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November 15, 2004
PDAs
The disconnected PDA is officially dead according to RIMM
Monday November 15, 10:55 AM
Disconnected PDAs are dead, according to RIM
By Kristyn Maslog-Levis, ZDNet Australia
BlackBerry-maker Research in Motion believes the days of disconnected PDAs are over
International wireless solutions manufacturer Research in Motion (RIM) believes the days of disconnected PDAs are gone.
The BlackBerry-maker said that users' information is changing too rapidly for disconnected PDAs (PDAs that do not attach to PCs wirelessly) to catch up.
RIM Asia-Pacific vice-president Patrick Spence said "Disconnected PDAs were great in the past but today, people's information is changing too rapidly for that type of model and customers want to synchronise their PDAs with their PCs fast."
Spence said the company has received an "overwhelming" response from the market after opening up its BlackBerry products to the consumer sector.
BlackBerry is a wireless service that provides access to email, data, Internet, phone and personal information management applications on a wireless handheld.
With 30,000 installations around the world, Spence is predictably bullish about the outlook for the BlackBerry.
"There's not really any substitute [for BlackBerry]. The way we bundle the service makes it a very unique device. There is really no other solution like that, which is why it continues to spot its own space in the market," Spence said.
RIM recently announced the integration of Wi-Fi technology in BlackBerry in order to target specific "campus" types of environment where the clients can deploy Blackberry to people for a specific application.
"For instance, warehouse companies can use the device to access inventory and use voice-over-IP at the same time. We will still be using the same server but for a different set of usage," Spence said.
He added that BlackBerry was currently expanding the number of handsets that are BlackBerry solution-enabled. They are also preparing for BlackBerry Enterprise server version 4.0 which will allow users to use BlackBerry "without any desktop software" and is expected to drive down the total cost of ownership.
RIM has just released the BlackBerry 7100v handset, currently only available with Vodafone.
Optus recently added the Blackberry wireless platform to its suite of business mobile email products. The telecommunications company said it would sell the BlackBerry 7230, the BlackBerry 7730 and the Nokia 6820 to corporate customers with a range of payment plans.
More news from ZDNet:
BlackBerry gets a taste of Wi-Fi
BlackBerry can be bitten by DoS attacks
RIM to release new BlackBerry in Europe
BlackBerry is driving market for mobile email, says Gartner
Vodafone launches BlackBerry smartphone
Posted by keefner at November 15, 2004 02:27 PM