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NEW YORK—Several top wireless technology developers are teaming up to offer services and products that support a host of advanced applications such as Wi-Fi-to-cellular roaming.

Moves under way by such companies as Symbol Technologies Inc., IBM, Avaya Inc. and Proxim Corp. could give enterprises and mobile users alike greater network flexibility and, ultimately, extended range.

Symbol and IBM are working together to bring Symbol’s vertical-market expertise to IBM’s WebSphere Everyplace and Workplace management software, officials of the two companies said last week.

“Under the covers, we’ve been working on interfaces that tie into IBM’s software,” said David Green, director of global strategic alliances at Symbol, in Holtsville, N.Y.

Click here to read more about IBM’s new middleware strategy.

On the back end, the two companies are working on services that enable WLAN (wireless LAN)-to-WAN roaming by combining Symbol’s switching hardware with IBM’s wireless middleware and management software. The products will be aimed at enterprise users and carriers, several of which are planning to offer WLAN-to-WAN roaming, IBM officials said. On the client side, the companies have integrated bar-code support into the WebSphere wireless software.

IBM, of Armonk, N.Y., is also considering developing automated services that bridge voice and data, officials said. With such services, a customer could call an automated system for airplane flight schedules, make requests through voice prompts and receive a data reply.

IBM also plans eventually to add push-based e-mail support to its WebSphere software to compete directly against Research In Motion Ltd.’s BlackBerry Enterprise Server, officials said.

Read more here about RIM’s recently overhauled Enterprise Server.

Elsewhere in the industry, other roaming efforts are under way. Avaya, Proxim and Motorola Inc. are each testing devices and supporting software that can allow mobile customers to roam between cellular networks and WLANs.

Avaya, of Basking Ridge, N.J., and Proxim are collaborating on a 16-port voice-focused switch that’s due by the end of June, said Kevin Duffy, Proxim’s chief technical officer, in Sunnyvale, Calif. Twelve- and 24-port switches are due by year’s end, Duffy said.

Motorola officials in Arlington Heights, Ill., said a handset supporting WLANs and cellular networks is pending but declined to give a due date. “We recognize the legitimacy comes when the carriers are ready to commit,” Duffy said.

The carriers have begun roaming trials.

“We’re working closely with AT&T Wireless [Services Inc.] to implement a local GSM/GPRS [Global System for Mobile Communications/ General Packet Radio Service] network inside our hospitals that will roam to the standard cellular [WAN],” said John Halamka, CIO of CareGroup Healthcare System, a Boston-area hospital group. “The advantage is having a standard device for local- and wide-area communication, call routing to our local PBX from devices used inside our buildings, and lower radio power levels,” Halamka said.

“We’re planning a pilot of Vocera [Communications Inc.’s] hands-free Wi-Fi phones to learn about … wireless voice over IP,” Halamka added.

Check out eWEEK.com’s Mobile & Wireless Center at http://wireless.eweek.com for the latest news, reviews and analysis.


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