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[m2m-iwg] Re : OMA-DM?

Nicolas,

Thanks, I should meet Cinterion and their newly elected JCP EC Representative tomorrow at DemoCamp Berlin.

Just in case you haven't seen it via the UOMo Docs page or Twitter, this is the SlideShare from Copenhagen also mentioning Sierra's solution here at CPH Airport: http://www.slideshare.net/keilw/the-eclipse-m2m-iwg-and-standards-for-the-internet-of-things

As I presented Unit type-safe DSLs in Berlin this June I may cut the introduction shorter in Berlin, given the slot is the last one and I may not have more than ~30 minutes, but I guess I'll leave all the M2M Real Live Use Cases in there, plus one or two slides on Cinterion as they are present to discuss in the Q&A.

If OMA-DM is such a widely used protocol, I guess a planned "Device Management" JSR for Embedded (based on Oracle's current Device Access API) might take it into consideration, even though the old JSR was withdrawn at the time.

So were e.g. 108 and both it and successors like 256 and 275 (voted down, while the "Final" 256 never got any adoption in real devices even from Nokia;-) which now gain momentum again through SensorWeb or Unit and Quantity-sensitive use cases like those on Smart Container and Temperature Unit here.

Will reply any outcome of the discussion with Cinterion after the DemoCamp.

Kind Regards,
Werner

> ------------------------------
> 
> Message: 2
> Date: Mon, 19 Nov 2012 14:48:28 -0800
> From: Nicolas Damour <ndamour@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: m2m Industry Working Group <m2m-iwg@xxxxxxxxxxx>
> Subject: [m2m-iwg] Re :  OMA-DM?
> Message-ID: <26F9C809-1285-40C1-B604-7BAC0DB9CA41@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
> 
> Hello Werner.
> 
> OMA-DM stands for Open Mobile Alliance - Device Management and is a
> protocol defined by the OMA, initially to remotely configure mobile phones.
> 
> It is also widely used in wireless cellular M2M and at least the 3 top
> cellular M2M module manufacturers Sierra Wireless, Gemalto/Cinterion and Telit
> support OMADM in their products as a de facto standard for remote
> management and configuration.
> 
> Literally millions of cellular devices today support OMADM.
> 
> This is the real life use case, and I suppose that it is the reason why
> the IWG is interested in it.
> 
> Kind regards,
> 
> Nicolas.
> 


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