> Maybe the target market for 770 and N800 does not include the business > market, but If Nokia is at all interested in penetrating that market for > a device like the N800 Nokia will surely have to come up with a very > strong offering with respect to device security. Otherwise the CIO's of > the world will not let this device into their network perimeter, at > least not knowingly.
Any CIO that relys on firewall software on the end-user device is an idiot. Companies rely on dedicated firewalls AT the network perimeter, Nokia makes those as well, see: http://www.usa.nokia.com/business The 770/N800 devices are not routers, IP connections to them are destined for ports that are open on that specific device. Now, if you want to turn a 770 or N800 into a router, that can be done, but that is definately outside the scope of what the device is intended for. Ed Okerson _______________________________________________ maemo-developers mailing list maemo-developers@maemo.org https://maemo.org/mailman/listinfo/maemo-developers