Quote
{quote:title=Dwimmerlaik wrote:}
Push mail does exactly what it says, when a message is received by the Exchange server, it is "pushed" out to the client. This means that email is received immediately without the delay inherent to "pull" systems such as those used with POP and IMAP email systems. If Apple has any hope of ever making headway into the enterprise environment, they will have to adopt push mail technology either through the BlackBerry Enterprise Server or Exchange Server methodology.
Push mail does exactly what it says, when a message is received by the Exchange server, it is "pushed" out to the client. This means that email is received immediately without the delay inherent to "pull" systems such as those used with POP and IMAP email systems. If Apple has any hope of ever making headway into the enterprise environment, they will have to adopt push mail technology either through the BlackBerry Enterprise Server or Exchange Server methodology.
{quote}
Oh please. Nobody needs push technology. I challenge you to provide one realistic example of why push technology is needed over polling the server.
Push technology is to help people pretend they're important. "My day is so busy I need to see email the second it arrives." What BS - you can wait a minute for your email client to poll the server. And if your day is so busy, you have other things to do during that minute.



Sign In
Register
Help


MultiQuote