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By Cassimir Medford
Network World, 12/24/01

Standards and tools might be immature, service coverage spotty, client operating systems divergent, security a thorn and costs unpredictable, but a wide cross-section of enterprise users are embracing wireless data access.

Some network executives are willing to endure the pain of early adoption in exchange for the competitive advantages they say are inherent in wireless data access, especially the always-on mobility. "The tools are still immature, and techniques are still changing," says Rick Rawlings, IS director at Ray & Berndtson, an executive search firm in Fort Worth, Texas. Still, he suggests the firm's wireless project has been well worth it.

For one, sales partners at the worldwide firm have been more than excited about using wireless access to the company's principle application, SearchNet. Most readily exchanged their Dell laptops for Compaq iPaq PDAs, Rawlings says, explaining that the laptops were too big, took too long to boot and open applications, and made it difficult for users to ensure privacy. The PDAs, on the other hand, let partners use SearchNet discretely and are practically always on, getting partners to the information they need in the time it would take just to get to a laptop's logon screen. Plus, the always-on feature keeps the partners current in an industry that profits from change.

SearchNet runs on a Citrix thin client/server system, is integrated with Microsoft Outlook, uses an Oracle 9i database and features a candidate registration system. To provide wireless access to it, Rawlings determined he needed to work with the Windows CE operating system because it could support the thin-client technology, with some customization, and the Oracle database. Palm OS could not handle the latter, Rawlings says.


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The only additional element Ray & Berndtson needed was synchronization software because it has not yet found a carrier that can meet its coverage needs - the company has offices in eight U.S. cities,Rawlings says. For now, partners synchronize information with the company's server using tools from Synchrologic. They dial up or use a connection cradle.

Ray & Berndtson recently completed its staggered rollout of the wireless system, issuing iPaqs to about 80 sales partners. Each setup cost about $600. The company also will issue each partner a Dell desktop, valued at about $2,000. "The desktop plus the iPaq and all its accessories adds up to about half the cost of a standard business-class laptop. Right there, the reallocation of our assets paid for the transition," Rawlings says.

Legal motion

Like Ray & Berndtson, Los Angeles law firm Paul, Hastings, Janofsky and Walker used its laptop refreshment budget to transition to a wireless scenario. In its case, a critical application has been adapted for use on the BlackBerry wireless handheld from Research in Motion and made available to 700 attorneys and support staff.

The firm chose wireless for almost the same reasons as Ray & Berndtson's. The attorneys considered laptops overkill - 90% of those who had laptops used them exclusively for e-mail. Now attorneys get e-mail, faxes and voice mail wirelessly via a universal inbox on the BlackBerry. It's ideal because it doesn't require synchronization with a host, says Mary Odson, the firm's CIO.

And it turned out to be a good deal for IT. "Immediately upon issuing the BlackBerries, attorneys gave their laptops back," Odson says. "That really helped our [return on investment]. The money I would normally spend on refreshing laptops, about $300,000, I set aside to purchase BlackBerries [for support staff and researchers]," she notes.

Overall, the firm has reduced its laptop budget and the attendant "toll-free" dial-in costs by 30%, while its attorneys are more efficient and happier.

On the server side, the costs are relatively modest. The base server configuration with a 20-user license is about $3,000. Ongoing communications costs amount to approximately $40 per month, per user.

And for the first time, the firm will use a customer relationship management (CRM) application. It's chosen the InterAction CRM application designed for the Blackberry by Interface Software.

Harvard goes wireless

Repurposing applications for wireless devices can pose more of a challenge than building wireless applications from scratch, but Harvard Medical School rose to it. Starting this fall semester, the school supports wireless Web access from all PDAs. Students and faculty can get access to the entire curriculum, class and faculty evaluations, schedules and events, and can share information via whiteboards. Doctors can write prescriptions and access patient records and lab results.

The project is the brainchild of John Halamka, associate dean of Harvard Medical School and CIO of CareGroup, an integrated delivery network of six hospitals in the Boston area. "Doctors and medical students are very mobile people so we wanted to give them accessibility to all the business and educational processes and information they needed. I sent incoming students a letter saying, 'Bring whatever device you have,'" Halamka says.

About 160 students arrived at school with 27 different models of PDAs.

"A browser solution allowed us to be device-neutral and standards-based. We also made it capable of synchronization and wireless communications," Halamka says. "We used a standard HTML set, JavaScript and [Secure Sockets Layer]."

Halamka used the M-Business Server from AvantGo, a San Mateo, Calif., developer of software that enables the integration of wireless systems with existing enterprise applications. "I had to make the decision as to how I was going to deliver content wirelessly. Am I going to write some sort of native application for every platform or find some sophisticated conduit?" Halamka says. "That's what AvantGo is - a platform-neutral transport medium to the Web. We can take all the Web content we have already developed, repurpose it and get it to any device."

The M-Business Server eliminates the need for complex and expensive code rewrites to accommodate the small footprint and attendant limitations of mobile systems. Arcstream, a wireless systems integrator in Watertown, Mass., worked with Harvard on the implementation. Internal IT is maintaining the wireless setup.

"Our benefits are the ability to transmit knowledge to any portable device via wireless or synchronization," Halamka says of the $250,000 wireless undertaking. "Students and faculty have knowledge at the point of care, when and where they need it, to best serve patients."

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Blue-collar mobility
Utilities and other dispatch organizations are embracing the wireless Web.

Companies that dispatch armies of people who work on trucks, read meters, fix gas leaks or deliver packages are beginning to ditch pencil-and-paper or feature-poor customized private radio solutions for mobile "office" technology.

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