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Absolute launches BlackBerry tracker

Absolute launches BlackBerry tracker

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 23 Feb 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

The company’s Computrace Mobile agent will allow IT managers to keep tabs on their mobile fleet at a very inexpensive price. But what can it do that BES can't?

“You probably don’t want to spend that much if you only have 10 BlackBerries,” he said. “Instead, you can set up BlackBerry Internet Services and add this to it for $14 a month and you’ll have a lot of the features that you would get with BES or with full blown Exchange and ActiveSync.”

Tauschek said that Absolute should try and get the word out to SMBs by partnering up with carriers and make the tool available upon the sale of a device.

But for large businesses that can afford it, he added, the advanced policy-based remote wipe features and the forced pin capabilities available in BES will be too difficult to pass up.

As for the geolocation feature, the software sends out a very small ping to the BlackBerry devices in the field and has little to no impact on battery life. The feature is disabled when the phone is switched off, Absolute said.

With more and more companies having to lay off employees, Clark said, the tracking feature will be especially useful for IT administrators to keep tabs on their mobile fleet.

But according to Tauschek, the inability to track in real-time (the Absolute can only generate updated location summary reports every 30 minutes) means the tool will not be too helpful in recovering a stolen device.










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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