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The open mobile alliance : delivering service enablers for next-generation applications / / Michael Brenner, Musa Unmehopa
The open mobile alliance : delivering service enablers for next-generation applications / / Michael Brenner, Musa Unmehopa
Autore Brenner Michael
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, England ; , : John Wiley, , c2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (532 p.)
Disciplina 621.384
Altri autori (Persone) UnmehopaMusa
Soggetto topico Mobile communication systems
Wireless communication systems
ISBN 1-281-31828-0
9786611318284
0-470-51990-8
0-470-51989-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Part I / Background and Introduction -- 1.0 Introduction -- 1.1 Service Enablers -- 1.2 The Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) -- 1.3 Service Enablers in OMA -- 2.0 The Silo Syndrome and its Solution -- 2.1 Vertical Integration -- 2.2 Re-use as first class citizen -- 2.3 The OMA Service Environment -- 2.4 Additional Features of the OSE -- 2.5 OSE and Related Technologies -- 2.6 Summary -- 3.0 The Open Mobile Alliance / An Organizational Overview -- 3.1 Overview of OMA -- 3.2 Principles of the OMA -- 3.3 OMA's Relationship with External Organizations -- 3.4 OMA Organizational Structure -- 3.5 The Processes -- 3.6 Interoperability in the Open Mobile Alliance -- 3.7 Summary -- 4.0 Interoperability TestFests -- 4.1 The objective of interoperability in the OMA -- 4.2 The organization of the test campaigns -- 4.3 Planning -- 4.4 Finances -- 4.5 TestFest Statistics -- 4.6 Comparison with other SDOs -- 4.7 Summary -- 5.0 Service Provider - The Network Operator Perspective -- 5.1 The Need for OMA -- 5.2 Operators in OMA -- 5.3 OMA Challenges for the Future -- 5.4 Summary -- 6.0 Service Provider - The Enterprise Perspective -- 6.1 Enterprise Needs -- 6.2 OMA Enterprise awareness -- 6.3 Summary -- Part II / Horizontal Topics -- 7.0 The Policy Enforcer Details: Model, Architecture, Realization and Impact -- 7.1 Policy Enforcement modeling in the OSE -- 7.2 Beyond the OSE: Policy Enforcement as Service Oriented Architecture Composition -- 7.3 Logical architecture versus deployment considerations -- 7.4 Relationship to Parlay and IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) -- 7.5 Policy modeling -- 7.6 Policy Enforcer through OMA enabler realization -- 7.7 Relationship of Policy Enforcer to IETF PEP/PDP -- 7.8 Policy assembly, composition and orchestration -- 7.9 Summary - Next steps -- 8.0 The Policy Evaluation, Enforcement and Management Enabler -- 8.1 Are Those specifications Really Needed?.
8.2 PEEM Market Needs / -- 8.3 PEEM Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 8.4 PEEM Salient Points -- 8.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 8.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 8.7 Summary -- 9.0 Utilization of IMS in OMA -- 9.1 Are those specifications really needed? -- 9.2 Standard pre-cursors to IMSinOMA -- 9.3 Architecture overview -- 9.4. Salient Points and Divergent Views -- 9.5 Impact of specifications -- 9.6 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 9.7 Summary -- 10.0 Service Architectures - Parlay and the OSE -- 10.1 A Quick Taster of Parlay -- 10.2 The Parlay in OSE Enabler -- 10.3 PIOSE Challenges -- 10.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 10.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 10.6 Summary -- 11.0 A Web Services Technology Realization of the OSE -- 11.1 Web Services Crash Course -- 11.2 A Web Services Infrastructure Framework -- 11.3 Mobile Web Services -- 11.4 The OMA Web Services Enabler Release -- 11.5 The Technologies Specified by OWSER -- 11.6 Network Identity -- 11.7 OWSER and the OSE -- 11.8 Divergent views and their resolution -- 11.9 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 11.10 Impact of the Specifications -- 11.11 Summary -- 12.0 The OMA Service Provider Environment enabler -- 12.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 12.2 OSPE Use Cases -- 12.3 OSPE Requirements -- 12.4 Standards Pre-Cursors to OSPE -- 12.5 OSPE Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 12.6 OSPE Salient Points -- 12.7 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 12.8 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 12.9 Summary -- 13.0 The Security Enablers -- 13.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 13.2 Security Common Functions Enabler -- 13.3 SEC-CF Salient Points -- 13.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 13.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 13.6 Summary -- Part III / Selected OMA Service Enablers -- 14.0 The Presence and Group Management Enablers -- 14.1 Presence / What is it?.
14.2 A Constructionist View of Presence Architectures -- 14.3 The OMA Presence Model and Specifications -- 14.4 A Deployment Example / Deploying Presence and XDM Enablers in an IMS or MMD environment -- 14.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 14.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 14.7 Summary -- 15.0 The Push to talk over Cellular enabler -- 15.1 Are those Specifications Really Needed? -- 15.2 Standard Pre-cursors to OMA Push to Talk over Cellular -- 15.3 Architecture and Technical Specifications Overview -- 15.4 Salient points -- 15.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 15.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 15.7 Summary -- 16.0 Mobile E-mail -- 16.1 Background -- 16.2 MEM Architecture -- 16.3 Summary -- 17.0 The Charging Enabler -- 17.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 17.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to Charging -- 17.3 Charging Requirements -- 17.4 Charging Architecture and Technical specifications -- 17.5 Divergent Views and Their Resolution -- 17.6 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 17.7 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 17.8 Summary -- 18.0 The Device Management Enablers -- 18.1 Device Management Requirements -- 18.2 Device Management Architecture -- 18.3 Device Management Enabler Specifications -- 18.4 Impact of DM Specifications on the Industry -- 18.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 18.6 Summary -- 19.0 The Digital Rights Management Enabler -- 19.1 What were the drivers for those specifications? -- 19.2 Are those specifications really necessary? -- 19.3 OMA DRM Requirements -- 19.4 Architecture and technical specifications overview -- 19.5 Salient points -- 19.6 Impact of specifications on the industry -- 19.7 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 19.8 Summary -- 20.0 The Broadcast Enabler -- 20.1 Are those Specifications Really Needed? -- 20.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to BCAST Enabler.
20.3 BCAST Architecture -- 20.4 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 20.5 Summary -- 21.0 The Dynamic Content Delivery Enabler -- 21.1 Why Do We Need New Specifications for DCD? -- 22.0 The Global Permissions Management Enabler -- 22.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 22.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to GPM -- 22.3 GPM Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 22.4 GPM Salient Points -- 22.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 22.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 22.7 Summary -- 23.0 The Categorization based Content Screening Global Enabler -- 23.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 23.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to CBCS -- 23.3 CBCS Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 23.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 23.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 23.6 Summary -- 24.0 The Game Services Enabler -- 25.0 The Location Enabler -- 25.1 What is Location? -- 25.2 Location Architectures -- 25.3 The Mobile Location Services Enabler -- 25.4 The Secure User Plane Location -- 26.0 The Mobile Application Environment -- 26.1 The Mobile Web Architecture -- 26.2 Mobile Browser -- 26.3 Mobile Content Data Formats -- 26.4 Multiple Interaction Modalities and Devices -- 26.5 Summary -- 27 Recent Topics -- 27.1 The General Service Subscription Management Enabler -- 27.2 Device Profile Evolution -- 27.3 Converged IP Messaging Enabler -- 27.4 Mobile Advertising -- Part IV / Wrap Up -- 28.0 Concluding Remarks, and what's in store next? -- 28.1 Project Post-mortem -- 28.2 What's Next? -- Annex A -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- References.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910145591303321
Brenner Michael  
Chichester, England ; , : John Wiley, , c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The open mobile alliance : delivering service enablers for next-generation applications / / Michael Brenner, Musa Unmehopa
The open mobile alliance : delivering service enablers for next-generation applications / / Michael Brenner, Musa Unmehopa
Autore Brenner Michael
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, England ; , : John Wiley, , c2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (532 p.)
Disciplina 621.384
Altri autori (Persone) UnmehopaMusa
Soggetto topico Mobile communication systems
Wireless communication systems
ISBN 1-281-31828-0
9786611318284
0-470-51990-8
0-470-51989-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Part I / Background and Introduction -- 1.0 Introduction -- 1.1 Service Enablers -- 1.2 The Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) -- 1.3 Service Enablers in OMA -- 2.0 The Silo Syndrome and its Solution -- 2.1 Vertical Integration -- 2.2 Re-use as first class citizen -- 2.3 The OMA Service Environment -- 2.4 Additional Features of the OSE -- 2.5 OSE and Related Technologies -- 2.6 Summary -- 3.0 The Open Mobile Alliance / An Organizational Overview -- 3.1 Overview of OMA -- 3.2 Principles of the OMA -- 3.3 OMA's Relationship with External Organizations -- 3.4 OMA Organizational Structure -- 3.5 The Processes -- 3.6 Interoperability in the Open Mobile Alliance -- 3.7 Summary -- 4.0 Interoperability TestFests -- 4.1 The objective of interoperability in the OMA -- 4.2 The organization of the test campaigns -- 4.3 Planning -- 4.4 Finances -- 4.5 TestFest Statistics -- 4.6 Comparison with other SDOs -- 4.7 Summary -- 5.0 Service Provider - The Network Operator Perspective -- 5.1 The Need for OMA -- 5.2 Operators in OMA -- 5.3 OMA Challenges for the Future -- 5.4 Summary -- 6.0 Service Provider - The Enterprise Perspective -- 6.1 Enterprise Needs -- 6.2 OMA Enterprise awareness -- 6.3 Summary -- Part II / Horizontal Topics -- 7.0 The Policy Enforcer Details: Model, Architecture, Realization and Impact -- 7.1 Policy Enforcement modeling in the OSE -- 7.2 Beyond the OSE: Policy Enforcement as Service Oriented Architecture Composition -- 7.3 Logical architecture versus deployment considerations -- 7.4 Relationship to Parlay and IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) -- 7.5 Policy modeling -- 7.6 Policy Enforcer through OMA enabler realization -- 7.7 Relationship of Policy Enforcer to IETF PEP/PDP -- 7.8 Policy assembly, composition and orchestration -- 7.9 Summary - Next steps -- 8.0 The Policy Evaluation, Enforcement and Management Enabler -- 8.1 Are Those specifications Really Needed?.
8.2 PEEM Market Needs / -- 8.3 PEEM Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 8.4 PEEM Salient Points -- 8.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 8.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 8.7 Summary -- 9.0 Utilization of IMS in OMA -- 9.1 Are those specifications really needed? -- 9.2 Standard pre-cursors to IMSinOMA -- 9.3 Architecture overview -- 9.4. Salient Points and Divergent Views -- 9.5 Impact of specifications -- 9.6 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 9.7 Summary -- 10.0 Service Architectures - Parlay and the OSE -- 10.1 A Quick Taster of Parlay -- 10.2 The Parlay in OSE Enabler -- 10.3 PIOSE Challenges -- 10.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 10.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 10.6 Summary -- 11.0 A Web Services Technology Realization of the OSE -- 11.1 Web Services Crash Course -- 11.2 A Web Services Infrastructure Framework -- 11.3 Mobile Web Services -- 11.4 The OMA Web Services Enabler Release -- 11.5 The Technologies Specified by OWSER -- 11.6 Network Identity -- 11.7 OWSER and the OSE -- 11.8 Divergent views and their resolution -- 11.9 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 11.10 Impact of the Specifications -- 11.11 Summary -- 12.0 The OMA Service Provider Environment enabler -- 12.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 12.2 OSPE Use Cases -- 12.3 OSPE Requirements -- 12.4 Standards Pre-Cursors to OSPE -- 12.5 OSPE Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 12.6 OSPE Salient Points -- 12.7 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 12.8 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 12.9 Summary -- 13.0 The Security Enablers -- 13.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 13.2 Security Common Functions Enabler -- 13.3 SEC-CF Salient Points -- 13.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 13.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 13.6 Summary -- Part III / Selected OMA Service Enablers -- 14.0 The Presence and Group Management Enablers -- 14.1 Presence / What is it?.
14.2 A Constructionist View of Presence Architectures -- 14.3 The OMA Presence Model and Specifications -- 14.4 A Deployment Example / Deploying Presence and XDM Enablers in an IMS or MMD environment -- 14.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 14.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 14.7 Summary -- 15.0 The Push to talk over Cellular enabler -- 15.1 Are those Specifications Really Needed? -- 15.2 Standard Pre-cursors to OMA Push to Talk over Cellular -- 15.3 Architecture and Technical Specifications Overview -- 15.4 Salient points -- 15.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 15.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 15.7 Summary -- 16.0 Mobile E-mail -- 16.1 Background -- 16.2 MEM Architecture -- 16.3 Summary -- 17.0 The Charging Enabler -- 17.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 17.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to Charging -- 17.3 Charging Requirements -- 17.4 Charging Architecture and Technical specifications -- 17.5 Divergent Views and Their Resolution -- 17.6 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 17.7 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 17.8 Summary -- 18.0 The Device Management Enablers -- 18.1 Device Management Requirements -- 18.2 Device Management Architecture -- 18.3 Device Management Enabler Specifications -- 18.4 Impact of DM Specifications on the Industry -- 18.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 18.6 Summary -- 19.0 The Digital Rights Management Enabler -- 19.1 What were the drivers for those specifications? -- 19.2 Are those specifications really necessary? -- 19.3 OMA DRM Requirements -- 19.4 Architecture and technical specifications overview -- 19.5 Salient points -- 19.6 Impact of specifications on the industry -- 19.7 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 19.8 Summary -- 20.0 The Broadcast Enabler -- 20.1 Are those Specifications Really Needed? -- 20.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to BCAST Enabler.
20.3 BCAST Architecture -- 20.4 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 20.5 Summary -- 21.0 The Dynamic Content Delivery Enabler -- 21.1 Why Do We Need New Specifications for DCD? -- 22.0 The Global Permissions Management Enabler -- 22.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 22.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to GPM -- 22.3 GPM Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 22.4 GPM Salient Points -- 22.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 22.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 22.7 Summary -- 23.0 The Categorization based Content Screening Global Enabler -- 23.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 23.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to CBCS -- 23.3 CBCS Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 23.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 23.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 23.6 Summary -- 24.0 The Game Services Enabler -- 25.0 The Location Enabler -- 25.1 What is Location? -- 25.2 Location Architectures -- 25.3 The Mobile Location Services Enabler -- 25.4 The Secure User Plane Location -- 26.0 The Mobile Application Environment -- 26.1 The Mobile Web Architecture -- 26.2 Mobile Browser -- 26.3 Mobile Content Data Formats -- 26.4 Multiple Interaction Modalities and Devices -- 26.5 Summary -- 27 Recent Topics -- 27.1 The General Service Subscription Management Enabler -- 27.2 Device Profile Evolution -- 27.3 Converged IP Messaging Enabler -- 27.4 Mobile Advertising -- Part IV / Wrap Up -- 28.0 Concluding Remarks, and what's in store next? -- 28.1 Project Post-mortem -- 28.2 What's Next? -- Annex A -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- References.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910830873703321
Brenner Michael  
Chichester, England ; , : John Wiley, , c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The open mobile alliance : delivering service enablers for next-generation applications / / Michael Brenner, Musa Unmehopa
The open mobile alliance : delivering service enablers for next-generation applications / / Michael Brenner, Musa Unmehopa
Autore Brenner Michael
Pubbl/distr/stampa Chichester, England ; ; Hoboken, NJ, : John Wiley, c2008
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (532 p.)
Disciplina 621.384
Altri autori (Persone) UnmehopaMusa
Soggetto topico Mobile communication systems
Wireless communication systems
ISBN 1-281-31828-0
9786611318284
0-470-51990-8
0-470-51989-4
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Part I / Background and Introduction -- 1.0 Introduction -- 1.1 Service Enablers -- 1.2 The Open Mobile Alliance (OMA) -- 1.3 Service Enablers in OMA -- 2.0 The Silo Syndrome and its Solution -- 2.1 Vertical Integration -- 2.2 Re-use as first class citizen -- 2.3 The OMA Service Environment -- 2.4 Additional Features of the OSE -- 2.5 OSE and Related Technologies -- 2.6 Summary -- 3.0 The Open Mobile Alliance / An Organizational Overview -- 3.1 Overview of OMA -- 3.2 Principles of the OMA -- 3.3 OMA's Relationship with External Organizations -- 3.4 OMA Organizational Structure -- 3.5 The Processes -- 3.6 Interoperability in the Open Mobile Alliance -- 3.7 Summary -- 4.0 Interoperability TestFests -- 4.1 The objective of interoperability in the OMA -- 4.2 The organization of the test campaigns -- 4.3 Planning -- 4.4 Finances -- 4.5 TestFest Statistics -- 4.6 Comparison with other SDOs -- 4.7 Summary -- 5.0 Service Provider - The Network Operator Perspective -- 5.1 The Need for OMA -- 5.2 Operators in OMA -- 5.3 OMA Challenges for the Future -- 5.4 Summary -- 6.0 Service Provider - The Enterprise Perspective -- 6.1 Enterprise Needs -- 6.2 OMA Enterprise awareness -- 6.3 Summary -- Part II / Horizontal Topics -- 7.0 The Policy Enforcer Details: Model, Architecture, Realization and Impact -- 7.1 Policy Enforcement modeling in the OSE -- 7.2 Beyond the OSE: Policy Enforcement as Service Oriented Architecture Composition -- 7.3 Logical architecture versus deployment considerations -- 7.4 Relationship to Parlay and IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) -- 7.5 Policy modeling -- 7.6 Policy Enforcer through OMA enabler realization -- 7.7 Relationship of Policy Enforcer to IETF PEP/PDP -- 7.8 Policy assembly, composition and orchestration -- 7.9 Summary - Next steps -- 8.0 The Policy Evaluation, Enforcement and Management Enabler -- 8.1 Are Those specifications Really Needed?.
8.2 PEEM Market Needs / -- 8.3 PEEM Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 8.4 PEEM Salient Points -- 8.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 8.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 8.7 Summary -- 9.0 Utilization of IMS in OMA -- 9.1 Are those specifications really needed? -- 9.2 Standard pre-cursors to IMSinOMA -- 9.3 Architecture overview -- 9.4. Salient Points and Divergent Views -- 9.5 Impact of specifications -- 9.6 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 9.7 Summary -- 10.0 Service Architectures - Parlay and the OSE -- 10.1 A Quick Taster of Parlay -- 10.2 The Parlay in OSE Enabler -- 10.3 PIOSE Challenges -- 10.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 10.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 10.6 Summary -- 11.0 A Web Services Technology Realization of the OSE -- 11.1 Web Services Crash Course -- 11.2 A Web Services Infrastructure Framework -- 11.3 Mobile Web Services -- 11.4 The OMA Web Services Enabler Release -- 11.5 The Technologies Specified by OWSER -- 11.6 Network Identity -- 11.7 OWSER and the OSE -- 11.8 Divergent views and their resolution -- 11.9 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 11.10 Impact of the Specifications -- 11.11 Summary -- 12.0 The OMA Service Provider Environment enabler -- 12.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 12.2 OSPE Use Cases -- 12.3 OSPE Requirements -- 12.4 Standards Pre-Cursors to OSPE -- 12.5 OSPE Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 12.6 OSPE Salient Points -- 12.7 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 12.8 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 12.9 Summary -- 13.0 The Security Enablers -- 13.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 13.2 Security Common Functions Enabler -- 13.3 SEC-CF Salient Points -- 13.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 13.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 13.6 Summary -- Part III / Selected OMA Service Enablers -- 14.0 The Presence and Group Management Enablers -- 14.1 Presence / What is it?.
14.2 A Constructionist View of Presence Architectures -- 14.3 The OMA Presence Model and Specifications -- 14.4 A Deployment Example / Deploying Presence and XDM Enablers in an IMS or MMD environment -- 14.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 14.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 14.7 Summary -- 15.0 The Push to talk over Cellular enabler -- 15.1 Are those Specifications Really Needed? -- 15.2 Standard Pre-cursors to OMA Push to Talk over Cellular -- 15.3 Architecture and Technical Specifications Overview -- 15.4 Salient points -- 15.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 15.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 15.7 Summary -- 16.0 Mobile E-mail -- 16.1 Background -- 16.2 MEM Architecture -- 16.3 Summary -- 17.0 The Charging Enabler -- 17.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 17.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to Charging -- 17.3 Charging Requirements -- 17.4 Charging Architecture and Technical specifications -- 17.5 Divergent Views and Their Resolution -- 17.6 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 17.7 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 17.8 Summary -- 18.0 The Device Management Enablers -- 18.1 Device Management Requirements -- 18.2 Device Management Architecture -- 18.3 Device Management Enabler Specifications -- 18.4 Impact of DM Specifications on the Industry -- 18.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 18.6 Summary -- 19.0 The Digital Rights Management Enabler -- 19.1 What were the drivers for those specifications? -- 19.2 Are those specifications really necessary? -- 19.3 OMA DRM Requirements -- 19.4 Architecture and technical specifications overview -- 19.5 Salient points -- 19.6 Impact of specifications on the industry -- 19.7 Specifications evolution and future direction -- 19.8 Summary -- 20.0 The Broadcast Enabler -- 20.1 Are those Specifications Really Needed? -- 20.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to BCAST Enabler.
20.3 BCAST Architecture -- 20.4 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 20.5 Summary -- 21.0 The Dynamic Content Delivery Enabler -- 21.1 Why Do We Need New Specifications for DCD? -- 22.0 The Global Permissions Management Enabler -- 22.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 22.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to GPM -- 22.3 GPM Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 22.4 GPM Salient Points -- 22.5 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 22.6 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 22.7 Summary -- 23.0 The Categorization based Content Screening Global Enabler -- 23.1 Are Those Specifications Really Needed? -- 23.2 Standards Pre-Cursors to CBCS -- 23.3 CBCS Architecture and Technical Specifications -- 23.4 Impact of Specifications on the Industry -- 23.5 Specifications Evolution and Future Direction -- 23.6 Summary -- 24.0 The Game Services Enabler -- 25.0 The Location Enabler -- 25.1 What is Location? -- 25.2 Location Architectures -- 25.3 The Mobile Location Services Enabler -- 25.4 The Secure User Plane Location -- 26.0 The Mobile Application Environment -- 26.1 The Mobile Web Architecture -- 26.2 Mobile Browser -- 26.3 Mobile Content Data Formats -- 26.4 Multiple Interaction Modalities and Devices -- 26.5 Summary -- 27 Recent Topics -- 27.1 The General Service Subscription Management Enabler -- 27.2 Device Profile Evolution -- 27.3 Converged IP Messaging Enabler -- 27.4 Mobile Advertising -- Part IV / Wrap Up -- 28.0 Concluding Remarks, and what's in store next? -- 28.1 Project Post-mortem -- 28.2 What's Next? -- Annex A -- Abbreviations and Acronyms -- References.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910877506803321
Brenner Michael  
Chichester, England ; ; Hoboken, NJ, : John Wiley, c2008
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui