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Thursday, April 17, 2014

You can't stop shadow IT, so here's how to manage it

Windows Phone 8.1 could be the new BlackBerry | First iPad, now Chromebooks: Microsoft embraces non-Windows devices

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BY IDG ENTERPRISE
April 17, 2014
InCITE Your twice weekly digest of the most important developments in the consumerization of IT

You can't stop shadow IT, so here's how to manage it

David Hoff, the CTO of cloud integrators Cloud Sherpas and a CITE Conference speaker, explains how companies he talks to are effectively managing shadow IT.

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Windows Phone 8.1 could be the new BlackBerry

Back in the early days of the smartphone, the device to have was a BlackBerry. But when the shift to touch and large screens came, RIM's BlackBerry OS was too slow to change and the market shifted away.

Resource compliments of: CITEworld

InCITE Mobile & BYOD

Do you manage mobile devices for your company? Are you interested in the latest developments in the mobile market? Subscribe to our monthly newsletter with the latest news, analysis, tips, and reviews of the latest smartphones, tablets, and wearable devices, plus the MDM tools and techniques to manage them in the enterprise. Subscribe

First iPad, now Chromebooks: Microsoft embraces non-Windows devices

With Microsoft's renewed focus on the cloud and support for non-Windows platforms, the company has one more reason to kill its Scroogled campaign -- at least against Chromebooks.

How NASA's CTO knows which technologies will invade the enterprise next

An interview with CITE speaker Tom Soderstrom, who is always prototyping new technologies to see which ones users actually adopt.

The Kindle Fire isn't ready for the office

The Kindle Fire HDX makes a great consumer tablet but it's lacking some key functionality necessary to use it for work.

Microsoft unveils a cloud Internet of Things

Microsoft's new CEO has a vision of "ubiquitous computing and ambient intelligence". At an event in San Francisco the company unveiled more of its building blocks.

Big data for everyone

Microsoft wants to give you big data, SQL data, and machine learning tools that let everyone get curious and ask the right questions.

Why Apple needs to create an iOS training program

iOS devices dominate enterprise mobility, but Apple provides no training on it for IT pros.

How iOS 8's Healthbook feature could be an actual life saver

Healthbook could be designed to make it easy for EMTs and ER staff to access critical health data even if a user's iPhone is locked with a passcode.

Heartbleed flaw spotlights Android's disastrously slow update process

The Heartbleed OpenSSL flaw affects the earliest version of Jelly Bean, which still powers a significant portion of Android devices.

Chef adds new tools to court the all-powerful developer market

IT infrastructure automation vendor Chef is continuing its push to help enterprises capitalize on the popularity of the DevOps movement with a slew of new features, announced at this week's ChefConf 2014 user event in San Francisco.

The "third platform" of computing means a massive increase in scale

IDC analyst and CITE Conference speaker Joe Pucciarelli explains how to take advantage.

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