Research In Motion Ltd. is rolling out a new system that aims to help its corporate customers keep track of employees' BlackBerrys as well as rival devices they use, including the iPhone.
The move—the BlackBerry maker's first to incorporate competitors' products—is a tacit acknowledgment by RIM's executives that their once-undisputed grip on the corporate smartphone market is loosening. It is also a bid by the company to take advantage of the new diversity of work-related devices by grabbing a piece of the growing market for so-called mobile-device management services.
Employees are increasingly convincing their company's chief technology officer to allow ...
Research In Motion Ltd. is rolling out a new system that aims to help its corporate customers keep track of employees' BlackBerrys as well as rival devices they use, including the iPhone.
The move—the BlackBerry maker's first to incorporate competitors' products—is a tacit acknowledgment by RIM's executives that their once-undisputed grip on the corporate smartphone market is loosening. It is also a bid by the company to take advantage of the new diversity of work-related devices by grabbing a piece of the growing market for so-called mobile-device management services.
Employees are increasingly convincing their company's chief technology officer to allow ...
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