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Stabroek News

Technology giants target Blackberry
published: Tuesday | February 14, 2006

BARCELONA (Reuters):

RESEARCH IN Motion's (RIM) Blackberry will remain the standard for mobile e-mail in the face of a challenge by Microsoft and Nokia, whose rival e-mail systems aren't as cheap or secure as they claim, RIM's CEO said Yesterday.

"It's insecure. And Microsoft and Nokia use about five times more of the network than we do. Network capacity is scarce and battery power is scarce. That's why operators can price BlackBerry aggressively," RIM Chief Executive Jim Balsillie said in an interview at the fringes of 3GSM, the world's largest wireless trade show.

Initial launches by mobile operators indicate that the offering from Microsoft is indeed priced in line with that of BlackBerry, at around $30 a month, despite Microsoft's initial claims that push, or mobile, e-mail would become virtually free of charge.

"They (the operators) are pricing it pretty much the same," confirmed Pieter Knook, senior vice president for the mobile and embedded software division at Microsoft.

Microsoft denies, however, that its push e-mail service is insecure, saying it has the same security features of Outlook Web Access used by many of its customers.

ENSURING SECURITY

Balsillie reiterated that a technical workaround which his company announced late last week will ensure the BlackBerry service continues uninterrupted even if a U.S. court grants an injunction requested by patent holding company NTP Inc. to halt the email service.

"There won't be an interruption of the service. Our 3.5 million users in the United States won't have to do a thing. They will continue to receive their mails," he said.

Blackberry is used by around 4.5 million subscribers around the world, including some U.S. government staff.

Microsoft and Nokia are eyeing the hundreds of millions of workers and consumers who want access to their e-mail wherever they are. In recent months, both companies have started offering cheap server software that pushes e-mail to mobile devices.

Microsoft said on Monday four big operators, Vodafone , Orange, T-Mobile and Cingular, would retrofit a number of mobile handsets running on Windows Mobile software so they can start receiving this "push e-mail" on their pocket devices. New Windows Mobile devices can automatically receive push e-mail.

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