potential ownage, iPhone won't work with many Corporate email systems

it was never going to be a business phone, don't know why you assumed it would be. not everything in life is one size fits all
 
I've had to use both, and no EDGE is not as good as EVDO. There is higher latency, and lower transmission rates. Not a good combination of factors for mobile data devices.
 
Battery
Talk Time Up to 8 hours
Standby Up to 250 hours
Internet Use Up to 6 hours
Video Playback Up to 7 hours
Audio playback Up to 24 hours
 
i really don't give a shit i'm an industrial designer, i have used PCs and Mac's. I prefer PCs for graphics. now i use PCs professionally and i like it just fine

first thing i noticed when i got a mac was "why the hell do people prefer these over PCs for grapics programs?"
 
http://www.azcentral.com/business/consumer/articles/0619biz-iPhone19-ON.html



Cliffs: Thread title




Companies not upgrading for iPhone

Jessica E. Vascellaro and Nick Wingfield
The Wall Street Journal
Jun. 19, 2007 07:45 AM
While millions of consumers are eagerly anticipating Apple Inc.'s launch of its iPhone next week, Bill Caraher is bracing for the worst.

Mr. Caraher, technology director of von Briesen & Roper, a Milwaukee law firm, says he is being besieged by inquiries from employees wondering whether the office's email system can be used with the device.

His answer, at least initially, has been no. The main problem is that the iPhone can't send and receive email through the company's corporate BlackBerry email servers. He says he is unwilling to look into workarounds, because they might compromise the company's security. "It's another hole in the system people can exploit," he says.
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This scene is being repeated in workplaces throughout the country as Apple moves closer to its much-ballyhooed rollout of the iPhone. While iPhones can be used for email, for now, many businesses don't plan to sync them with internal email systems that use technology from BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd., Microsoft Corp. and Good Technology, owned by Motorola Inc. That means many iPhone users won't be able to directly send and receive messages through their corporate email systems, although they may be able to forward their work emails through a third-party service like AOL or Yahoo Mail.

didn't print rest of article ,see link
 
You must work in a very forgiving environment. I absolutely won't touch anything that comes into the building that isn't 100% work related, and I'm definately not going to spend days trying to figure out how to make something work that isn't intended to work in the first place. Users can't figure out how to sync their treo to their PCs with a goddamn book telling you how and software that is as easy as "click next" on every box.
 
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