Korea introduced these rules in good faith some time ago, as digital cellular telephony was getting going, with the hope that this would catch on as the standard platform not only in Korea but also around the world.
It has not. It failed, just as many efforts in standardization fail in our industry and others. However, it remains a standard in Korea, primarily targeted at routine, fundamental cellular phones, rather than at business devices such as BlackBerry that are already programmable.
BlackBerry follows a great many international standards. Our applications are written in a version of Java, which accommodates very wide open standards.
There is actually no demand that we are aware of for any BlackBerry application to be moved over to a Korean cellphone. Indeed, that's something we've not heard of. So from that standpoint, putting the time and effort into making BlackBerry compatible with the WIPI standard would be a sheer, dead-weight loss to RIM. We would be diverting critical technical resources to a project that would have no economic value.