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Monday, January 27, 2014

Samsung KNOX: A slow rollout, but far from dead

Workday will let customers try bleeding-edge features early | You'll be amazed at how many times you touch Google services each day

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BY IDG ENTERPRISE
January 27, 2014
InCITE Your twice weekly digest of the most important developments in the consumerization of IT

Samsung KNOX: A slow rollout, but far from dead

Samsung's high-security KNOX platform suffered from a delayed rollout and sometimes contradictory messaging about which devices support it and how to activate it. Even so, it's likely to be a major new factor in enterprise mobility management in 2014.

Resource compliments of: CITE Conference + Expo

Lead the consumerization culture shift

Consumer technologies are changing business in fundamental ways. Learn how to lead the culture shift in your enterprise at the third annual Consumerization of IT in the Enterprise (CITE) April 27–29 in San Francisco. Learn more

Workday will let customers try bleeding-edge features early

Workday 21 introduces a "preview mode" that enables customers to test brand new features as they're ready for public consumption. It points to a growing appetite in the enterprise for faster feature delivery.

 

You'll be amazed at how many times you touch Google services each day

Even a hardcore Google user might be surprised at how many Google services they use and how much of their data is spread across Google servers. Here are two management tools to help you gain control of your Google existence.

Okta CEO: Soon, cloud services will give both IT and users what they want

The cloud is still relatively young and it's going to take some time before reaching an industry standard way of connecting services to standard framework for security and compliance on the backend.

Salesforce makes a play for Windows developers

Windows Phone and a new generation of 8-inch Windows tablets are starting to make inroads into business IT, and supporting .NET gives Salesforce access to these platforms -- and to their developers.

The best alternatives to LogMeIn

If you're feeling left in a lurch by LogMeIn's decision to kill its free offering, LogMeIn competitors would be glad to have you. We tried a number of alternatives and found a couple that work nicely and a few that hardly work at all.

Hats off to Steve Ballmer

Microsoft's core enterprise software business just keeps growing, quarter after quarter, year after year.

 

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