Commentary
Mobile's Big Cyber Monday: RIM's Not Merry
Cyber Monday means mobile Monday for many buyers this year. Are you finally ready to trade in your beloved BlackBerry?
Nelson, a longtime BlackBerry fan, spent several weeks with all three of these top rivals. Don't miss his in-depth look at life with each of the phones--and the reasons why he went with the phone that Jobs built.
More Global CIO Insights
Webcasts
- Making Information Matter in the New Data Center Economy
- Ovum Technology Analysis: Compelling Trends and Successful Strategies for Externalizing Your Enterprise Through APIs
White Papers
More >>Reports
More >>You must be sure that your enterprise IT team is fully ready to explain the rules and handle the wave of devices that will arrive from now until holiday time, as people treat themselves to those new gadgets. That's not new. But what is new is increased attention by the C-suite on your overall mobile device management strategy, both in terms of cost and completeness.
And as columnist Craig Mathias points out, you have more options, but a lack of industry standards as you craft your complete mobile management plan: "Is mobile device management something one operates in one's data center, a service one buys from a carrier or operator, a service provided by a third party on a device/network-independent basis, or perhaps an open-systems mix-and-match solution based on standards that--oh, wait, we really don't have standards here yet," he writes. "My mistake."
There's not a lot of good news for T-Mobile fans this Cyber Monday. As InformationWeek's Eric Zeman reported last week, T-Mobile is running low on moves if the AT&T acquisition doesn't come to pass. On Thanksgiving, AT&T showed it is willing to go to great lengths to salvage the T-Mobile bid, even as AT&T officially said that it had withdrawn its merger application from the FCC.
Are you wondering just how many Kindle Fires will be walking in your enterprise's door? Amazon is being coy about the precise number of Kindle Fire tablets that it has moved since Black Friday. Amazon will only say that "it sold four times as many Kindle products on Black Friday as it did last year, and that Kindle Fire, which features a color touchscreen, topped all Kindle sales," InformationWeek's Paul McDougall reports.
It's too early to judge exactly how the Amazon and Apple tablet sales contest will play out when the dust settles after December 25. That Target reports the lower-priced Kindle Fire is selling briskly with its shoppers is not a surprise. But one player that looks out of the game is RIM, with retailers pulling the PlayBook from inventory. "A check of Best Buy's site early Monday showed that the devices were still listed, but not currently available for Web purchase or store pick up--a sign that the PlayBook may turn out to be the real Thanksgiving turkey," McDougall notes.
Laurianne McLaughlin is editor-in-chief for InformationWeek.com. Follow her on Twitter at @lmclaughlin.
The Enterprise Connect conference program covers the full range of platforms, services, and applications that comprise modern communications and collaboration systems. It happens March 25-29 in Orlando, Fla. Find out more.


Subscribe to RSS









