What most people may not know: The feature that Opera Unite delivers is available on mobile handsets already, namely on Android (here it rather works with Webkit), Win Mobile, Nokia S60 (Webkit again) and a Brew based handset. In fact, it was already demonstrated on JavaOne four weeks ago. How come?
What Opera calls Unite and intends to port to mobile tomorrow is functionally contained in what Sprint (wireless carrier in the US) calls Titan (which essentially is Mobile OSGi plus web browser integration), shipping with a number of handsets this year. What each respective technology does:
- it turns your device into a full web server (we call it the The Server in your Pocket)
- it lets you share your content peer-to-peer with your friends
- the local user interface runs in the browser
- new services & capabilities can be injected (taking effect on both the server and the browser based UI)
- on broadband networks it discovers peers via some internet lookup service (for instance, the demo on JavaOne used Twitter for that purpose). Certainly, Opera is ahead of the game in this regard as they provide an operational central DNS service operational
- on local networks it can discover peers through UPnP
Despite these similarities, OSGi takes the concept one step further and offers additional capabilities:
- it is browser agnostic. In fact, on Android and S60 the Webkit browser is used, whereas on WinMobile and a Brew based handset we use Opera Mobile (without Unite support)
- the server feature runs in the background and is available even when the browser is down
- new services (i.e. a new p2p messaging service) are written in Java and are deployable (push or pull) at any time (even once the device is already shipped). This opens the door to leveraging an incredible amount of existing code, knowhow and developer resources. Moreover, pure Opera Unite services run in the browser sandbox and cannot leverage platform capabilities that Opera does not provide JavaScript APIs for. In mobile this is crucial as file access (essentially the only platform access API currently available in Unite) isn’t all you want to use. There is location, messaging, PIM, etc. … In OSGi, you’re not bound to the APIs of your sandbox, you can bring you own APIs! Not to speak of the many APIs you get out of the box
- OSGi is a recognized industry standard, it is not a proprietary technology. It has an open governance model, a reliable spec and a huge developer community behind it
Anyway, despite these differences I am extremely excited about Opera Unite. Alike Sprint and OSGi, Opera has stood up for a new approach of architecting the internet: Turning dump clients into intelligent servers. It is not about yet another social networking platform, it is about expanding the very core fabric of the web and the way social communication works today. It took a popular brand like Opera to finally get a public conversation going about this new architecture. I sincerely thank Opera for having created this level of awareness in public. Sprint & Co. haven’t managed to create even just a fraction of the buzz we have seen in the last few weeks, initiated by Opera's announcement.
Lawrence Eng from Opera says in his blog "I hope you’ll join me in imagining a more personal and social computing experience that actually begins to deliver on the old (but not forgotten) promise of the Internet bringing people together in meaningful ways." I certainly will! Will you?
Opera, why don’t we team up and explore what comes out if we combined Unite and Mobile OSGi?
- Jo
4 comments:
Yeah, and pure OSGi services run in a OSGi sandbox, how about that? And how exactly you are going to expose Location, Messaging, etc. APIs with OSGi in Titan?
I don't know where is the incredible amount of existing code that you can use in Mobile OSGi as is. Can you point a single Java component/library that you can easy reuse in Titan?
Last thing -- just try to create, debug and deploy the Unite's blog example on a Mobile OSGi device and tell me how many developers will prefer this instead of JS ...
You seem to have gotten the impression that I am bashing against Unite, by no means this is my intention. As I said, I really like it!
To your comments:
- Sandbox: OSGi is not a sandbox because in contrast to the browser you can extend the platform. You can extend OSGi by functionality that purely runs inside OSGi & Java, but you can also extend it to break out of OSGi and use native functionality (by means of JNI). This really makes a difference to what you can do inside the browser sandbox. Note: OSGi is protected by a powerful security concept to avoid maluse of user data.
- Platform features: The mentioned features are exposed in OSGi through means of standardized JSR APIs (like in any other mobile Java environment). Custom enabler can be added (see previous comment).
- Component reuse: More or less any Java component that complies to Titan's VM spec (Java 1.4, CDC/FP) can be turned into OSGi components (called bundles) which makes the available code base huge. Ready bundelized components you find at the OSGi Bundle Repository or the Eclipse Plugin Central. There're more repositories out there...
- Development Ease: Every developer has his or her preferences for languages and tools and certainly this blog is not the right forum to discuss that topic. Nonetheless, I can surely tell that a simple blogging service like the one on the Unite primer is not big effort in OSGi either. A colleague of mine programmed it within a few hours only.
Opera is offered free of charge for personal computers and mobile phones, but for some devices it must be paid for. Thanks for all the information that you share!
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