MobileMe Helps Apple Compete with BlackBerry Devices
On Monday, Apple introduced a new service that delivers push e-mail, push contacts and push calendars into the “cloud” of native applications on the iPhone, iPod touch, Macs and PCs.
Dubbed MobileMe, the service plus provides a suite of ad-free Web applications that aim to deliver a desktop-like experience through any contemporary browser.
MobileMe applications — available at www.me.com — include Mail, Contacts and Calendar, as well as Gallery for viewing and sharing photos and iDisk for storing and exchanging documents online.
“Think of MobileMe as ‘Exchange for the rest of us,’” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “Now users who are not part of an enterprise that runs Exchange can get the same push e-mail, push calendars and push contacts that the big guys get.”
Pushing Against BlackBerry
Here’s how it works: With a MobileMe e-mail detail, all folders, messages and status indicators look identical whether you are checking e-mail on an iPhone, iPod touch,
“With the BlackBerry, whether you are sent an e-mail, you get it right away. In the previous version of the iPhone, you had to go back and sync up before you could get your e-mail,” said Phil Leigh, a senior analyst at Inside Digital Media. “If you can get e-mail on your iPhone on the fly now, that’s a pretty significant advantage.”
Push technology additionally keeps contacts and calendars continuously up-to-date so changes made on one device are automatically pushed up to the cloud and down to other devices. Push works with the native applications on the iPhone and iPod touch, as well as Microsoft Outlook for the PC. It plus works with the Mac OS X applications Mail, Address Book…
Orginal post by Top Tech News
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