Sprint Offers Developers the Tools They Need to Be Successful
SANTA CLARA, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 27, 2009--
Calling the developer community the cornerstone of mobile innovation,
Steve Elfman, president, Network Operations & Wholesale, outlined
Sprint’s “Open” approach and encouraged developers to create
applications that work not only on Sprint’s most dependable 3G network,1
but across the industry. Elfman delivered today’s keynote address at
Sprint’s (NYSE:S) 2009 Open Developer Conference – its ninth annual
application developer conference.
Elfman outlined the key tenets of Sprint’s Open approach:
-
Let consumers determine the application winners
-
Be easy to do business with
-
Create a developer’s “Garage” where new innovation happens
-
Use the proven Open Internet model as a guide
-
Support is best performed by the creators of the content
-
Open still requires management
Sprint Listens to Developers
“Sixty-five percent of U.S. wireless consumers already are using some
form of wireless data services,”2 Elfman said. “The
popularity of smartphones and the Internet access and applications they
provide are here to stay. We recognize the important role that
developers play in a mobile environment. Sprint wants developers to be
successful and profitable. We understand that their innovation is good
for the mobile consumer, business and government services and our
industry as a whole.”
Application Development Addresses Voice Services and Data
Voice services continue to play a central role in mobile communications,
even as data grows. Application developers have created a number of
voicemail and messaging services that take advantage of call forwarding
capabilities. Sprint announced today that it will not charge customers
for certain types of call forwarding. Conditional call forwarding for
busy calls or calls not answered using the customer’s wireless phone
will be free, beginning mid-November. (Standard charges will continue to
apply for immediate call forwarding.)3 This change will give
Sprint customers the opportunity to access third-party voice services,
including the new voicemail feature in Google VoiceTM.
Google Voice lets users manage and control their voice communications
and comes with a suite of voicemail and text messaging features. On
Monday, Google announced it will offer a Google Voice feature that
allows mobile phone users to take advantage of Google Voice without
having to sign up for a Google Voice phone number. Further illustrating
its open, collaborative approach, Sprint is working with Google to
develop additional functionality to support services such as Google
Voice that will deliver an even richer experience to Sprint customers.
"We're excited Sprint customers will be able to take advantage of Google
Voice voicemail with their mobile phones. We look forward to continuing
this relationship and working closely with Sprint in the future," said
Bradley Horowitz, vice president of Product Management at Google. "Free
call forwarding and Sprint's Open approach create more opportunities for
developers, large and small, to build innovative and useful
applications."
Networks Matter
Sprint encourages application development that can run across various
networks, but also recognizes that the network is a differentiator in
how well an application works. The data speed, reliability and ubiquity
of the Sprint Network are key elements in enabling an application to run
at its best. According to a recent PC World report, Sprint
tested as the most reliable network overall among U.S. carriers in a
13-city performance test.4 PC World’s test results
provide further support for Sprint’s “most dependable 3G network” claim.
The average of Sprint Rev A download speeds reported by the Boy Genius
readers was the fastest amongst the major national wireless carriers.5
In addition, Sprint is the only national wireless carrier to have
launched a 4G network. Sprint 4G is currently available in 17 markets
across the country.
Devices, operating systems and ease-of-use for the customer play
important roles in the performance of an application. A critical aspect
in making those applications richer is the level of interaction/exposure
to the network and IT APIs (application programming interfaces) that a
developer can gain. Sprint provides more collaborative tools and access
than any other carrier, with more than 300 APIs exposed for developers
and a developer sandbox that will be offering access to 4G as well as 3G
tools. In 2009 Sprint has launched or announced an extensive line of
devices that allow developers full access to their capabilities (two
Android™ devices, two Palm® webOS™ devices, and multiple
Windows Mobile and RIM Blackberry devices).
While consumer applications receive a lot of attention in popular
advertising, sophisticated applications that enhance productivity and
cut costs are in high demand by enterprise, business and government
services.
“To take our applications to the next level, we’re going to have to have
open APIs made available for developers like ourselves,” said Andy
Baldocchi, senior vice president, Sales and Business Development,
FunMobility. “We must get really creative to get successful applications
in the market. It could be a billing API which allows for flexible
billing applications or an API that accesses the messaging stack on a
phone, or it could be location-based APIs. And Sprint is delivering the
developer tools more quickly than anyone else.”
Sprint’s Open Approach Stimulates Creativity, Innovation
Sprint’s leading open approach is paying dividends for developers and
innovation. This month Sprint received the Frost
& Sullivan 2009 Award for Product Line Strategy in the North
American Mobile Resource Management (MRM) Market. Frost & Sullivan
identified the TeleNav Vehicle ManagerTM as an example of
Sprint’s focus on collaboration with application developers to create a
unique, all-in-one fleet management service featuring specialized GPS
capabilities and vehicle diagnostics. The award-winning TeleNav Vehicle
Manager collaboration is supported by Sprint’s platform enablers program
for developers.
The Open
Developer Conference is fostering learning about engaging with
platform enablers as well as enterprise M2M business solutions,
approaches to make developers more profitable, 4G technical/development
resources and more. The conference also is delivering valuable insights
and support from a strong cross-section of leading mobile platforms,
from Android and Palm webOS to Java ME, RIM and Windows Mobile, and
providing hands-on coding sessions, breakout sessions, event sponsor
exhibits and networking opportunities for developers.
ABOUT SPRINT NEXTEL
Sprint Nextel offers a comprehensive range of wireless and wireline
communications services bringing the freedom of mobility to consumers,
businesses and government users. Sprint Nextel is widely recognized for
developing, engineering and deploying innovative technologies, including
two wireless networks serving almost 49 million customers at the end of
the second quarter of 2009; industry-leading mobile data services;
instant national and international push-to-talk capabilities; and a
global Tier 1 Internet backbone. The company’s customer-focused strategy
has led to improved first call resolution and customer care satisfaction
scores. For more information, visit www.sprint.com.
Google, Google Voice and Android are trademarks of Google Inc.
1 Dependable based on independent, third-party drive tests
for 3G data connection success, session reliability, and signal strength
for the top 50 most populous U.S. markets (including PR) from January
2008 to July 2009. Not all services available on 3G and coverage may
default to separate network when 3G unavailable.
2 U.S. Wireless Data Market Q2 2009 Update, Chetan Sharma
Consulting, Aug. 2009
3 Although no charges will be applied for conditional call
forwarding (meaning busy calls or calls not answered), some Sprint
customers may incur a $0.20 per-minute charge if they choose to forward
calls directly into voicemail or to another number without first
allowing the call to try to reach the number and getting a busy
signal/no answer. This is called unconditional call forwarding
(immediate).
4 PC World’s tests included 13 major cities with more than 20
tests per city from all regions of the country during a two-month period
(March and April 2009). In all, 5,443 individual tests from 283 testing
locations were conducted for each provider’s 3G service. Testing was one
minute in duration, and network performance can be highly variable from
neighborhood to neighborhood. The 13 cities were Baltimore, Boston,
Chicago, Denver, New Orleans, New York, Orlando, Phoenix, Portland, San
Diego, San Jose, San Francisco and Seattle. Sprint won for reliability
in Boston, Chicago, Denver, Portland, San Diego, San Francisco and
Seattle. Sprint tied for reliability in Orlando.
5 Boy Genius Report 3G network speed results based on
self-reported reader speed tests shared on boygeniusreport.com as of
Aug. 21, 2009.
Source: Sprint
Sprint
Jennifer Walsh Kiefer, 913-794-2950
Jennifer.r.walsh@sprint.com