January 2009 Archives

Coincidence? I don't think so.

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Had this strange conversation over IM this morning.  It's like Kurt and I were sharing a brain or something!

whoa

Oh yeah, and we're *still* running Live Communications Server 2005.  Upgrades coming soon!

First off, I thought this day would never happen:

<N/A> | BlackBerry Messaging Agent bes-blackberry Agent 1 (Application Event Log on BES) | 01/20/2009 20:14:17 (*********) -> [AUDIT] jcruz@wharton.upenn.edu - User activated on the BES

That's one of the automated messages we get when a user successfully connects to our BlackBerry Enterprise Server.  Yes, true believers, I've switched from a vaunted Windows Mobile phone to a BlackBerry.

Mostly because my AT&T Tilt is dying, and an 8820 became available recently, but also because we need some in-house support expertise on the BlackBerry itself.

Which leads me to the subject of this post.

BlackBerry and their vaunted Enterprise Redirection is not worth the money.  Here's my tally (assuming we're buying a phone for a new account)

  • BlackBerry Enterprise License: $100
  • BlackBerry Enterprise Redirection Plan: $45/month (unlimited), $39.99/month (4MB.yeah.*4*MB)
  • BlackBerry Bold: $299

Look at the below for an iPhone:

  • Exchange Active Sync License: Free/included
  • iPhone Data Plan: $45/month (unlimited for Enterprise)
  • iPhone 8GB: $199

And for a new HTC Fuze:

  • Exchange Active Sync license: Free/included
  • MS DirectPush Data Plan: $29.99/month (unlimited)
  • HTC Fuze: $299

Out of the gate, the iPhone costs us less, and even more insidiously, the data plan costs us less per month.  So my question to everyone is:

Why are we still buying BlackBerries?

Granted, you know, we're *not*, because we're trying to cut spending, but think about how much money we could be saving if all 200+ BlackBerry users we have had started with iPhones to begin with?

Do I hear a call to switching to the iPhone?  Even switching to Windows Mobile phones (the HTC Fuze being the current example) would save us some bucks!

Don't even get me started on the amount of staff time *wasted* because the various carriers out there don't have a clue about how to add BlackBerry Enterprise Redirection to the phone's plan.  It took me 55 minutes to do that tonight, and I know exactly what I need and what to ask for!

<sigh>

As you were, true believers.  I'm saving up for an iPhone.

UPDATE: So it turns out that the Enterprise plan for the iPhone, the one that lets you connect to Exchange, is actually $45/month, not $30/month.  Soooo, looks like this whole post is a wash!!!

UPDATE2: According to peeps in the know (and an actual iPhone user on our Exchange servers) only the $30/month plan is necessary.  Take that, BlackBerry!  iPhonez still rulexz!

Online Scanning for free

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imageI  was tooling around with my Brother's home computer over the holidays, and noticed that there may have been a good bit of malware installed (thank you BearShare!).

I was about to run a scan using Symantec, then my other brother piped up and said:

Why don't you use Windows OneCare?  It's online and free!

I was confused, befuddled, and intrigued!  There's a free scanning tool from Microsoft?  And my little bro' knew about it and I didn't? Something isn't right with the world.

Turns out it's quite useful and pretty effective; check it out:

http://onecare.live.com/site/en-US/default.htm

About this Archive

This page is an archive of entries from January 2009 listed from newest to oldest.

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