Welcome | Sign In
ECommerceTimes.com
Applications

Scalix Goes Wireless With Messaging System

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints
Scalix Goes Wireless With Messaging System

Scalix is competing on a different basis than RIM and Good Technologies. Its competition is Microsoft Exchange and Lotus Notes, both proprietary solutions, both of which already offer a wireless component.


eMarketer Whitepaper: Optimizing the E-Commerce Experience
From the Web to the Contact Center, are you prepared to proactively engage and keep your savvy customers? Read how e-commerce leaders are optimizing their sites with ratings, reviews, live help, Web analytics, mobile and more.

Linux-based messaging vendor Scalix Corporation announced late last week a wireless solution designed to extend its e-mail and calendaring software to mobile devices.

Developed in partnership with enterprise mobility solutions vendor Notify Technology Corporation, the Scalix Wireless Solution provides wireless access and synchronization of e-mail Increase Customer Sales with Email Marketing -- Free Trial from VerticalResponse, calendar, address book and PIM data and supports all wireless devices and carriers.

"Today's generation of wireless e-mail solutions often limit customer choice by dictating the device and carrier that must be used," said Julie Farris, Scalix founder and chief strategy officer.

"The Scalix Wireless Solution gives IT departments and users the freedom to tailor a solution according to their needs. This is a continuation of Scalix's client of choice architecture that helps customers avoid lock-in to a specific vendor technology."

Cross-Carrier Support

The new software includes advanced wireless synchronization and access to all Scalix mailbox information, including e-mails, calendar, contacts and tasks. Users can read, compose, reply, forward and delete e-mails, view and edit attachments, and maintain calendar and contacts.

Users can also schedule meetings, accept or decline meeting requests, schedule automated wireless data synchronization, and perform robust filtering using the device of their choice.

The solution features Advanced Encryption Standard/Triple Data Encryption Standard encryption and Secure Socket Layer connectivity. A Web-based console is designed to help users administrate by consolidating tasks including server administration, as well as device and user provisioning.

Wireless Interoperability

Scalix Wireless transmits data directly to wireless devices, with no intermediate data repositories, and all data is sent fully encrypted. The wireless solution communicates directly with the Scalix Server and all organizational data is stored behind the customer firewall.

The messaging platform blends with open and proprietary infrastructures, including Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Exchange, Outlook and Active Directory to assure seamless migration and coexistence with no end-user disruption.

Its Web e-mail client, Scalix Web Access, runs on Internet Explorer, Mozilla and Firefox, running on Windows, Linux, UNIX and Macintosh desktops.

Necessary Move

Yankee Group analyst Gene Signorini told LinuxInsider that Scalix's move is not as much about open-source as it is about necessity. "Scalix had to do this to be legitimate," he said. "If you are going to be an enterprise class e-mail application, there has to be a wireless story as part of the offering."

Still, Signorini said Scalix is competing on a different basis than RIM and Good Technologies. Its competition is Microsoft Exchange and Lotus Notes, both proprietary solutions, both of which already offer a wireless component.

The Scalix Wireless Solution supports all BlackBerry and wireless PalmOS devices, including the popular Treo, along with a wide variety of Windows Mobile PDAs such as the HP (NYSE: HPQ) iPAQ and Smartphones from Samsung and Motorola (NYSE: MOT). It supports all major wireless carriers including Cingular, Nextel, Sprint (NYSE: S), T-Mobile and Verizon and any Palm or Windows Mobile PDAs over 802.11x networks.


Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Jennifer LeClaire


More by Jennifer LeClaire

The Digital Car: Cool Automotive Accessories, Part 2
January 16, 2007
Not all the latest high-tech automotive electronics are built to entertain. Many give the driver more information and more control. Vehicle tracking devices can tell where the car is at any time, software installed in a smartphone can turn off a vehicle's security system whenever the owner approaches, and diagnostic tools can tell what's wrong with the engine -- and how much it'll be to fix it.
'World of Warcraft' Wows 8 Million Subscribers
January 12, 2007
"World of Warcraft," the massively multiplayer online role-playing game, has reached the 8 million subscriber mark. Since debuting in North America in Nov. 2004, "World of Warcraft" has become the most popular MMORPG in the world. The franchise is available in seven different languages and is played on at least four continents.
AT&T Bids Goodbye to Cingular Brand
January 12, 2007
Starting Monday, AT&T will launch a multimedia campaign to transition the Cingular Wireless brand name into its advertising and customer communications. The campaign will integrate popular imagery, phrases and icons from Cingular's traditional advertising, including the "raising the bar" tagline, the "Jack" character and the color orange.
Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network