Motorola and AOL have agreed to develop AOL Instant Messager (AIM) software for Motorola wireless devices. The companies claim the move will enable live, real-time communication between Motorola devices and an estimated 45 million users of AIM.
Motorola and AOL announced today they will be working together to bring AOL's instant messaging service to next generation Motorola products - repeating an announcement originally made in 1999. The pair first revealed the same deal three years ago...
MSN Messenger Connect for Enterprises will add security, archiving and other message-management features sought by companies that are beginning to warm to the idea of allowing employees to conduct business over instant messaging (IM) networks.
Handset maker Motorola will provide its 388C MMS-enabled handset for message transmission while a third partner Sohu.com, a China-based Net firm, will provide content services such as exclusive reporting on its website.
The security of its messaging systems is no exception to this rule, which is why we're delighted that Antigen has been selected to protect its messaging environment: it sends a clear message to Orange customers that security is top of the agenda.
Orange is starting TalkNow on the Treo 600 handset and will move it to other 'signature' smart phones, such as the Orange SPV, the Motorola MPx200 and the Nokia 6600, and then lower-end consumer handsets that typically use closed, proprietary OSes...