Posts tagged Itself

Is RIM Shooting Itself In the Foot With Mobile Fusion?

rim_logo150.jpgResearch In Motion has taken a step that many in the industry thought the company would not, could not take. RIM announced today that it will release Mobile Fusion, an enterprise-security grade mobile device management suite akin to its BlackBerry Enterprise Server, for the iPhone and Android platforms.

This was a necessary move for RIM. Yet, it has lost the first mover’s advantage. The BES system was the first of its kinds and became the default system for enterprise mobility. That era is beginning to pass as more employees bring iPhones and Android to work. RIM will look to monetize off that trend, but the company’s edge has been lost.

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Mobile Fusion will provide MDM alongside the BES in enterprise and government IT departments. Fundamentally, it is nothing that the industry has not already seen before. Here is the list of functions for supported devices:

  • Asset management
  • Configuration management
  • Security and policy definition and management
  • Secure and protect lost or stolen devices (remote lock, wipe)
  • User- and group-based administration
  • Multiple device per user capable
  • Application and software management
  • Connectivity management (Wi-Fi®, VPN, certificate)
  • Centralized console
  • High scalability

If these product capabilities sound familiar, it is because there is a vibrant ecosystem that has been built around MDM services that do exactly the same thing. Companies like BoxTone & 3 Laws Of Mobility (a Motorola subsidiary), Good Technology, Zenprise, Symantec, McAfee, Sybase (which partners with Samsung), Fixmo (that got a huge Series C round of funding yesterday), Airwatch and others have all come out with BES-style MDM services in the last year or so focused on delivering security to enterprise smartphones.

The problem comes down to the fact that enterprises no longer have to rely on BlackBerry for security. RIM’s data encryption technology on BlackBerry handsets is still at the forefront of the pack and remains attractive to enterprises but there is no shortage of options for companies looking for solutions.

Here is a breakdown of MDM services from Gartner in April. It does not include 3LM, which launched out of public beta in October with a partnership with BoxTone at CTIA Enterprise and Apps.

gartner_mdm_april11.jpg

RIM is in a tricky position here. Mobile Fusion is a product where the company is damned if it does, damned if it doesn’t. Either way, RIM appears to be damned. In talking with analysts over the course of the year, the general consensus on RIM that it would return from whence it came, a niche enterprise smartphone manufacturer. That was as long as it had the proprietary functions of BES attached to BlackBerry devices. Come Mobile Fusion in March, that is no longer going to be the case.

So, where does RIM go from here? It is losing consumer market share by the fist load and now is making an effort to monetize on that loss in the enterprise market. What it all comes down to for RIM is the wait and see. Wait for BBX to come out next year, hope that it sparkles and gain back consumer (hence, enterprise) market share.

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Barack Obama Joins Google+, White House Itself Still Not There

First Britney Spears takes the top Google+ spot away from Google CEO Larry Page today. Now the President of the United States, Barack Obama, has opened an account. Not Yet Verified, But Yes, Real Is it really him? It’s actually a Google+ brand page for the Obama For America campaign, and not…



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Four ways the SEO industry could kill itself – Econsultancy (blog)

Four ways the SEO industry could kill itself
Econsultancy (blog)
Many agencies are bucking the economic climate, budgets for SEO continue to grow and pretty much every decision maker on the client-side understands and appreciates the value of natural search. The SEO industry, however, is not immortal.

and more »

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Nokia’s Still Has Work to Do to Differentiate Itself With Windows Phone

The last two days at Nokia World 2011 were spent trying to figure out how Nokia CEO Stepehen Elop could justify his claim that his company’s Windows Phone is, in fact, “the first real Windows Phone.” From a marketing and merchandise perspective, it is not. If we take Nokia’s value added services into account, Elop may have a point but there is still a lot of work to do.

The Nokia Lumia 800 is a beautiful phone. It feels nice to hold and has all the tech specs that gadget geeks would expect from a top of the line smartphone (except for a forward facing camera). The big question has been whether Nokia’s implementation of Windows Phone is any better than LG, Samsung or HTC. The answer remains to be seen.

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Mango Baked Too Soon For Nokia

By the time the ink was dry on the deal between Nokia and Microsoft to use Windows Phone last February, the major portions of Windows 7.5 Mango were already built and done, according to Ilari Nurmi, Nokia’s VP of product marketing for smart devices.

There are still a number of things to like that Nokia has put into the device. Nokia Maps with Nokia Drive is a solid turn-by-turn navigation system that can work without a data connection. Offline maps with turn by turn fully bring an end to the Garmin and TomTom era of dominance of in-car GPS devices.

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Nokia also wants to push its imaging and camera functions as superior functionality in this version of Windows Phone. Nokia is known for its hardware so there is little to argue there. Nokia Music is the third prong that the OEM wants to push as a differentiator that seems more like bloatware from the manufacturer than fixing a problem. At the keynote on Wednesday, Nokia SVP of program and product Kevin Shields said that, “I think we have finally solved the mobile music problem. I am really excited about it.”

There is nothing really special about Nokia Music. It is basically like putting a iPod of pre-loaded songs and playlists into a phone. Yes, that makes it so it can work offline (a larger trend for Nokia which is beneficial to consumers), but smartphones these days handle music just fine, from downloading and local storage to streaming from the cloud.

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Nokia has built some augmented reality and public transports applications into the Lumia as well. In terms of these types of applications, Nokia is now just catching up with the rest of the industry.

Road To Differentiation

Nokia’s road to differentiation may prove to be a difficult one. Part of the deal between Microsoft and Nokia is that existing Nokia assets, like maps and location-based services, will be put into future versions of Windows Phone that Microsoft licenses to every OEM. So, to get Nokia Maps, all Samsung will need to do is license the next version of Windows Phone since it will already be in there.

We will see how the next round of Nokia’s Windows Phones come out as Nokia and its very large ecosystem of international developers (which is a big plus for the company over iOS and Android) can create unique function into the device. Nokia is excited and it should be. In the time frame that they have created the device and the marketing program that will come with it, Nokia did about as well as it possibly could have. It just may be a while before the company sees any tangible results from the move.

Traction across the globe where Nokia is strong will not be hard for the company. It is in the developed countries with saturated smartphone markets where it will have a difficulty competing. As we have seen with Android and iOS, those are the markets that push popular products down the value chain. Are Nokia Maps and location services, music and a good camera enough? Time will tell.

Disclosure: Nokia paid for ReadWriteWeb’s travel and accommodations to Nokia World 2011.

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Google+ Is Google Itself, Says Google VP

Google+ is the overriding connection between all Google services. That’s how Google’s Bradley Horowitz described it in an interview, conducted by Wired, that delved into some of the most common and important questions about the Goog…

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Former Mobile Search Engine Taptu Reinvents Itself As Tablet Platform Tool

The search technology behind failed social search engine Worio became the guts of the successful Zite app, which was recently acquired by CNN. Similarly Taptu, which began as a mobile search engine in the pre-iPhone era (2006), did almost the identical thing and is hoping to follow Zite’s…



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Google Buys Zagat, Gives Itself Extraordinary Rating

Google has bought Zagat, an innovator of user-generated restaurant surveys. Google promises that Zagat ratings and reviews, which are currently behind a paywall, will become a “cornerstone” of Google’s local offering. Terms of th…

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Ripoff Report Not Banned, But Removes Itself From Google’s Index

Ripoff Report is completely gone from Google’s index and Google says it’s been done at Ripoff Report’s own request. But, the question now is whether that request was made on purpose or an accident. As the image above shows, a site:ripoffreport.com search brings up Google’s…



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SAP Calls Itself an Innovation Company and Compares Itself to Apple

IT Poll: Can HP Reinvent Itself as a Software Company?

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