Interop NY Keynotes: BlackBerry

September 17th, 2008 by Valerie Barber

David Yach, Chief Technology Officer of Software at Research in Motion rounded out the final keynotes of the morning as part of the Mobile Business Expo (MBX). David focused on how enterprise and mobility are tied together today.

Which of the following initiatives are likely to be a major telecommunications technology related priority for 2007? Mobility is a huge issue.

We’re starting to see traction with mobility.

  • The evolution of enterprise mobility:
    • Voice –> messaging –> e–mail –> web, –> business applications –>  instant messaging/presence –> what’s next?
  • Cell phone to Smartphone:
    • 1G –> 2G –> 3G

Converging IT Responsibilities

Collaboration, Web/Internet, Desktop Computer, Deskphone/PBX, Mobile Phone and Applications. All of this is under the umbrella of IT. IT departments are not a single cohesive unit where everyone gets along. They have different motivations, budgets, goals, etc.

BlackBerry manages all of these responsibilities in one, forcing these departments to collaborate and work together. This is key for interoperability between these systems, knowing how they work together.

Desktop capabilities are expected in mobility:

  • Information
  • Collaboration
  • Voice
  • Transactions
  • Presence
  • Application

Mobile devices are fundamentally changing the pace of which we all work. You can reach anybody at anytime. This changes business.

All of this is working with data that is behind a corporate firewall.

The big change in IT is that for almost any industry now, the data that you have and you manage is a core corporate asset. It doesn’t matter whether you’re in manufacturing, logistics, or a bakery. Information is king. This has the benefit of moving IT up to a C-level position. You are a core part of your business success. This has benefits, and also added stress.

Voice is still the “killer app” for mobility. Deskphones and smartphones need to overlap into a mobile voice system.

Another up and coming technology is the mobilization of enterprise applications. This provides the ultimate user experience. For example, Blackberry has mobilized the SAP Business Suite on BlackBerry smartphones. SAP CRM access is as seamless and intuitive as email on BlackBerry and incorporates push, alerting, security, GPS, Wi-Fi and media.

Enterprise grade platforms will extend core competencies of enterprise systems to mobile environments.

  • Secure
  • Reliable
  • Manage
  • Control
  • Administration
  • Standardize

Conclusion:

Putting it together: integrating the wireless capabilities of today into the business tools of tomorrow.

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September 17th, 2008

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