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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Microsoft mobile e-mail drive wins OK

Associated Press The Spokesman-Review

BARCELONA, Spain — Microsoft Corp. has won backing from major cellular networks for a new generation of phones designed to transform mobile e-mail from executive accessory to standard issue for the corporate rank-and-file.

The partnerships, with operators including Vodafone and Cingular, to be announced Monday at a mobile industry gathering in Spain, could spell more trouble for the embattled Blackberry and other niche e-mail technologies, analysts say.

Unlike the Blackberry and its peers, phones running Microsoft’s latest Windows Mobile operating system can receive e-mails “pushed” directly from servers that handle a company’s messaging — without the need for a separate mobile server or additional license payments.

As costs fall, Microsoft is betting companies will extend mobile e-mail beyond top management to millions more of their employees.

“We’re at the tipping point of seeing exponential growth in this area,” said Pieter Knook, the U.S. software giant’s senior vice president for mobile and embedded devices.

On the opening day of the 3GSM phone show, Hewlett-Packard Co. and three other handset makers are expected to launch the first Windows smartphones equipped with the new e-mail technology out of the box. HP’s new iPAQ HW6900 Mobile Messenger also offers Bluetooth and Wi-Fi connectivity.

Vodafone Group PLC is to sell the phones under its own brand, in a joint marketing deal, targeting companies that already run Microsoft’s Exchange software on their servers. Exchange is the collaborative glue behind Microsoft’s popular Outlook application.