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Has Nokia lost it?!!

8 December, 2008 (18:04) | Business, Mobile Technology, Rants

One thing you learn over the years of running a business is to know your competitors as well as you know your own business. In this case, I think Nokia’s off their rocker. Their latest campaign is geared at the BlackBerry user, so let’s compare, shall we?

Nokia E71 Ad

Now, in all fairness to Nokia, I am a Nokia E71 user – it’s a sexy, versatile phone. I monitor two Exchange accounts using Mail for Exchange and Roadsync. I use the VOIP client frequently, the podcasting application is a lifesaver, Widsets keep me up to date and I like viewing rich media with Skyfire.

… but to have Nokia purport that there are no hidden costs, I think they may have misunderstood the ultimate cost – people’s time. Some comparisons, after the jump.

For the purpose of this test, we’ll talk about connecting the mobile to Microsoft Exchange Server.

Software installation test:

Nokia E71 – you must install either Mail for Exchange or RoadSync
BlackBerry Handheld – software is included on the server

Server configuration test:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange and RoadSync connect to Exchange natively
BlackBerry Handheld – BlackBerry Enterprise Server is required

Cost per unit test:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange, free. RoadSync, $40
BlackBerry Handheld – Built in client, free. BES license, $99

Activation test:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange and RoadSync, must know all the details of your Exchange server, at least five different settings have to be entered into the device
BlackBerry Handheld – User only needs to know their email and activation password

Automatic retrieval test:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange, will automatically retrieve the rest of a message. RoadSync, must manually download the rest of a message
BlackBerry Handheld – Messages automatically retrieve

Server side management test:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange and RoadSync, limited configuration and management of the device from the server
BlackBerry Handheld – dozens of configuration options from access rules to signatures on the server

Subfolder test:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange, no subfolders. RoadSync, only folders below the Inbox
BlackBerry Handheld – Subfolders anywhere and everywhere

Note: when I queries the RoadSync people about this issue, they stated that this is a limitation of the ActiveSync protocol. With the release of the iPhone and it’s ability to connect with subfolders regardless of where they may be (same level as Inbox, for example), I’m calling bullshit.

Search test:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange, built in plugin for internal search. RoadSync, server-based search works only with Exchange 2007
BlackBerry – fast handheld search

Name resolution test:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange, will resolve names in the device’s addressbook, you can use a tool to find names on the server. Roadsync, no automatic resolution, you can use a tool to find names in the device’s addressbook or on the server
BlackBerry – will resolve accounts on the server and the device automatically

Flags, followup, reminders:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange, no dice. RoadSync, flagging and reminders on messages for Exchange 2007 only
BlackBerry – no dice

One button composition:

Nokia E71 – Mail for Exchange, hold down the e-mail key. RoadSync, one button composition broken, you have to go through several menus to compose an email
BlackBerry – Quick composition from the home screen

So in the end, both devices read email, once you get to know your device, you’ll probably get along well with it. The most confounding aspect of the Nokia device is the configuration and management of the device. Not as smooth as the BlackBerry yet and costly as a result. If you count your labour as free, then maybe there’s an ROI justification to look at it. If not, then it’s gotta be BlackBerry.

In all fairness, I haven’t mentioned Nokia’s Intellisync which is supposedly a contender for the BlackBerry Enterprise space. The client which is also the same client used for the free Nokia Email service (similar to BlackBerry’s BIS) is a piece of junk. Slow, clunky and poorly laid out at best.

Comments

Comment from Jenn Figueroa
Time December 9, 2008 at 12:02 pm

Raj,
Your comment on RoadSync sub-folder support is misleading.
RoadSync does sync email folders that are on the same level as the inbox as well as folders below the inbox.

Comment from raj
Time December 9, 2008 at 12:12 pm

Hi Jenn,

I’m going to reserve this as somewhat correct. From what I see, RoadSync syncs the following folders at the top level:

Inbox and Junk-Email.

RoadSync can synchronize your Calendar, Contacts and Tasks.

Sent mail also gets synced to the Sent Items folder.

On my BlackBerry, I can see Deleted Items, Drafts, Inbox, Infected Items (created by antivirus), Junk E-mail and Spam (created by antispam)… and pretty much any other folder I choose to put in my mail tree.

On my iPhone, I can see exactly what I see with the BlackBerry so it doesn’t appear to be a limitation of the AciveSync protocol as mentioned to me by RS support.

So, please let me know if this is anomalous by RoadSync standards. I have a few Exchange servers, multiple versions for that matter, that I can try this with.

Comment from bazzz
Time February 10, 2009 at 7:42 am

As a Blackberry user (2002-2005) and later WinMob user (company threw out BBs) I couldn’t believe the folder issues with my E71 (and MfE from Nokia in general). Like many users I had a set of roughly 50 Exchange rules putting messages in the right subfolders which I couldn’t see on my E71. I thougt it was a config issue until I found it was a limitation of Nokia MfE. Unbelievable. Thought about sending the phone back, which I should have done.

I don’t understand either why this should be a limitation of ActiveSync (oder https). E.g. Scalix, iPhone, WinMob use the same protocol and see all folders.

In Combination with MS Exchange “Nokia MfE” is just not a good messaging solution.

Comment from Jesse
Time February 23, 2009 at 1:58 pm

The author says “I monitor two Exchange accounts using Mail for Exchange and Roadsync.” and I’d love more infomation on this because my understanding is that the e71 can only have one calendar, for example. Does it give you the option to merge both calendars? Or are you only syncing non-overlapping items from each exchange account? (like mail from one, calendar from another)

Comment from raj
Time February 23, 2009 at 2:03 pm

@Jesse I monitor my primary mailbox on an Exchange 2003 server which includes my calendar, contacts and inbox using MFE. I monitor a company support mailbox which resides on an Exchange 2007 server for the second mailbox – this only includes the inbox and shows up seperately in the mailbox listing. I’m not sure what would happen if you synced contacts, tasks and calendars – you’d probably see an overlap on these items.

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Time August 12, 2009 at 12:27 pm

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