If you are interested in the technical documentations, please send us an email. The documents listed below are available:
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Documentation Summary 1.1.pdf (80 K)
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This document briefly describes each document in the collection. Thisdocument also helps you quickly find the information you want to read.
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White Paper 2.4.pdf (920 K)
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Today, people are becoming accustomed to accessing their e-mail-messages, their date- and adressbook or bank accounts from anywhere anytime. More and more people are sending billions of SMS messages all over the world. By the end of the year Multimedia Messaging (MMS) is supposed to become the next killer application.
A wide variety of different mobile devices are populating offices, buses, subway trains and airports. We are starting to cut off our fixed lines at home and browse the Internet with notebooks and web pads. Organizers and mobile phones are converging, and many things that we were doing using the Internet during the past years are suddenly appearing on little colourful displays of smart phones. Watching colourful Founders and streaming video on a mobile phone, is everyday becoming more normal. So what has The Internet become??
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Future Directions 2.1.pdf (376 K)
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This document describes future directions for developments of the weblicon PIM product describing functional requirements, technical aspects and pointing towards opportunities.
The weblicon product is separated into modules, each having a clear focus implemented in all three product lines (HTML, WML and Java). This document discusses the general implementation and features available to a module, independently from the product line.
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Development and QA 1.4.pdf (352 K)
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This document describes the weblicon technologies software development and quality assurance process. It covers a process definition and explanation ranging fro m design and architecture definition until the approval of a successfully launched live service.
The QA processes that are part of the overall software development process ensure the controlled and reliable delivery of high quality software based on cleanly defined criteria.
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Project Processing 1.1.pdf (324 K)
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In the implementation of software projects, weblicon works according to a standardised procedure, supporting a professional project processing. The procedure splits the project into successive stages, starting with the analysis, leading to the concept, the implementation and finally to the acceptance. Every individual step defined is subjected to a qualified quality management.
This document describes the methods and the stages in drawing up individual applications or in adapting the weblicon standard products. The focus is not on the theoretical listing of models or the description of approaches but the depiction of indispensable steps, tried and tested in practice. The activities and the results expected (in the form of a model) are presented for every step.
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Architecture 1.3.pdf (508 K)
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This document describes the technical architecture of the weblicon Personal Information Manager (PIM) system. It describes the system architecture, inner workings of the weblicon applications and its interoperability with external systems.
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HTML Server 1.6.pdf (2.2 MB)
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This document contains a functional description of the weblicon online PIM HTML server application. It describes the visual appearance and the functions available to the end user.
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WML Server 1.2.pdf (4.1 MB)
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This document contains a functional description of the weblicon WML server. It describes the visual appearance and the functions available to the user.
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VoiceXML Server 1.2.pdf (632 K)
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weblicon has developed a Personal Information Manager (PIM) based on the VoiceXML specification. The VoiceXML server provides a speech interface for accessing the weblicon PIM with an ordinary or wireless phone. The server application dynamically generates audible prompts, handles spoken replies, and gives the user access to important calendar details, personal contact information, to-dos, and e-mail messages. The VoiceXML server supports Dutch, English, French, German, or Italian and can be configured to use male or female prompts.
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Administration 1.3.pdf (2.0 MB)
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This document contains a functional description of weblicon administration console. It describes the functions available to the system administrator and the implications of the settings for the weblicon PIM application.
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J2ME Client Server 1.0.pdf (480 K)
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This document describes the concept and technical architecture of the weblicon J2ME client for delivering the weblicon PIM to Java-enabled mobile phones.
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Java Client Server 1.2.pdf (2.2 MB)
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weblicon has developed a Personal Information Manager (PIM) based on Java Foundation Classes (JFC) software and Java Swing components from Sun Microsystems. The Java client provides a rich and full-featured user interface for accessing the weblicon PIM. The client supports Dutch, English, French, German, or Italian and will offer online and offline access to important appointments, personal contacts, to-dos, and e-mail messages.
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SyncML Client Server 2.1.pdf (820 K)
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Weblicon offers a complete synchronization product for synchronizing the weblicon PIM with standard desktop PIM software and PDAs. Using SyncML, the weblicon sync engine supports synchronization with the proprietary weblicon sync clients and any SyncML enabled device such as the SyncML enabled Ericsson T68 and Nokia 9210 handsets.
The weblicon synchronization application was designed to provide the user with the most reliable, easy to use and secure synchronization solution possible. SyncML technology is used to enable professional synchronization features and maximum future compatibility.
The proprietary weblicon synchronization clients support synchronization of appointments, to-do lists and the address book with Microsoft Outlook, Outlook Express as well as Palm and Pocket PC PDAs. Synchronization works bi-directional, changes on the client side will be applied to the weblicon PIM, and modifications of data on the weblicon PIM side will be applied to the client side.
The weblicon synchronization application is a user friendly one-click solution which was carefully designed and pre-configured to produce good synchronization results without any additional user interaction or manual configuration.
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Single Sign On 1.2.pdf (176 K)
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This document describes the concept of a single sign on mechanism which will allow the weblicon PIM to be integrated into any Web Site. The purpose of this mechanism is to be able to transfer the user from the Web Site to the weblicon PIM without having to re-authenticate the user.
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SSO Server 1.0.pdf (72 K)
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This document describes the concept of a single sign-on server (weblicon SSO server) which can provide a unified user-interface to multiple web applications from different vendors. Users will be able to switch between different applications without having to re-authenticate.
The weblicon SSO server has not been implemented as of today. However, the concept presented in this document has been successfully implemented before by members of the weblicon staff. The concept is compatible with the existing weblicon PIM architecture and can support 3rd party web applications such as the Netscape Messaging Server without modification of these applications.
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XML API Server 1.4.pdf (120 K)
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This document describes the XML Application Programming Interface (API) of the weblicon API Server application.
The weblicon API Server is intended to provide an interface for backend integration of the weblicon Personal Information Manager (PIM). By using the XML API of the API Server, 3rd party server applications have full access to the weblicon address book data maintained in an LDAP server. Using the XML API offers an alternative access to the address book data in addition to directly connecting to the LDAP server.
The weblicon API server currently offers access to the weblicon address book only, but will be extended to provide full access to all weblicon data including appointments, todo and messages.
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LDAP Specification 1.2.pdf (276 K)
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This document describes the LDAP structures that are used by the weblicon product. It covers as well the particularities of the part of the ER model that corrosponds to the data stored in the LDAP directory as well as the LDAP structures themselves as used in the directory server. Currently weblicon uses and recomments Netscape LDAP Directory Server 4.12. However, due to the standardized nature of LDAP any propper LDAPv3 server implementation will be compatible with the weblicon product.
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Data Model 1.2.pdf (224 K)
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Entity Relationship Model
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