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The group says there are fewer than 20 million business users of wireless e-mail worldwide, representing just 2 percent of all e-mail accounts (a fact TelecomWeb news break finds surprising). Analysts predict the progressive availability of products and services will allow 350 million business and consumer users access to wireless e-mail by 2010, meaning that 20 percent of all e-mail accounts will be wireless-enabled. Gartner expects wireless email to reach commodity status by 2012.
In addition, a growing number of employees will have the ability to access corporate email and other applications from personal devices. Traditional business-e-mail-centric devices are transforming into personal devices that span both professional and consumer life.
According to Monica Basso, research vice president at Gartner, growth in the consumer market will be fuelled by the increasing availability of wireless e-mail support, both in devices and from service providers as well as by improved usability. Corporate use also will also rise, she says, as enterprises come under increased pressure to provide real-time communications for their expanding mobile workforce.
"By 2012, wireless e-mail products will be fully interoperable, commoditized and have standard features," Basso adds. "They will be shipping in larger volumes at greatly reduced prices."
To deal with the sheer volume of business and personal e-mail, convergence is coming. "Convergence will happen on the client side, hiding technology complexity from users and allowing them to focus on messaging content," Basso says. "By 2017, wireless e-mail will be fully integrated with other messaging tools into personal, converged communications. Companies like Microsoft, IBM, Nokia and RIM are already taking some steps in this direction."
While Gartner sees consumerization of IT as the key trend influencing the rise in popularity of wireless e-mail both inside and outside of the enterprise, it also notes other trends and drivers influencing the phenomenon:
http://www.telegeography.com/cu/article.php?article_id=18972
Terrorists are engaged in an online jihad, characterized by the use of the internet to fundraise, distribute messages and directives, recruit and proselytize. It is impossible to shut down the entire presence of terrorists on the internet; however, this article details a proposal which can have a marked impact on the presence of terrorists on the internet. Using existing statutes, it is possible to regionalize terrorist websites, limiting them to an extremely small number of countries from which they may receive internet services. Once the terrorist message is limited to a particular region, a modification of current laws can allow for a cyber embargo on jihadist websites and their supporters. These efforts coupled with diplomatic cooperation can further the effort to curb the impact of jihadist websites, while simultaneously increasing the ability of governments to monitor these websites and, when necessary, shut them down.