Mobile Standards and the Tower of Babel

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The Tower of Babel was to be built by a united humanity to reach the heavens. God sowed confusion among the builders by creating different languages because the hearts of men were said to be inherently evil and disobedient. That’s how Wikipedia describes the Tower of Babel.

Creating Mobile Standards has possibly the same challenges as that Tower to reach the heavens. Certainly that was one commentator’s view when the Open Mobile Alliance came together on June 12, 2002 to take on this challenging project. The mission of the Open Mobile Alliance was to facilitate global user adoption of mobile data services by specifying market driven mobile service enablers that ensure service interoperability across devices, geographies, service providers, operators, and networks, while allowing businesses to compete through innovation and differentiation.

Since then there’s been lots of activity. In 2004, the W3C launched its Mobile Web Initiative. However the explosive growth of the Mobile Internet world makes it difficult for large groups of stakeholders to take the time to modify their individual preferences and accept agreed standards. So it is not surprising to see the following from Anders Borg, a keen observer of all things mobile. He asks, “Has OMA lost its mojo?” In his view, when OMA comes out with anything new it’s typically way too late and often completely misdirected, and is rather a reflection of yesterday’s walled garden thinking, that consumers and service providers try to break any way they can.

Agreeing standards even in the stabile (non-mobile) Internet world is proving to be extremely challenging. What hope can there be for the Mobile Internet world? Perhaps we should just learn to live with our Tower of Babel.

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