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What
is Wap?
If you're a mobile phone
user, you're going to be hearing a lot more about it!
WAP (Wireless Application
Protocol) is, essentially, a technology which will allow your mobile phone to
browse the Web. It's a protocol for the transmission of data over low bandwidth
wireless networks.
It is implemented as two key
components: the WAP Gateway and the micro-browser. Together these enable mobile
phones to interact with the rest of the Internet. The gateway connects phones
to the Internet, whilst the micro-browser uses an XML document format, the
Wireless Mark-Up Language (VML), to display pages.
The key to WAP is the gateway.
This acts as a proxy, interpreting requests from phone micro-browsers and
retrieving content via stnadrd HTTP requests. If you're already running Web
servers you won't need to change them to deliver WAP applications - though you
will need to translate your HTML and redesign your pages using VML.
A WAP gateway will compile VML
pages for more efficient transmission to a mobile phone. It's probably best to
think of a WAP gateway as a specialised form of Internet proxy, similar to
familiar Web proxies and caches.
The micro-browser is
implemented in a mobile handset, and is designed to handle WML code using the
phone's standard interface. As a result, displays are three or four lines, and
interfaces will vary from manufacturer to manufacturer and phone to phone,
The micro-browser needs to work
in the limited memory and processor space of a mobile phone, so don't expect it
to be as sophisticated as Internet Explorer or Netscape Navigator!
A better comparison will be the
early tier 1 frameless and table-less browsers, or the Lynx text-only browser.
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