All ITProPortal Channels
 
GSM Association Banks On RFID Technology To Boost Handsets

GSM Association Banks On RFID Technology To Boost Handsets

18 November, 2008, by Desire Athow



Tags: Mobileme, NFC


The GSM association which represents the mobile industry, is pushing hard to get Near Field Communication (NFC) features added to mobile phones as early as mid-2009, including the Single Wire Protocol NFC interface.

At an event, held in Macau, China, the association called for the ETSI (European Telecommunications Standards Institute) backed Single Wire Protocol standard (SWP) to be implemented as quickly as possible.

NFC technology is already widespread across UK and is used as the gatekeeper for London Underground's transport system.

The Pay-Buy-Mobile initiative, as it is known, is being held back by the lack of NFC-capable phones but already, according to Telecoms.com, trials are being run in 8 countries with 9 mobile operators with a similar number planning more pilots across the globe.

O2 had a successful six-month trial which saw 500 Londoners use a NFC capable Nokia 6131 mobile phone that was used both as an electronic wallet and an Oyster card.

A report by Juniper Research says that up to 700 million NFC enabled mobile phones will be sold by 2013, representing up to 25 percent of the market by then.

In related news, the GSM association is also in talks with ENUM, an E.164 telephone Number Mapping protocol, to bring IP addresses to phone numbers using a service called Patfhfinder.

Desire Athow Posted by Desire Athow on 18 November, 2008

Désiré Athow is the Content Editor of ITProPortal.com and has been writing technology articles for nearly a decade. You can follow him on Twitter.



BlackBerry Storm 9500HTC G1

Mobile Phones

Compare over 250mobile phones &
52,000 deals!





Hot Topics
Spotify
Spotify

Spotify is certainly one of the most popular online music websites in the world which is a feat for a service that was officially launched only in February 2009

 
Nokia OVI
Nokia OVI

OVI is Nokia's response to Apple's conquering App Store

 
Microsoft Bing
Microsoft Bing

Bing is the new name of Microsoft's latest search engine iteration

 

Forgot your password?