Windows Mobile at Tech Ed

In previous years there have only been a couple (at best) sessions on Windows Mobile at Tech Ed, however, mobility is now in the consideration of many IT managers and with a slew of products and integration opportunities with Windows Mobile, this year I'm pleased to be able to announce that we've four sessions on Windows Mobile at Tech Ed this year.

If you are interested in Windows Mobile, deploying and managing Windows Mobile or integrating Windows mobile to your communication stack, you'll want to check out these sessions at Tech Ed:

Session ID Title
UNC117 Windows Mobile: Overview and Roadmap
UNC218 Exchange Server, Office Communications Server, and Windows Mobile: The ultimate ingredients for Mobile UC
CLM321 System Center Mobile Device Manager 2008 Overview
DEV215 Windows Mobile Development 101: Cut the fruit and get the cream

If you want to look for these in Comnet (when it goes live), remember that the Session ID is comprised of the short code for the track (UNC= Unified Communications and Mobility), the first number is the level (100 = very high level - not technical, 200 = Introduction, 300 = Experts, 400 level = advanced).  The final two numbers are somewhat less specific and may pertain to the number of the session in the track or may just be taken from the US Tech Ed session code (in which case it is somewhat arbitrary).

There are other sessions that will be applicable (particularly in the UNC and DEV tracks) too, so look out for them.

Posted by darryl on July 7/21/2008, 2008  •  Comments  •   • 

Comments

7/20/2008 10:10:31 PM

Christopher Fairbairn

Looks great Darryl. It's exciting to see more mobility content enter "mainstream" events such as TechEd (although I'm still mourning the end of MEDC).

Do any of the sessions at TechED this year cover the topic area of Silverlight and its mobile story?

Christopher Fairbairn New Zealand

7/20/2008 11:37:31 PM

Darryl

No - we had a session on silverlight mobile from a corp speaker initially scheduled, but the corp speaker pulled out and it was decided that the value of doing it was not as great as the value of doing a non-mobile session instead.

Darryl New Zealand

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