As Michal K said, you can use AlarmManager
with a Service
and/or BroadcastReceiver
to wake your app periodically.
However, in order to preserve the user's battery I highly recommend not polling the connection.
Instead, you can use Google Cloud Messaging for Android or GCM (formerly called C2DM)
Here's the site:
http://developer.android.com/guide/google/gcm/index.html
EDIT
The main benefit here is that Android phones that have Google accounts will already poll Google's servers periodically. They do this with cooperation from the carriers (like Verizon/AT&T). Because of this, the radio can go into low power mode and receive push notifications. By using Google's service, you enable a way for your app to receive data via push notifications without causing any extra battery drain.
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(Also, here is some of the info from my other post about this).
There was a very interesting Google IO talk this year about how the cell radio sits in an idle/low-power state most of the time, and takes a few seconds to "warm up". They also discuss the perils of how polling the internet periodically will really drain the battery.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwC1OlJo5VM
Battery talk starts about 17:12
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PwC1OlJo5VM&feature=player_detailpage#t=1032s
A slide from the presentation:
AlarmManager
is your friend: developer.android.com/reference/android/app/AlarmManager.html