WO2001052016A2 - Software architecture for wireless data and method of operation thereof - Google Patents

Software architecture for wireless data and method of operation thereof Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2001052016A2
WO2001052016A2 PCT/US2001/000946 US0100946W WO0152016A2 WO 2001052016 A2 WO2001052016 A2 WO 2001052016A2 US 0100946 W US0100946 W US 0100946W WO 0152016 A2 WO0152016 A2 WO 0152016A2
Authority
WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
user
server
message
wireless
connector
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/US2001/000946
Other languages
French (fr)
Other versions
WO2001052016A3 (en
Inventor
Shane Connely
Nathanial X. Freitas
Will Meyer
Jonathan Oakes
James Venturi
Original Assignee
Thin Air Apps
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Thin Air Apps filed Critical Thin Air Apps
Priority to AU2001229376A priority Critical patent/AU2001229376A1/en
Publication of WO2001052016A2 publication Critical patent/WO2001052016A2/en
Publication of WO2001052016A3 publication Critical patent/WO2001052016A3/en

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L67/00Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
    • H04L67/2866Architectures; Arrangements
    • H04L67/30Profiles
    • H04L67/303Terminal profiles
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L67/00Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
    • H04L67/01Protocols
    • H04L67/02Protocols based on web technology, e.g. hypertext transfer protocol [HTTP]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L67/00Network arrangements or protocols for supporting network services or applications
    • H04L67/14Session management
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L69/00Network arrangements, protocols or services independent of the application payload and not provided for in the other groups of this subclass
    • H04L69/24Negotiation of communication capabilities
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04LTRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04L69/00Network arrangements, protocols or services independent of the application payload and not provided for in the other groups of this subclass
    • H04L69/30Definitions, standards or architectural aspects of layered protocol stacks
    • H04L69/32Architecture of open systems interconnection [OSI] 7-layer type protocol stacks, e.g. the interfaces between the data link level and the physical level
    • H04L69/322Intralayer communication protocols among peer entities or protocol data unit [PDU] definitions
    • H04L69/329Intralayer communication protocols among peer entities or protocol data unit [PDU] definitions in the application layer [OSI layer 7]
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W4/00Services specially adapted for wireless communication networks; Facilities therefor
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04WWIRELESS COMMUNICATION NETWORKS
    • H04W74/00Wireless channel access, e.g. scheduled or random access

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a system and method for accessing server-based
  • the present invention relates to a
  • HTML HyperText Markup
  • WML Wireless Markup Language
  • Groupware includes essentially any application or
  • Microsoft's Outlook® client and Microsoft Exchange Server® allow a user to
  • the present invention satisfies the foregoing need by providing, in one aspect, a
  • the software architecture includes a wireless data receiving and transmitting
  • FIG. 1 is a block diagram representation of a system in accordance with a
  • FIG. 2 is a block diagram representation of protocols, gateways, and devices that
  • FIG. 3 is a flowchart representing the request handling process of the system of the
  • FIG. 4 is a flowchart representing the wireless device recognition process.
  • FIG. 5 is a UML diagram of the core classes m a preferred embodiment of the
  • FIG. 6 is a UML diagram representing the message subclasses in a preferred embodiment
  • FIG. 7 is a block diagram representing the communication protocol for an
  • FIG. 8 is a block diagram representation of server communication protocol
  • FIG 9 is a block diagram representation the use of server communication protocol
  • FIGS. 10A- 10H is a flowchart of a wireless groupware application in accordance
  • FIG 1 there is a shown a block diagram representation of a system in
  • the system includes Client devices, e.g , WAP phone 20, RIM
  • gateway e.g., VoxML, WAP, etc.
  • protocol e.g., HTTP
  • AIM. SMTP. SMS, etc.. can also be supported by the system. Referring back to FIG. 1,
  • the Connector server 30 acts as a secure access point from the outside world into a
  • the network 32 will be a
  • server refers to a software application running on a hardware
  • the complete chain of wireless communication usualh. but not necessa ⁇ ly, includes a number of gateways, base stations, receivers, and antennas
  • Communication may also take place over public or p ⁇ vate networks using a va ⁇ ety of
  • Connector server 30 is a Pentium II class or Unix equivalent server with 128MB RAM,
  • the data stores 34-40 are connected to Providers 42-44 which provide an access
  • Providers 42-44 can be located in the same LAN as the
  • Provider availability allows them to reside behind firewalls 48 if needed. Providers can
  • Providers 42-46 manage access to their assigned data
  • the system may also
  • Client specific Connectors 52 to provide device specific application
  • Palm VII organizers include Palm VII organizers, Palm DI/V organizers with wireless connectivity RIM
  • the Connectors 52 are dynamically loaded modules of the Connector Server 30
  • Connector 52 resembles a Java Servlet in form and function. Connectors are supported by the Connector Access class which provides standard service such as Session
  • a Connector 52 handles requests from wireless devices and generates responses.
  • Connectors can share the core functionality that makes up the application logic
  • an HTTP request 58 is
  • a device detection process 60 is
  • the HTTP request is routed
  • the Connector(s) 52 may be modula ⁇ zed further by moving the data-access
  • Server application framework makes Providers available to Connectors, whether they are
  • the Connector Server 30 When a Connector 52 receives a request from a device, the Connector Server 30
  • Device objects are an abstraction of the actual
  • a Device Profile represents a template or prototype for a particular class of
  • Device class membership may be
  • a Connector can
  • the UP Browser may have screens with ten lines of text while others may only support
  • Connector Server 30 When the Connector Server 30 receives an HTTP request, it quenes each of its
  • the chosen DeviceProfile then acts as a factory, generating a Device instance,
  • Connector Server 30 When the Connector Server 30 routes a request to your Connector, it constructs a
  • Dat can also be encrypted at the device level and at the Connector server 30 so that at no point in the chain of communication between device and data store is data in an
  • the network communication layers employ up-to-date encryption and
  • Connector server 30 is performed using 40 or 128-bit Secure Socket Layer (SSL)
  • 30 can also be encrypted using a va ⁇ ety of methods, including SSL and other Public key
  • PKI Infrastructure
  • the Connector server 30 facilitates access by the Client devices 20-24 to a host of
  • the data stores 34-40 can also
  • Providers 42-46 enable disparate data sources to interact with the
  • Connector server 30 Connectors 52 handle the va ⁇ ous protocols and pecuha ⁇ ties of
  • wireless handheld devices supporting, in p ⁇ nciple, even those devices that do not yet
  • Connectors 52 can also transform data store objects into HTML. XML, WML, or
  • a connector 52 can also be used to link
  • Connector server 30 external applications and data sources to a Connector server 30.
  • p ⁇ ma ⁇ ly provided to support wireless Client devices 20-24, hardwired
  • access devices 54 e.g., network terminals, can also access the data stores 34-40 through
  • Connector 52 to the Connector Server 30 can access a remote data stores 56
  • server 30 component that routes traffic between them. Since the modules can be installed
  • the component-based architecture provides users with their choice of multiple
  • Connector server 30 When installed on separate machines, both the Connector server 30 and Providers
  • groupware refers to a software application paradigm which
  • Each user has the
  • the architecture of a groupware product includes server software, or a
  • ASS NAME DESCRIPTION ⁇ tor Vogelm The core representation of an item within a groupware store. It contains an item's identifier string and location path. All other groupware item types extend this class.
  • Event IA representation of an appointment, reminder, or meeting The event has one organizer and one or more attendees.
  • the class l also contains the location, date, time, and description of the bvent.
  • AddNewGroupwareltem The basic "put" action for a groupware store. This represents actions such as composing email, adding an entry to a date book, or adding a new person to an address book.
  • _ oveGroupwareltem The action for modifying the location of an item within a groupware store. This represents actions such as filing an email, moving an appointment to a shared group calendar, or organizing an address book into categories.
  • UpdateGroupwareltem The action for modifying an existing item kvithin a groupware store. This represents lactions such as editing an email draft, changing Ithe time of a meeting, or modifying the completion status of a task on a To Do list.
  • DeleteGroupwareltem The action for removing an existing item from a groupware store. This represents actions such as deleting an email, canceling a meeting, or removing a post from a message board.
  • Countltems, CountltemsResponse The action for obtaining a count of total items in a specified groupware store location. This is used to obtain status or overview information [for the user.
  • the second component of the wireless groupware system is the client-server
  • SIRF Simple Inbox Return Format
  • HTTP HyperText Protocol
  • SMTP Send Mail Transfer Protocol
  • the SIRF protocol is best understood by reference to the wire protocol specification
  • -GUIDs are globally unique identifiers, stored as valid ANSI NULL-terminated st ⁇ ngs
  • time is 24-hour format.
  • the client and Server will agree upon a number of e ⁇ or and status codes to communicate
  • the "API" is a set of routines that the Connector 52,
  • FIG. 1 routes from a Client device through to the session management layers.
  • the Inet Library 78 which controls the
  • Palm hardware for sending data and the Network Stack 80. which is the lower level portion of the Inet software, all run on the Palm device Communication of the Palm
  • the Connector Server 84 communicates tot he Message Store 88
  • Messaging Connector 86 which may also have as part of it a Provider as
  • the Messaging Connector 86 will communicate over HTTP with the Client device
  • Palm.net proxy server to pass it through to the Client device.
  • the Palm Connector 52 will
  • the framework is designed to allow developers to
  • asynchronous communication protocols can be hidden from the level at which the
  • Actions such as Fetch Messages or Delete
  • the client uses the services of a server supporting this framework to carry out
  • a Request which contains a set of Actions and a MetaData object
  • the server-side of the framework consists of three distinct
  • Transport 90 Transport 90, Router 92, and Executor 94
  • the Router 92 is responsible for maintaining resource
  • the Transport 90 assembles the Actions 100-104 using services of the Router 92, then
  • the Transport 90 receives the Response 98 from the Executor 94 and
  • Transport piece 90 of the architecture could be implemented as a stand alone
  • server application could in fact be the execution environment that hosts the
  • Transport component 90 could be plugged into some other
  • the Transport 90 must know how to interpret incoming Requests 64 and build
  • Actions 100-104 from some network layer protocol This implies that a Transport
  • va ⁇ ous Actions 100-104 Action Responses 98
  • MetaData Metadata
  • the Executor 94 is the component that understands how to "execute" Actions 100-
  • Transport 90 to some degree, in that they both have the notion of a set of "supported" Actions, on which they must agree. This does not mean that an Executor 94 and
  • Transport 90 are only usable with a certain predefined set of Actions 100-104. As we will
  • the Router 92 manages coordination between the Transport 90 and the Executor
  • the Router 92 is an intermediary, and though implementations may be complex, the
  • the framework can be implemented in a number of
  • NSYNC Java implementation provides an HTTP Transport Core component 106. This
  • the module is designed to take incoming HTTP requests and output HTTP responses, and
  • the module is the runtime environment for the Router and an Executor.
  • the module includes a Java
  • WAP Wireless Application Protocol
  • a welcome screen will appear 114
  • the PIN is blank, the user will be provided with a message indicating that a password must
  • e-mail/groupware providers include Microsoft Exchange,
  • the server is then entered 138.
  • the server's hostname can be obtained from the administrator
  • the user may not have the option to save the
  • the user will then be prompted to enter their Display Name 144.
  • Name is the name that will be used when messages are sent by the user using the
  • the Display Name field is not required for Microsoft Exchange or
  • the Mailbox Manager allows a user to logon to a particular mailbox that has been
  • the mailbox is selected from the list and a Sign In
  • a search is then performed to determine if the user elected to have the
  • the default view screen will contain a list of headers for the five most recently
  • the default screen will also provide the user with the options of
  • view screen 160 the user can browse through the list of message headers in the mailbox
  • Messages received in the mailbox can be standard e-mail
  • selected message is an invitation or an e-mail 174. If it is an invitation, the details of the
  • the user can then select the response option desired and this will be sent to the invitation sender 178. Rather than selecting a response, the user can also select
  • the message contents are sent in one kilobyte chunks so only a
  • portion of the message may be displayed in the default vie .
  • the user can enter the data or select back to back up and change the
  • the user selects the send option and, if the recipient list matches with the o ⁇ gmal message 186, the message is sent
  • the user can search through their entire mbox based upon search c ⁇ te ⁇ a
  • the list of found messages can be
  • Calendars As depicted in FIG IOC, the user has the option of accessing their groupware
  • server will determine if the calendar is empty 202 and, if so, deliver a message to the user
  • the OK option returns the user to the previous screen or, if it is already at the first
  • Connector Server 218 As will be desc ⁇ bed below, to view notes a user
  • the session idle time can be configured by the system administrator.
  • This application allows a user to access contact lists stored on the connector server.
  • the server will determine first if there are any contacts in the user's list
  • the Search option permits the user to search for a contact by ente ⁇ ng the contact's
  • infonnation 246 or let the user know that no contact has been found with that name 244
  • the recipient list is blank 252 the user will be returned to the prompt to enter an e-mail
  • recipient's e-mail addresses can be
  • the Mam Menu screen as depicted m FIG. 10F, provides the user with the
  • the user can also view messages that are stored in folders other than the inbox
  • the user is then presented with a message requesting the user select the type of message
  • the Mailbox Manager can also be used to create, edit, or delete a mailbox
  • the user is provided a message indicating that the provider could not be found and the user

Abstract

A software architecture, data model, and access protocol to facilitate real time, session-based access to server-based (30) data from low bandwidth wireless computing devices (20, 22 and 24).

Description

SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE FOR WIRELESS DATA
AND METHOD OF OPERATION THEREOF
PRIORITY
The followmg application claims pπoπty from U S Provisional Patent
Application Seπal Nos 60/176,014, filed January 14, 2000
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to a system and method for accessing server-based
software applications remotely More particularly, the present invention relates to a
software architecture, data model, and access protocol to facilitate real-time, session-
based access to server-based data from low-bandwidth wireless computing devices
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The proliferation of low cost mobile computing devices with wireless capabilities
has created a demand for software systems that support their capabilities The vaπety of
devices and methods for accessing remote servers also demands server software that is
flexible the manner which it communicates and formats its responses Some devices
expect browser-targeted markup languages, such as HTML (HyperText Markup
Language) or WML (Wireless Markup Language) Other devices, which can support more
complex, custom client applications, can support more complex data formats Ultimate!} new devices are being developed and distπbuted to the general public everyday, making
the openness and flexibility of a software system which supports them even more cπtical.
For a software system of this type to be useful, a core application which makes use
of its capabilities for remote access from any device to any data is necessary. Perhaps no
type of data is more time sensitive and essential to the modern worker than what is
commonly refeπed to as groupware Groupware includes essentially any application or
application-suite that offers collections of canonical item-types, such as messages,
contacts, events, and tasks, and exposes query-able interfaces to those collections. For
example, Microsoft's Outlook® client and Microsoft Exchange Server® allow a user to
store contacts in an address book, send e-mail to those contacts, schedule a meeting based
on the results of e-mail, and create a list of tasks necessary to prepare for some milestone
Indeed, getting e-mail to handheld devices has been a problem in need of a better
solution than is currently available Previous methods of synching information between
wireless devices and servers have been laden with shoπcommgs From resolving
conflicting data, to not having up-to-date information, to not receiving urgent information
quickly enough, mobile workers have been saddled with numerous inadequate choices
due to synching technology Particularly troublesome for users that were searching for an
e-mail solution that did not rely on synching was the fact that most e-mail-enabled
wireless devices have had their own separate e-mail address and mbox. Autoforwarding
has therefore been the only way for a user to access e-mail sent to their pπmary inbox
This has been a poor solution to a complex problem. A need therefore exists for a software architecture, data model, and access
protocol for wireless devices which utilizes low bandwidth, high latency, wireless
networks to facilitate access to highly complex and dense remote servers on demand, in
real-time For a system which includes these components to be useful and applicable, a
core "killer" application is required The invention descπbed by this document satisfies
both of these needs
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The present invention satisfies the foregoing need by providing, in one aspect, a
method of communicating wireless data wherein a request is generated at a wireless
device The type of wireless device which generated the request is detected and the
request is routed to a server through a software module which implements the
functionality of a particular application for the wireless device type The request is then
processed at the server and a response to the request is generated
In another aspect of the invention a software architecture for wireless data is
provided The software architecture includes a wireless data receiving and transmitting
device application and a server for processing requests from said wireless device
application A software module running on the server detects the type of wireless device
and routes the request from the wireless device application to the server through a
software module implementing the functionality of a particular apphcation for the
wireless device type There has thus been outlined, rather broadly, the more important features of the
invention in order that the detailed descπption thereof that follows may be better
understood, and in order that the present contπbution to the art may be better appreciated.
There are. of course, additional features of the invention that will be descπbed below and
which will foπn the subject matter of the claims appended hereto.
In this respect, before explaining at least one embodiment of the invention in
detail, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited in its application to the
details of construction and to the arrangements of the components set forth m the
following descπption or illustrated in the drawings. The invention is capable of other
embodiments and of being practiced and earned out in vaπous ways. Also, it is to be
understood that the phraseology and terminology employed herein, as well as the abstract
included below, are for the purpose of descπption and should not be regarded as limiting
As such, those skilled in the art will appreciate that the conception upon which
this disclosure is based may readily be utilized as a basis for the designing of other
structures, methods and systems for carrying out the several purposes of the present
invention. It is important, therefore, that the claims be regarded as including such
equivalent constructions insofar as they do not depart from the spiπt and scope of the
present invention. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a block diagram representation of a system in accordance with a
preferred embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 2 is a block diagram representation of protocols, gateways, and devices that
can be linked using the software architecture of the present invention.
FIG. 3 is a flowchart representing the request handling process of the system of the
present invention
FIG. 4 is a flowchart representing the wireless device recognition process.
FIG. 5 is a UML diagram of the core classes m a preferred embodiment of the
wireless groupware system of a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
FIG. 6 is a UML diagram representing the message subclasses in a preferred
embodiment of the wireless groupware system of a preferred embodiment of the present
invention
FIG. 7 is a block diagram representing the communication protocol for an
implementation of the present invention.
FIG. 8 is a block diagram representation of server communication protocol
components for a preferred embodiment of the present invention.
FIG 9 is a block diagram representation the use of server communication protocol
components in a geneπc Java HTTP server of a preferred embodiment of the present
invention FIGS. 10A- 10H is a flowchart of a wireless groupware application in accordance
with a preferred embodiment of the present invention
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED
EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
Referring now to the figures wherein like reference numerals indicate like
elements, in FIG 1 there is a shown a block diagram representation of a system in
accordance with a prefeπed embodiment of the present invention In the exemplary
embodiment depicted, the system includes Client devices, e.g , WAP phone 20, RIM
Blackbeπy pager 22, and Palm VII 24, which link through a wireless service provider 26
to the Internet 28 to a Connector server 30. As shown in FIG. 2, any other small footpπnt,
low power regardless of the gateway, e.g., VoxML, WAP, etc., or protocol, e.g., HTTP,
AIM. SMTP. SMS, etc.. can also be supported by the system. Referring back to FIG. 1,
the Connector server 30 acts as a secure access point from the outside world into a
network 32. In the preferred embodiment, it is envisioned that the network 32 will be a
mid- or large-size corporate, i.e., "enterpπse," network
As used herein, server refers to a software application running on a hardware
computing server, hosting one or more wireless applications Wireless encompasses
communication technology, both software and hardware, which enables access by mobile
computing devices to remote data without the direct use of fixed, physical wired
infrastructure The complete chain of wireless communication usualh. but not necessaπly, includes a number of gateways, base stations, receivers, and antennas
Communication may also take place over public or pπvate networks using a vaπety of
frequencies and protocols for data transmission. In a preferred embodiment, the
Connector server 30 is a Pentium II class or Unix equivalent server with 128MB RAM,
Windows NT. Lmux, Solans or other Java 1.1 enabled operating software
The data stores 34-40 are connected to Providers 42-44 which provide an access
point into the data stores These Providers 42-44 can be located in the same LAN as the
Connector server 30, on a WAN, or anywhere on the Internet This distπbuted approach
to Provider availability allows them to reside behind firewalls 48 if needed. Providers can
also push data out through an HTTP proxy server 50 if that is the only connection to the
outside world available to users. Providers 42-46 manage access to their assigned data
store implementation and update the Connector server 30 with status information
peπodically duπng runtime and duπng shutdown. As depicted, the system may also
include one or more Client specific Connectors 52 to provide device specific application
logic and response formatting. . Examples of Client devices supported by Connectors 52
include Palm VII organizers, Palm DI/V organizers with wireless connectivity RIM
Inter@ctιve pagers, WAP-enabled handsets (WML 1.1), HDML-enabled cell phones
(HDML 3.0). and Windows CE devices with wireless connectivity.
The Connectors 52 are dynamically loaded modules of the Connector Server 30
that implement the functionality of a particular application for some set of devices A
Connector 52 resembles a Java Servlet in form and function. Connectors are supported by the Connector Access class which provides standard service such as Session
Management, User Management, and Logging.
A Connector 52 handles requests from wireless devices and generates responses.
In some cases, there may be only one Connector for an entire application that may be
responsible for servicing requests from several types of devices. Alternatively, there may
be one Connector for each device type that an application supports. The device-specific
Connectors can share the core functionality that makes up the application logic
As shown in the exemplary embodiment of FIG. 3, an HTTP request 58 is
transmitted from a wireless device to a Connector. A device detection process 60 is
undertaken to determine the type of wireless device from which the HTTP request 58
emanates After determining the type of wireless device, the HTTP request is routed
through the appropπate connector 62 to the Connector Server where the request is
processed 64 A response to the request is then generated and routed back to the
appropπate connector 66 The response is then rendered 68 for the specific type of
wireless device and an HTTP response 70 is transmitted back to the wireless device.
The Connector(s) 52 may be modulaπzed further by moving the data-access
functionality of the application into separate Provider components. The Connector
Server application framework makes Providers available to Connectors, whether they are
running locally on the server machine or even across a network Since the
communication between components is transparent both to the components and to the developer, a distπbuted architecture can be easily introduced for an application as the
deployment scales.
Wireless Device Detection and Profiling
When a Connector 52 receives a request from a device, the Connector Server 30
invokes the Connector's handle method 72, FIG. 4, which informs it of the request and
passes the necessary input for processing. Device objects are an abstraction of the actual
physical devices that issue HTTP requests to the server. The Connector Server's ability to
automatically recognize the properties of any device that contacts it plays an important
role in tracking which devices a user possesses, and in enabling a Connector 52 to
generate output custom tailored for different wireless devices, and the networks and client
applications which they make use of.
A Device Profile represents a template or prototype for a particular class of
physical devices (which may or may not be wireless). Device class membership may be
determined by the manufacturer of the device, the markup language browser(s) installed
on the device, or some combination of these factors Devices within a class share some
set of well-defined properties, embodied in the Device Profile. A Connector can
programmatically query all Device objects generated by this profile for information such
as:
• The height and width of the screen in pixels
• The number of soft keys
• Whether or not the device has a color screen The actual values of these properties will differ from Device to Device, just as
they differ among actual physical devices Some models of wireless phones supporting
the UP Browser may have screens with ten lines of text while others may only support
three. When the Connector Server 30 receives an HTTP request, it quenes each of its
installed DeviceProfiles (in a configurable order) for the first one that matches the
request The chosen DeviceProfile then acts as a factory, generating a Device instance,
and mapping the attnbutes of the physical device to the Device object's member data
fields.
When the Connector Server 30 routes a request to your Connector, it constructs a
Device object whose properties coπespond to those of the physical device For example,
if a user makes a request from a WAP handset with a Phone.com WML Browser, the
object passed as a parameter to handlewill be of type UPWAPDevice The example
below illustrates how to use the Java instance of operator to conditionally render output
(to the Connector Server console) based on the type of device making the request
public void handle( Properties req, Device device, OutputStream out)
{ if (device instanceof UPWAPDevice) {
Svslem.out.println ("A handset with UP. Browser"),
J else if (device instanceof NokiaWAPDevice) {
Svstem out.println ("A Nokia handset of some sort"), ; else if (device instanceof WAPDevice) {
System.out.println ("Some new or generic WAP device");
1 else if (device instanceof PalmVIIDevice) {
System.out.println ("It's a Palm VII using a PQA");
J else if (device instanceof HTMLDevice) {
System.out.println ("At least it supports HTML!");
;
else {
System.out.println ("An unknown device");
} } Client and Server Secuπtv
Dependable security is of fundamental importance with accessing internal
enterpnse as well as personal data from remote clients. Toward achieving that end, all
data sent across the network between the Connector Server and Providers is sent as
compressed, serialized objects secured using standards-based encryption and
authentication mechanisms. This approach is more secure than POP3. IMAP. and FTP
since an ASCII-based "clear text" protocol is not used. There is no way, for instance, for
a user to manually "Telnet" into a Provider 42-46 or Connector Server 30 and interact
with it. Dat can also be encrypted at the device level and at the Connector server 30 so that at no point in the chain of communication between device and data store is data in an
unencrypted form.
The network communication layers employ up-to-date encryption and
authentication technologies. Communication between Client devices 20-24 and the
Connector server 30 is performed using 40 or 128-bit Secure Socket Layer (SSL)
wherever possible Communications between Providers 42-46 and the Connector server
30 can also be encrypted using a vaπety of methods, including SSL and other Public key
Infrastructure (PKI)-based systems
The Connector server 30 facilitates access by the Client devices 20-24 to a host of
data stores, e.g.. Microsoft Exchange 34, EMAP POP3 server 36, LDAP server 38, and
web-based messaging, calendaπng, or e-commerce site 40. The data stores 34-40 can also
include lotus domino or any other open standards messaging, database, or other
application
Just as Providers 42-46 enable disparate data sources to interact with the
Connector server 30, Connectors 52 handle the vaπous protocols and pecuhaπties of
wireless handheld devices supporting, in pπnciple, even those devices that do not yet
exist. Connectors 52 can also transform data store objects into HTML. XML, WML, or
ASCII, or they can directly work with objects passed by Providers 42-46 to update
information on other servers or databases A connector 52 can also be used to link
external applications and data sources to a Connector server 30. Although pπmaπly provided to support wireless Client devices 20-24, hardwired
access devices 54, e.g., network terminals, can also access the data stores 34-40 through
the Connector server 30 and Providers 42-46. Similarly, a Client device connected
through a Connector 52 to the Connector Server 30 can access a remote data stores 56
utilizing the system.
Utilizing the foregoing system architecture users are able to access any type of
data source via any type of Client device To achieve that end. the component-based
approach is employed and implemented with configurable software modules that are
designed to interface with Client devices 20-24 on the front-end and with enterpπse data
sources 34-40 on the back end. These modules plug in to the centralized Connector
server 30 component that routes traffic between them. Since the modules can be installed
and distπbuted separately from the core server platform, organizations have the option to
distπbute components across their network to ensure secunty and load balancing
requirements
The component-based architecture provides users with their choice of multiple
scenaπos for configuπng the Connector server 30. A typical scenaπo involves having
both the Connector server 30 and multiple Providers 42-46 installed within the
corporation's LAN. One machine may host all of the components if desired, thereby
eliminating the need for network communication between Providers 42-46 and the
Connector server 30 When installed on separate machines, both the Connector server 30 and Providers
42-46 employ a compressed, encrypted object transport layer to securely enable one of the
true strengths of the system - distπbuted computing Typically used as a catchall phrase
for all sorts of client-server configurations, the Connector server model, with its single
point of access from the Internet to multiple local/remote Providers that allow access to
data store servers, is a practical and successful application of distπbute computing The
model also allows for scalability and the ability to load balance across an array of servers
by plugging in additional Providers where necessary
When installed across separate machines, the Connector server-side architecture
employs dynamic discovery mechanisms, allowing vaπous components at different levels
within the distπbuted architecture to inform each other of their availability and sets of
services Two pπmary levels of discovery occur- between Providers 34-40 and the
Connector server 30, and between Client devices and the Connector 52 Examples of
information conveyed duπng the process of discovery include the types of functionality
offered by specific data store Providers 42-46, Provider status information, account
information, and, in the case of "groupware," the range of item locations that specific
Providers support.
Wireless Groupware Access Application As used herein, groupware refers to a software application paradigm which
facilitates collaboration and communication between a set of users. Each user has the
ability to communicate, schedule, and organize private and public information.
Commercial software packages that use this paradigm include Microsoft Exchange and
Lotus Domino. Internet e-mail also fits within this model. Groupware, or portions of it,
are also refeπed to as e-mail, PIM (personal information management), or shared
calendaring. The architecture of a groupware product includes server software, or a
"groupware store", which maintains and transports data, and client software, which allows
the user to interact with the store to retrieve, view, create, update, and remove data from
within the store.
The concept of "wireless groupware" is comprised of three components. First, a
defined canonical format which represents a lightweight set of groupware store items and
their essential fields and methods. Second, a lightweight, efficient communication
protocol for authentication, and retrieval or manipulation of groupware objects in a
server-side groupware store. Third, an application workflow/process which defines a real
time wireless groupware session and application. These three components will be defined
in the following sections.
Groupware Class Definition This section will define the canonical format that has been created for representing
groupware data within the wireless groupware system. The format was created to support
the following:
• Compatibility with all existing groupware server store software
• Usage on limited resource mobile devices and high-powered servers alike
• Representation of only the most essential information in the most efficient
manner possible
• Compatibility with all object-oriented computer programming languages
The following chart provides the class definition of canonical groupware data types:
ASS NAME DESCRIPTION βtoreltem The core representation of an item within a groupware store. It contains an item's identifier string and location path. All other groupware item types extend this class.
Message A representation of a message from one user to one or more bther users. This is most commonly used for email messages,
[though instant messages, pages, announcements, or chat
[messages could also be represented by this class. Message has a number of subclasses including ForwardedMessage,
ReplyMessage, Eventlnvitation, and TaskAssignment.
Event IA representation of an appointment, reminder, or meeting. The event has one organizer and one or more attendees. The class lalso contains the location, date, time, and description of the bvent.
Contact A representation of an address book entry. The basic fields, isuch as name, phone number, and address, are represented, i ialong with email and website addresses. i j
[Task A representation of an assigned task or "To Do" list entry.
Notions of an assignee, completion amount and a deadline, or due date, are contained within this class.
Figure imgf000019_0001
The next chart provides class definitions of canonical groupware data actions:
CLASS NAME(S) DESCRIPTION
AddNewGroupwareltem The basic "put" action for a groupware store. This represents actions such as composing email, adding an entry to a date book, or adding a new person to an address book. _ oveGroupwareltem The action for modifying the location of an item within a groupware store. This represents actions such as filing an email, moving an appointment to a shared group calendar, or organizing an address book into categories.
UpdateGroupwareltem [The action for modifying an existing item kvithin a groupware store. This represents lactions such as editing an email draft, changing Ithe time of a meeting, or modifying the completion status of a task on a To Do list.
DeleteGroupwareltem The action for removing an existing item from a groupware store. This represents actions such as deleting an email, canceling a meeting, or removing a post from a message board.
Countltems, CountltemsResponse The action for obtaining a count of total items in a specified groupware store location. This is used to obtain status or overview information [for the user.
[MarkGroupwareltemSeen/Unseen The action for changing the "viewed" status of (an existing groupware store item. This represents messages and posts being marked tread or unread.
(ValidateName, ValidateNameResponse [The action for validating a
GroupwareUserAddress against a groupware
Figure imgf000020_0001
The foregoing class definitions can be further understood by reference to the UML
diagrams of FIGS. 5 and 6.
Client Server Communication Protocol
The second component of the wireless groupware system is the client-server
communication protocol. Two version of a wireless groupware communication protocol
have been created. The first protocol, the Simple Inbox Return Format (SIRF), is focused
squarely on real-time, session-based wireless groupware, whereas the second. In Sync
(NSYNC), is somewhat more abstract, and can support stateless transactions. Both
protocols can be used as part of wireless groupware applications and were created to
satisfy the following requirements:
• A lightweight, efficient means of communicating a variety of data types.
• Support for stateful and stateless communication.
• Able to support a variety of character encoding formats.
• Able to be implemented using a variety of computer programming languages.
• Able to be implemented on resourced limited mobile computing devices and high-
powered servers alike.
• Support for sequential, iterative access to large server-side data items.
• Able to communicate the Wireless Groupware Data and Action Class information. • Able to be tunneled through standard internet protocols such as Hypertext Transfer
Protocol (HTTP) and Send Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP).
The SIRF protocol is best understood by reference to the wire protocol specification
provided below. The functions defined here represent the email or message functionality only, and not the entire set of groupware objects and actions:
SIRF Protocol Specification
-GUIDs are globally unique identifiers, stored as valid ANSI NULL-terminated stπngs
without any CR characters.
-Message indexes are UInt32 starting at 0, and ID's are Umt32. The message ED is used
only between the client and connector/session. The session will communicate with the
providers using separate Stπng message ids.
-Server sends responses with DELIM character of 0x06 and terminating with ETX (0x03)
-Dates will always be transmitted in the stπng form "YYYYMMDDHHMM", where Y is
Year, M is Month, D is Date, H is Hour, and the second M is Minute, and where months
and days are 1 -based, and time is 24-hour format.
The client and Server will agree upon a number of eπor and status codes to communicate
the following- Success, Authentication Failure, Invalid Account, Invalid Provider, Provider IO Eπor, Host Not Found, User Not Logged In, Invalid Client Version, Address
Resolution Eπor, Invalid Bound, Invalid Item ID.
Function Definitions
Figure imgf000022_0001
Figure imgf000022_0002
Figure imgf000023_0001
Figure imgf000023_0002
(supports Post)DELIMSupported Post ActionsDELIMO or
1 (supports Task)DELIMSupported Task ActionsDELIMO
or 1 (supports Contact)DELIMSupported Contact
ActionsDELIMETX
Figure imgf000024_0001
Figure imgf000024_0002
Figure imgf000024_0003
9
Figure imgf000025_0001
Figure imgf000025_0002
Figure imgf000026_0001
Figure imgf000026_0002
name2\n
namen\nDELIMETX
Figure imgf000027_0001
Exemplary Implementation
In an exemplary embodiment, the "API" is a set of routines that the Connector 52,
FIG. 1, routes from a Client device through to the session management layers. The
specific routines will be proxied to the abstract for communication with the Providers
underneath
As shown in FIG. 7, in a Palm Client implementation where a Palm Messaging
Application 74 running on a Palm device is being supported, the API functions will be
available in the Client device to higher application layers. The Messaging API software
76, which is the client side of the server software, the Inet Library 78, which controls the
Palm hardware for sending data, and the Network Stack 80. which is the lower level portion of the Inet software, all run on the Palm device Communication of the Palm
device to the Connector Server 84 is through a wireless connection to the Palm wireless
gateway, i.e., Elaine 82. The Connector Server 84 communicates tot he Message Store 88
through the Messaging Connector 86 which may also have as part of it a Provider as
descπbed above.
The Messaging Connector 86 will communicate over HTTP with the Client device
(HTTPS on the Palm VH) using the SIRF communcation protocol All content in this
communication must be marked as HTML, even though it will not be, in order for the
Palm.net proxy server to pass it through to the Client device. The Palm Connector 52 will
communicate with the Client device and process the requests accordingly to produce the
desired response to fulfill the needs of the Messaging Application 74.
NSYNC Protocol (Client Server Protocol. Version 2)
In the NSYNC protocol, the framework is designed to allow developers to
leverage application-level logical steps in building cross-platform client-server wireless
applications. All details of transport layer implementations, push or pull, synchronous or
asynchronous communication protocols can be hidden from the level at which the
application developer operates. The NSYNC framework is a straightforward division of
labor between vaπous layers of an application, where the application consists of client and
server components operating transparently together. Other levels of abstraction can be
built on this basic framework to accomplish more and more general tasks with less
specific coding, with an attendant decrease in performance. Actions
The framework is based on the fundamental notions of Actions Actions are
application-level tasks that are typically reflected directly to a user. The Actions are
implemented as classes in whatever object-oπented language we are discussing An
application, then, rests on the fundamental set of Actions it supports An e-mail
application, for example, might implement Actions such as Fetch Messages or Delete
Messages The client uses the services of a server supporting this framework to carry out
the actual execution of these Actions.
Each and every Action implies a corresponding Action Response. These are the
results of an Action, and every Action has EXACTLY one Action Response Actions are
fed to the server via a Request, which contains a set of Actions and a MetaData object,
some holder for information that spans all Actions in the Request The server executes all
of the Actions in the Request, using whatever appropnate information is contained in the
MetaData, and returns a Request filled with Action Responses.
NSYNC Server Architecture
As shown in FIG. 8, the server-side of the framework consists of three distinct
functional levels: Transport 90, Router 92, and Executor 94 The Transport component
90 is responsible for receiving Requests 96 over some transport layer, and returning
Responses 98 back over that layer The Router 92 is responsible for maintaining resource
pools, and offeπng services to the Transport 90 to identify incoming Actions 100-104 The Transport 90 assembles the Actions 100-104 using services of the Router 92, then
passes them into the Executor 94 for actual execution - the Executor 94 is responsible for
actually executing the Actions 100-104 contained in the Request 96 and generating
Responses 98. The Transport 90 receives the Response 98 from the Executor 94 and
sends it back to the client that sent the oπgmal Request 96.
Note that these fundamental divisions of labor are quite high-level The services
offered by each layer are quite openly defined, and the stack resembles a network protocol
stack more than a concrete definition of services in some particular language.
The Transport
The Transport piece 90 of the architecture could be implemented as a stand alone
server application, and could in fact be the execution environment that hosts the
framework. Alternatively, the Transport component 90 could be plugged into some other
server architecture.
The Transport 90 must know how to interpret incoming Requests 64 and build
Actions 100-104 from some network layer protocol. This implies that a Transport
implementation has some knowledge of the client-side Transport implementation, as well
as vaπous Actions 100-104, Action Responses 98, and MetaData.
The Executor
The Executor 94 is the component that understands how to "execute" Actions 100-
104 and generate corresponding Action Responses 98. This implies that it is tied to the
Transport 90 to some degree, in that they both have the notion of a set of "supported" Actions, on which they must agree. This does not mean that an Executor 94 and
Transport 90 are only usable with a certain predefined set of Actions 100-104. As we will
see, this general model can be further specified with a certain type of Action 100-104 that
is self-describing and self-executing.
The Router
The Router 92 manages coordination between the Transport 90 and the Executor
94. It allows both components to take advantage of caching and performance-enhancing
facilities, and ensures that there is some degree of type-safety between the two layers.
The Router 92 is an intermediary, and though implementations may be complex, the
definition of services is not.
Example Implementation
As we mentioned previously, the framework can be implemented in a number of
ways - as a complete server application, or as a component of another server architecture.
Let us consider a specific of the NSYNC Java implementation as depicted in FIG. 9. The
NSYNC Java implementation provides an HTTP Transport Core component 106. This
component hosts the NSYNC framework inside a generic HTTP-server plugin module.
The module is designed to take incoming HTTP requests and output HTTP responses, and
is the runtime environment for the Router and an Executor. The module includes a Java
Servlet API wrapper 108, as well as a Connector wrapper. This implementation therefore
provides a way for the framework to operate in several different HTTP server
environments transparently. Groupware Application Workflow
The application workflow for a wireless groupware application will now be
descπbed with reference to FIGS. 10A-10H. As used in the workflow diagrams, links
bracketed with "<>" indicate on screen links, "()" indicated on screen custom softkeys,
and "[ ]" indicate off screen static hardkeys These application workflow diagrams
explain how to set up a Wireless Application Protocol (WAP) enabled handset to access
e-mail and groupware data To access the Connector server 30 (FIG. 1), browse to the
URL or IP address of the machine m your network where it is installed 110 Once the
browser is configured to find the Connector server 112, a welcome screen will appear 114
prompting the user to enter their login information including user name and PIN. At the
login screen the Wireless User Name that has been provided by the system administrator
is entered 116 along with a Wireless PIN 118. The user name and PIN are confirmed by
first checking whether this is a new user profile 120. If it is not a new user profile, the
entered PIN will be checked 122 and, if mcoπect, a message will delivered to the user that
they have entered an invalid user name or password 124 The user can then elect to
reenter the user name 116 and PIN 118.
If the user name and PIN that have been entered are new 120, the system will
check to ensure that the user name is not blank 126 and that the password is not blank
128. If the user name is blank, the user will be prompted to enter the user name 116. If
the PIN is blank, the user will be provided with a message indicating that a password must
be entered 130. If the user elects, they will be given the opportunity to enter a PIN 118 Once the user has entered a correct user name and PIN, the Connector server will then
check whether the user has an e-mail profile 132.
Account Set Up
The first time a Groupware Access application running on the Connector server is
visited by a user, an e-mail account will need to be set up. If the system administrator has
not pre-configured an account, the user will be prompted to configure the e-mail account
134. First, the user will be prompted to choose the appropriate type of email/ groupware
provider 136. Exemplary e-mail/groupware providers include Microsoft Exchange,
IMAP, POP, and DOMINO. The internal URL or IP address of the email or groupware
server is then entered 138. The server's hostname can be obtained from the administrator
if the user does not know it. The user login name for the groupware server is then entered
140 and the user is given the option of entering the password 142. If the user does not
enter the password, they will be asked to enter it at each logon. Depending on the security
configuration of the Connector server, the user may not have the option to save the
password as part of account configuration.
The user will then be prompted to enter their Display Name 144. The Display
Name is the name that will be used when messages are sent by the user using the
Connector server. The Display Name field is not required for Microsoft Exchange or
Lotus Domino accounts. The user will then be prompted to enter the complete e-mail
address 146. This is the return e-mail address that will be used when messages are sent
with the connector server. This field is not required for Microsoft Exchange or Lotus Domino accounts.
The setup is then complete and the user will be provided with a message indicating that
the e-mail account has been successfully configured 148 The user is then returned to the
Mailbox Manager at the login screen 112.
Mailbox Manager
The Mailbox Manager allows a user to logon to a particular mailbox that has been
configured When logging in, the user will be presented with a list of the available
mailboxes To sign in to a mailbox, the mailbox is selected from the list and a Sign In
button is selected. A search is then performed to determine if the user elected to have the
system save the e-mail password for the account 150. If not. the user will be prompted to
enter a password for the account 152. If the user attempts to enter a blank password 154,
and blank passwords are not accepted by the system, the prompt to enter the password
will again be provided to the user 152. If the wrong password is entered 156. the user will
be provided with a prompt indicating that the wrong password is entered 158 and the user
will be prompted to enter the coπect password 152. If the password is saved 150. a blank
password is accepted or the coπect password is entered 156, the user will be presented
with a default view of their mailbox 160, FIG. 10B.
If the mailbox is empty 162, the user will be provided with a message that there
are no messages to display 164 and the user will be given the option of returning to the
mam menu or back to the previous screen. If the mailbox is not empty the default view of
the mailbox 160 will be displayed The default view screen will contain a list of headers for the five most recently
received messages. The default screen will also provide the user with the options of
viewing messages, browsing through the list of headers, searching for a mail message,
refreshing the screen (to display headers for newly received messages. From the default
view screen 160, the user can browse through the list of message headers in the mailbox
by selecting an option to view More 166. The user will then be provided with a list of the
next five message headers.
To refresh the default screen, the user selects the Refresh option in the default
view screen 168. If the user ever desires to back up a screen, the user would select the
Previous option in the view screen 170. Alternatively, the user can select to go Back 172
which will return them to the previous screen if they are not already on the first screen. If
they are already on the first screen, they will be returned to the Main Menu, to be
descπbed below. The user can also go to the Mam Menu by selecting the Menu option on
the view screen.
If the user would like to view the contents of a message, they would select the
header of the message to view. Messages received in the mailbox can be standard e-mail
or invitations. Thus, when a header is selected the system will first determine whether the
selected message is an invitation or an e-mail 174. If it is an invitation, the details of the
invitation will be displayed including the sender, title, location, time 176 The user is
then presented with the options of accepting the invitation, declining the invitation, or
tentatively accepting. The user can then select the response option desired and this will be sent to the invitation sender 178. Rather than selecting a response, the user can also select
to return to the message list thereby putting off the response.
If the message selected to be viewed by the user is an e-mail, the user will be
provided with a default view of the e-mail including the From, Date, and Subject fields as
well as the body 180. The options More, Reply, Reply All, Forward, Delete, and OK are
also presented to the user. The message contents are sent in one kilobyte chunks so only a
portion of the message may be displayed in the default vie . To view additional one
kilobyte chunks of the message, the user would select the option for More.
If the user selects the OK option when in a message, they will be returned to the
previous screen or, if already at the first screen of a message, they will be returned to the
message list. The user is also provided with the Back option which will return them to the
Message list from wherever they are in a message.
If the user selects the delete option, the message will be deleted and the user will
be provided with a message indicating that the message has been deleted 190 The user
can confirm this by selecting OK following which they will be returned to the message
list. Alternatively, they can select back which will undue the delete and return them to the
body of the message.
If the user selects the Reply, Reply All, or Forward options, they will be provided
with prompts for enteπng the recipients, cc's, Subject and Body of the response message
184. At each prompt, the user can enter the data or select back to back up and change the
entered data. Once all of the requisite data has been entered, the user selects the send option and, if the recipient list matches with the oπgmal message 186, the message is sent
and the user is informed of this 188.
If the user is at the first prompt of the response message 184, the recipient prompt,
and selects back, they will be given the option of selecting the type of item they wish to
compose 190. If the user desires to compose a response message they will be returned to
the response prompts and follow the steps descπbed above. If they instead desire to
compose a calendar entry they will select this option and be returned to the Main Menu.
From the message list 160, the user can also select to Search their messages
Using this option, the user can search through their entire mbox based upon search cπteπa
set for the From, Subject and Body fields of the e-mail 192. If the search cπteπa for one
of the fields is left blank, that field will not be used as part of the search. If all of the
fields are left blank the user will return to the message list. If not, once the search is
complete if messages are found that match the search cπteπa 196. the user will se a list of
messages that match the cπteπa entered 198 The messages found by the search can be
viewed by selecting the header of the desired message. The list of found messages can be
navigated and manipulated in the same way the message list is as descπbed above.
If no messages match the search cπteπa 196, a message will be provided to the
user informing them of this and giving them the option of going Back to select new search
cπteπa or returning to the Main Menu 200.
Calendars As depicted in FIG IOC, the user has the option of accessing their groupware
calendar using their wireless device. When the user enters the Calendar application the
server will determine if the calendar is empty 202 and, if so, deliver a message to the user
that there are no calendar items to display 204. The user can then choose to go back or
return to the Mam Menu. If the calendar is not empty 202, the most current calendar item
will be provided to the user 206 along with the options View, More, OK and Menu.
The OK option returns the user to the previous screen or, if it is already at the first
screen, to the Main Menu 208 The Menu option returns the user directly to the Mam
Menu 210. Because of the limited screen dimensions of the wireless device, only a
limited number of calendar event headers can be displayed at a time. The More option
allows the user to view additional calendar events not cuπently displayed. If there are no
additional calendar events to view 212, the user will be provided with a message to that
effect 214 and the user can go back or return to the Main Menu.
If the user selects the view option for a calendar item they will be provided with
additional information about the calendar item including the Organizer, Title, Location,
time and attendees 216. The user can then select to leave the view screen and go back to
the calendar list by selecting back.
Notes
Also depicted in FIG 10C is the flowchart for use of the Notes application
provided by the Connector Server 218 As will be descπbed below, to view notes a user
would select notes from the Main Menu If the Notes folder is empty 220 the user will be provided with a message to this effect and be given the option of returning to the Main
Menu 222. If there are Notes 220, the default view of the list of the first five notes will be
provided to the user 224. The details of any of the Notes in the list can be viewed by
selecting the note from the list 226. As with the Calendar application, the More, OK, and
Menu functions are also provided in the Notes application.
Logoff
To logoff the Connector Server, the user would return to the Main Menu from any
of the applications and then select the logoff option. A message would be provided to the
user indicating that they are logged off of the server 228. The user would be given the
option here of logging back into the server or going back to the Mam Menu While the
user can return to the Ma Menu they will be logged off the server but will be able to
retπeve data already downloaded to their wireless access device. If the user does not log
off on their own. they will be automatically logged off after the session idle time limit has
been reached. The session idle time can be configured by the system administrator.
Contacts List
Another option available from the Main Menu is the Contacts List application.
This application allows a user to access contact lists stored on the connector server. For
Microsoft Exchange it is Contacts, for Lotus Domino it would be People When this
option is selected the server will determine first if there are any contacts in the user's list
230. If not, the user will be provided with a message to this effect and be returned to the
previous screen or Mam Menu at their option 232. If there are contacts in the user's list, a default display of the first five contact's full names are displayed along with the View,
More, Search, OK and Menu options 234.
To view a contact's information, the user would click on the contact's name. The
server would then make a determination whether the file for the contact information is too
large to be sent to the wireless device 236. If the file is too large, the user will be notified
of this and given the option to return to the previous screen 238. If the file is not too large
to be sent to the wireless device, it will be sent and the contact's data displayed 240 The
use will then have the options of directly placing a call to the contact or composing an e-
mail to the contact
As previously descnbed, the More option allows additional contacts to be
displayed. Also, the OK and Menu options provide the functions previously descπbed.
The Search option permits the user to search for a contact by enteπng the contact's
name 242 If a search by name is performed, the server will return the contact's
infonnation 246 or let the user know that no contact has been found with that name 244
If no contact is found with the searched name, or if no search cπtena are entered, the user
is returned to the search query screen to enter a name 242.
Compose Menu
To create a new mail message or a new calendar item the user selects the Compose
option from the Main Menu The user is then prompted to select the type of item they
wish to compose, e.g., a mail message or a calendar item 248 If the user selects to
compose a mail message, they are then presented with the prompts to enter the recipients e-mail address, any cc's e-mail addresses, a subject line and the body of the message 250
The user then clicks on send to send the message.
If the user has entered a recipient e-mail address 252, the message will be sent and
the user will be notified of this by a message displayed on their wireless device 254. If
the recipient list is blank 252 the user will be returned to the prompt to enter an e-mail
address for the recipient. It should be understood that recipient's e-mail addresses can be
stored m memory of the server or wireless device so that the user may need to enter onh
the recipient's name in the to line and the server or device will provide the necessary e-
mail address. After sending the e-mail, the user will be given the option to go back to
prepare additional e-mails or go to the Mam Menu.
If the user selects to compose a calendar item the user will be prompted to enter
the attendees, title, location, start time, end time and details of the calendar item and then
click on create 256. The server will check to see if all of the attendees are recognized 258
and if any of the attendees are incorrect an error message will be presented to the user
requesting that the user go back and edit the attendees list 260. If all of the attendees are
correct the server will then check to ensure that the start time is before the end time for
the item 262. If the start time is before the end time the calendar entry will be added to
the calendar 264 and the user will then be given the option of going back to create more
calendar items or return to the Main Menu If the start time is after the end time 262, the user will be notified that they are
attempting to create a calendar item with invalid parameters. The user will then go back
to edit their calendar item.
Ma Menu
The Mam Menu screen, as depicted m FIG. 10F, provides the user with the
vaπous applications available through the connector server After login to the server, the
user is presented with the Main Menu screen which presents the options of Messages
(descnbed above), Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, Notes, Compose, Browse Folders, Logoff,
Setup and OK 268 By selecting the desired option in the Ma Menu the desired
application is launched.
To view tasks the user would select the Tasks from the Mam Menu (Tasks for
Microsoft Exchange To Dos for Lotus Domino) The default view of the first five task
notes is presented to the user 270 along with the options of View. More, OK and Menu
If the task list is empty 272 the user will be presented with a message that there are no
items to display 274 and can then return to the Mam Menu or go back to the previous
screen
If the user wishes to see more than the first five tasks, the select the More option
and if there are more tasks to display 276 the next five items will be displayed If there
are no additional items to display the user will be provided a message that there are no items to display 278 and given the option of going back to the previous screen or
returning to the Main Menu.
If the user desires to see the details of a task they would click on the task in the list
270 The server would then check to determine whether the message is too large to
display 280 on the wireless device. If the task note is too large to display, the user will be
provided with a message indicating that the message is too large 282 and the user will be
returned to the task list If the message is not too large to display the task note including
the Title, assigned date and time, due date and time, pnoπty (low, normal, and high),
percentage complete, and details 284. After reviewing the task list, the user can then
return to the task list.
Browse Folders
The user can also view messages that are stored in folders other than the inbox
To view such messages the user selects the Browse Folders option from the Main Menu
The user is then presented with a message requesting the user select the type of message
to view, e.g., Messages, Calendar, Contacts, Tasks, Notes, Deleted Items, and Outbox
286. In a preferred embodiment, only the first five available folders are provided in the
default screen. The user would select the More option to view additional folders. To
view the contents of a folder, or to see a folders subfolders, the user clicks on the folder
and the folder contents or folder's subfolders will be displayed 288. Be selecting the back
option the user will be sent back to the previous screen or, if at the first screen 290. the
user will go back to the Browse Folders menu. Setup Menu
The Mailbox Manager can also be used to create, edit, or delete a mailbox
configuration or to change the Wireless PIN. To perform any of these functions, the user
selects the Setup option in the Main Menu 292, FIG. 10H. To add a new mailbox, the
user then selects an Add New option in the Mailbox Manager and is provided a message
requesting that information be provided to set up the account 294 The user is then
prompted to enter an access provider, server, login name, password, display name, and e-
mail address 296. If the user enters the requested information, they will be provided a
message indicating that they have successfully configured the e-mail account 298.
To edit the PIN for the account, the user selects the password option in the setup
menu 292. The user is then presented with a message asking if the user would like to
change the password 298. If the user responds affirmatively they are presented with
prompts to enter the user name, the old PIN, the old PIN again to confirm it and then the
new PIN 302. If the correct usemame and old PIN were entered 304 the PIN is changed
and the user is returned to the Mam Menu. If the entered usemame or PIN are incoπect,
the user is presented with a message indicating that the incorrect information was entered
306 and the user is returned to the prompt for enteπng the user name and old and new
PINs 302.
If the user desires to change the user name, they would select the user name option
in the setup menu 292. The user is then presented with a message asking if they wish to
associate the device they are using with a different user name 308. If they respond affirmatively to this message, the user will be prompted to enter the user name and PIN
310. If the user name is left blank 312 the user will be asked to enter the login
information again 314 If an invalid password is entered 316 the user will be presented
with a message indicating that the user name or PIN were invalid 318. If either the user
name is blank or an invalid user name or PIN are entered, the user is returned to the prompts for enteπng the user name and PIN.
From the setup menu, if the user selects the menu option, the user will be sent to
the Main Menu if they are already logged in 320. If they are not already logged in 320,
the user is provided a message indicating that the provider could not be found and the user
can then be sent to the login screen 322.
What is claimed is:

Claims

1. A software architecture for wireless data, compπsing
a wireless data receiving and transmitting device application;
a server for processing requests from said wireless device application;
a software module running on said server for detecting the type of wireless device
and for routing requests from the wireless device application to said server through a
software module implementing the functionality of a particular application for the
wireless device type.
2. A method of communicating wireless data, compπsing the steps of:
generating a request at a wireless device;
detecting the type of wireless device which generated said request and routing said
request to a server through a software module which implements the functionality of a
particular application for the wireless device type,
processing said request at said server and generating a response to siad request.
PCT/US2001/000946 2000-01-14 2001-01-16 Software architecture for wireless data and method of operation thereof WO2001052016A2 (en)

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US17601400P 2000-01-14 2000-01-14
US60/176,014 2000-01-14

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US6151628A (en) * 1997-07-03 2000-11-21 3Com Corporation Network access methods, including direct wireless to internet access
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