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Technology Stocks : General Magic

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To: ynot who wrote (5217)3/1/1999 1:09:00 AM
From: dwight martin  Read Replies (1) of 10081
 
From YAHOO!, purports to be from an Andrew Seybold publication:

WIRELESS KNOWLEDGE'S OPERATIONS CENTER

The Wireless Knowledge operations center is ibuilt on Windows NT-compatible
hardware and has been designed to run Microsoft Exchange 5.5 using a server
cluster and RAID 5-disk array
. The computer backbone and server banks can be
scaled as needed, and the entire center can be duplicated in other regions of
the country or any part of the world as required. The service has been
designed to be a single point of connection to provide corporations with
access to multiple networks using multiple devices. Wireless Knowledge can
also provide other features that would not be available to a
corporate system tied directly to a single network. For example, a mobile
user carrying both a phone and a pager could receive a message on both
devices. A user who carried a palmtop PC, a notebook, and a phone could
access his or her corporate resources using the palmtop device or the
computer. In each case, the network would "know" the capabilities and
limitations of the device in use. Another way to view the Wireless Knowledge
operations center is as a communications switching hub with the capability to
send and receive data across multiple networks simultaneously. This is
valuable when you have a fleet of users employing several different networks
or using multiple devices. For example, a new price list could be made
available on the corporate server for the sales staff. A message would be
sent to their pagers notifying them that the new price list was waiting for
them. When they called in using their wireless phone connected to their
notebook, the new file would be uploaded for their use.


messages.yahoo.com@m2.yahoo.com

I guess you'd expect an MSFT project to use NT, though, huh?
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