Not sure that will help with wireless enterprise activation.
________________________________ From: Barsodi.John [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, May 09, 2008 10:56 AM To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues Subject: RE: Personal Blackberries I'm taking a wild guess, but it might be more about managing company data on a personal device.... Try filtering for anything inbound from RIM's netblock. From: Matt Moore [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, May 09, 2008 10:51 AM To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues Subject: Re: Personal Blackberries I'm guessing you don't want to support the private devices? If that's the case just make a contact for the person using the BB email address for the contact then forward mail to both the mailbox and the contact. If there's and trouble....call the carrier. ----- Original Message ----- From: Kevin Lundy <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues <mailto:exchangelist@lyris.sunbelt-software.com> Sent: Friday, May 09, 2008 10:05 AM Subject: Re: Personal Blackberries Doesn't require POP. I've got pop off already. On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 12:52 PM, Steve Ens <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Turn off POP access for the user in question? On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 11:10 AM, Kevin Lundy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: I have 2 questions related to Blackberries 1) Is there an elegant way to block blackberries from accessing corporate email via OWA? I thought about urlscan to filter the user agent, but I have read that doesn't work. 2) How many people allow personal devices on their BES? If you do, does the company pay the license fee or the user. Thanks Kevin ~ Ninja Email Security with Cloudmark Spam Engine Gets Image Spam ~ ~ http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Ninja ~