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1G
In mobile telephony, first-generation systems were analog,
circuit-switched. Voice links were poor, handoff unreliable,
capacity low, and security non-existent. 1G systems are not
now under active development – indeed, in some areas
1G spectrum is being auctioned for 2G and 3G use.
2G
In mobile telephony, second-generation protocols use digital
encoding and include GSM, D-AMPS (TDMA) and CDMA. 2G networks
are in current use around the world. These protocols support
high bit rate voice and limited data communications. They
offer auxiliary services such as data, fax and SMS. Most 2G
protocols offer different levels of encryption.
2.5G
In mobile telephony, 2.5G protocols extend 2G systems to provide
additional features such as packet-switched connection (GPRS)
and enhanced data rates (HSCSD, EDGE).
3G
In mobile telephony, third-generation protocols support much
higher data rates, measured in Mbps, intended for applications
other than voice. 3G networks trials started in Japan in 2001.
3G networks are expected to be starting in Europe and part
of Asia/Pacific by 2002, and in the US later. 3G will support
bandwidth-hungry applications such as full-motion video, video-conferencing
and full Internet access. www.3gpp.org
AMPS
Advanced Mobile Phone System: a 1G standard which operates
in the 800-900MHz-frequency band. It is still widely used
in the United States.
Analog
The simple way to transmit speech, which is translated into
electronic signals of different frequency and/or amplitude.
The first networks for mobile phones, as well as broadcast
transmissions, were analog. Due to being longer established
in some countries, analog networks may offer better coverage
than digital networks, however analog phones are less secure
and suffer more from interference where the signal is weak.
Analog systems include AMPS, NMT and ETACS.
API
Historically, "application programming interface".
Practically, an API is any interface that enables one program
to use facilities provided by another, whether by calling
that program, or by being called by it. At a higher level
still, an API is a set of functionality delivered by a programming
system, and as such the mix of APIs in a particular system
tells you what that system can do.
Bluetooth
An open specification for seamless wireless short-range communications
of data and voice between both mobile and stationary devices.
For instance, it specifies how mobile phones, computers and
PDAs interconnect with each other, with computers, and with
office or home phones. The first generation of Bluetooth permits
exchange of data up to a rate of 1 Mbps per second, even in
areas with much electromagnetic disturbance. It transmits
and receives via a short-range radio link using a globally
available frequency band (2.4 GHz ISM band).
bps
Bits per second: a way of quantifying data transmission throughput.
It is the number of pieces of information (bits) transmitted
or received per second.
C++
An industry standard object-oriented compiled language, formally
standardized in 1998, but tracing its history to the early
1980s, with an heritage in C and Simula. C++ is a general-purpose
programming language with a bias towards systems programming.
C++ runs on most computers from the most powerful supercomputers
to the ubiquitous personal computers. Symbian OS is written
in C++.
CDMA
Code Division Multiple Access: a digital wireless telephony
transmission technique.
1. CDMA allows multiple frequencies to be used simultaneously
(Spread Spectrum). The CDMA idea was originally developed
for military use over 30 years ago.
2. The CDMA standards used for second-generation mobile telephony
are the IS-95 standards championed by QUALCOMM.
Cellular
Radio
The technology that has made large scale mobile telephony
possible. Current cellular networks reuse the same radio frequencies
by assigning them to cells far enough apart to reduce interference.
A cell is the geographical area covered by one radio base
station transmitting/receiving in the center. The size of
each cell is determined by the terrain, transmission power,
and forecasted number of users. Service coverage of a given
area is based on an interlocking network of cells, called
a cell system.
Circuit-Switching
Means of creating a connection by setting up a dedicated end-to-end
circuit, which remains open for the duration of the communication.
CLDC
J2ME Connected Limited Device Configuration. The CLDC serves
the market consisting of personal, mobile, connected information
devices. This configuration includes some new classes designed
specifically to fit the needs of small-footprint devices.
Communicator
A generic name for information centric mobile phones. In effect
a fully featured personal digital assistant and mobile phone
in one unit. The Nokia 9210 Communicator is an example of
such a Symbian OS phone.
Content
Provider
A company that provides services to mobile phone users or
network operators. These services could be shopping, web surfing,
chat rooms, playing games, accessing data such as music and
books through a server.
Crystal
Code-name for a half VGA reference design for Symbian OS.
D-AMPS
Digital AMPS (Digital-Advanced Mobile Phone Service) is the
digital wireless standard widely used throughout the Americas,
Asia Pacific and other areas. D-AMPS uses digital TDMA on
the one hand, and is required to be compatible with installed
AMPS base station networks on the other. D-AMPS operates on
the 800 and 1900 MHz bands.
DCS
1800
Digital Communications System: another name for GSM working
on a radio frequency of 1800 MHz. Also known as GSM1800 or
PCN, this digital network operates in Europe and Asia Pacific.
Digital
A way of encoding information. On digital networks, data doesn’t
need to go though the extra step of being converted to an
analog signal, voice is sampled and coded in a way similar
to how it is recorded on a CD. Digital networks are fast replacing
analog ones as they offer improved sound quality, secure transmission
and can handle data directly as well as voice. Digital networks
include mobile systems GSM, D-AMPS, CDMA, TDMA and UMTS.
Dual
band
Dual band mobile phones can work on networks that operate
on different frequency bands. This is useful if you move between
areas covered by different networks. Some networks operate
on two bands, for instance GSM-1800 in town centers and GSM-900
in the rest of the country.
Dual
mode
Dual mode mobile phones have more than one air interface and
hence can work on more than one network. One example is phones
that operate on both digital and analog networks. They are
quite useful if you want the advantages of a digital phone,
but regularly visit areas where analog is the only service
available.
EDGE
Enhanced Data Rates for GSM Evolution. An enhanced modulation
technique designed to increase network capacity and data rates
in GSM networks. EDGE should provide data rates up to 384
Kbps. EDGE will let operators without a 3G license to compete
with 3G networks offering similar data services. EDGE is not
expected before 2001 at the earliest.
EPOC
Deprecated term. Refer to Symbian OS.
E-TACS
Extended Total Access Communications System: a 1G mobile phone
network developed in the UK and available in Europe and Asia.
FCT
Fixed Cellular Terminal - also known as : GSM Gateway, GSM
Modem, GSM Router, Mobile Gateway, channel bank, GSM channel
Bank, ISDN GSM Gateway, analogue GSM gateway.
Fixed
Cellular Terminal
Mobile Device that allows fixed telephony devices such as
PBX Telephone Systems to connect directly to the GSM Mobile
Phone Network - This may be to allow PBX users to call colleages
on their mobiles free of charge, or call other mobile users
at reduced rates (depending upon available tariffs) - or for
use in remote offices where no fixed line services are available
(eg building site / remote monitoring post) - for landline
substitution then Fixed Cellular Terminals are available that
can provide voice, fax and data over the GSM network such
as the Ericsson
F251m.
GPRS
General Packet Radio Service: a radio technology for GSM networks
that adds packet-switching protocols, shorter set-up time
for ISP connections, and offer the possibility to charge by
amount of data sent rather than connect time. GPRS promises
to support flexible data transmission rates typically up to
20 or 30 Kbps (with a theoretical maximum of 171.2 Kbps),
as well as continuous connection to the network. A 2.5G enhancement
to GSM, GPRS is the most significant step towards 3G, needing
similar business model, and service and network architectures.
GPRS started to appear in some networks during 2000.
GSM
Global System for Mobile communications, the most widely used
digital mobile phone system and the de facto wireless telephone
standard in Europe. Originally defined as a pan-European open
standard for a digital cellular telephone network to support
voice, data, text messaging and cross-border roaming. GSM
is now one of the world's main 2G digital wireless standards.
GSM is present in more than 160 countries and according to
the GSM Association, accounts for approximately 70 percent
of the total digital cellular wireless market. GSM is a time
division multiplex (TDM) system. Implemented on 800, 900,
1800 and 1900 MHz frequency bands.
GSM
Gateway
A mobile phone device thats takes a single SIM card or multiple
SIMS and provides a telecoms interface - either Analogue (FXO/FXS)
to allow connection to Analogue trunk of a Telephone System
(or to allow a standard telephone to connect directly), ISDN
Interfaces such as ISDN2e and ISDN30 for connection to ISDN
telephone systems and VOIP interfaces to allow the gateway
to connect to a Voice Over IP network. The GSM Gateway enables
these traditional telephony devices to connect directly to
the mobile phone network, usually providing the user with
access to cheaper call rates. (see www.gsmsave.co.uk)
HSCSD
High Speed Circuit Switched Data: dedicated circuit-switched
data communications technology for GSM which boosts data throughput
up to 14.4 Kbps in a single channel, and by aggregating channels,
up to 57.6 Kbps. An asymmetrical service can be offered where,
for instance, one channel is allocated for the uplink and
several are aggregated for the downlink. HSCSD can provide
a fixed bit rate (transparent mode) or a variable one (non-transparent
mode). In most cases HSCSD is available to network operators
as a pure software upgrade. HSCSD started to appear in some
networks in 1999.
IMT-2000
International Mobile Telecommunications-2000: term used by
the International Telecommunications Union (ITU) for the specification
for projected third-generation wireless services. Formerly
referred to as FPLMTS, Future Public Land-Mobile Telephone
Systems.
i-mode
Proprietary packet-based information service for mobile phones.
i-mode delivers information (such as mobile banking, and train
timetable) to mobile phones and enables exchange of email
from handsets on the PDC-P network. Launched in 1999 by NTT
DoCoMo, i-mode is very popular in Japan (especially for email
and transfer of icons), but is not currently being used elsewhere,
IrDA
1. A suite of protocols for infrared (IR) exchange of data
between two devices, up to 1 or 2 meters apart (20 to 30 cm
for low-power devices). IrDA devices typically have throughput
of up to either 115.2 Kbps or 4 Mbps. IrDA protocols are implemented
in Symbian OS phones, many PDAs, printers and laptop computers.
2. The Infrared Data Association, the industry body that specifies
IrDA protocols, originally founded by Hewlett-Packard and
others.
Java
Industry standard object-oriented language and virtual machine,
invented by Sun Microsystems and formally released in 1996.
Java is an ideal language for network applications and applets.
Sun's Java specifications include many Java APIs and platforms,
including the JavaPhone API and PersonalJava platform, which
are included in Symbian OS.
J2ME
Java 2 Platform, Micro Edition (J2ME): The edition of the
Java platform that is targeted at small, standalone or connectable
consumer and embedded devices. The J2ME technology consists
of a virtual machine and a set of APIs suitable for tailored
runtime environments for these devices. The J2ME technology
has two primary kinds of components – configurations
and profiles.
JavaPhone
A Java API specification controlling contacts, power management,
call control, and phonebook management, intended specifically
for the programmability requirements of mobile phones.
JTAPI
The Java Telephony API is an extensible API that offers an
interface to all call control services (from those needed
in a consumer device up to those of call centers). JTAPI is
part of the JavaPhone API.
Kernel
Core of an operating system, a kernel manages the machine’s
hardware resources (including the processor and the memory),
and provides and controls the way any other software component
can access these resources. The kernel runs with a higher
privilege than other programs (so-called user-mode programs).
The power and robustness of an OS's kernel play a major role
in shaping overall system design and reliability.
MExE
Mobile Station Application Execution Environment (GSM 02.57):
a framework to ensure a predictable environment for third-party
applications in GSM or UMTS handsets (ie the Mobile Station).
MExE does this by defining different technology requirements
called "classmarks". MExE classmark 1 is based on
WAP, classmark 2 on PersonalJava and JavaPhone, and classmark
3 on J2ME CLDC and MIDP. Other classmarks may be defined in
the future. MExE specifies additional requirements for all
classmarks, for instance a security environment, capability
and content negotiation, a user profile, user interface personalization,
management of services and virtual home environment. A handset
can support any number of classmarks.
MIDP
Mobile Information Device Profile. Set of Java APIs that is
generally implemented on the Connected Limited Device Configuration
(CLDC). It provides a basic J2ME application runtime environment
targeted at mobile information devices, such as mobile phones
and two-way pagers. The MIDP specification addresses issues
such as user interface, persistent storage, networking, and
application model.
Network
operator
Company with a license to provide wireless telephony services.
NMT
Nordic Mobile Telephone. One of the earliest 1G cellular network
developed jointly in Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and
Sweden. Originally operated in the 450 MHz band. Later the
900 MHz was used as well.
OBEX
Object Exchange: a set of high-level protocols allowing objects
such as vCard contact information and vCalendar schedule entries
to be exchanged using either IrDA (IrOBEX) or Bluetooth. Symbian
OS implements IrOBEX for exchange of vCards, for example between
a Nokia 9210 Communicator and an Ericsson R380 Smartphone,
and vCalendar.
OS
Operating System: historically, the minimal set of software
needed to manage a device's hardware capability and share
it between application programs. Practically, "OS"
is now used to mean all software including kernel, device
drivers, comms, graphics, data management, GUI framework,
system shell application, and utility applications. This would
define Windows, Palm OS and MacOS as operating systems. Symbian
provides an operating system – Symbian OS – tailored
for data-enabled mobile phones.
OPL
A BASIC-like programming language, for rapid application development,
used on Symbian OS.
Packet-switching
Technique whereby the information (voice or data) to be sent
is broken up into packets, of at most a few KB each, which
are then routed by the network between different destinations
based on addressing data within each packet. Use of network
resources is optimized, as the resources are needed only during
the handling of each packet. This is an ideal model for ad
hoc data communication, and works well also for voice, video
and other streamed data. Mobile phones with packet-switched
communication appear to be "always connected" to
the data network, whereas in the case of circuit-switched
connections, setup time takes around 30 seconds to connect
from a mobile phone to an ISP. Use of packet-switched network
can be charged according to the volume of data transferred
and not to any notion of time spent online.
PCN
Personal Communications Network: another name for GSM 1800
(it is also known as DCS 1800). It is used in Europe and Asia
Pacific.
PCS
Personal Communications Service: an American generic term
for a mass-market mobile phone service, emphasizing personal
communication, independent of the technology used to provide
it. PCS includes such digital cellular technologies as GSM
1900, CDMA and TDMA IS-136.
PDC
Personal Digital Cellular: the 2G TDMA-based protocols used
in Japan, owned by NTT DoCoMo. PDC services operate in the
800 and 1500 MHz bands.
PersonalJava
A Java platform optimized for the requirements and constraints
of mobile devices.
Platform
A set of technology, which acts as a foundation for real-world
applications, or higher-level platforms. Symbian OS includes
C++ APIs, a leading Java implementation, an application suite
and integration with wireless and other communications protocols.
Polyphonic
Ringtones
Todays poly ringtones are almost as good as the original records,
the quality gets better all the time due to continuous improvement
in mobile phone audio technology. Most modern mobile phones
with play 16 track tunes. Whilst the early mobile phones that
would only play monophonic sounds are still around it is only
a matter of time before all mobile phone manufacturers produce
handsets that play polyphonic tones. Polytones sound good
and most hits are available to be transmitted in stereo to
give up to 40 different notes playing at a time.
Quartz
Code-name for a tablet-like, quarter-VGA portrait screen size,
pen-based, reference design.
Reference
design
User interface designs for Symbian OS delivered to Symbian
licensees
Service
provider
A company that provides mobile phone users with services and
subscriptions to mobile phone networks.
SIM
Subscriber Identity Module. The SIM card is the smart card
inserted inside all GSM phones. It identifies the user account
to the network, handles authentication and provides data storage
for basic user data and network information. It may also contain
some applications that run on a compatible phone (SIM Application
Toolkit).
Smartphone
A generic name for voice centric mobile phones with information
capability. The Ericsson R380 Smartphone is an example of
such a Symbian OS phone.
SMS
Short Message Service: available on digital GSM networks allowing
text messages of up to 160 characters to be sent and received
via the network operator's message center to your mobile phone,
or from the Internet, using a so-called "SMS gateway"
website. If the phone is powered off or out of range, messages
are stored in the network and are delivered at the next opportunity.
Symbian
Connect
The PC-based Symbian Connect is a system for data synchronization,
file management, printing via PC, application installation
from a PC, and other utility functions allowing Symbian OS
phones to integrate effectively with PC and server-based data.
Symbian
Developer Network
The developers' support network for Symbian OS, where you
will find all the resources to enable you to develop world-class
applications for Symbian OS phones.
Symbian
OS
Symbian’s advanced open standard operating system for
data enabled mobile phones. It includes a multi-tasking multithreaded
core, a user interface framework, data services enablers,
application engines and integrated PIM functionality and wireless
communications.
SyncML
Synchronization Markup Language, an industry-wide effort to
create a single, common data synchronization protocol optimized
for wireless networks. SyncML's goal is to have networked
data that support synchronization with any mobile device,
and mobile devices that support synchronization with any networked
data. The SyncML structured data layer will use XML wherever
appropriate. SyncML is intended to work on transport protocols
as diverse as HTTP, WSP (part of WAP) and OBEX, and with data
formats ranging from personal data (e.g. vCard & vCalendar)
to relational data and XML documents. The SyncML consortium
was set up by IBM, Nokia and Psion among others. Symbian is
a sponsor of the SyncML consortium.
TACS
Total Access Communication System: a British 1G analog mobile
telephone standard based on the US AMPS system. It was later
adopted in other countries including Hong-Kong and Japan.
TDMA
1. Time Division Multiple Access: a digital wireless telephony
transmission technique. TDMA allocates each user a different
time slot on a given frequency. GSM, D-AMPS, PDC and DECT
use TDMA in one form or another. 2. A name generally used
for D-AMPS. TDMA networks are operated in the US, Latin America,
New Zealand, parts of Russia and Asia Pacific.
UMTS
Universal Mobile Telecommunications Service, part of the IMT-2000
initiative, is a 3G standard supporting a theoretical data
throughput of up to 2 Mbps. First trials started in 2001.
It should be rolled out in most of the world by 2005.
Unicode
A 16-bit character encoding scheme allowing characters from
Western European, Eastern European, Cyrillic, Greek, Arabic,
Hebrew, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Thai, Urdu, Hindi and all
other major world languages, living and dead, to be encoded
in a single character set. The Unicode specification also
includes standard compression schemes and a wide range of
typesetting information required for worldwide locale support.
Symbian OS fully implements Unicode.
vCalendar
Defines a transport- and platform-independent format for exchanging
calendar and schedule information so that any vCalendar-compliant
application can send or receive calendaring and scheduling
information to or from any other vCalendar-compliant application.
For instance, users with mobile phones running vCalendar-aware
applications can schedule meetings automatically over an infrared
link or via sending an SMS.
vCard
Standard defining the format of an electronic business card.
All devices supporting vCard can exchange information such
as phone numbers and addresses. For instance a user with a
vCard-aware phonebook application on a handheld computer can
easily transfer names and phone numbers to a vCard-aware mobile
phone.
VGA
Video Graphics Array: “standard” screen size of
640 by 480 pixels.
WCDMA
Wide-band CDMA: a CDMA protocol originated by NTT DoCoMo and
now adopted for third-generation use by ETSI in Europe. WCDMA
supports very high-speed multimedia services such as full-motion
video, Internet access and video conferencing.
WAP
1. Wireless Application Protocol: a set of communication protocol
standards to make accessing online services from a mobile
phone simple. 2. WAP was conceived by four companies: Ericsson,
Motorola, Nokia, and Unwired Planet (today called Phone.com).
The WAP Forum is an industry association with over 200 members.
Symbian is a full member of the WAP Forum.
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