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Ironically though, many businesses are not adverse to vendor lock-in when it comes to mobile devices. The companies who standardized on Blackberry are often standardized on one carrier that provides that Blackberry service for them and seem to have no problems with the prospect that if they switched carriers they may have to replace all their Blackberries because most have no intention of switching carriers.
Many companies have already established relationships and/or contracts with various carriers and I doubt that a company that has a deal with Verizon is going to dump Verizon just to be able to provide iPhones to their employees. Consequently, the iPhone's lock-in to AT&T is going to be as much of an impediment, perhaps even more of one, than the lack of built-in integration to Exchange.
What I think will be interesting is to see whether the traditional PC-standardization model holds for mobile phones. For the longest time it has held that the computer/environment that a person buys for their home is what they use at work, so if they use Windows at work they'll get Windows at home. It seems that Microsoft is expecting the similar thing to happen with Windows Mobile, though I am skeptical that will be the case. Even the PC model is changing as people are getting fed up with the extra tech support Windows seems to require and are starting to buy Macs even if they use Windows at work.
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