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Home >> Voice, Data, and IP >> Hardware, Software and Emerging Applications

BlackBerry app ensures you stay within the iLane

BlackBerry app ensures you stay within the iLane

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 23 Nov 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

A new voice-based e-mail solution from Canadian mobile solution provider IMS, aims to keep BlackBerry users connected when they are on the road. But one wireless analyst warns that the device might be too expensive for most IT shops.

Waterloo, Ont.-based Intelligent Mechatronic Systems (IMS) Inc. has rolled out an in-car device that gives users of Research In Motion Ltd.'s BlackBerry the ability to operate their smartphones via voice commands. But in today’s struggling economy, at least one industry analyst says the product’s steep price tag could make it a luxury most businesses will be hard pressed to afford.

The iLane is a portable hardware device that plugs into your car’s 12 volt cigarette lighter and syncs up to BlackBerry 8800 series handhelds via Bluetooth connectivity. Once plugged in, the device can read e-mail, news and weather reports to the user out loud, as well as provide access and control over smartphone applications such as SMS messaging and calendar functionality.

Besides plugging in the iLane device, users will also have to download a small application to their BlackBerry phones.

“As soon as you get into your car with your BlackBerry, the iLane takes over your smartphone,” Ken Truffen, vice-president of marketing at IMS, said. When users turn on the device, he added, iLane will automatically inform them how many new e-mail messages or calendar appointments they have for the day and also give them the option to read and respond to each of them.

Users looking to respond to their e-mail via text will be disappointed, however, as iLane does not currently feature voice-to-text capabilities. The device responds by sending an mp3 recording of your voice.

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... about mobile applications on IT World Canada's Web site

As for the services that iLane does have, IMS highlighted its partnerships with the Associated Press and with The Weather Network. The deal will give users the ability to listen to news, weather and sports using iLane.

“We gearing this toward enterprises users, the road warriors out there who spend a fair amount of time within their vehicles travelling around,” Truffen said. All the data is encrypted (256-bit), he said, and stays within the vehicle with no need for an external server connection.

“We’ve been using this with government agencies and banks within the U.S. and Canada and we’ve gotten thumbs-up across the board,” Truffen added.

But whether the device will receive support from enterprise bean counters remains to be seen.

iLane is coming to market at a suggested retail price of $600, plus an additional $8 a month for the service itself. At least one analyst said that regardless of the iLane’s quality, its steep price tag will probably be its downfall.

“Economically it’s going to be out-of-reach for most people,” Mark Tauschek, senior research analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Research Group, said. “It’s a luxury that most people aren’t going to be able to afford, especially with voice-enabling software increasingly becoming available at cheaper prices.”


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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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