| October 14, 2013 | | InCITE | Your twice weekly digest of the most important developments in the consumerization of IT | | iOS 7 includes many new features that will appeal to enterprise users and enterprise IT pros. Some, like data protection for all apps, are automatic and ready as soon as a device is upgraded or activated. But these four key features need thought, planning, and technical prerequisites. | | Resource compliments of: CITE 2014 Awards Program The CITE Conference + Expo is accepting nominations for its inaugural CITE Awards, recognizing the most innovative mobile, social, cloud, and analytics technologies and solutions. Submit by Nov. 1. Finalists announced in December. Winners announced onsite at the show, April 27-29, 2014, in San Francisco. See www.citeconference.com for details. Click to continue | | You can be productive on mobile devices -- without a keyboard and mouse. It just is going to take some imagination to rethink how we work. New products from Seismic and Silk point the direction. | | Resource compliments of: CITE Conference Attend Consumerization of IT in the Enterprise (CITE) Forum, November 5, 2013 in New York and learn how Dow Jones CIO Stephen Orban's aggressive digital strategy is transforming the publishing powerhouse. Complimentary registration. | | IBM Research, Sutter Health, and Geisinger Health System have been granted $2 million for a joint research from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to develop a new type of analytics and application methods that could help doctors detect heart failure years earlier than they do now. | | Talk.co joins the fray of group messaging apps, but is there room for one more? The appeal here lies with its minimalist, back-to-basics approach to instant conversation. | | Millions of Android (and even iOS) mobile device owners use a number of familiar Google mobile apps every day, including Search, Maps, YouTube, Drive and Google+. But Google's mobile apps bench runs deep, and two lesser known Google apps might prove to be useful on your device. | | Windows Phone was never about making a ton of money from licensing fees. It was more about making sure that Microsoft's bread-and-butter enterprise products had a solid mobile story. | | | |
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