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Linkleri Üyelerimiz Görebilir. UslanmaM Üyeliği İçin Tıklayın) - AT&T plans to market the iPhone to business users in addition to consumers

but analysts aren't recommending that enterprises supply workers with the phones.
Cingular

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recently decided that the iPhone will appeal to business users and the operator is now working hard to ensure that its back-end enterprise billing and support systems will accommodate the device when it ships

said a source familiar with the company's plans

who spoke on condition of anonymity.
An AT&T spokesman said he couldn't comment on the iPhone beyond when it will become available and its price. The phone is expected to become available in June. It will cost $499 or $599 depending on the memory size. Initially

AT&T will be the exclusive provider of the iPhone

although other service providers are expected to eventually start selling it as well.
The idea of marketing the iPhone as an enterprise product baffles some analysts.
If AT&T announces that it will be marketing the phone to enterprise customers

"we'd be against it

" said Ken Dulaney

an analyst with Gartner

who said he hasn't heard of such a plan from the operator. "We'd immediately tell our customers that'd be a very serious mistake."
No matter what kind of reputation a vendor has

if it's making its first phone

Dulaney would be unlikely to recommend it. "Building a phone is one of the most difficult things to do

" he said.
Also

the iPhone is expected to have a number of shortcomings for business users

he said. For example

it doesn't have a removable battery. "You'd be crazy to buy without that

" Dulaney said. The phone has multiple processors

which consumes more battery life than single processors

he said.
It also comes with a touch screen and no buttons

making it difficult for users to dial while driving

he noted.
He suspects that enterprises will likely decide against the iPhone for similar reasons that many decide not to standardize on Mac computers. Even if the iPhone is attractive

like the Mac

they'll choose BlackBerry or Windows Mobile devices because those have more software application options

he said.
That's one reason that Avi Greengart

principal analyst for mobile devices at Current Analysis

also thinks the iPhone won't be a good option for enterprise customers. Apple has said that the iPhone will run on an OS X-based operating system and told Greengart that enterprises won't be able to write applications for the phone

he said. "Companies like to extend corporate apps to the mobile space

and in order to do that

you need an open OS

" he said. Mobile operating system developers like Windows

Symbian

and BlackBerry enable third parties to write applications based on their software.
Because the iPhone isn't available yet

there's a chance that it could launch with applications that might appeal to business users

such as support for corporate e-mail

but Greengart said he'd be surprised if it did.
Without such corporate applications

enterprises would be buying their employees a device with plenty of storage for their digital music collections. "Could a company deploy this? They could

but they'd be paying for storage and for something intended for use as a consumer device

" Greengart said.
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