Study: Microsoft still leads in email
Microsoft will stay at the top of the growing corporate email market, thanks partly to its software's new wireless push capabilities, according to a new report from The Radicati Group.
Microsoft will stay at the top of the growing corporate email market, thanks partly to its software's new wireless push capabilities, according to a new report from The Radicati Group.
Nearly 25% of all corporate email is personal and 62% of workers send business email from personal accounts, according to a new survey.
Telstra's notoriously problematic email infrastructure is still not scalable enough to house email messages more than 120 days old and the company is deleting them to reduce storage requirements.
Too broad, too easy to make mistakes, says privacy group
Microsoft is digging deeper into its stores of electronic correspondence after a US District Court judge instructed the company to provide more information about a four-year-old email from a company vice president that told employees to delete email after 30 days.
As if the strain that spam and email alerts are putting on in-boxes weren't enough already, expect even more in the coming years as the overall number of email messages doubles from 31 billion a day now to 60 billion a day by 2006, market researcher IDC predicts.
Mailboxes over last weekend clogged with messages
Mail growing in both size and volume
Huge market opportunity in email service
Lotus has given teeth to its threats not to support cc:Mail