Nokia has launched a
corporate email system to allow business users to send and receive mail from
their mobiles.
The Scandinavian firm already has an alliance with
RIM, the maker of the
BlackBerry email device, but claimed that its
Nokia
Business Center (NBC) will make mobile email cheaper and more widely
available.
Nokia's email system comes in two modes. A standard version gives office
staff basic read/write access to email.
A professional version integrates directly into a company's corporate network
directory, giving direct access to email on a mobile device in the same way as
on the user's office PC. It also allows users to download attachments.
The standard version will be offered free when a company purchases a server
licence, which covers 400 people and costs £1,200.
The professional version requires an additional one-time fee per user of £32,
providing a perpetual licence for each office worker.
Ovum analyst Elsa Lion
told vnunet.com: "Nokia is not so well
represented in the business sector so this gives it a route into that market.
But a lot depends on how well it markets this solution.
"If it is too disconnected it risks the danger of being just another service.
I do not think it will dent BlackBerry until next year at least."
Nokia's server software will be 20 to 30 per cent cheaper than RIM's and
users will be charged a one off seat fee rather than RIM's ongoing charges.
"Considering that 70 per cent of people who use popular email devices also
carry a mobile phone, the opportunity for us to provide one device and solution
that perfectly addresses the voice and data experiences is tremendous," said
Mary McDowell, executive vice president of
Nokia
Enterprise Solutions.
In an email statement to clients, Ovum noted that Nokia's technology has yet
to be locked down.
"While Nokia is happy to make price and architecture comparisons with RIM, it
is relatively quiet on how its client server communications protocol measures
up," the analyst said.
"RIM's design optimises transmission by using some hefty compression, thereby
reducing the data that is actually carried over the air interface.
"This is one reason why its BlackBerry solution works so well over relatively
limited GPRS
networks, and why it is in no rush to introduce a
UMTS version of
its devices.
"Nokia is unwilling to say much about how well its own protocol works, but
admits that it is still working on compression."
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