HTC Touch review Live

August 15, 2007

My Latest Guest Review is online on Tracy & Matt’s site

today

to see the full review go here

For the 10 second summary,  the Touch is great bit of kit, a fantastic form factor and looks really cool but a little on the underpowered side. if you’re easily frustrated by a little waiting steer clear, if you’re happy to compromise on speed for the cool factor fill your boots.

Biggest Plus: Biotouch or TouchFLO, fab for broad fingered people like myself. (battery life and size are worth an honourable mention)

Biggest Minus : resources, it could do with a bit more memory

Not Sure….:  TouchCube, great to look at but doesn’t actually do much.

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E650 update

July 17, 2007

the continuing saga of Living with the Orange SPV E650

OK I’ve had the E650 for a few months now and I’m way way past the honeymoon period so I thought I’d give you a quick catch up on my current feelings on the device.

do I still love it ? well yes …… mostly

will I part with it ? not if I can help it

are there any problems with it ?   yes a couple

go on what are they then ?

well the biggest problem I’ve come across is the fact that any screen grabbing notifications such as low battery warnings disconnect your Bluetooth sessions, a royal pain when you are driving and involved in a conversation on your headset.  I have no idea why this happens it’s just a really bugging bug.

the second problem is purely aesthetic, remember the flappy flaps, they’re made of pretty soft plastic and  with use they deform and refuse to sit cleanly in their aperture. this is a real problem for the flap that hides the extUSB connector  which annoyingly is on the bottom of the phone and is in use a lot for charging, it now refuses to sit cleanly and really spoils the lines of the device. it’s going to come off when I get round to it.

Neither of these are major problems but they are worthy of mention as they are particularly annoying in a device that is otherwise so well designed.

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Blackberry and Exchange Total Cost of Ownership White Paper

July 3, 2007

real world experiences qualify a lab based paper

Jason has posted a link to the new revised RIM v’s Microsoft TCO white paper, which has been updated to include interviews with actual enterprise users of both technologies.

The original paper’s findings  back in 2005 were validated by interviewing a very small sample of 10 RIM users and  Microsoft and WiPro have extended the interviews to 160 enterprise users of one or the other mobility solutions.

the user communities of the interviewees are large, averaging over 50,000 email users with over 10,000 mobile devices.

to be honest this revision doesn’t move the debate forward all that far, it does give some insight into actual experience of users which can be supported per server in a BES environment and there are a few assumptions I’m not all that comfortable with, such as the comparative data plan costs in either environment and the relative support costs.

One of the interesting facts is that 89% of Blackberry respondents used Outlook web access before mobile deployment with only 88% of Windows Mobile respondents, following deployment the RIM figure stayed the same (unsurprisingly) whereas the WM figure rose to 96% just shows that Windows Mobile is part of a range of portals you can use to access your messaging and diary systems.

if you haven’t read the original paper this is worth a read however I don’t see it changing many minds.


Windows Mobile 6 and email triage

June 13, 2007

how Microsoft’s latest mobile platform has tipped the balance

email triage is one of the most popular  uses of  Windows Mobile device, which is the processing of your inbox in quiet moments when getting your laptop out is not an option.  it’s a great way to steam through a load of emails and filter the email fluff from your inbox delegate mails not for you and generally prepare your inbox for an efficient days work.  a true example of the benefits that the flexible working 9 by that I mean location independent working) that windows mobile 6 truly supports

The new shortcuts in Outlook Mobile under Windows Mobile 6 make life a whole lot easier

wm6shortcuts

simply press and hold the appropriate key and you can process the email according to your wishes.

today was the day when the balance was tipped, I came out of an extended  meeting  to find over 90 emails had arrived in the time I had been out of circulation. One particular thread needed my attention but the rest were FYIs or mailing lists ( yes I have a few where the site concerned has not yet embraced RSS), I had my laptop available in front of me but chose to breeze through the mails  on my smartphone because the shortcuts make  the process so much easier.  90 emails processed in double quick time down to the seven that really needed urgent attention. of course I penned the long responses on my notebook as the keyboard is much easier to make rapid use of however I’m pretty sure my inbox will always be processed  at the top level through my smartphone from now on.


support for Office 2007 comes to Windows Mobile devices

June 6, 2007

Office Mobile 2007 comes to a range of Windows Mobile devices

Jason has revealed that Office Mobile 2007 will be available from Q3 this year - I mentioned my disappointment that even though the Windows Mobile 6 and EVO launches were so close that the docx format was not supported in WM 6 this update redresses the balance - the terminology suggests that this is an application upgrade rather than an AKU / ROM update so  there should be no need to backup / wipe and start again,  the update will support .pptx .docx .xlsx and FAX documents on both WM6 and WM5.0  devices 

I’m increasingly coming to view my WM6 device as a portal to a sophisticated back end and this will help reinforce WM6 as a handportable part of the EVO environment, I just wish that Microsoft had included office 2007 support in the initial WM6 release,it should have been an intrinsic part of the WM6 and WM6 should have been launched as a portable office portal device.


m3100 staying on Windows Mobile 5.0???

May 22, 2007

will Orange bend to consumer pressure or not?

Jason has been announcing updates all day  from ASUS & Samsung however a worrying conversation I’ve had with an Orange insider has cast doubt on the likelihood of the HTC TyTN update to WM6 making it to the m3100 (officially)……. which will annoy me no end.

It seems that the recent AKU 3.0 update may have distracted the product teams and that its now possible that the Windows Mobile 6.0 upgrade will not be available before the next range of native WM6 devices appears on the Orange shelves.  The overlap casts doubt on whether the project will get started or maintain the necessary focus, as obviously the MNO wants to sell more equipment.

As I’ve said before this is a big test of the Windows Mobile licensing model as,  if I remember correctly, this is the the first time there will be official (as opposed to homebrew or leaked)  major Upgrade ROMs for manufacturer versions of OEM / licenced devices.  

MNOs (and not just Orange) need to be very wary of alienating their customers. 

I’ve sent some more feelers out into Orange land and I’ll post more as soon as I hear anything, here’s hoping it’s not true.

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Microsoft and Orange Announce Software as a Service collaboration

May 22, 2007

innovative SAAS  (or is it CAAS) service for hosted Unified Communications and Collaboration

                France Telecom

this announced by France Telecom today (Monday) a service in which Microsoft and Orange Business Services have teamed up to provide unified communications and collaboration tools to multinationals:

the full transcript :

Orange Business Services and Microsoft today announced “Business Together with Microsoft”, an innovative collaborative solution to accelerate the use of unified communications in companies. “Business Together with Microsoft” also helps companies keep up with the latest market requirements for fast communication, constant contact with colleagues, customers and partners, and efficient information sharing.

“Business Together with Microsoft” lets companies radically improve the communication habits of their employees. It gives access to a range of tools that they can use either when mobile or from their workstation. They can take advantage of new services, with total security, from any terminal that is equipped with a compatible web browser. Through a single Windows Outlook interface, they can access their mailbox, view voice messages as emails, read faxes, make voice over IP calls, and access their contacts and calendar. They can also communicate in real time through audio, video, web conferencing or instant messaging.  In addition, they can also manage and share documents and calendars. An encrypted link to their mailbox gives them access to powerful search functions.

Orange Business Services tailors “Business Together with Microsoft” to meet individual customer needs. The complete range of services includes consulting and audits, migration to IP, integration, managed IT infrastructure and applications services, and outsourcing.

“There is a huge demand for collaborative solutions in today’s working environment,” says Laurent Kocher, vice president, Global Services, Orange Business Services. “Cooperative work between employees in different locations across time zones is expected to make up more than half of a typical office employee’s work time by 2015. Companies need to provide staff with the tools to respond quickly to constant demands for attention and an efficient way to manage multiple types of contact”.

“Business Together with Microsoft” is currently available for multinational companies across the world, and is based on the complementary nature of the new generation of software launched recently by Microsoft: Office Communications Server 2007, Exchange Server 2007, Forefront and Office SharePoint Server.

“Business Together with Microsoft” leverages the complementary skills and expertise of the two companies: Orange Business Services in the area of messaging, IP convergence and network-related services; Microsoft in unified communications and collaboration solutions.

It’s an interesting alliance, Microsoft and Orange have been working closely together for some time and this is the first public tangible product to appear.

Reading between the lines it appears to be an Outlook Web Access portal providing access to Sharepoint for collaboration and the UC features of Exchange 2007 with Office Communications Server 2007 providing a VoIP portal, I suspect to Orange SIP trunks.

A packaged unified communications Inbox with Presence, Instant messaging, collaboration  and VoIP calls from wherever you can get access to a browser a very useful suite of applications

An interesting and maybe risky combination as OCS 2007 is still in beta, nevertheless an interesting proposition for the multinational with many mobile workers.

We are going to see a lot more of this,  in my opinion SAAS is about to explode.

I think it’ll have more impact and be much more interesting amongst the smaller business community, imagine if you could have access to all this big company technology with small company agility and no headaches of management……. watch this space…….

I’d  be very interested to see the appetite for managed hosted services out there amongst the smaller business community, if you have an opinion why not share it?

Is SAAS finally coming of age?

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Is this the most expensive mobile phone ever?

May 18, 2007

names changed to protect the not so innocent

I’m not talking about the excesses of Vertu’s range

I’m taking about this:

The ever so humble Blackberry 8800, but I can buy that for less than £320 I hear you cry, oh course you can…….. however

I’ve been discussing a problem one of my customers has this afternoon, one of his management team needs email and calendar on the move, now that bits easy but the problem my customer faces is much much bigger the problem is quite simple, Blackberry envy.

One of his senior managers , fresh back from a conference with other senior managers from other companies has had his ear bent all week about how great the Blackberry 8800 is and he NEEEEEDS one, in best 3 year old tradition he NEEEEEDS one and nothing else will do.

Now this customer has a pretty mature and well managed infrastructure, has Exchange 2003 SP2 and is actually running a handful of Windows Mobile 5.0 devices with Exchange activesync which work brilliantly the problem is this:

They aren’t Blackberries…..

OK the WM devices tried so far don’t work with the chief exec’s inbuilt German Bluetooth car kit, but some (like the s710 / E650) will and there are over 40 manufacturers and OEMs so the I like / will work will overlap at some point.

The manager in question has to have Blackberry

I’ve explained the plethora of options, the OEMs the devices, the flexibility and control that you get through exchange and Windows Mobile, I’ve even offered to drive over and show the interested parties my E650 but no, no way it’s going to be BlackBerry.

I’ve even drawn their attention to the flaws in the NOC model of delivery and the trials that Blackberry users in the states had with the extended outage they suffered recently to no avail it has to be the 8800 or nothing so the Bill ……

Blackberry 8800 Pearl = £319.11
Server Hardware etc : £1,200.00
Blackberry Enterprise Server Version 4.0 for exchange = £2,500.00
Installation: £750.00
Additional Firewall Configuration: £750.00

So that brings that little shiny Blackberry 8800 in at a whopping £5,519.11

The look on the financial directors or shareholders face……. Priceless

Five and a half THOUSAND pounds for a mobile phone…… can anyone beat that?

oh …… the cost to deploy an HTC s710 with Windows Mobile and Exchange Activesync, push email and security ……. £246 less, much less on contract.

I think it’s a little more than the challenge of the work wise workstyle that threatens British Business today.

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Work Wise Week part III - National Work from Home Day…..

May 18, 2007

I think this week is conspiring against me :)

As the post title suggests Friday 18th May 2007 is national work from home day and yet I am penning this post from my desk at the office in the lovely Derbyshire Dales.

Why? you may ask…. well considering I work from home once or twice a week and as often from a customers, their car park or a BTOpenzone hotspot (with or without dodgy coffee) I figure I’m already doing my bit for wise working.

Jason’s en route to Wales as well so I’m not alone in going against received wisdom.  

As far as I’m concerned the whole Home Working is the way forward  thing is a bit of a  non sequitur when considering the work wise workstyle, working wise is not being tethered to any location by technology, working practices or Culture, be it home or office.

Home working can be as inappropriate as working from the traditional office what I want to be able to (and mostly can) do is work when and where I want to, that’s Working Wisely.

Why am I in the Office? - I’m having a meeting, a face to face, with a colleague who has some undigitised information, and more importantly one of my colleagues is leaving and warrants  a goodbye hug- that’s the kind of thing you just can’t do remotely.

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Wardriving revisited

May 15, 2007

The state of Wireless Security in the UK ( well Nottingham)

I’m always talking about web ubiquity and I’ve been doing some work on this recently for a couple of customers considering HSDPA access as a mobile working solution, the results have been a little disappointing and far short of my expectations but more on that later.

Peter Cochrane is always admitting stealing WiFi talking about using open WiFi access and it’s been a while since I’ve looked at the state of WiFi security.  

I’ve recently discovered WiFifofum2 which is an improvement over my old favourite Ministumbler as it allows you to use your built in WM WiFi  stack and record the location of the Access Points it discovers. a couple of years ago I used to stumble quite a bit to gauge the growth of WiFi and I used to get about 20 APs on the way home.

tonight I did the same stumbling albeit with a different device and software and I found 167 different Access points, a selection from Nottingham below :

wardrive

in 2005 Security was woefully neglected with the vast majority of APs having no encryption, today….. it’s a bit better but still awful,  of 167 APs found 46 (that’s over 25%) had no encryption whatsoever.

Some Access Points may have had MAC address lists ( I don’t know I deliberately don’t connect) which will deter the casual WiFi thief but it’s still very very worrying.

whilst great for somewhat ethically dubious web ubiquity it’s not good for the AP owners or law enforcement if something nefarious happens. 

I’m off on a long journey tomorrow so I’ll do a bit more stumbling to see if the Notttinghamshire folk are typical or just downright irresponsible.

I’d be interested in other peoples experience

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Living with the Orange SPV E650 - the story so far

May 9, 2007

what’s the Latest Orange SPV really like to live with? my comprehensive review

Having lived with the E650 for a full three weeks this is a summary of the journey so far,  overall it’s been a very positive experience.

I’m not stat hungry so I’ll be providing real world measures of performance, my perception of the way the device operates not  stopwatch statistics.

The device has been used in a real business environment, as part of an Exchange 2003 messaging system using exchange activesync so some of the snazzier features associated with Exchange 2007 are not there yet but our upgrade is imminent so hopefully the three month review will be able to include these.

I am a geek and a techie but I try to apply the mother test for ease of use - I.e. could my mother use it? - a good yardstick for the levels of technical aptitude and patience displayed by most directors :)

my most recent devices of choice have been the Orange SPV c600 a candy bar smartphone running window Mobile smartphone edition 5.0 AKU 2 and the Orange SPV m3100 a traditional PDA form factor with touch screen 3G which I wanted it for and the addition of a sliding QWERTY keyboard (which I didn’t want at the time but now love) running Windows Mobile 5.0 AKU 2.3 Pocketphone edition (for now) 

The E650 has complemented my traditional notebook for two weeks but for the last week it’s been my only contact with work as I’ve been away on Holiday (more about that in an Off-Topic later).

conventions :

Where I refer to keypad I mean the E650 standard phone alphanumeric keypad where I refer to keyboard is the slide out QWERTY keyboard

Highlights:

  • The Keyboard - it’s a great addition to a Windows Mobile 6 Standard device mitigates a lot of the fiddliness of the interface
  • Fetchmail - until you try it you’ll not appreciate how much of a difference something this simple makes.
  • recoverability : I’d have loved to have said stability but I’ll explain later
  • Search as you type in Pocket Outlook AND Text messages

No Lights:

  • search as you type search in Pocket Outlook  only searches on display name and subject and suffers the unfortunate keyboard glitch in text and PO
  • lack of ‘ add word’ in T9 mode (mitigated by keyboard)
  • stability seems a little suspect when battery level is low
  • no MSN messenger or Voice command (included in the SDK by Microsoft but incomprehensibly omitted by Orange (I’ve bought Voice Command 1.6 US version from Handango - again more later)

Lowlights:

Review

Form Factor:

e650 rest

it’s a Vox I know but the E650 skin isn’t out in MobiControl just yet

The device is a lovely piece of kit, a little heavier and bulkier than the C600 and most standard candybar format phones - way heavier and thicker than the slim Jim LGs of this world but it fits comfortably in the shirt pocket and the weight provides a reassuring feel that suggests great build quality.

The keyboard is a real surprise to people not in the know the E650 just doesn’t look like it could hide a  QWERTY in a device that size. the keyboard action is very slick only requiring a little push to expose or close the keys, much nicer than the m3100. Portrait to landscape transitions can be a bit slow occasionally but it’s no massive deal. 

The screen is great much more vibrant and clearer than either the m3100 or c600.

The phone has four hardware buttons on the periphery - on/off on  the top; the voice activation and volume rockers to the left of the screen and the camera button to the right - the camera button placement is somewhat counter intuitive as when you access the keyboard you rotate the phone clockwise which leaves the camera button on the bottom of the rotated handset if you are shooting in landscape mode - a minor gripe.

The front mounted function keys are easy to access, I was worried about the placement of the send and end keys as they look like they could be easily operated in a pocket however the E650 actually suffers less from this than the c600.

The soft keys are a little fiddly at first but you get used to that, and anyone with more slender fingers than mine wouldn’t be troubled. 

The SIM slot is hidden behind the keypad and is accessed when the keyboard is exposed and there is an external MicroSD card slot covered with a rubber shield, again a great improvement on the c600 but less vital now that MicroSD cards are Multi-Gigabyte

USB and accessory connection is via an HTC extended mini USB port - a pain in the backside tbh which is covered by another rubber flap which makes the handset unstable when stood up on its end, a minor design flaw that only grates because the rest of the device seems so well thought out.

Operation

The E650 is great to use, much zippier than the equivalent WM5 device, despite the underpowered processor (only 201 MHz). occasionally (very occasionally)  the Camera application refuses to start due to memory usage but this is down to the fact that there is no native way to end an application apart from through the task manager a disappointing feature of smartphone versions of the WM platform.

Battery life is good although the quoted 5 hours / 7 days actually equates to about 2 1/2 days realworld usage (GPRS, voice, a little WiFi)

Configuration

I’ve always found the smartphone interface a little fiddly for making settings changes however the keyboard is a real bonus here - there’s no massive differences between the WM5.0 & 6 menus in this area.

applications

I’m concentrating on the core business applications - for me that excludes the camera although the 2 Megapixel produces pictures sharp enough to annoy your coworkers when you are on holiday. 

Office Mobile in WM6 is great but is really only designed to read attachments the giveaway is that the apps start in view mode  - you could (at a push) compose on the E650 as  the keyboard makes this possible for those with thinner digits - I still hit space+n or b+space a bit too often for my liking.

Pocket Outlook tends to be the place I spend most of my time :) - Highlights are Fetchmail which is a massive productivity tool and a real encouragement to download the rest of any message, it’s that smooth. (and a nice GPRS earner for Orange)

Keypad shortcuts are fantastic

wm6shortcuts

email triage is speeded up no end and this is a major use of most smartphones.

The E650 even has adobe reader LE installed so clicking on a PDF attachment allows you to read it

e650  adobe

We’re still running on Exchange 2003 SP2 in our production environment so when internal IS get Exchange 2007 sorted I’m sure Webready and HTML mail will be fantastic additions, looking forward to this.

Contacts quick search is much improved and now ignores gaps between consecutive keypresses

e650  gaps1

and the # is interpreted as a space which makes finding the actual Richard or Dave or Andy you want that much easier

e650  gaps

You at last can send a contact as a vCard however the E650 insists on sending it as an MMS rather than a text which seems odd and might affect your bill - it doesn’t work at all on my  work SIM as we disable MMS for all our staff by default.

Calendar operation is slick as well week view with appointment details is another great productivity aid 

e650  week

and the ability to add both required and optional attendees from contacts or the company directory when creating an appointment was something I always yearned for in WM5

e650  attendees

Where’s my Microsoft Voice Command Orange? and MSN messenger ?

Voice command is bundled by Microsoft and I’ve just gone out and spent £20 on it because of this omission.

No messenger is not so bad for me as we use office communicator but I can see it annoying some people - there are suggestions  that Orange’s new flat rate tariffs will exclude IM and VoIP so this might be the reasoning

Stability

overall stability is good apart from when the battery runs low when you get occasional application errors - this would have been a problem on WM5 however on the E650 the device seems to recover without a glitch and I’ve yet to lose any data at all - apart from a momentary annoyance this is much less of a problem than it has been in previous versions.

Ease of Use

The handset feels great in the hand and one handed operation is easy in phone mode, all the keys falling easily under the thumb, in landscape mode with the keyboard exposed a juggler can manage to use the E650 one handed

Missing Links

Could I get rid of my c600 at the moment? - absolutely the E650 outclasses it in every way

how about the m3100? ….. no I use TomTom navigator 5 a lot and memory map when walking neither of which are windows mobile 6 compatible. I do miss the touch screen in some apps however the E650 is rapidly weaning me off it.

Overall Assessment

I use the word slick a lot in this review that’s exactly what the E650 is, slick  very very slick.

there are a few minor niggles but they are outweighed by a factor of 10 by the improvements

Do I use the E650  more often than the equivalent WM5 devices? no

When I do use it is it faster brighter and better? sure thing 

Do I get more done? oh yes

Will Orange get this eval unit back ? NO CHANCE

the Orange E650 isn’t my perfect device but it’s not far from it. 

should you buy one - at £0 on most contracts and £165 on the Orange business price list yes you should, it’s a steal. if you are a business you’ll get that £165 back in a couple of weeks in improved productivity. 

Buy one if you can find one - after Jason’s admission - good luck :) 

[Edit : you might want to read my other earlier impressions just search here ]

[Edit: Tracy and Matt have reprinted this review over at their blog with some useful illustrative photo's of some of the physical aspects of the E650]

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Banish an annoying notification on the m3100

May 9, 2007

How to disable the SMS message sent notification on the m3100 / Hermes / TyTN

this via the very useful XDA developers  Hermes Registry Hack Wiki

you’ll need a registry editor like Resco Registry Editor

navigate to

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Inbox\Settings

if you can’t see the Settings key in the Inbox folder you need to create the key called Settings (Note Case is ImPortAnT)

Within the Settings folder create a new DWORD Value with the name SMSNoSentMsg (check the case) the DWORD Data value is 1 to disable the notification (make sure the Base is Hex) and 0 to enable the notification

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HTC TyTN (m3100 et al) as a USB wireless modem under Vista

May 6, 2007

software tweak for the TyTN for use with Vista

I blogged awhile back about using the m3100 as a wireless modem under Vista ( the Bluetooth modem needed no additional drivers) - HTC have added Vista USB drivers to their website at http://www.europe.htc.com/support/software/htctytn.html

(still no sign of the Windows Mobile 6 upgrade for the TyTN (boo) however no IMEI check for this software so maybe some hope for none HTC branded TyTN OEM device owners?)   

It seems that the file contains an updated version of the USBMDM.INF file from March this year which  passes WHQL tests so no annoying nags with XP during installation.

technorati tags: m3100, TyTN, 3G, Vista 


Office Mobile - Standard or Professional - Part I Word Mobile

April 25, 2007

you need to have a reason to buy Windows Mobile Professional - Right?

I’ve had comments and a couple of emails asking about functions on the E650. The E650 despite it’s natty design is a Windows Mobile Standard ( e.g. smartphone ) device, there are distinct differences of functionality in the Office Mobile suite between  WM standard and WM professional devices which are summarised in the following table


Word Mobile  
Professional Standard
Document opens in Edit mode  Has two modes : View and Edit
Create New Documents  Cannot Create New Documents
Font formatting can be done
(has Font Dialog) 
No Font Dialog
Paragraph formatting can be done  No Paragraph formatting
Toolbar is present  No Toolbar
Create New Numbered and
Bulleted List
Cannot Create New lists
Has tools such as spelling check,
word count,and insert date
No tools
Cut/Copy/Paste functions No Cut/Copy/Paste
Default zoom level is 100%  Default zoom level is 75%
No different scrolling modes  Page scroll and line scroll

the create new documents is the biggest bugbear - it seems a little stingy and as there are already workarounds for this it seems a little pointless to omit it.

hopefully this will be addressed in the patch that  provides office 2007 compatibility to WM6 devices when it’s launched later this year.

I suppose that we have to look at this as a positive as at least we have some (if compromised) native Office functionality on Standard devices now - saves installing third party applications.

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Raft of announcements from Vodafone - bidding for the social butterfly of MSPs crown

February 13, 2007

these are mostly more consumer than business but still show an interesting trend towards providing a mashed up mobile offering via Vodafone’s Live Portal.

in the last few days Vodafone have announced enhanced offerings with :

Yahoo to offer a seamless co branded IM application across PC and Mobile platforms with IM from PC to Mobile and vice versa

Microsoft offering a similar product using the Windows Live Messenger platform live search is probably not far behind

Google mobile maps and mobile search (java app) with enhanced listings and Google filters to ensure you are only provided with content accessible, suitable or compatible with your handset on or off Vodafone Live ( who decides suitable? )

eBay mobile (application) for tracking your auctions online

and Google again well youTube offering a daily selection of videos through the Live! portal.

interesting, wouldn’t like to have to tot up that little lots share prices. but shows that Vodafone is not ashamed to tie itself to some of the biggest names out there to provide content to subscribers.


Windows Mobile 6 - What’s New and What’s Cool, the insiders view

February 9, 2007

Jason has let the cat out of the bag not having had hands on it myself ( trying ) I’ll have to rely on Jason’s comments. the key new features for me are:

Smartfilter I use this in Outlook 2007 all the time, imagine it like the smart dialing function for emails, in Outlook 2007 the feature searches within Microsoft office attachments I’ve asked whether this is the case in WM6. just type in the letters to find the appropriate email and WM6 delivers all the relevant mails to you. this when added to Server Search which allows you to search your whole exchange mailbox from your device.

Storage Card encryption enforcement (and wipe) this is interesting as previously Microsoft suggested that this was a bad thing as not deleting the SD card allowed you to reboot from a recovery card and partially recover the configuration of the device. also no indication of whether an encrypted card becomes a tiny paper weight or can be subsequently accessed to recover data.

Certificates now you can add your own root certificates - hurrah that’s the end of a great deal of pain with certs that don’t work.

IRM (information rights management) essentially business DRM that determines who can read forward copy or paste an email or office document, absolutely fantastic, certainly a step up from password protected documents.

Out of Office at last you can set change and edit your out of office status from the device, IMHO this was always and anomaly and it’s inclusion whilst expected is very welcome

the Biggy as far as I can see is improved IE compatibility with PC not mobile websites - this is fabulous ( if it works). for ages developers have been able to code websites to serve different pages dependent on the device you are using ( see www.Google.co.uk/pda v’s www.Google.co.uk ) however in practice very few apart from mobile oriented sites bothered. this is a great improvement Jason says its tested on major sites, this will be great, added to HSDPA (when Orange get outside of London) at last I’ll have real Internet on the move.

can’t wait, I’ll have to keep pestering Orange for a beta device or two :)