Microsoft Exchange is an email service often used by businesses and academic institutions that works with email clients like Microsoft Outlook.
REDMOND, Wash. — Dec. 18, 2008 — Microsoft Corp. today announced it is expanding its Exchange ActiveSync Intellectual Property (IP) Licensing program, facilitated by Version 1.0 releases of technical ...
REDMOND, Wash., and BUCHAREST, Romania — March 25, 2009 — Microsoft Corp. and Gecad Technologies today announced a patent licensing agreement to implement Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync on Gecad’s ...
Nokia is offering to users of 43 different S60-model cell phones the ability to sync up with Microsoft Exchange on the back end using Microsoft's ActiveSync protocol. Nokia announced on September 10 ...
The news over the weekend that Google’s Gmail service will be ending support for Microsoft’s Exchange ActiveSync protocol is a blow to Microsoft’s Windows Phone. The Redmond company’s mobile platform ...
With the recent launch of the iPhone App Store, I spent a few minutes trying to figure out if Microsoft had written any of the 500 or so applications that became available on day one. After all, ...
Google announced late last week that is getting rid of some features in its software-as-a-service applications that are associated with Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync. Google uses Exchange ActiveSync ...
Microsoft, as promised, began rolling out ActiveSync support for Hotmail on August 30. Hotmail's support for Exchange ActiveSync (EAS) is available to all existing Hotmail users worldwide today, a ...
DataViz, Inc., a Microsoft Gold Certified Partner and leading provider of mobile office compatibility solutions recently announced that their Microsoft Exchange ActiveSync client, RoadSync, is now ...
Microsoft announced today that Google has agreed to delay the removal of support for Microsoft's Exchange ActiveSync protocol (Google Sync) until July. With 20+ years of experience covering consumer ...
Ah yes, ActiveSync. Licensing a spec without providing the implementation is a poor way to do it. Surely Microsoft could devote a little more effort and actually write the underlying client "glue" for ...