At this point, we feel that this is where wireless really becomes mainstream in most corporations.

Email is supposed to be this big productivity tool. But it's getting to the point where it is out of control.

By isolating the computer's protection in a virtual environment outside the main operating system, enterprises will have confidence that the security itself has not been compromised, that it is always on, and that they can trust the result that it gives. We believe this new approach will improve security and reduce the overall cost of administration.

What if we could allow end users to recover their own files? If you lost a file, why do you have to call IT to get it back? It's your files. We continuously track every single change at a block level and we move that across the network and we protect it.

Companies and government agencies must contend with a number of industry-specific email retention laws and regulations, such as the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, HIPAA and SEC Rule 17a-4, which means a system that works for one may not work for others. We want to give our customers a number of options to choose from, rather than forcing one bundled solution on all of them.

In the future, small businesses will get automatic integration with our E-Business Suite for large companies, allowing them to do business much more cost-efficiently and effectively.

The race is on [between technology companies] to get a complete XML solution stack in place and form those strategic partnerships with big vendors in each industry that help you standardize the doc formats. Once you've got that, you are in a good position to start driving the standard because you've got the big players.

If [Ford's] suppliers say, 'No, we're not going to be able to exchange [XML] documents based on their format,' guess what -- they're not going to do business with Ford.