Microsoft said Sunday in the United States that its long-awaited push e-mail capability for mobile devices is finally headed into the market.
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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