Q.
How blackberry works?any idea?
Tags:
idea,
blackberry
Asked by hitler,
01 May '08 12:06 am
Earn 10 points for answering
Answers (3)
1.
I do have a BB
U need a BB server( mail provider or ISP ) to communicate ur BB with the mail server so that u will get mail from ur outlook / notes to ur BB
Part from mail browser is there so if u have a GPRS .. then u can brws any site.. like normal PC/laptop..
Any thing else...:)
Answered by Ashish jain, 01 May '08 12:09 am
U need a BB server( mail provider or ISP ) to communicate ur BB with the mail server so that u will get mail from ur outlook / notes to ur BB
Part from mail browser is there so if u have a GPRS .. then u can brws any site.. like normal PC/laptop..
Any thing else...:)
Report abuse
Useful
(0)
Not Useful
(0)
Your vote on this answer has already been received
2.
A PDA does a lot of the same things a BlackBerry does, and the PDA made its
debut several years before the BlackBerry. But until recently, the only way to make the information on most PDAs match the
information on a person's computer was to automatically or manually sync the PDA. This could be time-consuming and inconvenient. It could also lead to exactly the conflicts that having a PDA is supposed to prevent. For example, a manager might schedule a meeting on the PDA, not knowing that an assistant had just scheduled a meeting for the same time on a networked calendar.
A BlackBerry, on the other hand, does everything a PDA can do, and it syncs itself continually through push technology. BlackBerry Enterprise Server or Desktop Redirector software "pushes," or redirects, new e-mail, calendar updates, documents and other data straight to the user over the Internet and the cell phone network.
First, the software senses that a new message has arrived or the data has ...more
Answered by sudesh, 01 May '08 06:12 am
debut several years before the BlackBerry. But until recently, the only way to make the information on most PDAs match the
information on a person's computer was to automatically or manually sync the PDA. This could be time-consuming and inconvenient. It could also lead to exactly the conflicts that having a PDA is supposed to prevent. For example, a manager might schedule a meeting on the PDA, not knowing that an assistant had just scheduled a meeting for the same time on a networked calendar.
A BlackBerry, on the other hand, does everything a PDA can do, and it syncs itself continually through push technology. BlackBerry Enterprise Server or Desktop Redirector software "pushes," or redirects, new e-mail, calendar updates, documents and other data straight to the user over the Internet and the cell phone network.
First, the software senses that a new message has arrived or the data has ...more
Report abuse
Useful
(0)
Not Useful
(0)
Your vote on this answer has already been received
3.
Report abuse
Useful
(0)
Not Useful
(0)
Your vote on this answer has already been received