HTC Hero coming October 11th to Sprint?

Lotus posts




It may not be the most fascinating development to hit RIM's platform, but hey, considering that BlackBerrys are still the device of choice for a great many of the world's businesses, every little bit of work-oriented software helps, we suppose. Alongside RIM's platform enhancement announcement came news that the company would be tying up with Lotus to bring its Connections business social networking platform (an oxymoron? you decide) to BlackBerry devices later this year. The suite will let users collaborate on work-related stuff, get in touch with contacts across the company, and hopefully, promote their garage bands. No word just yet on what models will support the new goods.
It's not the first product to tout enterprise email integration for the iPhone, but Visto Mobile has announced a solution of its own, promising secure access to Exchange and Domino servers without any software install on the iPhone -- a good thing, we'd say, considering that most IT departments frown on having to hack their fleet of mobile devices to set them up. Unlike Synchronica's solution which games Exchange's Outlook Web Access feature to avoid having to expose POP or IMAP servers to the world, Visto Mobile actually does require that admins open up a secure IMAP port and publishes the corporate directory to a Safari-friendly web page. Many IT departments frown on all that, too, so if you're planning on pitching this lil' solution to your own IT peeps, know full well that you may be turned away brokenhearted. Individual users can get in on the action for a one-time fee of $39 plus $10 per month, while companies are looking at $799 plus $199 per year plus $10 per month per user. Whew, patent suits must not be cheap, huh?







