Mobile phone turns web server

February 2nd, 2006 | by amarfresh |

Windows Mobile and Palm have long since closed the gap between desktop PCs and mobile devices. Nokia has closed the gap between mobile phones and PC servers!

‘We are now able to provide a Web server on a mobile phone with a global URL than can be accessed from any browser,’ they explain. ‘In a sense, the mobile phone has now finally become a full member of the Internet.’

Why would you want to serve web pages from a mobile phone? Why not simply have your phone interface with a stationary web server?

As long as a website resides on a stationary server the physical location of that server lacks meaning, because it will never change,’ Wikman and Dosa write. ‘With a mobile website it does change and it is meaningful as the content that is shared may depend upon the current location and context. For instance, if you browse to a mobile website and ask the “administrator” to take a picture, the image you get depends upon the location of the website.’

Although neat, I don’t fully see it’s purpose. It could potentially provide a method of sharing ringtones, music and wallpapers without IR or Bluetooth. In addition, it would be interesting if this technology was available over WiFi for phones that support it. (I don’t think Nokia has a WiFi-enabled phone…yet.) Oh, I get it, this is just another way for the cellcos to charge users for data services.

Link: PC Pro
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