Why not having a different approach? A widget would register to be notified when an SMS arrive, and upon reception, the widget wake up? In fact, nothing prevent you to put a link in an SMS, with or without widget, but this limit the use cases...
On 6/1/07, Gene Vayngrib <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Here is a use case - Push mail implemented as widget. Details: widget is running on the mobile phone, SMS message arrives alerting user to some changes. User clicks on a link in URL and a corresponding widget opens and picks up the changes from the Web. This would allow push-mail implemented as widget and many other enterprise scenarios - I can see many uses in CRM, for example. What is important - without widget having its own URL such applications become impossible to create. Please drop me a note if you see ANY workaround based on current Widget spec? --0-1904635671-1180704966=:79654 Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-1 Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit Here is a use case - Push mail implemented as widget. Details: widget is running on the mobile phone, SMS message arrives alerting user to some changes. User clicks on a link in URL and a corresponding widget opens and picks up the changes from the Web. This would allow push-mail implemented as widget and many other enterprise scenarios - I can see many uses in CRM, for example. What is important - without widget having its own URL such applications become impossible to create. Please drop me a note if you see ANY workaround based on current Widget spec?<br> --0-1904635671-1180704966=:79654--
-- Thomas Landspurg http://blog.landspurg.net
