL
and downloadable documentation, is available for free to developers working on
applications, he added; once the application goes commercial, Microsoft has a
pay-per-use licensing program.
More information is available at http://www.microsoft.com/mappoint/
About the Author
Rich Seeley is Web Editor for Campus Technology.