1. April 17, 2009 by Pej Roshan

    A kind word from an Agito partner…

    Hi all-

    I am not a believer in (shameless) self promotion when blogging, but I ran into some kind words written about our product and our team (truly our greatest asset), that I thought I would share.

    From Sean Eichorn’s blog, FrozenReality.com (he is based in Alaska):

    “I am rarely very impressed with 3rd Party software, but Agito Networks has impressed me.”

    фото порно бесплaтно писaющее

    Always a nice lead in!  Thank you Sean, and do let us know if there is anything else we can do to help!

    Thanks,

    Pej
    twitter.com/proshan

    Read Sean’s blogpost

  2. April 10, 2009 by Christian Gilby

    Video Post: An overview of Agito's 3.0 UC announcement

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    Agito’s UC Features

    How Agito Extends Your Existing UC System

    Request a Demo индивидуалки в тагиле

    Thanks,

    Christian

  3. April 2, 2009 by Pej Roshan

    AT&T Nokia E71x: What does this say about mobile email infrastructure?

    Now that the Nokia E71 for AT&T (known as the E71x) has been officially announced, it got me to thinking about what I have heard from press, analysts, customers, and other enterprises over the past month or so during my travels.

    e71x

    First off, I should state that my primary phone is an unlocked US Nokia E71, and I am a huge fan of the phone. Great VoIP performance, the best battery life of a dual mode phone to date (that I have seen), and the industrial design is gorgeous. The full spec sheet is on the Nokia site.  With AT&T offering it at $99, I am hopeful that this will reinvigorate Nokia S60 in North America.

    That said, I did hear a lot of commentary about how Nokia’s (and Apple’s, and every other WinMo handset maker’s support for native Microsoft DirectPush) was well received because it eliminated the costly $100/user client access licensed imposed by RIM for mobile email support.  I have heard story after story about cost conscious enterprises allowing unsanctioned personal phones (e.g. the iPhone) to receive corporate email because it was effectively free from cost, and DirectPush still allowed for remote device wipe to provide security peace of mind.

    With more and more DirectPush phones being release and many more to come (such as the Palm Pre), will this threaten the viability of the Blackberry Enterprise Server and the additional client access license expense?  Do you see a future where Blackberries support DirectPush?  The BES does have very robust device management and policy rules which allows enterprises to really customize and control device and email behavior, I just wonder how many enterprises will pay the premium for it versus going to other multivendor MDM solutions that can do the same.

    Congratulations to Nokia and AT&T on the release of an exciting phone!

    Pej

    http://twitter.com/proshan

    Read about the AT&T and Nokia e71x

    Read the Nokia e71x datasheet