词条 | SEVEN Networks |
释义 |
|name = SEVEN Networks, Inc. |logo = File:SEVEN Networks logo Wiki.png |logo_size = 200px |type = |founded = 2000 |founder = |location = Marshall, Texas |industry = Mobile software |products = {{Collapsible list | Ping Push Notifications Open Channel Mobile Messaging}} }} SEVEN Networks, Inc. is a privately funded American corporation founded in 2000. It had about 265 employees in 2010.[1] As of 2017, the company has research and development centers in Texas and Finland. SEVEN mobile messaging products are turnkey multi-device, multi-service computer software for operators and device manufacturers. The company claims its products have a desktop-like experience for core messaging applications like email, instant messagings and social networking. HistoryThe company was formerly known as Leap Corporation and changed its name to SEVEN Networks, Inc. in December 2000.[2] In 2004 the company was selected for FierceWireless' list of 15 promising and innovative wireless startups of the year.[3] By 2005, CEO Bill Nguyen had left to start another company.[4] In 2006, the company announced Sprint as a customer.[5] Since then, the company expanded its products to support email services, added mobile instant messaging applications, analytics and social networking. In 2010, the company announced it was selected by Samsung Electronics to provide push technology for Samsung Social Hub, a social networking and integrated messaging service available on several of the company’s handsets.[6] In January 2010, the company claimed in a press release to have more than eight million accounts actively synchronized on mobile devices using its software.[1][7] In early 2011, the company announced Verizon Wireless as a customer[8] and also announced Open Channel.[9] In 2012, the company announced a combined email, instant messaging and social media product, Ping.[10] Open ChannelThe Open Channel software product line focuses on mobile traffic management and optimization. There are Open Channel products for wireless signaling optimization, carrier network policy enforcement, and mobile data offloading.[11] Open Channel was launched in February 2011 to help carriers manage the impact of push technology for message notifications on their networks. It works by monitoring all requests for data from smartphone applications, such as Facebook, email, Twitter, which make up to hundreds of requests per hour, with only a small fraction of them actually returning data.[12] The platform acts as a buffer in the network, determining when content for a particular app is available and then allowing the phone to get that content.[13] Early tests estimated mobile devices might reduce their time on a network by up to 40 percent and mobile traffic by up to 70 percent while boosting battery life by up to 25 percent.[14] Open Channel is transparent to connected applications and requires no changes or special integration by mobile developers. Additionally, it does not require changes to the network and can work in conjunction with new standards for fast network dormancy, smart signaling and other network optimizations.[15] In February 2011, Open Channel received the GSMA Global Mobile Award for Best Mobile Technology Breakthrough in 2011.[16] In February 2013, Open Channel added offerings for policy enforcement and offloading.[17] Also in early 2013, Toronto-based wireless operator Public Mobile selected Open Channel to manage network signaling and help reduce service costs stemming from non-optimized mobile applications and unnecessary data traffic that was creating excess network congestion.[11] In September 2015, Open Channel was made available directly to consumers.[18] Mobile MessagingThe System SEVEN software allows consumers and enterprises to access information, such as business and personal email, calendar, corporate directories, personal contacts, and documents, as well as allows users to deliver mobile data, applications, and services to a portfolio of devices.[19] SEVEN's push notification platform, System SEVEN, is deployed as a SaaS (software-as a service) solution. SEVEN Mobile Email[20] and SEVEN Mobile IM[21] are SEVEN's own applications built on top of its push platform and its Ping Services[22] allow operators and device manufacturers to use the SEVEN push notification technology for messaging services and mobile applications. They provide mobile operators and device manufacturers with a solution for integrated messaging services. System SEVEN mobile email is a server-assisted solution, where access to user's email account appears to originate from IP addresses hosted by SEVEN (208.87.200.0 - 208.87.207.255)[23] or its customers. Although done with user's permission, email service providers may flag these as potential hacking attempts and have raised security concerns,[24] most recently with Microsoft Outlook for Android and iOS[25] PartnersThe firm works with mobile platform providers, device manufacturers, email messaging solutions and providers of services in the cloud, and infrastructure partners, to sell mobile messaging services. Its systems use commonly deployed mobile platforms including Android,[26] bada, BREW,[27] J2ME,[28] Symbian and Windows Mobile.[29] They work on products from device manufacturers, including: HTC, INQ, LG, Motorola, Nokia, Sanyo, Samsung, and Sony Ericsson; and are embedded on more than 550 device types.[30] The firm has partnered with many of the top Internet Service Providers including Google, Microsoft (Exchange and Windows Live) and Yahoo!,[31] and infrastructure providers such as Equinix,[32] Savvis and Oracle. Competition
References1. ^1 {{Cite news |title= 2 Straight Out of 10 for Seven |author= Monica Alleven |date= December 14, 2010 |work= Wireless Week |url= http://www.wirelessweek.com/News/2010/12/2-Straight-Out-10-for-Seven-Business/ |accessdate= June 14, 2013 }} 2. ^{{Cite web |title= Company Overview of SEVEN Networks, Inc. |work= Business Week web site |url= http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/snapshot.asp?privcapId=715608 |accessdate= June 14, 2013 }} 3. ^Fiercewireless, retrieved 20 May 2010 4. ^{{Cite news |title= Bill Nguyen: The Boy in the Bubble |date= October 19, 2011 |url= http://www.fastcompany.com/1784823/bill-nguyen-boy-bubble |work= Fast Company |accessdate= June 14, 2013 }} 5. ^Mobileburn, retrieved 20 May 2010 6. ^SEVEN Press Release, retrieved 31 Aug 2015 7. ^Seven Press Release, retrieved 20 May 2010. 8. ^FierceWireless, retrieved 17 March 2011 9. ^Light Reading Mobile, retrieved 17 March 2011 10. ^Androinica, retrieved 31 Aug 2015. 11. ^1 RCR Wireless, retrieved 04 April 2013 12. ^RCR Wireless News, retrieved 17 March 2011 13. ^Connected Planet Online, retrieved 17 March 2011 14. ^GigaOM, retrieved 17 March 2011 15. ^IntoMobile, retrieved 17 March 2011 16. ^GSM World, retrieved 17 March 2011 17. ^FierceBroadbandWireless, retrieved 04 April 2013 18. ^SEVEN Blog 19. ^Crunchbase, retrieved 20 May 2010. 20. ^Mobility Arena, retrieved 31 Aug 2015 21. ^SEVEN Press Release, retrieved 31 Aug 2015 22. ^Androinica, retrieved 31 Aug 2015 23. ^ARIN Online, retrieved 31 Aug 2015. 24. ^IP Address Lookup, retrieved 31 Aug 2015. 25. ^Exchangeserverpro, retrieved 31 Aug 2015. 26. ^Downloadsquad, retrieved 20 May 2010 27. ^Astricon, retrieved 20 May 2010 28. ^Csnet, retrieved 20 May 2010 29. ^Gomobi, retrieved 20 May 2010 30. ^Seven, retrieved 20 May 2010 31. ^SEVEN Blog, retrieved 31 Aug 2015. 32. ^Equinix retrieved 17 March 2011 External links
4 : Mobile technology|Software companies based in Texas|Privately held companies based in Texas|Companies established in 2000 |
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