OnePlus 6T on Android for Work - OnePlus 6T Questions & Answers

Anyone activated a 6T on Android for Work? And if so, which MDM - Google, BlackBerry, etc?

I did using Hub (used to be called airwatch agent) https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.airwatch.androidagent which is basically MobileConnect.

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I've got BB Connect, a PIN # and a Blackberry plan working for e-mail...

It is working perfectly for the e-mail accounts I've set up in BIS (not BES).
I inherited the plan from my previous phone (which was an actual blackberry), migrated to Rhodium and installed BlackBerry Connect. My question is, if BlackBerry Messenger is just a JAVA app., how come it is not possible to run that application (or a ported version of it, or some other java app that would work as a BBM client) on the Rhodium? what else is needed?
Before somebody replies that I should be asking in a Blackberry forum, over there they don't care if the WM users ever finds a way to use BB Messenger. As far as they know (and care), RIM discontinued support for BB Connect, so we are on our own... as usual...

Does Anyone have Blackberry Connect Working on HD2?

Looking to buy it when it comes out for tmobile. Before going to all of the work to switch providors, anyone have BB connect working on hd2?
Unforunately for me, BES is the only option for our corporate e-mail sync.
thx!
IMO BB Connect is a dead horse. RIM has essentially abandoned the product and I haven't seen a new client since the 8925 client.
What is your corp. email platform: Outlook or Notes?
Both have push email options.
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=579936
I don't think anyone figured it out.

[Q] Exchange Questions

My Mom is thinking about getting the Driod X. Her company said that only the iPhone and blackberries will sync with their exchange server. She currently has a blackberry now but it is not hooked up to the email server because they are making her pay the $15 a month for the corporate email. She would like to get her email without the extra cost so she is thinking about an android phone.
From my reading 2.2 fully supports exchange now but when the Verizon store called my mom's IT department to set up her email for her they said that it and all other Android phones are not supported. Needless to say she canceled that purchase.
My question is, is this true? If it is then are their ways around this?
I have an Evo and it works with my exchange server but I am pretty sure my company allows non provisioned devices to sync.
All lies. Just sounds like her IT department just doesn't want to support her and her Android.
If she knows how to get into her Exchange account via web..she can configure it herself. On the phone, just setup an account for Exchange, plug in username, password, mail server, and domain. Very easy setup.
Mail Server and Domain comes right from her web access address like...
https://mail.company.com
mail.company.com = mail server
company.com = domain
The address to her web account is the only variable. If she has never used it...get her to ask IT guys what it is. She can say so she can check her mail from home. If they are already supporting iPhones...Androids will come in on ActiveSync the same way. IT guys will never know the difference...unless they are network nazis that toggle Active-Sync on/off per user.
I mean they can go in and disable the mobile services in the Exchange tab in AD but i doubt they would do that for every user. I did try her account on my evo once but i didn't get it to work. Maybe i fat fingered something, idk. I need to test it again and maybe try touchdown. $20 one time fee is better than $15 a month and a new blackberry that is already out of date.
Does anyone have a Droid X with a nazi type IT department that can share some info? You guys are on Froyo by now right?
Ya best thing to do is try again on your Evo and verify all her settings. Using Touchdown instead of the built-in app is not going to make any difference. Either they will have her Active-Sync locked down or not.
I don't limit access to our Exchange and have connected some Xs (2.1) and several Incredibles (2.1/2.2).
I am working hard break all our Crackberry addicts, and I'm slowly getting there. I would love nothing more than to shutdown our Blackberry server for good.
Good Luck!
I'm not an exchange admin, but I think its either lies or stupidity
Exchange for android has the same remote wiping capabilities as the iphone I believe. Some companies are concerned about this enterprise functionality in case the user loses their personal phone.
Anyways, an exchange admin has to permit you to use a cell phone, unless they have it wide open. If you can get them to enable it for "iphone" it should also work for android.
you can even log into owa and wipe the phone remotely yourself if you want.
it does identify the type of phone you have though, so they will be able to tell you are not using an iphone.
there might be some reasoning behind them blocking android I am curious
Exchange Is Doable Even On 2.1
I currently have a Droid X. I exchanged it from a Droid 2 because I wanted the bigger screen and more SD memory. In any case, my company uses a hosted Exchange provider. Since I'm the lead System Admin, they had to give me an account that allows for Exchange to work with my Droid. Hell, most of the Senior IT Managers are already using the Incredible.
The bottom line is that the Exchange administrator can allow for a phone to access, just the same way as OWA works for remote users. Since mine is hosted, it cost the company $5 to give me an account allotment. However, if her Exchange server is in-house, then they should be able to provide access for her without any cost. Droid works fine with Exchange. I heard rumours that one of the delays for giving us X users the 2.2 update had something to do with Exchange - maybe they're trying to include Active Sync. However, my phone syncs fine already without Active Sync. So any statement that Droids and Exchange don't get along is a blatant lie or a sorry excuse - and that's coming from a total Noob.
I'd guess that perhaps her company is using a self signed certificate. In earlier versions (dont remember exactly which) of Android there was no "accept all certificates" option and a self signed cert would "fail" auth and not work. In at least 2.1 forward there is now an option for that. I used to have to use touchdown for this exact reason.
/my experience = network/system/exchange administrator.
Unless they explicitly blocked Android with isa or similar then they simply don't know what they are talking about.
Edit: it wasnt until 2.0 that this feature was added to stock email app. I am willing to bet money this is/was the issue.
Deyez said:
https://mail.company.com
mail.company.com = mail server
company.com = domain
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's not necessarily true. Mail server, yes but domain no. I would ask them the domain too as they could have named it anything they want (of course other easyways to find it too, but by the sounds of it they aren't saying they wouldn't let her just that it "won't work" which isn't true, so just have her ask.)
It could be that it is because the phone is still on 2.1 which isn't fully supported by exchange.
I actually hate the name "droid" because some people use it for all android phones and others for the Motorola android phones. My mom calls them all Droids and maybe the IT department says that because to them the Droid wasn't supported which had 2.1 and they just don't know the difference or anything about android 2.2
If they can see what type of phone it is then telling them it is an iPhone and then activating a Droid would probably piss them off and she doesn't want to do that.
Android 2.01 and above supported exchange. I believe 2.01 had some issues with self-signed certificates (I had a Droid 1 and took it back largely because of this ... I have a self-signed Exchange server and I had issues with attachments - but mail & contacts came through fine).
2.1 Improved exchange support and 2.2 is supposed to be even better (I've Froyo'd my X and haven't noticed any difference in my exchange experience)
How did you froyo your x???!!! Its not out yet on verizon.
Sent from my DROIDX using XDA App
avirnig said:
How did you froyo your x???!!! Its not out yet on verizon.
Sent from my DROIDX using XDA App
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Leak has been out for a while. Heck, the second leak just popped up over the weekend.
See original thread here:
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=758907
I am trying to find her external email server address with no luck. The webmail address she has only works when she is connected to her VPN. When she is outside of the VPN that owa address doesn't work in any browser. So how can I find the external webserver address only knowing the email address?
Sounds to me like owa is turned on but not accessible outside of your companies firewall. If that's the case you are probably out of luck.
Sent from my DROIDX using XDA App
The company had people with iPhones so it can't be entirely turned off. I think that they have an internal webmail address which would require the VPN and then an external webmail address which would work for phones.
Android pre 2.2 did not fully support all of the exchange security features so its not really a "lie" per say.
We use encryption and remote device wipe and all the security featuers to "lock down" our devices if they are lost / stolen because they could contain PHI.
If you have any phone with Android 2.2+ it should integrate seamlessly with exchange now so there is no reason to not allow the devices on the network unless they just made their own company policy saying so.
I'm not an iphone expert by any means, but I think iphones (pre-ios4.0) use some kind of enterprise sever like blackberry.
That server may be outside the firewall.
Sent from my DROIDX using XDA App

Is it possible to add exchange security features to Nexus S/Gingerbread

My company requires certain security policies to be enabled on a phone for us to be able to access our exchange server. I have listed them below. Is it possible to enable extra features on the nexus s?
numeric pin or alpha-numeric password options to unlock device. Exchange administrators can enforce password policy across devices.
Remote wipe: Exchange administrators can remotely reset the device to factory defaults to secure data in case device is lost or stolen.
Exchange Calendars are now supported in the Calendar application.
Auto-discovery: you just need to know your user-name and password to easily set up and sync an Exchange account (available for Exchange 2007 and higher).
Global Address Lists look-up in the Email application, enabling users to auto-complete recipient names from the directory.
I'm pretty sure all those features are already supported with the Nexus S. My brother's company has the same requirements, and his Nexus S works fine with their Exchange.
My Company also request for same requirements, my android device is Froyo 2.2 and it hasn't fully compatibility. My system administrator request for Touchdown tool instead of system OS capabilities.
It might be nice to have security features included in gingerbread OS, i don't known if it includes or not now.
Thanks
Sent from my GT-P1000 using XDA App
I am pretty sure all those features are already supported as well. I work with Exchange and my Evo worked with all of those options. I imagine my Nexus S will also.
Sent from my Nexus S using XDA App

Encrypted email

At my work we're not allowed to use the Android (2.1-2.3) built in email client because it's not encrypted, like the iPhone.
Has this changed in Android 3, or does Samsung provide their own encryption for the Tab?

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