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Friday, September 30, 2011
NFC Forum Advances Data Exchange With Publication of 16th Specification
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The NFC Forum, an industry association that advances the use of Near Field Communication (NFC) technology, has released its 16th specification, the Simple NDEF Exchange Protocol (SNEP).
SNEP is an application-level protocol suitable for sending
or receiving messages between two NFC-enabled devices. The new SNEP
specification is available to the public for download.
The extension of the NFC Data Exchange Format (NDEF) to peer-to-peer use in
SNEP is a significant advance. Previously, NDEF was applicable only to NFC
tags in reader/writer mode. Now, SNEP enables the use of the openly
standardized NDEF in peer-to-peer mode, making interchange of data
a reality. Application developers no longer
need to concern themselves with how their NDEF data gets transferred between
NFC-enabled devices. This capability is similar to the way that NFC Forum
Tag Type specifications encapsulate the differences between communication
layers. By providing this capability, the SNEP specification makes the
difference between reader-writer and peer-to-peer operation modes disappear
- a major step towards global interoperability of NFC applications.
Potential applications for NFC technology developed
with the new SNEP specification include:
Simplified transfer of contact information - one person's phone can be
configured to automatically send business card information when an NFC
peer-to-peer connection is established. The recipient doesn't have to do
anything other than to accept the business card and allow it to be entered
into his phone book.
Collecting movie posters for later use - a consumer can retrieve and store
movie posters with NFC tags onto an NFC-enabled phone while just passing by.
Back home, the consumer can display the movie information on a flat-screen
TV and navigate to the films' web pages, simply by tapping the phone to an
NFC-enabled TV remote control. |
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