Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on
MPACT BLUETOOTH BEACONS
What is it? Where is it? How long has it been there? These impactful enterprise asset intelligence questions are answered by MPACT. MPACT is both mobile marketing platform…and a family of Bluetooth(BLE) beacons enabling inexpensive, easy to deploy, asset locating solutions for any vertical market.

RECENT DISCUSSIONS

Answered Topic / Topic starter Replies Last post
Alternative to using Remoke Desktop on Windows Mobile Devices
by roberto cottone »
18 by Anonymous (not verified)
May 04, 2019 - 10:15 am
Pocket Browser & Printing
by Jesse Spence »
1 by Henrich Hofbauer
May 04, 2019 - 10:15 am
MSP RD & Agent on ET1 DV unit
by Matthew Chu »
1 by Avinash Sanka
May 04, 2019 - 10:15 am
Signature Capture on ES400 Browser
by Mark Johnson »
1 by Henrich Hofbauer
May 04, 2019 - 10:15 am
Teach a man to Phish (expose Cisco and Aruba)
by Kent Woodruff »
0 by Anonymous (not verified)
How do I respond to this requirement
by Charles Bland »
0 by Anonymous (not verified)
Are ADSP licences lost if IP changes?
by Juan-Antonio Martinez »
9 by Henrich Hofbauer
May 04, 2019 - 10:15 am
OPOS Driver with BT DS6878 Scanner
by Christopher Sather »
0 by Anonymous (not verified)
scandisk errors - general advise?
by Neville Harty »
0 by Anonymous (not verified)
ET1 Bluetooth Pairing Pinless
by Jonathan Boriotti »
0 by Anonymous (not verified)

RECENT BLOGS

By

DEVTALK: Customizing Enterprise Keyboard for Your Applications, Wed. July 17th, 2019 10 am CST

Stacey Kruczek

Discussing Session Persistence

Brian Munroe

Mimicking Field-Level Profiles with the DataWedge API

Darryn Campbell

APPFORUM 2019 - Blog Series: What Zebra Going Cloud Means for Developers Part 1

Nathan Clevenger

Industry News - Week of Jun. 17, 2019

Edward Correia

Industry News - Week of Jun. 17, 2019

Edward Correia

Zebra at Droidcon Berlin 2019

roberto cottone

Announcing Zebra Savanna Data Services!

Robin West

StageNow 3.x Remote XML Hosting v2

Ian Hatton

EMDK for Xamarin development with Nuget on older devices

roberto cottone