Wireless manufacturers show off their latest products in Las Vegas as mobile technology continues to gain mass acceptance.
Microsoft said Sunday in the United States that its long-awaited push e-mail capability for mobile devices is finally headed into the market.
Hosted messaging can lighten the load for your customers, not to mention add to your revenue stream. Here's how.
The actual administration of e-mail -- getting it into your company, filtering it, distributing it, providing mobile access to it, archiving it, backing it up, undeleting it -- can be an extremely time-consuming, bothersome process.
The handheld maker used to be the king of the hill. So how did it tumble into Microsoft's arms?
The BlackBerry for non-corporate users who require extensive multimedia capabilities, in addition to push-e-mail. (It's also a phone, portable audio/video player, camera, organiser, navigator and note-taking device.)
A feature-packed smartphone that's well-suited to business users, but it lacks the style and design-prowess of the BlackBerry.
Can the addition of GPS on HP's latest PDA-phone inject some much-needed oomph back into the dwindelling PDA market?
An incremental upgrade to the Atom, the Atom Exec is an incredibly feature-rich, well-designed smartphone.
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