SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Voice, Data, and IP >> Hardware, Software and Emerging Applications

Wi-Fi shines through cloudy iPhone data packages

Wi-Fi shines through cloudy iPhone data packages

By:  Jennifer Kavur  On: 21 Jul 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

While your monthly 400 MB allotment of 3G connectivity could get burned up pretty quickly, the iPhone's Wi-Fi connectivity offers a silver lining for the data-hungry

“It’s got really, really good quality of service mechanisms in place,” she said. “If you are doing something like streaming music or playing a video game…the data gets through first and gets priority so that you don’t end up with latency that would end up ruining your experience.”

Apple claims up to 300 minutes of battery life for Internet usage and/or talk time over the 3G network. Using Wi-Fi, you can expect roughly 400 minutes of Web browsing and 600 minutes for e-mail, said Davis-Felner. Talk time statistics aren’t provided for Wi-Fi, as the service isn’t yet available. “People haven’t had the opportunity to be out there testing it,” she said. “But for all those data-oriented applications, Wi-Fi is performing much better from a battery life standpoint than the 3G is.”

Wi-Fi potentially offers increased security. “From a security point of view,” said Tauschek, “you might feel a little bit better about transferring sensitive data on a secure Wi-Fi network than you would on a 3G network.”

iPhone applications are now being designed specifically for Wi-Fi use. “A few have caught our eye because of their particular suitability to the Wi-Fi link,” said Davis-Felner, who pointed to Pandora, Apple’s Remote and the eagerly anticipated iCall application (currently in beta) – the proposed first to enable voice calling over a Wi-Fi network and save user air time minutes.

Business users may find NetSketch appealing, said Davis-Felner. “[NetSketch] uses Wi-Fi only and you can connect iPhones or iPod touches over a Wi-Fi network to collaboratively create drawings and doodles,” she said. While it’s positioned as a “fun” application, NetSketch could provide a way to collaborate and draw a business diagram or create a business process, she said.

DataCase will enable you to treat the iPhone as a wireless hard drive and transfer data onto it using Wi-Fi, said Davis-Felner. “If you’re looking to get documents off your computer and transport them, you can use this,” she said. FileMagnet is another file transfer application, she recommended.

According to Tauschek, mobile CRM platform Sales Force Mobile and Oracle's Business Indicators are two key iPhone apps for the business market. “Those are the big first ones, but again, I think there will be more to follow,” he said. Tauschek also pointed to IT shops, which have the capability of using the SDK to port their own apps over to the iPhone.










Sign up for our Newsletters












Print |  Views: 8171   |   Rating:onononoffoff  (6 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur Jennifer Kavur was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2008 to 2010.

Related Content

iPhone users lean heavily on Wi-Fi for Web access
iPhone users lean heavily on Wi-Fi for Web accessA study found nearly one in five requests made over dual-mode phones other than the iPhone uses Wi-Fi. But nearly half of all iPhone traffic uses Wi-Fi rather than the cellular network.
Wireless broadband to drive iPhone sales
Wireless broadband to drive iPhone salesApple’s latest smart phone should be a boon to developers but a SeaBoard analyst notes business users have had more experience with RIM’s BlackBerries. Rogers plans to launch the iPhone 3G next month
2007: The year new mobile services faced struggles
2007: The year new mobile services faced strugglesThe year that was for cellular technologies such as muncipal wireless networks, WiMax and MVNOs
blog comments powered by Disqus