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Microsoft and RIM Partner on Office 365 Cloud
Microsoft and Research in Motion entered into an agreement to provide RIM hosted Blackberry Enterprise Service for the upcoming Microsoft Office 365 cloud platform, the successor to the Microsoft Business Productivity Online Suite (BPOS).
According to the announcement on March 17, Blackberry and Playbook users (when the RIM tablet becomes available) can sync to Office 365 data to receive secure e-mail, contacts, tasks, calendars and documents. Office 365, which includes Exchange Online, the Office Professional Desktop Suite, SharePoint Online and Lync Online is expected in July. A closed beta is expected for the RIM hosted BES later this year.
Microsoft announced its own news about BlackBerry e-mail cloud support on Wednesday. It now offers free BlackBerry e-mail cloud connections to new customers of Microsoft's Exchange Online service. This offer applies to new users of Microsoft's BPOS, as well as to future customers of the Microsoft Office 365 service, which is rumored to start in July.
The deal doesn't wipe out wireless service provider costs. And Microsoft seems to have applied the same policy to some other device makers as well.
"So, with the cost of your regular wireless bill, connecting your phone to BPOS or Office 365 will be free -- whether you have a Windows Phone, BlackBerry, iPhone, Nokia E Series or any other phone with Exchange ActiveSync," Microsoft's announcement stated.
Existing Exchange Online customers may not be left out of the deal. Microsoft's announcement indicated that "for existing customers, we expect to be able to provide more information later this month on how you can take advantage of this change."
Although details are scant, a Bloomberg story cited RIM senior executives as saying that a cloud computing deal had been struck between Microsoft and RIM. Microsoft will manage "some RIM customer information" as part of the deal, according to the story, which was published on Wednesday. The deal encompasses RIM's BlackBerry mobile devices, as well as RIM's PlayBook tablet device, which is expected to hit the market in the next few months.
A spokesperson for Microsoft denied that the deal described in the Bloomberg story was the same as Microsoft's announcement on Wednesday. When asked if Microsoft and RIM had signed a deal to use Microsoft's Windows Azure cloud storage for RIM device users, the spokesperson replied, "No. This is not part of the deal announced [by Microsoft] on Wednesday."
A spokesperson for RIM clarified that the agreement with Microsoft is "about RIM providing a BlackBerry enterprise service for Office 365." RIM announced on Thursday that this new service, which will be hosted by RIM, will be rolled out as a beta around the middle of this year. RIM's announcement incidentally notes that Microsoft dropped the price of its hosted BlackBerry enterprise service from $10 per user per month to $0 per user per month.
A BlackBerry service plan from a wireless service provider is required in either case. However, now the cloud link-up cost is $0 with Microsoft's Exchange Online offering, and it will cost $0 for the cloud link-up for RIM's future offering called "BlackBerry enterprise service for Office 365."
Meanwhile, Microsoft on Monday noted a problem with duplicate messages showing up for some customers using "RIM BlackBerry devices connecting to an Exchange 2010 SP1 RU3 environment," according to a blog post. The blog recommended that IT pros should hold off on deploying RU3 until Microsoft completes its investigation.
About the Author
Kurt Mackie is online news editor, Enterprise Group, at 1105 Media Inc.