Sony Ericsson T68ie Compatible with SMS standards, Examples of EMS contents and applications

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Compatible with SMS standards

Users will find EMS as easy to use as SMS. At the moment 15 billion SMS messages, are sent every month worldwide. Roughly 80% of this traffic is user-to-user i.e. mobile phone users sending short messages to each other using the keypad of the phone to enter text. The remaining 20 % is shared by downloads and notifications of different kinds.

The Enhanced Messaging Service (EMS) was first submitted to the standards committees by Ericsson. Ericsson presented the outline structure of EMS to the relevant ETSI/ 3GPP committees. The major mobile phone manufacturers and most operators are actively contributing to the 3GPP standards. Hence the EMS standards have evolved and are now stable and complete as part of the 3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP) technical specification.

An EMS message can be sent to a mobile phone that does not support EMS, or only supports part of EMS. All the EMS elements i.e. text formatting, pictures, animations and sounds are located in the message header. The EMS contents will be ignored by a receiving phone that does not support the standard. Only the text message will be displayed to the receiver. This is true consumer-friendly standardization. EMS is compatible to SMS across most of the range of mobile phones from the oldest to the newest.

Some companies in the mobile phone industry have developed their own messaging technologies, which only work with their own phone models. Network operators are in favour of EMS because it is universal – many of the major mobile phone manufacturers are constructively improving and developing the EMS standards even further for implementation in their products.

Examples of EMS contents and applications

A wide range of contents, applications and services may be developed. Below is a list of examples and areas where messaging can be enhanced with EMS.

User-to-user message

Messages usually originating from the keypad of a mobile phone can include pictures, melodies, formatted text with EMS.

Voice and e-mail notifications

Notifying mobile phone users that they have new voice or fax mail messages waiting - including

T68i

White Paper, April 2002

icons or melodies with EMS.

Unified messaging

The user typically receives a short message notifying them that they have a new message in their unified messaging box, with icons or formatted text further enhancing the message.

Internet e-mail alerts

An Internet e-mail alert is provided in the form of a short message that typically details the sender of the email, the subject field and first few words of the email message, and in this case formatted text is excellent to identify mesage elements.

Ring signals

Downloading ring signals from the Internet

News & commercials

World news illustrated, sports scores and news headlines, finance and stock market news with diagrams and tickers, commercial product promotions, weather reports with maps, tunes from TV commercials as ring signals.

Info & entertainment

Ring signals, e-greetings, football club logo, joke- of-the-day illustrated by pictures or sound, horoscopes, movie related animation or theme song, TV show promotions, music artist promotions, lottery results, food and drinks pictures and recepies, mood-related pictures.

Corporate

Flight schedules, preinstalled corporate logos, map snippets and travel info, company branded icons and ring signals, corporate e-mail notifications, affinity programmes where companies notify customers of product updates etc, banks notifying customers about new services and interest rates, call centres providing answers to questions about a product, vehicle positioning combining EMS with Global Positioning System (GPS) position information, job dispatch with delivery addresses for sales or courier package delivery, using EMS in a retail environment for credit card authorization, remote monitoring of machines for service and maintenance purposes.

Using Web, WAP And SMS for download

Already today services exist on the Internet where users can create melodies, and view icons and pictures, subscribe to entertainment and informations services. These may develop further in the future to support access via PC over the Internet, from the phone using WAP and even

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Contents T68i/T68ie Contents T68 Preface Purpose of this documentT68 White Paper, April Key functions and features Product overviewMore in-phone functions Picture phone book Memory managementMobile chat Calendar vCalendarMultimedia in the T68i Text MMS Multimedia Messaging ServiceMMS objects TemplatesBenefits PIM communication with MMSMessage conversion MMS technical featuresOTA configuration ArchitectureNew possibilities with messaging EMS Enhanced Messaging ServiceEMS more than just words Examples of EMS contents and applications Compatible with SMS standardsT68i White Paper, April Bluetooth wireless technology Using Bluetooth wireless technology in the T68iSyncML background What is SyncML?Synchronize calendar and phone book Hierarchical phone book with contactsProtocol Service providersBenefits of a common synchronization End usersLocal synchronization Local synchronization software and the T68iXTNDConnect PC WAP services Using WAP in the T68iSecurity using WAP Bearer type characteristicsGateway characteristics Gprs accessOver-the-air provisioning of WAP settings Configuration of WAP settingsPush services CertificatesMobile Internet Service Indication SIService Loading SL Data connectionsGeneral Packet Radio Services Mobile positioningUsing Gprs in the T68i GprsT68i White Paper, April GSM data communication Modem and AT commandsAT commands support Obex GSM UssdGSM Gprs Connection via cable Infrared transceiverConnection via infrared In-phone functions and features Subscription and/or network-dependentT68i White Paper, April T68i White Paper, April SMS ALS Fixed dialling and Restricted calls Network-dependent featuresSMS and EMS messaging SIM application toolkit SIM AT services supported by the T68iService Mode Support T68i Play Tone GET InputMore Time Polling OFFService Mode Support T68i SET UP Call‘Key’ responses User interaction with SIM ATText clearing times MMI Maximum Response lengthsSecurity and M-commerce technical data Feature Support in the T68i for m-commerceTerminology and abbreviations IrMC GatewayImage IrDASIM card Service providerWAP service SyncMLWMLScript Software Related informationDocuments LinksExterior description Technical specificationsGeneral technical data Supported Man-Machine Interface MMI languages Ambient temperaturesDimension Value in GSM Current consumption, talk and standby timesName Type of game Interactive Vibration Dimension Full rate Enhanced full rateSpeech coding Technical platform informationCell broadcast service Feature Support in the T68iShort message service SMS Wbmp Enhanced message serviceFeature Support in the T68i Multimedia message service Feature Support in the T68i/ieMessage priority AMR, AACInstant messaging/ Chat Bluetooth technical dataDimension Support in the T68i Tdma Performance and technical characteristicsDimension GSM 900/E-GSM GmskJPG WAP browser technical dataFeature Support in the T68i WAP browser WAP/WML WAPFeature Support in the T68i for WAP WAP Browser WAP Operator technical dataFeature Support in the T68i WAP browser WAP ProvisioningApplicative provisioning Feature Support in the T68i for WAPContent types TechnologiesSecurity WAP solutionsFeatures User agent profileObject formats ElementsGprs technical data Dimension Support in the T68iAT+CGDATA ENT AT+CGATT Packet Domain Service Attach Or DetachSIM RequestedFeature Support in the T68i e-mail client Built-in GSM data modem technical dataMail client technical data Ussd technical data Images downloading to phone Image format technical dataFeature File type Format VisibleSyncML technical data Feature Support for Sync ML in the T68iInfrared transceiver technical data GPRS25 IndexEMS7 T68 White Paper, April