
Motorola and Good Technology today announced that Good's GoodLink wireless messaging will be one of the push email options for the
Moto Q when it finally launches on May 31st. GoodLink is aimed primairily at corporate users offering continuous two-way push synchronization of users' e-mail, calendar, contacts, notes and tasks, as well as access to corporate intranets, CRM and ERP. The service also boasts enterprise-class, FIPS-certified security with end-to-end AES data encryption, remote data wipe, and remote password policy management. GoodLink is initially only available for Microsoft Exchange users, with support for IBM Domino/Lotus Notes coming later this summer. The Q itself is a Verizon, running on their high-speed EV-DO network and retailing for $300, although customers will be able to knock $100 off that if they sign up for a two year plan.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Luch @ May 23rd 2006 12:59PM
hmmmm lets see i spend $200+ on phone and now good-link wants my comapny to buy their app now??? ummm NO i will stick with my MS Push E-Mail service for FREE!
Side Step @ May 23rd 2006 3:30PM
Why is the pictured Q running the PPC version of WM5? Oopsies!
Sherwin Zadeh @ May 23rd 2006 4:36PM
I've heard that the Direct Push capabilities will not ship with the Q initially. You'll have to download an update in the near future.
Robert J DuVall @ May 24th 2006 8:59AM
I;d like confirmation on screen resolution. and this goodlink stuff is a purchase or a monthly $ervice charge? wht's the cost
Robert J DuVall @ May 24th 2006 9:03AM
does anyone have any deets on alltel's office Sync?? It's free and looks like it does the same thing