Once confined to marketing departments and media companies, the Mac is spilling over into a wider array of business environments,
thanks to the confluence of a number of computing trends, not the least among them a rising tide of end-user affinity for
the Apple experience.
Luckily for IT, many of those same trends are making it easier for tech departments to say yes to the Mac by facilitating
IT's ability to provide enterprise-grade Mac management and support.
infoworld metadata explorer:: Why no Macs is no longer a defensible IT strategy. News. Robert McMillan. 2008.02.12 Why Apple snubs its open source geeks http://iwx.infoworld.com/iwx/?tags=osxHOME |
"We're seeing more requests outside of creative services to switch to Macs from PCs," notes David Plavin, operations manager
for Mac systems engineering at the U.S. IT division of Publicis Groupe, a global advertising conglomerate. There are so many
requests that Plavin now supports 2,500 Macs across the U.S. -- nearly a quarter of all Publicis' U.S. PCs.
MacNN | Macs are close, not equal, but work well in IT:: reason why no Macs mentality is no longer a defensible IT strategy, the How does corporate IT support a major corporation with Macs? Fresh-Faced Recruit http://www.macnn.com/articles/08/04/22/macs.work.well.in.it/&startNumber=10HOME | Apple Buys Me.com .Macs New Name? | Simple Drops:: So, Apple does appear to own Me.com. It was likely purchased sometime in December 2007, and it could Why no Macs is no longer a defensible IT strategy http://www.simpledrops.com/2008/06/01/apple-buys-mecom-macs-new-name/HOME |
And Plavin is less of an anomaly than you might think. Buoyed by increased interest in the consumer arena, Macs are cropping
up in more and more organizations, in large part because end-users are pushing for them.
Applelinks.com:: After using it, theres no mystery why versio 1.2 is a staff pick on Apples download website. Why No Macs Is No Longer A Defensible IT Strategy http://www.applelinks.com/index.php/C40/P970/HOME | According to NPD Research, Apple's share of the retail market has climbed to 14 percent as of February 2008. Gartner and IDC report that the Mac's share in the U.S. as of March 31 was 6.6 percent. Alongside that home-based shift from PC to Mac is a significant
uptake for Apple among businesses, as Forrester estimates organizational Mac adoption tripled last year to 4.2 percent, mainly
on the backs of enthusiasts seeking approval for Apple's silver boxes in small workgroups.
[ Discover the pros -- and cons -- of the Mac in business in our special report. And become a Mac pro through Tom Yager's Enterprise Mac blog and InfoWorld's Enterprise Mac newsletter. ]
Perhaps a better barometer of the trend is the effect increased Mac sales are having at outsourcing firms, which have traditionally
been reluctant to support the platform due to a perceived lack of market in the past.
Centerbeam, a Windows management outsourcer for midsize businesses, is one such outsourcer eyeing the possibility of extending
its services to cover the Mac, says Karen Hayward, Centerbeam's executive vice president. Security firm Kapersky Labs has
already created a Mac version of its anti-virus software for release should Mac growth continue (and the Mac thus finds itself prey to more hackers), while Boingo Wireless, a Wi-Fi hotspot federator, is developing a Mac client to allow Mac users to tap into the Boingo
network.
Couple this increasing attention to services with the falling away of another knock on the Mac, price, and you can see why
even the federal government -- which has pockets of Mac users in a diverse set of agencies, including NASA, the U.S. Army,
and the National Institute for Standards and Technology -- is prepping for increased use of Macs in business environments,
having put together an official guide to implementing Mac security to conform to federal requirements.
After all, as Publicis' Plavin notes, Macs -- which cost the same as equivalently configured business-class PCs -- are cheaper
to support because they are easier to support. And when it comes to diverting IT resources toward competitive advantage, doesn't
ease of support sound compelling?
Where was the last debate on wednesday with Mccain and Obama?
INSTANCE / WAITING FOR SPRING
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