I've said it once. I'll say it again. there are markets beyond the USA. *cough* India *cough*
BB 10 not out till Q1 2013 (that's calender year, not fiscal year). That s a total F up by RIMM. Unacceptable.
They are the Terri Schiavo of tech companies
They are the Terri Schiavo of tech companies
I wonder what has happened to the guy who put his entire savings into RIMM and tried to Martingale themselves into a profit. He kept hyping about how RIMM is a great bargain.
What are you talking about? It doesn't support every EAS policy for corporate users, but it certainly supports ActiveSync.
Unfortunately, Windows Phone 7 only syncs with Exchange ActiveSync. So that means youll need an Exchange ActiveSync compatible email account to get your contacts and calendar info on there. Luckily, theres a free and easy way to get your current Outlook installation and Windows Phone 7 to sync with the same Exchange ActiveSync account.
First, youll need a Windows Live Hotmail email account. Next youll need to install the Outlook Hotmail Connector (64bit version is here). After the Hotmail Connector is installed, you can add your Windows Live Hotmail account to Outlook and youll get a full folder listing with sections for Contacts, Calendars, as well as email. Now transferring contacts and appointments from your stand-alone Outlook PST file to the Windows Live account is just a matter of drag and drop. Hold down the Ctrl key to copy items instead of moving them.
He sold vol against it?
I really thought the ATM straddles at .90 going in where pricey. RIMM never disappoints though. Even straddle buyers make money...
Who the hell wants to sync a smartphone with a single computer anyway? Get those contacts in the cloud on an Exchange server or Live Mail / Gmail account...then sync w/ Exchange ActiveSync.
Agreed. I never wanted to try that because I knew stuff wouldn't work right. For example, Outlook and iOS contacts each have data fields that the others do not.Windows Mobile used to support syncing directly with Outlook via ActiveSync, whereas the newer Windows Phone does not. If you're using a traditional POP3 mailbox and download your mail to Outlook, I could see how this would be annoying.
In Microsoft's defense, the number of people who still get mail is probably pretty small, and I don't think any other modern smartphone platform supports syncing with Outlook.
Edit: The ninja edit screwed up my quote and doesn't make sense anymore. Bottom line: legacyActiveSync[sync] is dead.
On a technological front, RIM failed for a couple of reasons.
Who the hell wants to sync contacts with a single computer anyway? Get those contacts in the cloud on an Exchange server or Live Mail / Gmail account...then sync w/ Exchange ActiveSync.
On a technological front, RIM failed for a couple of reasons. They were very late to the touchscreen phone party for one. Secondly, they tried to market their phone to people they shouldn't have. Rode high on selling it to teens and college students who didn't need it. They lost a lot of loyalty from the young adult and business demos as a result. When Apple came in and sniped the business demo, that was it. Apple doesn't necessarily do it better but it's a more flexible platform. Especially with companies who want their own internal apps.
I do. I have emails going back 20 years from when I was in the 5th grade. I have archived all of them in Outlook. I use Gmail but who knows what's going to happen in the future. I've gone from AOL to Yahoo to road runner to university emails to corporate and military returning to corporate and Gmail. Outlook has been there through it all. It has its problems but I mitigate with multiple backups and all the tags are there.
How hard would it be to add a Gmail account to Outlook using IMAP and move your messages onto the server? Gmail's "label" system makes me never want to go back to Outlook. I created an extra Gmail account just to download my work emails so I can manage them better.
Gmail HTTP >>>> Outlook Exchange
5,000 jobs axed
$512M loss
BB10 delayed until Q1 2013
RIM is dead. Lack of innovation, piss-poor management, shitty phones. So long suckas!