A new partner-billing option for Office 365 may not be  available until next July.
		Microsoft announced the Office 365 Open License at the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in  July. The news that Microsoft partners' most common request was being addressed  met with a very positive response from the WPC keynote audience. Microsoft  executives offered no timeframe for the change in the announcement.
		In response to a question about availability from RCP, a  Microsoft spokesperson said via e-mail, "Office 365 Open will be available  before July 2013."
		Office 365 Open is designed to work the same way as the  Microsoft Open License. A partner can purchase a key for the service through  the Open License and resell the key to a customer. Partners will be able to  bundle the Office 365 cloud productivity suite  with other services, set  their own price and determine their own billing timetable.
		Whenever it takes effect, Office 365 Open should settle what  has been the single biggest controversy in the Microsoft channel for the last few years. Microsoft previously only  allowed strategic partners, such as its syndication partners, to handle billing  for Office 365 and its predecessor, the Business Productivity Online Suite  (BPOS).
		For the vast majority of partners, monthly billing was  handled through a direct billing relationship between Microsoft and the  customer. Partners needed to get customers to sign them up as the Partner of  Record in order to qualify for advisor fees. While partners won't get advisor  fees for customers that they sign up under Office 365 Open, they can continue  to use the advisor fee business model for some or all of their customers if  they choose. Microsoft also announced changes to the advisor fee model at WPC  that took effect immediately -- lowering baseline fees and increasing fees for  increasing volume.
		Meanwhile, it's possible that Microsoft is aiming for  earlier availability on Office 365 Open but leaving itself some wiggle room  with the July 2013 date. Partners have told RCP that Microsoft privately has  been saying Office 365 Open should be available in the March timeframe.
		
				
						See Also:
				
		
		
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 27, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		With only a few weeks to a joint Sept. 5 announcement expected to reveal a new Lumia device or devices for Windows Phone 8, Microsoft  and Nokia appear to be putting other pieces in place.
		For one thing, Nokia's all-in bet on Windows Phone is  succeeding, at least in the limited arena of the existing Windows Phone  ecosystem. Nokia has only had Windows Phones for sale since November 2011 (and only  since January in the United    States), yet it's now dominating the field.
		According to Localytics, Nokia has "cemented itself as  the world's Windows Phone manufacturer" by accounting for 59 percent of  all global Windows Phone devices seen by Localytics' mobile app analytics  platform in July. In a Localytics  blog post Tuesday, Daniel Ruby wrote, "Between Jan. 1 and July 31,  2012, Nokia went from zero percent to nearly a third of all Windows  Phone-powered devices in use in the United States."
		
				
						
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		In the first half of the year, Windows Phone handsets seen  by apps running Localytics were up 312 percent, the Boston-based firm noted.
		Despite the growth, the partnership has a long way to go.  Nokia has said it sold 4 million Lumia devices worldwide in the second quarter.  That compares to about 29 million Apple iPhones and nearly 100 million Google  Android-based devices over the same period.
		Yet together, Nokia and Microsoft may be making headway with  the U.S.  carrier that could give them both the biggest boost in sales. The Bloomberg news service reported Tuesday that Verizon Wireless will sell a Nokia phone  running Windows Phone 8 later this year. If the report, which depends on an  unnamed source, is correct, it would be Verizon's first Windows Phone since introducing  the HTC Trophy in early 2011. Bloomberg also reported that Verizon is not  expected to be part of the Sept. 5 announcement.
		Microsoft's relationship with Verizon has been rocky over  the last few years. The carrier was burned by Microsoft's quick retraction of  the Kin from the market, and has been lukewarm in its support for Windows Phone  7. Verizon offered the Trophy months after other carriers had been selling  Windows Phones and didn't choose to offer new hardware when Windows Phone 7.5 came  out.
		Should Microsoft and Nokia land timely support from Verizon  on Windows Phone 8 in addition to their solid standing with AT&T, the  relationship could help carry the platform into a solid No. 3 position behind  Android and Apple.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 22, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		In a few months, Microsoft will make the most significant  changes yet to its Microsoft Partner Network competency structure. Microsoft is  consolidating six competencies into two, and redirecting two other  competencies. Here are the changes, announced during the Microsoft Worldwide  Partner Conference, that will take effect in November:
		
				App Dev Consolidation
				
The MPN is merging three competencies -- ISV, Software Development  and Web Development -- into one competency called Application Development.  Microsoft plans to grandfather all partners in the existing competencies into  the new competency automatically in November. In another move intended for  development-focused partners, Microsoft is expanding the number of competencies  with integrated application tracks.
		
				SharePoint Shakeup
				
As one of Microsoft's most strategic and wide-reaching  products, SharePoint had a stake in four different Microsoft competencies. The  company is trying to simplify the MPN competency structure around SharePoint at  the end of this year.
		Three of the competencies -- Portals and Collaboration,  Content Management, and Search -- will merge into a new competency called  Collaboration and Content. In a blog  post during WPC, MPN General Manager Julie Bennani said the merger reflects  "that customers increasingly want an end-to-end solution for finding,  sharing, managing, and collaborating on content, not separate solutions."  She also said the consolidation will make it easier and more cost effective for  SharePoint partners to engage with Microsoft.
		A fourth SharePoint competency is Digital Marketing, which  was focused on partners providing SharePoint-based Web sites to customers.  Microsoft plans to broaden the focus beyond SharePoint to capture a larger  opportunity.
		"Customers are looking for partners that can create  compelling end-to-end online experiences integrating their marketing campaigns  across display and search advertising, on the fly, with demonstrable ROI. Our  technology portfolio has evolved to support that broader definition and need so  we are revamping this competency to include our Bing advertising tools and  assets," Bennani's blog noted.
		Digital Marketing competency partners will now also get Bing  advertising credits ($2,000 for gold and $1,500 for silver.) Partners in the  new Application Development competency will get credits in the same amounts,  and Small Business competency partners will get Bing credits worth $1,500 for  gold and $1,000 for silver.
		
				Desktop Gets BYOD'd
				
In a nod to the consumerization of IT trend, Microsoft is  also renaming the Desktop competency. It will now be called Devices and  Deployment, and Bennani described the aim as to "recognize and reward  partners who help customers select, configure, and manage a range of secure,  productive devices."
		Also in November, Microsoft plans to hike the  gold competency membership fee by an amount that hasn't been disclosed yet.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 13, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		Dell, Lenovo and Samsung will be releasing devices for the  Windows RT operating system, a Microsoft official confirmed Monday.
		Windows RT is the version of Windows 8 designed for system-on-a-chip (SoC) platforms, especially consumer tablets. Higher-end tablets designed  to be backward compatible with older Windows applications for business and  power user purposes will have x86 processors and run Windows 8. Windows RT and  Windows 8 have both been released to manufacturing.
		Microsoft had previously committed to releasing a Microsoft  Surface tablet running Windows RT on Oct. 26, when Windows 8 and Windows RT hit  general availability. ASUS had also previously announced a Windows RT-based  system.
		"If you are following Windows RT, perhaps you have  taken note of the Asus Tablet 600 (Windows RT) announcement or Microsoft's own  Surface RT news. Along with Asus, we are excited to share that there will be  ARM-based PC designs from Dell, Lenovo, and Samsung running Windows RT," wrote Mike  Angiulo, vice president of Microsoft's Windows Ecosystem and Planning team,   in a blog post.
		Angiulo said more announcements for more form factors on  both operating systems would be coming as the launch approached.
		"Windows RT is not just for tablet form factors. Some  of our Windows RT PCs come with full keyboard and touchpad solutions, whether  removable/dockable or a traditional clamshell," he said.
		
				
						
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						    | Two images of ASUS' Windows RT tablet show the evolution  from a prototype to its final design. (Source: Microsoft Corp.) | 
				
		
		Given the limited number of Windows RT form factors that  Microsoft is licensing, it was interesting that Angiulo's post didn't make note  of two Windows RT devices Toshiba announced at Computex, a clamshell and a tablet. Other notable omissions from  the larger group of device makers are Acer and HP.
		Acer's CEO and Chairman J.T. Wang has been publicly  critical of Microsoft's handling of OEMs prior to the Windows 8/RT launch. HP  has gone on record, in the form of an anonymous  spokesperson's statement, that it would develop an x86/Windows 8 tablet  before a Windows RT/ARM-based device. However, other recent reports suggest HP  may be reconsidering.
		Angiulo also noted that Microsoft has avoided a forked code  situation with Windows RT in spite of the many SoC platforms involved: "We  have achieved our goal of one Windows binary for all Windows RT SoC platforms  from NVIDIA, Qualcomm, and Texas Instruments, each of which has developed  innovative ARM CPUs that form the basis of a complete system."
Related:
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 13, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Distribution giant Tech Data Corp. this week added hosted  Microsoft Exchange provider Intermedia to its StreamOne Solutions Store.
		The move makes several Intermedia messaging packages for  SMBs immediately available to Tech Data's 60,000 reseller channel in the United States.
		Stacy Nethercoat, vice president of software product  marketing for Tech Data, played up the security and private-label aspects of Intermedia's  offering. "Intermedia's private-label model provides a fast, reliable and  profitable way to enter the cloud, allowing our resellers to offer their  end-user customers an entire suite of cloud services entirely under their own  brands at their own price points," Nethercoat said in a statement. "Resellers  are also able to own the billing and bundle additional products and  professional services."
		As a company, Intermedia has pushed the billing angle  aggressively in contrast to Microsoft's approach with the Business Productivity  Online Suite and subsequent Office 365, which both involved Microsoft billing  end customers. Microsoft last month announced plans to allow partners to begin to control end user billing in the next few months.
		Tech Data will offer three Intermedia packages. Standard  will include an Exchange plan with backup and storage included. Advanced will  come with an unlimited Exchange mailbox and also include mobility, backup and  collaboration. Elite will tack on Lync and SharePoint.
		Intermedia has also had its hosted Exchange products featured in rival distributor Ingram Micro's Seismic program since late 2009.
		Meanwhile, Intermedia, with more than 480,000 mailboxes  under management, has been logging fast growth of late. In an e-mail interview last month, CEO Michael Gold said, "Intermedia's partners saw a 70 percent  increase in mailboxes under management, [and we had] a 30 percent increase in  active partners and 50 percent increase in total partner revenue."
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 02, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		One of the biggest questions surrounding Windows 8 is how  many third-party apps will be ready for launch.
		That's still a huge question mark, but one hot app developer  that makes software that serves as a usability multiplier is already on the  platform.
		
				Splashtop today  got a consumer preview version of its Splashtop Remote Desktop for Windows 8 onto  the Windows Store.
		The San Jose, Calif.-based company already claims more than  7 million users of its software that, among other things, allows mobile  devices from Apple iPads and Android tablets to various smartphones to access  Windows-based PCs and Macs to remotely run applications. With technology that  pushes video at 30 frames per second, Splashtop positions its software as  especially well-suited for HD movies and graphic-intensive games.
		The Windows 8 version allows Windows or Mac remote access  support over Wi-Fi and 3G/4G networks. For now, accessing computers over the  Internet through Splashtop will require a static IP address.
		I used Splashtop's Win8  Metro Testbed for the iPad earlier this year to test the Windows  8 Consumer Preview over my home network, and it worked very well. Judging  from that experience (and assuming Windows RT support), it seems like Splashtop's  app could provide a handy workaround for some of the limitations in Windows RT,  as well as expanding the applications immediately available to the Windows 8  platform.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on August 02, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Canalys, the market research firm that counts iPads and  other tablets among PC shipments, released numbers on Tuesday putting Windows'  overall market share at a "new low of 73 percent."
		In spite of some bright spots for Windows, the firm doesn't  see the Microsoft Surface pulling Windows out of a market share dive any time  soon and its analysts are encouraging OEMs to demand better pricing from Microsoft  on Windows RT. The slide represents a 9-point share loss in the year since  Canalys put Wintel's Q2 2011 share at 82  percent.
		Microsoft is slated to release an ARM-based Surface running  Windows RT with Windows 8's general availability on Oct. 26 and a Surface Pro  running Windows 8 Professional three months later.
		"The information available to date suggests the prices  of both will be too high to capture significant market share, and a direct  sales approach will prove inadequate. We expect the Surface pads to have a  similar impact on the PC industry as the Zune did in portable music players,"  Canalys analyst Tim Coulling said in a statement.
		Canalys does not expect the launch of Windows 8 to arrest  Microsoft's market share decline until Q3 2013 at the earliest.
		The firm also says it has advised PC OEMs to postpone  launching Windows RT devices until Microsoft reduces the price for the  underlying operating system.
		Meanwhile, another Canalys analyst suggests those PC OEMs  will be licking their chops for what, in his view, will be Microsoft's  inevitable failure with the Surface.
		"Microsoft has upset some partners by bringing its own  hardware to market," says Chris  Jones, Canalys vice president and principal analyst. "Marketing,  distributing and servicing such hardware profitably is hard. Once the Surface  makes a material dent in Microsoft's P&L, it will need to repair  relationships with PC vendors, who are already preparing lists of demands."
		In addition to reducing OEM prices for Windows RT, Canalys  warns that Microsoft will need to subsidize touch-panel production costs by $50  to $100 per unit to "kick-start the market" by helping the OEMs hit  mainstream price points.
		The bad news in the second quarter for Microsoft is Apple's 60  percent shipment growth to 21 million units (iPads and Apple desktops and  laptops), HP's 11 percent drop to 13.5 million units, and Dell's 11 percent drop  to 9.6 million units, according to Canalys' figures.
		The bright spots Canalys referred to are Lenovo's 27 percent  shipment improvement to 13.1 million units and Acer's 4 percent growth to 10.7  million units.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 31, 20128 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		KineticD, the Toronto-based cloud and hybrid backup company, has been on a tear lately, getting itself and its products certified under various Microsoft certifications.
		The latest Microsoft hurdle cleared by KineticD is certification of its cloud backup portfolio, KineticCloud, for the Windows 8 platform.
		The company, which has about 1,000 resellers and 100 managed services providers and private-label partners, announced the certification Tuesday morning. In a statement, CEO Jamie Brenzel described the benefits of certification for those resellers and MSPs, which are predominantly Microsoft partners. "Windows certification assures our customers, and theirs, that the software has been tested and runs efficiently without conflicts in the newest Windows environments," Brenzel said.
		The Windows 8 certification follows the certification last month of the KineticFAM open file driver for Windows 7, Windows Vista, Windows XP, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2003 and Windows Server 2000. The driver backs up constantly open files like Microsoft Outlook, making background backups possible and providing differentiation against products that rely on Microsoft's VSS.
		In an interview for that release, Brenzel said that certification ensures that KineticFAM doesn't conflict with other low-level drivers, such as anti-virus programs. "For us it's really important to demonstrate to our customer base that we've taken the time to not only develop a low-level driver that benefits our end customers to back up applications that are open all the time, but also give them the peace of mind that from a Microsoft Windows perspective that our product has been vetted through the Windows Certification process," Brenzel said.
		KineticD earned a completely different kind of Microsoft stamp earlier this month when it achieved a Silver Independent Software Vendor competency in the Microsoft Partner Network. For an ISV, the competency requires getting an application certified for a Microsoft operating system, providing three customer references and paying the silver competency fee.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 24, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		It's not every day you get to put Microsoft on the spot in  front of a live audience of a few hundred people. So when Andy Vabulas saw his  chance to make a plug for an investment to benefit a lot of MPN competency  partners like his own company, he took it.
		Vabulas, CEO of IBIS Inc., was invited to appear on a  Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference stage with Julie Bennani, the general  manager of the Microsoft Partner Network, last week in Toronto.
		Vabulas went through his scripted portion, discussing the  multiple tens of thousands of dollars that multiple-Microsoft-award-winning  IBIS has saved over the years through MPN benefits.
		Bennani thanked Vabulas for his directness and constructive  criticism over the years. With that opening, Vabulas piped right up. "I  have an ask," he said.
		"I wish that in the next year, that Microsoft would  really take the competencies and drive them out to our customers so they really  get to know what it means for us to invest, for us to have a gold competency,  for us to have a silver competency, so it really lands out in the marketplace,"  Vabulas said, adding jokingly, "I have a dream, that that would happen."
		Bennani appeared surprised by the timing of Vabulas'  request, although not by the content of it. Many partners have asked for the  same thing since Microsoft drastically raised the bar for silver and gold  competencies in 2010 compared to the old requirements to be a Microsoft  Certified or Gold Certified Partner. Bennani's colleagues on Microsoft global  channel chief Jon Roskill's leadership team have said in the past they were  considering customer-focused advertising campaigns to promote the value of  competency partners.
		Bennani pointed out that in addition to broad air cover  advertising for Microsoft products, the field sellers are doing a much better  job than in the past of making connections between customers and partners with  competencies. "The alignment is fantastic," Bennani said.
		At the same time, Bennani promised to escalate Vabulas'  concern. "I will take [it up] with Mr. Roskill," she said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 19, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		A year ago, Microsoft put Windows XP on a deathwatch. This  year, company officials warned there would be no reprieve for the popular but  aging operating system.
		"XP end of life is not that far off -- a thousand days  to be exact," said Tami Reller, corporate vice president and CFO for  Windows and Windows Live, during a Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference keynote a year ago.
		COO Kevin Turner followed up on the theme at this year's WPC last week: "Now, on April 8th of 2014, we're going to have a huge birthday  party. We're going to celebrate the 15th anniversary -- one-five -- of Windows  XP. And then we're going to put it to sleep. May it rest in peace."
		"We are not going to extend the end-of-life for Windows  XP. This is it. No more security updates. You won't be secure if you're running  it. We have to move people off the platform. It costs us and them way too much  money to continue to support it this far into the ecosystem," Turner said.
		He then pivoted to urge partners to upgrade Windows XP users  to Windows 7 and Windows 8.
		"Get them on 7. That's the fastest way to Windows 8.  Get the browser updated. Get the new release of Office updated so that they can  take advantage of all of the solutions and technology and investments that we're  making across the portfolio," Turner said.
		By Oct.  26 of this year when Windows 8 is scheduled to ship, Windows XP will have been  succeeded by three newer versions of the Windows client operating system.  Windows XP became generally available Oct. 25, 2001 and new sales of the OS  wound down from various channels between mid-2008 and early 2009. It was  succeeded by the much-criticized Windows Vista in January 2007 and Windows 7 in  October 2009.
		The Web analytics research firm Net Applications predicted earlier in July that Windows 7 would pass Windows XP in usage share sometime  this month. According to Net Applications, Windows XP fell below 50 percent  usage share in September 2011 and in June led Windows 7 by only 43.61 percent  to 41.59 percent.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 19, 20121 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Most Microsoft partners serving small-business customers  know without being told that the Microsoft Technology  Centers are not designed for them or their customers.
		Peruse the case studies for the 11 MTCs in the United States  and they're mostly enterprise engagements, with National Systems Integrators or  Global Systems Integrators and MTC staff guiding enterprise customers through  complex proof-of-concepts with Microsoft software and high-end gear from Dell,  HP, Brocade, EMC, Emulex, Brocade, NetApp, Emerson and APC.
		Still, executives on Microsoft's U.S. SMB team think they've  found a way for the large community of small-business-focused partners to  leverage Microsoft facilities to reach their customers.
		Their answer: Leverage the network of Microsoft Stores,  currently at 20  locations with a roadmap to 75 locations in the near future.
		During a keynote at Microsoft's Worldwide Partner Conference in Toronto last  week, Cindy Bates, vice president, U.S. SMB and Distribution at Microsoft,  described the facilities available to partners at each store.
		"Each store has space for a theater, a customer theater  that seats 45, has a 103-inch screen, and this is free for you to use. You can  use it for demos, customer meetings and each store has a business development manager,  who now is thinking about how to connect with partners in their local area,"  Bates said. "This is a great way to actually display Microsoft's  technology. All the great form factors, the phone, particularly with the  launch, all the Windows 8 devices are going to be there in the store."
		Bates said that for now the only requirement for a partner  to use a Microsoft Store for an event is membership in the Microsoft Partner  Network. (She hinted that at some point in the future the new Small Business  Competency might become a requirement.)
		"This is a resource that we want to make sure that all  of you are aware of and taking advantage of," Bates said.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 19, 20120 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		Without breaking any news on Windows Phone 8 at its partner  confab last week, Microsoft did treat partners to a deeper dive into business  features of the upcoming smartphone platform.
		Thom Gruhler, Microsoft's new corporate vice president of  Windows Phone Marketing, oversaw a guided tour of Windows 8 during a keynote at  the Microsoft Worldwide Partner Conference in Toronto.
		Windows Phone 8 will release in more than 50 languages and  the marketplace for the phone will be available in at least 180 countries later  this year. Device makers already queuing up to release hardware are Nokia, HTC,  Samsung and Huawei, while U.S. operators AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon are  reportedly planning to carry the devices this year.
		Gruhler and his onstage demonstration partner, Augusto Valdez,  put the phone OS through the same consumer-focused paces Microsoft executives  Terry Myerson and Joe Belfiore showed off in the Windows  Phone 8 preview in late June, running through demos of the shared core with  Windows 8, near-field communication (NFC), wallet features, maps and the more customizable  Start screen.
		In the June preview, Microsoft executives had declared that "Windows  Phone 8 is business ready" but largely glossed over those details in favor  of more exciting end user features. For the partner audience, more attuned to  business requirements and in a position to help influence some customers' mass  phone purchases and app platform choices, Microsoft devoted much more time to  business features.
		"With Windows Phone 8 we are continuing to push to make  Windows Phone the world's best enterprise-class mobile platform, with new  features and functionality that return us to our heritage as an early  enterprise leader in the mobile space," Gruhler said at WPC.
		He detailed three areas of significant business  functionality in Windows Phone 8:
		  -  Stronger out-of-the-box integration with Microsoft  Exchange, Microsoft SharePoint and Microsoft Lync.
 
 
-  Security features including secure boot and always-on data  encryption using Microsoft's BitLocker technology. "This means you can now  expand to sell mobile solutions to verticals like financial sector, government,  health care and many more," Gruhler said.
 
 
-  Built-in technologies for enterprise mobile device  management, with an emphasis on a simple user interface and integration with  existing software management solutions.
The business feature that Gruhler and Valdez spent by far the most time on was Windows  Phone 8's app distribution, which will allow customers to publish corporate  apps on their own internal servers rather than requiring them to put the apps  in a public app marketplace.
		"With Windows Phone 8 enterprise organizations can take  complete control over their LOB [line-of-business] apps, [which] gives you the opportunity to sell  those solutions to customers who don't want their apps published broadly,"  Gruhler told partners.
		In a demo, Valdez  called the capability the "Company Hub," which is a kind of internal  app that a company could deploy that would allow its Windows Phone 8-using  employees to get company apps, company news updates and alerts about corporate  password or license expirations, as well as maintain an employee profile. The  Company Hub and its apps would be deployed from a management server inside the  company and each phone would need a certificate to access the content.
		Valdez  explained how the Company Hub could provide opportunities for partners. "This  concept of a Company Hub is going to be shipped as a template with Windows  Phone 8. So, you are going to be able to customize Company Hub for your own  customers. You can create those for them and then have those Company Hubs being  deployed using the management server in each one of your customers at any time,"  Valdez said.
		So in all at WPC, Microsoft executives described five key  partner opportunities emerging from the business improvements in Windows Phone  8. 
		  - Tighter integration with existing Microsoft server-based solutions, using  Exchange, SharePoint and Lync.
 
 
- Vertical app opportunities in highly  regulated industries due to stronger security.
 
 
- Mobile device management.
 
 
- Sophisticated, private deployment of custom apps for corporate customers  through the Company Hub.
 
 
-  Managed services around the maintenance of Company  Hubs on customers' behalf.
 
 
 Get more news and analysis from WPC 2012 here.
 
	Posted by Scott Bekker on July 18, 20120 comments