When Cellphones Become Webservers
An anonymous reader writes "Nokia is experimenting with turning mobile phones into webservers, according to an interesting article on Linux Devices. Nokia has ported the Apache webserver and a few other software modules to the Symbian OS that runs its phones, but there shouldn't be any barrier to adapting the technique to Linux mobile phones, since it all appears to be released under Linux-friendly open source licenses. Just think of the possibilities of having a webserver in your pocket!"
3G, Wifi.
Bot Assisted Blogging
My phone is online 24x7. It has a constant GPRS-connection to the network, so it can receive email sent to me. And I can make phone-calls just fine. I can even make and receive phone-calls when I'm surfing the net with the phone.
Symbian is a multitasking OS, so having a webserver there is not an issue. And GPRS and the like do not prevent you from making phone-calls.
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
Quite why this is a better solution than having your 'phone update a server on a wired connection is beyond me, especially since it requires a Linux machine to act as a proxy anyway. Why not just run Apache on the Linux box, and use rsync to update it whenever you create some content on your 'phone?
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
However,
Which makes me ask, "In that case, why the hell would I want it?"