Users can view company data by cell phone NEW ORLEANS — Mobile users will be able to access corporate e-mail, calendars, phone directories, and other applications from mobile phones and other devices using software introduced Tuesday by Nokia at the CTIA Wireless trade show here.Nokia announced that it will sell the software, called Nokia One, to carriers in the Americas who will use it to provide a service to business customers. The offering, available to carriers now, is part of Nokia’s strategy to provide technology for advanced services in an open, interoperable technology environment.At the core of that environment is the OMA (Open Mobile Alliance) middleware architecture, said William Plummer, vice president of strategic and external affairs at Nokia in Washington, D.C., a division of Nokia, in Espoo, Finland. Nokia One will work with any brand of GSM/GPRS (Global System for Mobile Communications/General Packet Radio Service) handset and network infrastructure, Plummer said. It’s critical that wireless mobile technology emerges from the proprietary architectures of the past because mobile telecommunications is now a global market, he said. Nokia One is designed to let carriers provide at lower cost the kinds of services that have been provided using server-based systems set up with large enterprises. With it, corporate applications can be accessed via voice, SMS (Short Message Service), WAP (Wireless Application Protocol) and the Web on a variety of devices, including mobile phones, PDAs (personal digital assistants), PCs and fixed-line phones.As an example of what is possible with Nokia One, business users will be able to get prompts when important e-mail messages come in and search their voice mail boxes for the specific calls they want to hear, Plummer said. They can specify important e-mail senders and set the system to push a text notification to the phone or other device when messages from those senders arrive in the user’s in-box. In addition, customers will be able to search a set of waiting voice mail messages to find ones from the contacts they care about most, without having to listen to all the messages in the in-box.The commands that control the user’s preference will be sent as text from the phone, and the user will have to be authenticated before making changes. The service could also be controlled by voice commands. All the communication takes place over an encrypted channel, Plummer said. CTIA Wireless, sponsored by the Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association, continues through Wednesday. Technology Industry