- 10 Microsoft research projects
- 10 kitchen gadgets for the geek gourmet
- Verizon trounces competition
- Smartphone smackdown: Storm vs. iPhone
- FBI warns of holiday cyber scams
![]() |
Mobility in the enterprise has been - like wireless coverage - spotty. Too many "gotchas" have prevailed: unreliable and slow networks, deficient devices, underdeveloped billing and customer care systems, and lack of focus by the major wireless operators. These factors made for complex wireless projects involving a veritable circus of middleware, gateway and system integrator vendors. As a result, outside of BlackBerry, which counts about 1 million users worldwide, we've not seen broad adoption of wireless data in the enterprise. In fact, research shows that the global market for downloading ring tones exceeds that for enterprise wireless data services today.
But in the past two years, we've seen progress on several fronts:
With such advancements, companies now can take wireless to the next level. Doing so requires two steps. First, you must develop a company-wide mobility strategy that includes a holistic view of wireless: voice and data, in-building as well as mobile, and including plans for WANs and wireless LANs. Second, as wireless becomes a core component of new data center plans, you must deploy wireless to a much larger group of enterprise users.
Comment