Research In Motion is planning to partner with Microsoft on the latter’s cloud offerings, which will be integrated into BlackBerry devices as well as the upcoming Playbook tablet.
“Cloud has always been core to our business,” Alec Taylor, vice president of Software, Services and Enterprise Marketing for RIM, told analysts and reporters listening to a March 17 presentation. “It’s how we do real-time push; it’s how we developed our world-class security, our integration with carrier systems.”
To increase its reach into the cloud, though, RIM is apparently planning a troika of services to roll out later in 2011. These include BlackBerry Protect, a cloud-based solution to secure and protect smartphones and their content, BlackBerry Management Center, a cloud-based management system aimed at small and midsize businesses, and Blackberry Enterprise Service for larger companies seeking to move into the cloud.
RIM executives argue that businesses can accrue substantial savings by porting their data center needs to an off-site host.
Enterprises “are driving more toward a consumption model for their technology,” Taylor said. In that spirit, BlackBerry Enterprise Service “is all about taking advantage of the opportunity to manage BlackBerries from the cloud.” Services available will apparently be similar to those already present in BlackBerry Enterprise Server Express.
The agreement with Microsoft centers on RIM providing cloud-based BlackBerry service in support of Office 365, whose subscription-based model allows organizations to stay up-to-date with the latest versions of Microsoft Office, SharePoint Online, Exchange Online and Lync Online. RIM’s BlackBerry Enterprise Servers will apparently connect “cloud to cloud” with Microsoft’s data centers to host Office 365 data on users’ BlackBerries.
For more, read the eWEEK article: Microsoft, RIM Collaborate on Cloud Solutions for BlackBerry, PlayBook.