Thursday 22 September 2011

OMA announce availability of API specifications for more than 40 networks

Berlin – 21 September 2011 (OMA)

The Open Mobile Alliance (OMA), an international specifications setting body, announces availability of API specifications for more than 40 network and device resources, with various language and protocol bindings. These new standards allow the creation of interfaces to the service infrastructure residing within existing networks and on devices. By deploying these programmable connections, service providers can increase their developer base, reduce time-to-market for new applications and services, and simplify wider deployment of existing applications and services.

“As the applications market has exploded with hundreds of choices of APIs that offer the same functionality, OMA has answered industry demand for standardized access to fundamental resources,” says Musa Unmehopa, Chair of OMA’s Technical Plenary. “By deploying OMA API specifications, operators can now expose their specific assets for the common functions required by every developer of mobile applications – no matter what signaling protocols, platforms or other APIs they use.”

Additional operating systems, development platforms and network capabilities have now become established in the market. This has added new market channels for existing global customers. At the same time, the ever-expanding number of APIs has fragmented the application development and service delivery markets.

“Estimates for the market potential of applications and services are in the range of tens of billions of dollars in the next four to five years,” says Fred Harrison, Chairman of the Board of OMA. “Without standardization to support wide scale market growth, developers may find difficulty in working with a range of service providers, whilst customers and service providers may be limited in their access to the broad developer community.”

“When combined with the wide and growing number of service delivery platforms, OMA APIs will enrich telecom services across networks globally,” says Liliana Dinale, Chair of the OMA Architecture Working Group. “The wide variety of OMA APIs offer modularized control to service providers in order to facilitate application development in an efficient way. The scope of OMA’s API work enables traditional connection scenarios among applications and services. This directly supports the emerging class of Web 2.0 and mass market developers – who are extending network services to web-widgets and mash ups on both the client and server sides.”

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