The matter is how to pass facebook political filtering (in some countries like IRAN)
in htc hd2 mobile by means of *.cab softwares or on other manners?
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Hello
I'm hoping someone might be able to help with a problem we have encountered. We would like to allow some of our XDA users to access their Exchange email accounts via the webmail interface using Pocket Internet Explorer. This all works OK but there is a slight security issue with Pocket IE on the XDA caching network credentials.
The first time the user accesses the webmail site they are asked for the username, password and domain details as we would expect. Once authenticated they get to the mailbox login and from here can access their account. No problem here.
All subsequent logins however go straight to the mailbox so the XDA seems to be caching the network credentials. The only way we have found so far to clear the "cache" is to reset the XDA. I was wondering if anyone could suggest any other way.
O2 say this is a known "feature / issue" and the solution is to upgrade our Exchange server from 5.5 to 2000.
Thanks in advance for any help.
Microsoft
The problem you are experiencing here is an issue with Pocket IE. This part of the PocketPC 2002 operating system, and it pretty much unmodified by O2 / T-Mobile etc. You will find the same problem if you use an iPAQ, Casiopea etc, so it's not something that can be specifically fixed by O" - that's really up to microsoft.
I initially contacted Microsoft Tech Support and was told that they didn't support Pocket PC and I should contact the supplier of the PDA (ie O2).
I'll try Microsoft again but in the meantime I'd be grateful for any other suggestions.
Reading other posts on the site it looks as if it might not be possible to update the version of Pocket PC on the XDA anyway.
Thanks very much for your help.
Dpoes anyone know of any case studies or example applications which use a PDA with GPRS connection to a server database?
I have a project to to this, and need ideas. Not limited to the XDA, may also look at palm but need to find a good reason to do so :shock:
Ta,
Zx10rider
Avantgo is the first obvious choice.
Check out their various wireless sync options.
Also check out:
imov (instant message client)
PpcNews (news client)
Pocket Feed (RSS/RDF news aggregator)
Pocket Blog (extends your weblog to any Pocket PC device)
Try DA-Systems & select info on their Nexus product.
This is a field service tool for couriers, providing job data out, updates, courier status update inc signature capture, SatNav (TomTom), GPS reporting over GPRS etc. All reports back & is integrated with the DA-Systems back office product, allowing the office to know the exact current position and current job status of all their couriers.
Mobile TTDS
Check out our CAB dispatch system at:
http://www.digstud.se/ttds/mttds.asp
/Patrik
Dear all,
using an HTC Desire Z device for business reasons, I have to cope with the fact that company did lock the mailpush as of today for non iOS/BB/WinM devices.
They´re having a blacklist on the Exchange Server, filtering the words "Android", "Nitrodesk" etc... and blocking it - credentials are still working as I do have an old Windows Mobile device which still is OK.
Anybody knows where I can find some more details about the Exchange blacklist or/if how I can rename my mailclient ID ? Or if there is a mailclient outside which behaves like an e.g. Windows Mobile mailclient ?
Read something about the boot.prop, however I guess this is more the device ID then the mailclient ID - or is it same source ?
thx4support,
Tequila
+1
A big part of modern applications for mobile platforms (iOS, Android, etc.) has a server part. An application with out-of-date data loses its usefulness. It is important to provide a constant data update between server and device. Situation is the same for offline applications that also need to work without internet. Completely online applications don’t work (or are useless) without internet (i.e. Foursquare, Facebook). There are their own specifics, which go beyond the current article.
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As per the your problem concern I would like to say that you might want to visit Openxcell Technolabs Pvt ltd. I sure that you will get the perfect solution from experienced team.
Disclaimer: I know nothing on how to configure firewalls except for adding apps to the whitelist/blacklist.
Tried using NRFW and I noticed a few things:
1. I've consumed 12.54GB and 9.77GB was by NRFW. What's happening please.
2. I've tagged some apps that can only connect when I'm on wifi, yet I'm still getting notifications when I'm on mobile data. For example, the Facebook app and some games.
3. How do I determine which IP address should be allowed or blocked? For example, I see IP addresses pointing to Akamai and my ISP.
4. Is it a good idea to turn off background data? I restricted it on mobile data and allowed it when on wifi but some apps would not load properly even when I'm connected to a wifi network.
Thanks in advance! And please excuse me if I posted this in the wrong forum.
EDIT: I'm referring to Grey Shirt's NoRoot Firewall.
I read up a bit and learned that 1e100.net are Google's servers. I understand that these point to ads too. I also noticed my ISP's name shows up under these.
Do I allow these or do I block them?
First of all: sorry for answering so late ;-) ...:
- in my opinion, your traffic from internet is being redirected through this NoRoot Personal Firewall unto your smartphone
- so, the 9.77GB you mentioned were 'routed/directed' through the NRPFW - the rest was not (? - maybe for Android-Updates or anything?)
- as you could most probably see, all of these 9.77GB were allowed to pass through from the internet servers (akamai or google or microsoft or ibm or yahoo or many more..) to your smartphone ('s apps / system apps)
- notifications about your mobile connection(s) MAY simply be wrong (as i found out) - seemingly a bug in the NRPFW-app (?)
- akamai is one of the " intermediate servers" or main server for a couple of websites:
for example, when you open the 'WashingtonPost'-website on your smartphone, (all) contents from their website are upon an akamai-server, because 'WashingtonPost' does not have a server on its own inside their office building maybe big enough to handle all traffic from their website to all readers in the world
- your Internet Service Provider has intermediate servers for (any) web content, too - so, you might want to allow their internet addresses
- furthermore, background data is transferred when you have an email-app and this app (gmail or yahoo-app, e.g.) is transferring data even if you had closed the email-app (so you cannot see it anymore on your launcher) or it's even running in background and checking if there's new mail when auto-started while your smartphone is booting.