In June 2007, my resources stated that Apple had licensed Microsoft;s ActiveSync protocol, enabling the iPhone to customers connect to Exchange Server and make use of its wireless messaging and synchronization capabilities. But it took till today,
Buy Office 2010, March 5, for Apple — and Microsoft — to acknowledge this licensing arrangement.A Microsoft spokeswoman just sent me this note via e-mail:“Nowadays, Microsoft will be on hand at Apple headquarters as Apple announces it has licensed Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync for the iPhone. The agreement means iPhones will have built-in mobile access to Microsoft Exchange Server,
Office Professional Plus 2010, letting end users send and receive wireless email, manage their calendars,
Cheap Office Home And Business 2010, and view and edit tasks and contacts virtually anytime, anywhere.”Apple has been pushing to make the iPhone as appealing to business people as buyers. The ActiveSync licensing deal is one step toward realization of this goal.Apple mentioned currently that they will build ActiveSync support ideal into the iPhone. What this brings users, as Microsoft explains on its Web site:“Exchange ActiveSync enables a mobile phone to synchronize email, calendars,
Cheap Windows 7, tasks, and contacts with Exchange Server over the air.”Microsoft makes the ActiveSync protocol available to interested parties via a pre-established licensing agreement. From Microsoft’s Web site:“Microsoft offers a commercially reasonable, nonexclusive license so that other companies can use the Exchange ActiveSync Protocol in their own products. Microsoft will license its trade secrets and necessary patent claims for implementation of the protocol specification.“Microsoft offers a license for this mobile device synchronization protocol for Exchange Server 2003 and 2007 with documentation. The Exchange ActiveSync Protocol license is for a five-year term and based on annual projected sales volumes.”While standard ActiveSync licensing costs vendors $100,000 or first-year’s royalties, whichever is higher, with a per unit royalty thereafter, the rates are negotiable, Microsoft has stated.A number of phone vendors, including Nokia, Palm,
Office 2010 Professional Plus, Motorola and Sony Ericsson, already offer devices that sync with Exchange using ActiveSync. Now Apple officially can be added to that list.Does Apple;s support for ActiveSync make the iPhone more appealing to you?