Monday, September 30, 2013

Apple's new licensing for apps gives it a huge enterprise advantage

Evernote CEO: Actually, nobody wants BYOD | Three easy steps to make Chrome more secure

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BY IDG ENTERPRISE
September 30, 2013
InCITE Your twice weekly digest of the most important developments in the consumerization of IT

Apple's new licensing for apps gives it a huge enterprise advantage

One of the biggest iOS 7 advances for enterprise environments is Apple's new volume licensing model. It also has the potential to be a huge competitive advantage over Android in business environments.

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Evernote CEO: Actually, nobody wants BYOD

They just want to use "non-crappy" products, says Phil Libin. That informs how Evernote designs its products, even as it tries to push into business.

 

Three easy steps to make Chrome more secure

Google has announced upcoming changes to how its Chrome browser and OS will handle certificates for SSL connections. But Chrome also provides security tools that users can deploy today to protect their synced files and Google accounts.

Brazil looking to build country cloud in light of NSA snooping

The revelations that have surfaced about NSA spying could soon have an impact on the entire internet if countries insist that internet companies build in-country data centers.

Blades could end up being the coolest new addition to Surface

Microsoft hinted that it plans to support all kinds of accessories that snap into Surface tablets like the current keyboards snap in place. The first such "blade" works in conjunction with a DJ app for mixing music, but it's the potential for a whole series of blades for different applications that has people excited.

Why Amazon could actually beat Microsoft in enterprise tablets

It used to be that getting a foot in the door at enterprises meant hiring an experienced sales team and partnering with ISVs. But these days, Amazon doesn't have to change a thing.

What's really new with the latest Egnyte update

Now, companies can use Egnyte to access files stored entirely on premises, with no requirement to upload the files or any metadata to Egnyte's cloud. It's a corner case, but continues Egnyte's emphasis on flexibility.

VMware veteran quietly leaves to build mobile enterprise startup

Srinivas Krishnamurti, who was senior director for mobile enterprise solutions for VMware, recently left the company to build a new mobile enterprise company that is currently in stealth mode.

CloudOn shows what Office on mobile could be like -- when it actually works

CloudOn uses virtualization to deliver Microsoft Office's three most mission critical components -- Word, Excel, and PowerPoint -- on any platform, phone and tablet both.

 

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