Microsoft to Replace Blackberry? 232
nmccart writes "According to Wired Magazine, Microsoft, along with Cingluar and Vodaphone, is planning to introduce the next generation of Windows Mobile phones that can receive e-mails "pushed" directly from servers that handle a company's messaging. This will allow companies to skip over the cost of installing a Blackberry server, and instead just use the Exchange servers that they are already using. The question becomes, now that this technology is cheaper, will my VP be buying new Windows Mobile enabled cell phones for his entire department just so we can put in more hours?"
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:2, Insightful)
"Hey, is that your new wireless email device with mini-qwerty keypad?"
"Hey, is that your new Blackberry?"
So no, Windows Mobile Smart Phones won't takeover until the day people stop calling every portable audio player an iPod and every PVR a TiVo.
Re:Treo 700w (Score:4, Insightful)
Everyone I know who has tried a BlackBerry has dumped their previous solution. Even a recent interviewee made note of how he successfully migrated a Treo house to BlackBerry 8700 and 7290s. The difficult part was getting the execs to try something new. As soon as they'd had a day with a BB, they were hooked.
Here's the thing...a lot of these devices try too hard to do everything. The guys at RIM have done just the opposite and stuck with it. They've focused on delivering secure wireless email (and application services) to the end-user. That's where their R&D money goes. Not on building a mini M$ office app that let's you squint at cells. If you're going to do any serious office suite work, you won't be doing it from a mobile...especially one with such a crappy KB and battery life as the Treo 700w.
For those who want to play games, get polled, unencrypted email, sure...the Treo does ok. Businesses require something more. SAP and enterprise services are the biggest growing sector of IT. It only makes sense to use an end-to-end secure wireless solution. No other vendor provides that than RIM at them moment. They write their own desktop, server and device code. They manufacture their own devices. When you control a product at that level, you can offer an unparalleled solution.
Ok...not as objective as I wanted to be (read: subjective), but consumers (and prosumers) have a lot to take into account when buying wireless. Different strokes for different folks.
Re:Treo 700w (Score:2)
I think this is the key; there's no one solution that's perfect for everyone. Me? I find my HTC Blueangel works well. PocketInformant (the PIM I use on Windows Mobile) suits my needs much better than any other mobile device PIM I tried; the GSM/GPRS nature of the phone lets me run mobile AIM (which is actually useful to me, even for work-related stuff), as well as use sshCE if I have to get to one of my servers to fix it. And the built-in keypad, while no real keybo
Re:Treo 700w (Score:2)
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:2)
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:5, Informative)
I don't know that I entirely agree. While Crackberries are quite popular, I think that there is still a significant number of companies that don't have a mobile email solution that would jump at the opportunity to do it as a "single" solution. As well, as companies look to upgrade, having the all-in-one solution could be quite enticing. The biggest bonus for M$ is that I don't think they are necessarily counting on driving significant additional short term exchange licenses due to this manuver, so they can afford to wait and slowly take on marketshare. Remember, people wouldn't be buying "Windows Smartphones", they're buying mobile email solutions that also allow them to do voice. If a Windows Smartphone fits the bill, then so be it.
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:2)
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:5, Insightful)
Blackberry does not have a vertical leverage like Apple has with iPod where the content and the device is controlled by a same company.
In fact, many, many, corporations use Exchange and the value proposition (not having to buy an extra wireless email service) is going to be something that is going to be very difficult for Blackberry to compete against.
Add the fact that most power-types that own Blackberries tend to upgrade their device almost every year, there is really nothing holding people back from switching their wireless e-mail service.
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:2)
Add to it that RIM hasn't innovated in the past 5 years. Colour screens? They do phonecalls now too? Blah. They should be smaller, lighter, cheaper, and have used their clout to dig into small business, students and other markets. Their back end software should be seamless at this point, we shouldn't be hearing BS about unencrypted mail being stored or other dumb stuff.
I've stayed away from investing in their stock because the moment a big player decides to enter the area, they're sunk. The only thi
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:2)
Although Blackberry provides software to send corporate e-mail to wireless devices, it does not have any marketshares in the e-mail servers themselves - thus no vertical leverage (control the distribution AND access).
Microsoft, on the otherhand, has a popular e-mail server - Exchange - that they can use to leverage integrated mobile devices that can tap the e-mail server directly.
Unless Blackberry quickly makes in-road in e-mail server market (highly unlikely), the
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:2)
From the same school of thought, circa 1995:
"I doubt it... So many places I know and so many people I know are running Netscape Navigator that I think it will take a long time, if it ever does occur, for people to switch over to Internet Explorer."
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:2)
Re:I doubt it.... (Score:4, Informative)
Depending on the situation, it will take a much shorter time to switch to Windows Smartphones.
Consider the scenerio where you have an Exchange 2003 Server with an Outlook Web Access (webmail) front end server. Lots of companies either currently have this scenrio or have a similar Exchange 2000 scenerio and will upgrade in a couple of years.. If you have this scenrio, turning on Exchange Active Sync, the technology that makes this happen, is an afternoon of work. Period. It's done. There are no extra licenses, no extra software and no extra infrastruture. Getting approval for it will be increadibly easy, because it carries about the same risks asthe OWA server you're already running.
Now consider you have the exact same scenerio, but also a Blackberry server. It's still painless to turn on EAS, so having the two work side by side is easy. You can have Smartphones and Blackberry offered to your employees. But if you already have EAS and don't have a Blackberry server, how are you going to convince your boss to pony up the cash for Blakberry?
In short, since EAS is "free" (as in "you already paid for it, but didn't know it at the time"), you're far more likely to deploy it than the "expensive" Blackberry server. Thus, MS wins again.
TW
Full disclosure: I've implimented an EAS solution at my company and currently have an Audiovox SMT5600 Windows Smartphone. The Syncing is awesome, though I find myself restarting my phone periodically, something I never had to do with my old Nokias. I've never owned a Blackberry, though the few times I've played with one convinced me they're a fine solution.
Now that NTP's patents are most likely bunk (Score:2)
Re:Who says this is a free market? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Who says this is a free market? (Score:2, Insightful)
They do have an office suite monopoly (no one else can guarntee you'll be able to read the doc and xls files people send). They use the fact that Outlook is automatically installed combined with the Windows domain setup to leverage Exchange server. It's not quite a monopoly, but it's pretty damn common in offices. Much more so then it co
We don't know, and Yes. (Score:5, Funny)
Answer: (Score:5, Funny)
Yes I will. Now get back to work!
Patent infringement (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Patent infringement (Score:2)
Re:Patent infringement (Score:3, Funny)
Same question... (Score:5, Insightful)
Only if you let him. I am on salary and work 40 hours. The first year +, I worked 60 hours plus. Then, as I automated and gaine control over recurring issues, I got more done in 40 than when I was working 60.
I was under pressure to keep working more than 40... I just said 'no'. Simple as that. And I have received a promotion since then, so no "black list" occurred.
If you aren't in a position to say 'no', get there. No job is worth working more than half of your waking hours.
Feh... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Feh... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Feh... (Score:2)
Uh, what?
Could you please point out an easy UI that they have designed? I'm not saying Blackberry is any better, after using a Nokia when they were entirely text menu driven then switching to a SE T616 and now a Treo 650, I have a hard time figuring out my bf's Blackberry everytime I try to use it. I don't understand why it always wants to dial the last number you dialed whenver you want to use the phone.
I like things that make sense, but that'
I can see it now... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I can see it now... (Score:2)
ChatterMail can already do this on Treo/Palm (Score:5, Interesting)
No Mickysoft exchange server needed.
Re:ChatterMail can already do this on Treo/Palm (Score:2)
One thing Microsoft (not that hard to spell correctly) does is messaging.
Re:ChatterMail can already do this on Treo/Palm (Score:3, Interesting)
Calendaring is an important business function for many, and a dealbreaker for me.
Always make sure (Score:2)
The Never Ending Work Day (Score:2)
That would probably depend upon the cost per unit of the phones along with any other expenses connected with the rollout of this system compared to the relative value of each additional potential employee hour worked. You might also ask yourself, especially if they do set this up and start abusing it on nights and weekends, if t
RMS being right all along (Score:3, Insightful)
I like the headline: "MS Venture Nips at BlackBerry". How about "MS Will Eat BlackBerrys (for) Lunch." Anybody want to bet how long RIM's going to last? Two years? Three?
Re:RMS being right all along (Score:2)
And turn them into DingleBerries.
(Sorry.)
Not Necessarily... (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft is not a juggernaut that rolls over everything that it touches. They have failed *many* times in becoming even a viable competitor in certain marketplaces, let alone a dominant force that squashes everyone. Examples of where they have not wiped out an established competitor include home finances software (vs Quicken), PDA platforms (vs Palm), game consoles (vs Sony), search engines (vs Google), web portals (vs Yahoo), DRM'ed music files (vs Apple), etc, etc, etc.
RIM is no pushover. They've been building Blackberries for almost 10 years now, and have a lot of technology experience (and a lot of patents) in their pocket. They also have a fanatical following in the corporate world, not unlike iPods in the consumer world. Sure, MS might compete, but put RIM out of business in 2-3 years. *NOT* going to happen!
Re:Not Necessarily... (Score:2)
To pick a nit, Palm once had the PD
Re:Not Necessarily... (Score:2)
I don't know about the TREO 700w, but the 600/650 are a lot better than any brick phone that previously ran windows. Obviously if the 700w takes off that could change; however, to say that MS killed Palm is incorrect. MS contributed to the decline of PALM, but there where a lot of factors involved in PALMS downward spiral.
-MS2k
Re:Not Necessarily... (Score:2)
Re:Not Necessarily... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not Necessarily... (Score:2)
PDA? Look at the ground it made from the 0% level. Do you really think they are not doing well especially since 5.0
Game Consoles? From 0 place to 2nd place world wide? Yeah they sure ain't doing well.
Search Engines? COnsidering they just got into it last year, give it some time.
Web Portals? MSN? Hello?
DRM music files? WMA? Hello?
No time soon... (Score:5, Interesting)
(b) The existing Crackberry addicts will only switch when their existing units are pried from their cold dead fingers.
(c) I'll contend that the majority of type-A folks that need this already have it in Blackberry, and MS and the cell providers will be trying to get people to switch vs. trying to get lots of new customers to buy in. Smaller potential market, and perhaps already near saturation.
Re:No time soon... (Score:2)
But given the offering, Microsoft will probably price it in the basement, so that people who don't have Blackberry stuff just get it at very low cost, with their standard load of Microsoft.
All they'll have to do is buy phones with Microsoft software and will will all work (sort of).
That's how you kill of Blackberry - make it a non-event to get started with the Microsoft version. No more new interest in Blackberry, given its cost.
That's the model for obsoleting WordPerfect, VisiCalc, Netscap
Re:No time soon... (Score:2)
Like the other markets they've tried to break into, *THEY DON'T OWN THE PLATFORM HERE*, so their ability to strangle the competition (RIP Netscape) is limited. May it remain so.
Re:No time soon... (Score:3, Insightful)
1.) BES, either Domino/Notes or Exchange (I support both) is far from stable. Between lost emails from/to handhelds, MDS errors or such, I spend about 4 hours a week supporting 1500 users on two BES (on for Exchange one for Domino/Notes). The Good Technologies solution is MUCH more robust and stable by a far margin.
2.) Windows Mobile powered crackberries are already supported by Exchange Server 2003 SP2. And it works quite well.
3.) There really are not all that many
Re:No time soon... (Score:3, Informative)
No argument there.
The point is what number of them are likely to be interested that aren't already on Blackberry? The existing base has already spent the money, and how much of the remainder are potential customers? Not everyone is interested in 24/7 email into their cells.
Re:No time soon... (Score:2)
Wow, you must not be in the Washington DC metro area!!!
Re:No time soon... (Score:2)
Is there really much of a savings? (Score:2)
A Microsoft Exchange centered system is not going to reduce the cost of the monthly wireless plans unless the cell provider is willing to take less profit on the MS devices. They won't unless competition forces the issue.
I suppose that MS cou
Re:Is there really much of a savings? (Score:2)
Re:Is there really much of a savings? (Score:5, Informative)
That's it.
The only contracted costs are the broadband link, phone rental and call charges.
No licences, no hosted servers, no ($$) Exchange server and no ($$) Blackberry Server.
Nuff said.
Re:Is there really much of a savings? (Score:2)
Sounds like a "good enough" solution, or a "good for the money" solution.
Re:Is there really much of a savings? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Is there really much of a savings? (Score:2)
Most larger companies have data service agreements in place which take into account the montly cost of the data service which more or less takes care of any huge expenses. For example here we pay $40 per month in fees regardless of the amount of data sent/recieved.
The MS solution sure will be cheaper if they continue with the route SP2 for Exchange
Re:Is there really much of a savings? (Score:2)
We passed on the offer... the blackberry was dumped.
Exchange is the kiss of death for this product (Score:3, Funny)
More hours for who? (Score:2)
Yep, it'll be a lot of extra work keeping these things safe.
Late as usual (Score:3, Insightful)
Not blackberry, goodlink (Score:5, Informative)
Support for mobiles built in exchange? Bye-bye Goodlink at $300 a seat.
Re:Not blackberry, goodlink (Score:2)
Wrong question (Score:2, Insightful)
That's a pretty stupid question. Phrased that way, the VP would be an idiot unless he has a chunk of change for over time or wants to be sure that he doesn't have some stupid IT people show up at a company function (muwahaha, I'll have them install stuff during the party so they can't show up - muwaaahhhaaahaha).
What the real
This is not as good (Score:3, Informative)
This is not ready for prime time.
A question of strategy (Score:2)
Harness the OX (Score:2, Informative)
Security? MDS? (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Microsoft isn't exactly known for security. To my knowledge there have been very few hacks of the RIM BES product because of its' nature - it establishes outbound-only connections to the RIM servers which then link back to the wireless providers.
2) MDS. The BES allows (via this same set of secured connections) access to the corporate intranet servers (assuming it's configured to do so). I personally have found this to be a very, very useful feature. Lots of stuff in our daily business does not live in the realm of Exchange, but might live in the realm of our intranet servers. RIM made this easy by allowing admins to avoid worrying about VPN tunnels or SSL connections. Set it up, and it just works. I have a feeling that this product offering might not compete in this arena.
PIN Messaging - THE killer BB app (Score:5, Interesting)
For those that don't know, PIN messages are transferred through the BlackBerry network from the sender's 'berry over a dedicated GPRS APN using AES encryption. After that, they are passed up to Waterloo ON where they are routed - without being decrypted - to the destination, where the reverse of the sending occurs. Note that nowhere does the BES or email enter into this.
For savvy but non-technical users (i.e. many executives) who want to keep their conversations private, a PIN simply can't be beat - you've got a commercial service which guarantees delivery (you can check when your PIN arrives with a little 'D' in your sent items) and guarantees security. Plus you don't have to pass around public keys to make it work.
Yes, you can do email any number of different ways. And yes, you could secure messages with AES encryption although nowhere near as easily as this. But to get all of that in a box with ease of use that pleases executives... hard to beat RIM on this one.
Re:PIN Messaging - THE killer BB app (Score:2, Insightful)
Then how does it work? If you don't have a public key to do your AES key exchange, seems like it's nothing more than smoke and mirrors. Or maybe you just have to trust RIM not to play man-in-the-middle. But if it pleases the executives...
Re:PIN Messaging - THE killer BB app (Score:3, Interesting)
Lawsuit Reveals an Open BlackBerry
Canadian bank submits intercepted PIN messages as evidence against ex-execs
News Story by Jaikumar Vijayan
JANUARY 17, 2005 (COMPUTERWORLD) - Private messages exchanged using corporate BlackBerry wireless devices may not be quite so private after all. In fact, even the so-called PIN messages that many users thought were untraceable can be logged.
The lack of BlackBerry privacy became clear in a lawsuit filed in T
This is horrible (Score:3, Funny)
My experience with Windows-powered handhelds... (Score:2)
Handspring Visor
iPaq 3600
Jornada 548
iPaq 3800
Jornada 568
T-Mobile Pocket PC Phone Edition
Sony Clie SJ22
I finally switched back to Palm. An older device, refurbished, that suits me better than any of the Windows Powered devices or the newer PalmOS handhelds.
Microsoft improved things in each new device, but only at the cost of a reduction in capability in other areas. But the difference between these devices and a Palm, let alone a Blackberry, is incredible. Rather than
How It Works (Score:5, Informative)
This is all based on second-hand information, so some of it might be wrong, but here's my understanding of how it works.
Getting mail to to a WinCE PDA has always been easy. The standard technique was POP or IMAP over whatever Internet connection you can finagle (eg, GPRS). However that was always a pull technique and the thing about crackberry addicts is they want the mail to appear on their PDA as soon as it arrives at the mail server (push). One technique is to send an SMS every time a mail arrives so the PDA knows to check the server, another technique is to poll the server frequently, but both of those techniques can be very expensive.
The new WinCE enabled PDA achieves push by opening an HTTP XML request back to your Outlook Web Access server. It sends the username and then just waits. If any mail arrives then the OWA sends back a "ping" message that tells the PDA to pull the new mail. When the HTTP request times out the PDA simply opens a new connection. Effectively this works the same as push - mail "appears" on the PDA as soon as the Exchange server gets it - but without excessive bandwidth costs or SMS costs. It also means you don't need special crackberry servers or a crackberry subscription.
So my guess is that this will be the downfall of crackberry, and not a moment too soon.
Re:How It Works (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How It Works (Score:2)
Why not use the IMAP4 IDLE command [faqs.org]? This is the standard mechanism for making mail appear instantly over IMAP. Microsoft in this case writes both the client and the server, so they sh
Why the hate? (Score:2)
Is there something I don't know about Blackberry reliability? So, you think it's better to use one of the least secure and most expensive mail servers because it has a special method to talk to a WinCE crippled PDA? WinCE and "Smart Phones" have both have records about as good as Exchange. Why are you so ready to jump on this?
Are y
I saw a demo a couple of weeks ago. (Score:5, Informative)
The good:
------------------
1) If the real-life version works as well as the virtual PC demo I participated in, it will do exactly what the marketing materials say it does.
2) It not only synchs email, but todo, contacts, appointments, etc. Everything but public folders, I think.
3) On the server side, all of the software required to do push sync is free with Exchange Server 2003.
The bad:
------------------
1) Phone requires Windows Mobile 5.0, plus a sync driver/module thingy that (groan) HAS TO BE INSTALLED ON THE PHONE BY THE MOBILE VENDOR.
2) Support for this configuration is, well, going to suck because the mobile vendors will push you through their help desk (pretty much guaranteed to NOT understand this), and Microsoft can't support the mobile piece of the puzzle directly, even though it's technically their software.
3) The range of services over which mobile vendors will be able to exert their control has been expanded to include private corporate messaging, appointments and task lists! Yay!!!!
Re:I saw a demo a couple of weeks ago. (Score:2)
http://www.microsoft.com/presspass/press/2006/feb0 6/02-12GlobalPartnerSupportPR.mspx [microsoft.com]
Already ran this experiment at my office (Score:3, Interesting)
An Assumption (Score:3, Insightful)
That assumes you're using Exchange in the first place. Not everybody does.
Re:An Assumption (Score:2)
Everybody running a BlackBerry server does.
This is a consumer technology - not enterprise (Score:4, Insightful)
One of the main reasons that Blackberries are so popular is their use in Government. This is primarily due to the Blackberries being through several certification processes to demonstrate that they are secure and can be used to manage materiel classified up to a specific level.
The other is that they work.
Now, try to see Microsoft doing the same. They can barely get certification for products that are nearing EOL. Any Windows powered device in this kind of an environment is doomed to fail.
One of the guys here has a Windows powered smartphone - he's forever power cycling the damn thing, or just tossing it in his top drawer and walking away.
Personally I hate Blackberries - they are a PITA to manage with the executive where I work.
But I'd have to hate a Windows powered equivalent even more.
Yes (Score:2)
Yes, your VP will spend extra money (for the phones, any overtime/comp time and having to listen to you demand a higher raise) just to make you have to put in more hours. Come on dude, I know people like to be melodramatic but let's be at least reasonably sensible about it.
Antitrust? Exchange? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
BlackBerry vs. MS (Score:2)
(not to mention RIM doesn't seem to have that same "take ove
Ewh (Score:4, Interesting)
It just, ewh.
Oh okay, how bad was it? Well ewh. Yes it is childish but it was just so... ewh. I can't really put it in anyother way. Mediocre perhaps but that ain't it. Bad? No the basic idea was okay but just well done in an ewh way. Not so much buggy as just not working.
Offcourse it had to be rebooted or rather reset every few hours. Of course it froze and of course programs crashed. It was a first generation MS product. But that wasn't the only problem, anyway the unit I worked with was a test unit not a final production unit so it might have improved later (yeah right).
What was the real problem? Well take the browser. It was a crap version of IE (or should that be crappier? Crapiest?) version 5 I think with NO css support at all. None. Bit of a nasty shock to our designer that was.
It was a bitch to delvelop for when you got it to work. Meanwhile the other unit was one of those nokia phones, the one you got if you were a good boy, with an opera browser that was just like a real browser.
It for me was a typical MS product, badly done, half done and not finished. Did it sell? Yeah it did, not well but well enough. That is MS entire business strategy I think. Flood the industry with products that are crap but get accepted by the morons to force everyone to support MS.
It is kinda like IE. Every web builder knows that IE is the worst browser ever build but it is the one that controls what you can and cannot do on a website. Just today I had to tell someone that to have a fixed bar at the bottom of a website is not possible on their site because IE does not properly support css position: fixed. Works perfect in every browser except IE so you cannot use it on mainstream sites.
Will MS sell these phones to people that should have bought blackberry's. Off course. Probably not enough to be successfull but enough to force everyone to once again limit themselves to the lowest common denomenator.
Yuck. Someone please make my day and shoot a MS user.
Re:Ewh (Score:3, Insightful)
Someone please make my day and shoot a pretentious git who doesn't know what he's talking about.
I've had to work with Macs (OS 7 - MacTCP, anyone?) and early linux. And they sucked just as mightily. If you want to try and sound like you have an intelligent opinion, you could at least try a recent product. So what if you tried something over 5 years ago - that's like 50 years in IT terms.
Windows Mobile 5 is pretty decent, actually. Although, of course, there is room for improvement. If you have some obse
Why promote FUD? (Score:2)
Nobody remembers the failures like MS Bob, Web TV, Windows For Pens.
And I'm also I'm sick of articles about iPod killers.
BFD (Score:3, Informative)
I have never understood why Blackberry has become so popular--I find the device, the user interface, and the service to be just awful compared to the alternatives.
Free the BB server (Score:2, Interesting)
This way, we (as in you and me) could make many FOSS groupware work with their POSH protocol and give MS a true run for their money.
On the other hand, BB would see their devices sales increase by leveraging on FOSS messanging solutions and i think we would have a chance to finally push MS the fuck out of that space (email and PIMS).
Exchange? (Score:2)
They're using Exchange? That's a pretty bold statement.
And with Microsoft's security record...
-M
Why install the BES? (Score:2)
Re:What about spying? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:What's MS's deal? (Score:5, Insightful)
This is in corporations interest to be able to play the device makers against each other, instead of being tied to Blackberry. Basically, a big company with Exchange probably has a Blackberry ent. server working with exchange, and views installing Good (to support Palm devices) as a pain, so they are stuck buying blackberries. This will allow people to become more hardware agnostic, but most places will still stick with a few supported models due to support costs.
All similar to pc software market - MS benefits as the hardware gets cheaper because it does so as it gets more pervasive - bigger market means more possible licenses for Exchange seats.
Re:What's MS's deal? (Score:2)
I can see where they'd want to diversify; they can't own the PC market forever, but they haven't been able to get nearly the traction elsewhere, which is probably a Very Good Thing for the market.
Re:What's MS's deal? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:What's MS's deal? (Score:2)
Let's cut MS some slack... (Score:2)
It worked for Apple and it's MP3 player didn't it? Perhaps Microsoft thinks they can do the same thing, re-hash an idea RIM has already made popular and sell it because they implemented it better and more elegantly than RIM did. RIM has been alone in it's market for a long time and quite frankly they have their had thumb stuck up a certain orifice inst
Re:There are already workplace protection laws (Score:2)
Re:There are already workplace protection laws (Score:2)
Re:There are already workplace protection laws (Score:2)
I work nearly a 7 day week if I were to take into account *Everything*. Timesheets are 40 hours a week...
Works both ways of course - I can have a couple of days off and even it out occasionally.