New pagers will offer Internet access
September 9, 1997
Web posted at: 4:56 p.m. EDT (2056 GMT)
By Karen Kaplan
Need the latest stock quote? An update on the weather
forecast? How about a restaurant recommendation, and
directions on how to get there? Just fire up your pager and
find all that information on the Web.
That's right. Those beeping, vibrating devices are about to
become the latest, and smallest, vehicle for surfing the
World Wide Web.
Later this month, WolfeTech will unveil Pocket Genie, the
first software system for visiting Web sites via a two-way
pager. Pager makers Motorola and Research In Motion plan to
have the Web-surfing software installed on their new two-way
devices, which are heavier than regular pagers and have tiny
keyboards built in.
In order to squeeze the most use out of a limited amount of
pager memory, Pocket Genie will offer access to only about 20
Web sites that focus on topics such as travel, weather,
package tracking and horoscopes. Users will navigate through
a series of menus to make their queries, which will then be
sent over paging networks to a computer server at WolfeTech's
office. That computer then surfs the Web for answers, formats
them and sends them back to the pager.
With Motorola's new PageWriter 2000, responses will arrive
over the SkyTel paging network in about 30 seconds. Using the
Inter@ctive Pager from Research In Motion, queries will be
sent over a packet radio network and answered in about six
seconds.
Although the Web sites Pocket Genie visits, including
MovieLink (http://www.movielink.com), the Weather Channel
(http://www.weather.com) and Lucent Technologies' Maps On Us
(http://www.mapsonus.com), can be used for free, WolfeTech is
paying the sites a few pennies per use as a courtesy, said
Surya Jayaweera, the firm's co-founder and president.
WolfeTech was founded by a group of Harvey Mudd College alums
and now has about 20 employees and "hundreds of thousands" of
dollars in venture capital, Jayaweera said. The company's
next project is to create software for surfing the Web with
digital PCS phones.
(c) 1997, Los Angeles Times. Distributed by Los Angeles Times
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