July 03, 2014 | InCITE | Your twice weekly digest of the most important developments in the consumerization of IT | At their respective developers conferences, Microsoft, Apple, and Google have all demonstrated their intention to dominate the enterprise mobility market. | White Paper: OutSystems It's time to kick start your mobile application strategy. Why go mobile? What are the three primary mobile application types? What type of app should you build first? How to get started, really fast! Read Now | Shadow IT is alive and well in many healthcare organizations. In some that may lead to costly privacy beaches, but in others it may simply result in better care. | Resource compliments of: PC Connection Storage modernization unlocks the full potential of your data center. It increases storage capacity, boosts performance, and reduces costs per gigabyte. Take an educated look at storage with our three-level S.M.A.R.T. methodology. Learn how to create a cost effective model with unrivaled flexibility with our Storage Modernization and Refresh Toolkit. | If we let careless services and companies poison the well, we could lose the next generation of breakthroughs in technology, healthcare and everything else that big data touches. | With Surface, Microsoft is finally learning what its OEM partners have been going through for much of the last two decades. Hardware can't succeed without great software, and Microsoft has rarely lived up to the picture it paints for the OEMs. | With Microsoft's decision to join the AllSeen Alliance, following the unveiling of more closed ecosystems by Apple and Google, a competition between open and closed is playing out in the Internet of Things. | In announcing a series of new features to its EMM suite, MobileIron highlights just how much modern enterprise mobility and BYOD have reshaped the role and functions of IT. | Google rode Android to a dominant position in the mobile OS market by granting OEMs permission to make their own Android flavors. This won't work in the markets for wearables and smart autos. | Getting a broken phone fixed or replaced can be a maddening affair, but here's how one attentive Verizon Wireless retail employee saved the day. | | | |
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