Wholesale Applications Community

The Wholesale Applications Community (WAC) was an organisation that was set up to create a unified and open platform to allow mobile software developers to more easily write applications usable on a variety of devices, operating systems and networks.[1][2] At least 48 companies were members of the organization.[3]

Wholesale Application Community
TypePublic limited company
IndustryComputers
Predecessor2006 (2006)2010 (2010) OMTP Bondi
Founded2010 (2010)
Defunct17 July 2012
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
ServicesInternet Application Platforms
Number of employees
unknown (October - 2010)

The WAC organisation came to an end with the GSMA announcing on July 17, 2012, that it reached an agreement to integrate WAC's major programs and initiatives into the GSMA. Additionally, Apigee, acquired the technology assets of WAC.[4]

WAC was preceded by the OMTP and it completed its acquisition of the Joint Innovation Lab on 1 October 2010, accelerating the commercial launch of WAC-enabled application stores and put it in a position to be fully operational and commercially running before the end of 2010.

Overview

The Wholesale Application Community application development platform is based on standard technologies such as HTML, JavaScript, and Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). Specifically this platform builds on the work of the former Open Mobile Terminal Platform Ltd.'s BONDI project, the Joint Innovation Lab (JIL) device APIs and the GSM Association's OneAPI program.

By utilizing web-based technologies, rather than relying on developers to write native applications for specific devices, the WAC alliance believes it can spur the development of more applications across a much wider range of devices. The group also aims to make certain telecoms APIs available to developers, such as those for operator billing.

Development

WAC was not a Standards Development Organisation (SDO) - but used W3C Standard technologies for its platform and in particular used the W3C Widget packaging format and specification for web apps. It also furthered the use of JavaScript device APIs and these originated from the OMTP BONDI project. BONDI was developed by the now defunct Open Mobile Terminals Platform OMTP. JIL was a joint venture by China Mobile, Softbank, Verizon Wireless, Vodafone focused promoting the use of web based technologies for mobile application development. JIL compliant handsets include the SGH-i8320 (Samsung Vodafone 360 H1).[5]

On the 27 of July 2010, WAC announced that it would "join forces" with JIL and then completed the acquisition on 1 October 2010. This meant that "Developers currently creating JIL applications can continue working with the existing JIL specification, tools and software libraries and these applications can be deployed on JIL based devices immediately. With the publication of the WAC specification, developers will also have a clear path to deploy applications on a wider range of devices supporting the WAC specification in 2011."

Problems

One question is whether such a large group of operators are able to respond to changing market conditions, particularly in the wake of the influence exerted by Apple and Google.[6] However, Vidhya Gholkar, WAC's Developer Relations lead commented at Mobile 2.0, September 20, 2010, that "WAC is not about competing with Apple and similar companies. Its focus is on making apps available to a much greater audience. To do this requires adherence to a core set of Web technologies and have the ability to distribute to a base larger than that served by a single device or OS."

See also

References

  1. Tanner, John (11 March 2010). "Cellcos get WAC on OS fragmentation". Telecomasia. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  2. Ray, Bill (5 May 2010). "Operator gang gunning for iTunes". The Register. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
  3. "Wholesale Applications Community Grows as 32 New Members Join the Open Applications Initiative". 18 October 2010. Retrieved 18 October 2010.
  4. "WAC post".
  5. "WAC, Meego, eStore: Three Big Moves in Mobile Platform Consolidation". 4 March 2010. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
  6. Kincaid, Jason (15 February 2010). "The Wholesale Applications Community Sounds Like A Disaster In The Making". TechCrunch. Retrieved 8 May 2010.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.