What I am wondering is if the blackberry device's wifi chip has the capability to seamlessly move and hand-off the connection from one access point to the next - without dropping the call. In a large office setting, you can expect that users could walk from one side of the office to the next.
@woody5362 ; behind in what? I really think you just regurgatate what you read on fan sites and not really know what on earth you're talking about.
UMA, PBX, ALL enterprise email server infrastructure support (Exchange, GroupWise, Domino), Intranet sites pushed to the device with updates done on the backend and with file browsing to corporate intranet sites ... right not 1 smartphone supports this ALL - not even MS WinMobile or WebOS, or iPhone/OSX Server or Linux/Android.
@vassago47 MVS 5.1 has this feature
cdigdawg 7 months ago
What I am wondering is if the blackberry device's wifi chip has the capability to seamlessly move and hand-off the connection from one access point to the next - without dropping the call. In a large office setting, you can expect that users could walk from one side of the office to the next.
vassago47 10 months ago
@woody5362 ; behind in what? I really think you just regurgatate what you read on fan sites and not really know what on earth you're talking about.
UMA, PBX, ALL enterprise email server infrastructure support (Exchange, GroupWise, Domino), Intranet sites pushed to the device with updates done on the backend and with file browsing to corporate intranet sites ... right not 1 smartphone supports this ALL - not even MS WinMobile or WebOS, or iPhone/OSX Server or Linux/Android.
Jaggabone 1 year ago
@woody5362 they're not behind. they're just doing different stuff. Blackberry is the largest smartphone maker in the world.
I use android, because it suits more my "entertainment" needs. but believe me, if I was running a business, I would choose the BB right away !
francispelletier 1 year ago