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The secondary device is a computer running a desktop operating system, which serves as a companion for the primary device. Desktop messaging clients on secondary devices do not function independently, as they are reliant on the mobile phone maintaining an active network connection for login authentication and syncing messages.
Typical use-cases involve things such as cross-domain, web-based single sign-on, cross-domain user account provisioning, cross-domain entitlement management and cross-domain user attribute exchange. Use of identity federation standards can reduce cost by eliminating the need to scale one-off or proprietary solutions.
In ADFS, identity federation [4] is established between two organizations by establishing trust between two security realms. A federation server on one side (the accounts side) authenticates the user through the standard means in Active Directory Domain Services and then issues a token containing a series of claims about the user, including their identity.
Implementation of federated VoIP involves a number of initiatives: (optionally) registering existing telephone numbers in a well-known ENUM service, typically the e164.arpa DNS domain. obtaining an SSL/TLS certificate for the domain(s) installing a SIP proxy, an XMPP/Jabber server, or both
One could not send messages from GTalk accounts or XMPP (which Google/GTalk is federated with—XMPP lingo for federation is s2s, which Facebook and MSN Live's implementations do not support [4]) to AIM screen names, nor vice versa. [5] In May 2011, AIM and Gmail federated, allowing users of each network to add and communicate with each other.
The federations are often universities or public service organizations. The Shibboleth Internet2 middleware initiative created an architecture and open-source implementation for identity management and federated identity -based authentication and authorization (or access control ) infrastructure based on Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML).
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EAS 2.5 (Part of Exchange Server 2003 SP2) was the first version of EAS to be written by the Exchange Server team. This version also introduced Direct Push, a real-time push e-mail solution which allows the server to say "I have a new item for you" and then tells the client device to do a sync. (This was called a "Ping Sync").