Computing, Cycling, horticulture, other stuff

iPhone hangover sweeps the world…

December 4th, 2008 Pete

The world has slowly begun to wake up from the Apple party with a severe case of iPhone hangover. People are realising that the device fails to do many of the things they would expect a smart phone to do (or even some things a basic mobile could do). Many are starting to wonder why they bought a device that simply doesn’t deliver to do what the flashy marketroid ads said it could do.

Article at Apple Insider: Apple argues only a fool would believe its iPhone 3G ads

Simple answer: they were lied to.

iPhone vs Housebrick

October 22nd, 2008 Pete

iPhone vs Housebrick

image by fuxoft

Nokia admits defeat in the mobile business market

October 15th, 2008 Pete

From IT News Australia:

The phone maker announced today that it will cease developing or marketing its behind-the-firewall offerings for business mobility, and has acquired Canadian firm OZ Communications to provide a new focus on consumer mobile messaging.

and this from Business Week Europe:

“It underlines our long-held belief that Nokia’s enterprise strategy has not worked at all, so from that point of view it makes complete sense,” said Richard Windsor, a mobile analyst at Nomura Securities. 

Rather than admitting defeat, perhaps Nokia is taking another approach. Instead of a server and infrastructure being set up inside a company (such as a blackberry server for example) to get users inside the network to sync with business applications, Nokia are providing consumers with ways to sync against services such as MS Exchange from their own cubicles. This could be a better tactic to saturate the market with business-enabled phones that the users are able to manage themselves.

Instead of having to court the IT department of a company, Nokia can now persuade users to sneak their devices inside the firewall and sync up data on their own, even without the knowledge of the IT department in some cases. This raises many privacy and security concerns if mobile workers are taking copies of data outside the network without the knowledge of management. IT managers will have extra work on their plate to prevent leakage of data through these new and dynamic channels.

I’m syncing my Nokia E71 against the work Exchange server right now. ;)

More info:

http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&ned=us&ie=UTF-8&ncl=1252532613

http://www.crn.com.au/News/85745,nokia-abandons-business-mobility.aspx

Can you Digg it?