| June 13, 2013 | | InCITE | Your weekly digest of the most important developments in the consumerization of IT | | Apple's upcoming iOS 7 offers a complete redesign of the user experience and many new features - including features that will thrill business users and several that will be music to IT's ears. | | When Microsoft bought social collaboration tool Yammer, one of the company's first challenges was getting its own employees and partners to use it. Here's how they did it and what they learned along the way. | | Here's what Dropbox founder Drew Houston told MIT graduates today. | | Offering workers the Jawbone UP will improve productivity and employee satisfaction, in addition to gaining some savings on insurance costs, says the cloud services consulting company. | | Medical app developers claim that Apple's iOS App Store guidelines prohibits them from including drug and dosing information in reference apps for doctors, nurses, and other healthcare professionals. | | My Surface RT is slow -- to startup and to launch apps -- defeating some of the purpose of porting Windows to the ARM architecture in the first place. | | Android's vulnerability to malware is the main reason Google's mobile operating system has failed to penetrate the enterprise. And the latest Android Trojan will make IT pros think even harder about deploying the mobile OS. | | Like Google's Chrome browser, Google Drive becomes even more useful when you take advantage of third-party add-ons and services. | | Microsoft promised a unified, adaptive approach that would satisfy everyone. In fact, it did the opposite: It created a horribly awkward mashup of two fundamentally incompatible approaches that worked poorly on both PCs and tablets. It doesn't have to be that way. | | | |
|
No comments:
Post a Comment