Thank you in advance for your insight and expertise. I unfortunately am forced to work in the PC world, and my firm (global bank), has gone RIM. At one point they had other servers in addition to RIM (Goodlink?? & ....), and within the past year they pulled the plug and went exclusively Canadian. We of coarse use Outlook, and our IT help desk told my assistant that our "system is like a great big loop. The email enters our system, is sent to Exchange then RIM, the provider and ultimately the device." Yada Yada.... RIM servers are involved, "it won't work." HOWEVER, I’ve heard of a brave man that has accomplished this feat, and it may have been due to an app. Is there an app that can disguise an iphone as a BB to a RIM server? Is this crazy talk? If not, brilliant app developers get to it! Or, did this brave solider simply hook his iPhone to the system, and the Exchange server is the muscle?
1. What is Exchange versus Enterprise?
2. If a company uses one of the aforementioned E-servers, does this mean that ActiveSync will work?
On July 20th, 1969 The United States safely landed two gentlemen on the moon, while the third orbited. The reason I mention this is that they had slightly more computing firepower than a hand held calculator, (1967, Texas Instruments). We have a brilliant and powerful device in our pockets, we now just need to figure out how to make it fetch our (my) email. It’s not rocket science folks.
In addition, my firm also blocks SMS, MMS, GPS, Bluetooth, most web functionality etc. If I am able to jerry-rig this lovely contraption to behave, will I loose said functionality?
I nervously look forward to this response, as I love my iPhone, and would have to double pocket mobiles if not. Let's put our heads together, and figure this out.
Apologies for paraphrasing, an elementary understanding of complex systems, spelling and grammatical errors.
Thank you.