18/12/2008

PocketMac, BlackBerry and the new Unibody Macbook portables..

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I got this eMail from PocketMac:

Hello Bill,
We've been hearing from customers like you that they had trouble synching their BlackBerry handhelds with new Aluminum MacBook laptops.
They also reported trouble synching their new BlackBerry Storm.
The Aluminum MacBook issue appears to be caused by a change Apple made to some of the hardware and software for that new model.
We recommend two items that you should download and install to better assist with connection and synchronization:
1. Apple OS 10.5.6 Update 2. Blackberry USB Driver Patch/Upgrade (available at the bottom of this email).
Please run Apple's software update from the Apple icon --- Software Update. After the Software Update searches for new software. Mac OS X 10.5.6 software update should be available in the download list.
Please install this update. It's large and will take several minutes to complete. After successfully installing the update, please restart your Macintosh and continue with the instructions below...
We've just released a new, free patch is to support synching the new BlackBerry Storm, the BlackBerry Bold 8900 and connections to the new MacBook Aluminum. This patch supports both Mac OS X 10.4 ("Tiger") and Mac OS X 10.5 ("Leopard").
At the bottom of this email, please find the download link for this new update.
However, please download this USB Driver ONLY if you have one of the following items in your operating environment:
*You have a NEW Aluminum MacBook. *You have a BlackBerry Storm 9530 *You have a BlackBerry Bold 9000
Please download this update at: http://www.pocketmac.net/public/DriverUpdate.3.1.3B.dmg
If you run into any issues or need help installing this update, please visit our knowledgebase article at: http://tinyurl.com/69n83a
Thank you,
Lauren Samuels
PocketMac Team
Now this kind of customer service I like.

13/06/2008

BlackBerry Bold vs iPhone v2

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A new 8800-sized BlackBerry - the Bold - is due in July. And so is the iPhone 2. Specification for specification, how do they stack up? Check this out.

    Conclusion:
  • Processors, screen, wifi, mobile specs are nearly exactly the same. Though the Bold has a twice as fast processor than the previous Curve, Pearl and 8800 - so it feels fast. The iPhone 2 still has the same processor as iPhone 1. And the screens are the same resolution.
  • Memory wise, the Bold has 1gb onboard, and expandible to 16gb. The iPhone has 8gb or 16gb. Realistically, the majority of the iPhone memory will be used as an iPod. Most BlackBerry users dont yet use their BlackBerries as MP3 players (though this became possible). I guess there's not a 'sync my BlackBerry to iTunes' option.
  • Of course, the BlackBerry includes full mail/PIM sync with Domino, Exchange, Groupwise, whereas the iPhone 2 does full mail/PIM with Exchange and MobileMe (the new name for .mac). The MobileMe subscription costs an additional fee.
Interesting times ahead, indeed. Given the BlackBerry dominance of corporate mail, and Apples amazing entry to the mobile phone market just a year ago, its all to play for.

09/04/2008

Howto: Train a BES administrator

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A quick eMail from Ray Bilyk:

Love your Blog! Quick question... As a experienced Domino Admin being moved to support BlackBerry as well, what books/manuals do you suggest I get and read? Money IS an object (if you know what I mean).
Well, anything that starts off with 'Love your blog!' will obviously get our attention.

This is actually a really good question. How did we get to this level ?

From my point of view, it all started when one customer of my company - HADSL - asked that we incorporate BlackBerry functionality into our product. The customer arranged for us to tag along to a training day they were given by their carrier (Vodafone in the UK), and we were taught the absolute basics - adding a new handset, nuking a handset, upgrading the firmware on a handset, etc. This cannot be under-rated as a training exercise, believe me. Just having someone there to answer the first 10 or so dumb questions that spring into your head is a lifesaver. Rob Owen of Vodafone did a stand up job, and left us all with a really positive feeling.

After that, I dig into the BlackBerry Enterprise Server manuals themselves, and that seemed to do the trick. Also, I downloaded a QuickStart BES, put it on a test server and generally abused that for testing and developing. I'm guessing it took me a few days of floundering around to get comfortable with the processes.

What resources did other folks find really useful out there ?

08/04/2008

Beware the Network Carriers

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Running an enterprise eMail system is hard. And when the C-level folks (CIO, CEO, etc) demand BlackBerries, we then have to pick up expertise in running BlackBerry Enterprise Servers. Whilst this is not simple, its all part of the day job as far as messaging folks like us. And then at some point, we get involved with carriers. People who actually supply airtime, handsets, SIMs and of course the all important BlackBerry service that enables these wonderful devices.

I'm a fairly patient man (honestly!) - my wife and I have successfuly brought up a teenage daughter (akin to defusing a nuclear device with a carrot), and have dealt with organisations such as phone carriers before. We dont expect much from them - and we expect frankly to be ripped off at every turn. This is what happens in this market, and we've come to expect it. We might not like it, but generally speaking, we can walk into any shop and pick up a phone, sign an onerous carrier conract for a lifetime, and walk out with a working phone.

When we start dealing with Carriers on a business level however, trying to enable our BlackBerry devices, we enter a whole new world of pain. The seventh level of hell. We come face to face (or phone to phone) with the Carrier customer service departments. And we have to explain to people - who frankly dont know and dont care - what we're asking for. I suspect these departments (And I say this of all phone carriers) are filled with people who were thrown out of the Traffic Warden school for being too nasty or thrown out of the Civil Service / Local Government for being incompetent.

BlackBerry handsets come with two flavours of connection.

  • BlackBerry Internet Service - or BIS. This is what Joe Public gets on his BlackBerry when he buys one out of a shop. It basically gives you a BlackBerry thats connected to the carriers eMail system. And very little else. Its a no-mess, no fuss connection method. Folks like this, its a huge growth area, and its simple.
  • BlackBerry Enterprise Service - or BES. Chaps, this is what we're after. We want this little bundle of plastic and sillicon to be under ourcontrol, via OUR BES server.
First the bad news. The carrier controls what kind of BlackBerry it is by the subscription it places on the SIM card. So when you pick up a handset from a shop, by default in most carriers, it'll be a BIS handset. Or (as in my case below) the telephone call center person picked the first thing that said BlackBerry on the list.

I found this out to my cost last August. On a whim, my wife and I entered a Carphone Warehouse store, and explained very carefully that we wanted a BES handset. "Sure", "Fine", etc. We walked out of the store. It took FOUR months for Carphone Warehouse to not admit that the store person had actually not understood a word, and just wanted a handset sale. So we had to return that phone in the end (and all the hassles with keeping the phone number, etc). Up until then, I quite liked Carphone Warehouse as some of their more technical staff had actually received some training and sounded like they knew what they were doing. Despite being sold a T-Mobile subscription that did not work in my house.

Using this awful experience, we then approached BT - British Telecom. And again, carefully explained what we wanted, made sure that the telephone operator actually understood the difference, and had placed the correct order. Back in November. Well, its taken me till MARCH to get it fixed. And involved swapping handsets. Unlike Carphone Warehouse - who couldnt actually switch us from Personal to Business without losing our number - BT could (repairing one mistake). After another couple of months, we finally got the number ported, and after another MONTH being basically messed around, my wife - Sorry - CFO - now has a working Pearl, on one of my BES servers. My Daughters Pearl has taken over a month and some frosty eMails, but at this point in time, its not being blocked. Perhaps this month. (I view BT as having internal processes so arcane that they make IBM look like some sort of springing gazelle in comparison. Coverage is good, price is excellent, but actually getting them to provide it is like kicking a dead whale along the beach)

Other carriers I've dealt with have included T-Mobile (my current carrier) who regularly charges me £150 anytime I spend any time outside the country. Not as bad as my previous carrier - O2 - who charged me even more and seemed to employ Vogons on their 'customer service line', or Vodafone who ripped me off for £2,000 in the space of a few months. (On the plus side, Vodafone are the only carrier who could actually supply BES handsets from the shop, that worked on the same day. Kudos for actually training their staff. I guess you get what you pay for)

Why were these bills so large ?

(And this bit is relevant to ANYONE who uses a mobile phone with a data subscription abroad). The carriers will typically give you a 50mb or 75mb allowance for data whilst in your home country, and then charge you £7.50 ($15 USD) per Megabyte or part megabyte whilst abroad. The European Commission are currently investigating this blatant rip-off and the carriers have responded by dropping their price to less than a pound per megabyte (but watch out - it might only be on new contracts). I cant wait till the EU finally hurts them for this. Because, as we all know, data phones with eMail (BlackBerries, Apple iPhones and even *shudder* windows mobile phones) all chirp away on the data network, consuming network bandwidth. Weve all heard of stories of folks taking iPhones on cruises and returning to a $4,000 bill... You dont want to be one of these.

Clearly, gone are the days when using a mobile phone to talk whilst abroad is hugely expensive. Moble data whilst abroad is still hugely expensive, and you should beware.

So, BES administrators, treat your phone carrier as a strange and extremely expensive beast. Train them quickly that that you require are BES enabled SIM cards and BES enabled BlackBerry handsets for your users, and you should beat your carriers hard and often to ensure that your few international roaming customers (be they BlackBerry or some inferior device) can use these handsets whilst abroad without bankrupting your company. Keep them as jumpy as a unicyclist in a minefield by constantly demanding they lower their prices, improve their services. And remember - the more applications and the more use that our users make of these handsets - a success by all means - means more bandwidth used.

There is hope on the horizon in terms of Data charges. The newer BlackBerries (The curve 8820 - of which I have one) and the new Pearl 8120 (Which I've just ordered for my daughter) as well as the iPhones and clunky windows mobile devices all have Wifi access on them. In America, T-Mobile already allow subscribers to hook into the mobile carrier infrastructure using internet connections, and therefore remove these abhorrent 'roaming charges'. Newer handsets - such as the BlackBerries - now allow us to receive and make mobile calls using this connection method - so hopefully in future, we can just disable our SIM's completely, and use Wifi access whilst abroad.. More on the implementation of this in a later article (once I've figured this ou!). So the conclusion from this paragraph is to ensure that all new handsets can perform this kind of function, making any future migration pain free. In other words, insead of ordering chunky old 8707s on your next handset order, start ordering nice new 8820's, 8120's or 8820's...

03/04/2008

SupportForums.BlackBerry.com

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Whilst flouncing around with URL's on the BlackBerry.com web site the other day, I happened to come across supportforums.blackberry.com. I dont know how new this is, or how official it might be, but it does look like RIM are setting up support forums on their URL.

(It does give us all something to look at whilst were waiting for BES 415 and OS 4.5 for the handsets...)

09/03/2008

BES 4.1.5 / Domino 8.0.1 - are they supported together?

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Over on Notes.net, Richard asks the implicit question: Does BES and Domino 8.0.1 work?. This is a pretty common theme out there right now - we all want to install the latest version of both packages as soon as we can. However, its not as simple as it would appear...

My response was:

Specifically, the current version of BES (4.1.4) is NOT supported on the 8.x stream.
BES 4.1.5 is due out on March 11th (Tuesday) and IS supported on 8.0.0. Rumours (via a podcast) indicate that this is NOT initially supported on 8.0.1.
Now. In my experience, on a SMALL BES server, 4.1.4 works okay with 8.0.0, and I should be able to verify on March 11th whether it works on 8.0.1.
Note the difference between 'Runs on' and 'Supported'.
Basically, as an end-user admin, if you hit problems and call up RIM for help (as you should) and you say 'I have 4.1.5 on 8.0.1', they'll point at the versions and halt the call there and then. Which doesnt help you.
In your position, I'd heartily recommend putting BES or Professional on a separate server (perhaps within VMWare if its a *small* user base), and on 7.0.2/BES 414 or the equivalent Professional software.
In a months time or so, once the dust has settled on 4.1.5/professional, you might find that its supported on 801, etc, and at that stage, upgrade your domino server. Note: I advocate caution, especially when providing services to the folks who sign your cheques.
Its a PITA, but it covers you and means you can get support, which is the important thing.
Will your exec notice much difference ? Not really, not until his handset is upgraded to the handset O/S v4.5 to take advantage of all these features. Which isnt going to happen till thats released, and I like everyone else, dont know.
If its any consolation, this version issue is not restricted to RIM - this is common on most application/mail plaforms where you have to rely on a third party addin (in this case BES). And its an unfortunate and frustrating part of our job to deal with this.
But there's no point in losing sleep and getting angry over this - yelling at RIM and/or IBM will do nothing aside make you lose your voice..

Hope this helps,


---* Bill
http://www.notesberry.org
Hopefully, this'll help others out there in the same position.

01/03/2008

BES 415 - another short delay

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Rats. As reported here (and various other places), BES 415 has now slipped to March 11th. Sheesh.

25/02/2008

The Irish Lotus Notes User Group - Dublin - 4-6th June 2008

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ILUG2008Small.pngFor all those folks who didnt come last year (and have had an early-bird registration), general registration is now OPEN. So RUN, dont walk, and hit the shamrock on the right. Remember.

  • Its free!
  • BlackBerry as always will be there
  • Its over 3 days
  • Its in Dublin.
  • It features the best speakers from Lotusphere
  • Did I mention its FREE?
  • Expect surprises, giveways, prizes, real cutting edge presentations, code giveaways, networking, cool delegates and a few surprise guests.
  • DONT expect Rob Novak to buy a guinness for EVERYONE in his session again this year, as the room seats 500 people, and even a man of his caliber would have difficulty covering that bar bill.
(And as always thanks to Paul Mooney for basically giving up his life to set this up)

03/02/2008

BlackBerry Enterprise Server 4.1.5

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We've been waiting for this for a while.. The Boy Genius report just got their mitts on it and have a quick review here

(No we dont have it yet - we all being BlackBerry Partners [and if we did we couldnt tell you about it] and no we dont have any idea as to when it will acually be released.. Sooooon, I hope!)

31/01/2008

BES 4.1.4 Maintenance Release 3 for Domino is now available...

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As usual, head to http://www.blackberry.com/go/softwaredownloads...

30/01/2008

170 classic arcade games - FREE - on your BlackBerry

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Check out this entry on bbGeeks

Most of us will have fond memories of playing classic video games like PacMan or Missile Command and would jump at the chance to play these games on your BlackBerry. If you were not swept up in the video game culture, chances are you have a favorite card game that you would enjoy playing on your BlackBerry during that four hour sales meeting next Tuesday.
In the interest of providing our readers with an equal balance of BlackBerry knowledge and BlackBerry fun, we now present to you:
170+ Free Games for your BlackBerry
from here

14/01/2008

Resurrect a Bricked BlackBerry

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Via CrackBerry.Com

Today’s lecture isn’t really a “newbie” topic, but it’s one that I wanted to cover because in the past three weeks I’ve gone through it half a dozen times and that is Reloading the Operating System on a BlackBerry that’s totally “Nuked”. I’m not sure if nuked is the technically appropriate word for it (I also use one that starts with an F and ends in an ED and has a CK in the middle), but it is how I refer to a BlackBerry that is stuck in a permanent reboot cycle and is completely, completely unusable. With a Nuked Berry, essentially the device turns on (red LED comes on for a few seconds), then you see the white screen with the hourglass of death, and then the display shuts off, the device shuts off, a few seconds go by and then it starts up and does the same thing again and again and again (it’ll do it for hours if you let it)
from here

10/01/2008

EA Games offering three free BlackBerry games...

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Via Rimarkable:
You may not have known it but gaming giant, Electronic Arts, has a mobile division called EA Mobile and they will be giving away 3 Free BlackBerry Titles at the close of CES.
We have a saying around here. The only thing better than a BlackBerry game is a Free BlackBerry game!
We aren’t exactly sure when these free EA BlackBerry games will be available so keep checking the EA Mobile website for updates.

07/01/2008

BerryReview.Com

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Some link love from BerryReview.Com (thanks!) prompted me to add them to my google reader. (Why Google Reader ? Well, it means I can read RSS/Blog feeds on my computer, and on my BlackBerry whilst on the move - and they stay syncronised. Recommended).

And WOW. What a huge collection of content they have on there. Go spend half an hour and see how many new cool skins, info, and apps you can pick up.. Definitely one for the bookmark bar.

01/01/2008

BlackBerry Programming Articles

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Over the summer, I wrote four articles for the LotusUserGroup.org.

  • Article one gave a quick overview of MDS and how to get started
  • Article two gave an in-depth MDS programming example.
  • Article three gave a Java Development Environment (JDE) kick-start
  • Article four gave an in-depth view of a JDE application which syncronised with Domino Databases.
I hope you enjoy them as much as I enjoyed writing them!

01/01/2008

BlackBerry Software Release Dates

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I keep being asked 'When is BES 415 available?'. And I, because I dont work for RIM, cant tell you. However I was passed a link to the software lifecycle database, which might be able to tell you..