Tag Archive for iPad

Business PC Not Dead Yet

Business PC Not Dead YetThe BusinessInsider says that the PC market imploded last quarter. They cite data from technology prognosticators IDC who reported PC sales fell 14 percent in the first quarter, which is worse than their forecast of a 7.7 percent drop. IDC claims this is the worst quarter for PC’s since they started tracking sales.

PC Shipments Q1 2013IDC blames Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows 8 operating system for alienating consumers. The new tile-based interface is too weird for consumers, says IDC. Instead of buying new laptops or desktops, people are buying tablets and smartphones which serve as good-enough alternatives claims the article.

Despite the wave of doom and gloom in the headlines from Gartner (IT) and IDC,  at FierceCIO warns IT managers and executives to think  before they ditch their existing PCs fleet in favor of tablets and smartphones; or perhaps reallocate their budgets to migrate existing business apps for a tablet-only environment future.

FGartnerierceCIO makes the point that the decline in shipments pertains only to the consumer section of the PC market. According to Mikako Kitagawa, at Gartner: “Unlike the consumer PC segment, the professional PC market, which accounts for about half of overall PC shipments, has seen growth, driven by continuing PC refreshes.

What’s more, this growth is taking place even though some regions already have passed the peak of their PC refresh cycles. And at half of overall PC shipments, the professional PC market is nothing to be scoffed at. On the other hand, the overall dip–despite the growth in the professional PC market–does speak to just how sharply the drop in consumer PC shipments has been according to the article.

Steve BallmerConsumers are clearly moving their content consumption from PCs to connected devices, such as tablets and smartphones. As far as enterprises should be concerned though, businesses are still buying PCs.

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Despite what many people wish, I still don’t see many ways in which tablets can replace the office PC. How do you run a 40 column excel on a 9.5 inch Apple (AAPL) iPad screen? Can you use Access on a consumer-centric tablet like the iPad?

 

 

Tablet Info

Outside the office, workers turn to the tablet over the PC

Outside the office, workers turn to the tablet over the PCTablets aren’t overtaking smartphones or PCs in the enterprise, but they’re definitely carving a new business niche for themselves a survey conducted by cloud content management firm Alfresco shows.  According to the data cited by GigaOM, tablets have replaced the PC as the go-to work station for working at home and on the road.

The Alfresco study found that staff are using tablets:

  • 48% of enterprise employees are using tablets after hours at home,
  • 55% of respondents use tablets at business meetings (vs. 24% using PCs),
  • 50% are turning first to slates at conferences, compared to 13% using their laptops.

Alfresco reported that employees prefer the smartphone at more informal business functions

  • 57% using them at business lunches and
  • 51% using them in coffee shops.

But the tablet is also starting to become commonplace even in those more casual settings: 34 percent of respondents said they would haul out their slate at lunch meeting, while 43 percent would do the same in a coffee shop.

The Alfresco data indicates that the 3-screen reality is coming true. Tablets aren’t replacing either smartphones or laptops, but are instead creating a new space in-between. The vendor says it’s pretty clear that laptops are increasingly tethered to the desk or cube, while tablets are the tool of choice on the go.

RB- This has huge implications on the support side of the equations

Incorporating Mobile Devices into Enterprise Security

Incorporating Mobile Devices into Enterprise SecurityEnterprise information security hasn’t caught up with the consumerization of IT according to Lenny Zeltser in a recent article on the Lenny Zeltser on Information Security blog. The author states that the urgency with which organizations need to account for consumerization is driven by modern mobile devices such as Apple iPhones and iPads.

Enterprises are coming to terms with the idea of employees connecting to the corporate network over a VPN from personal laptops and home workstations according to the article. However, most organizations haven’t looked at the effect that the proliferation of powerful mobile devices has on the enterprise security architecture.

Mobile devices sometimes have VPN-like access to the corporate network and in most cases have access to the company’s email contents, calendar and address book. The devices are as powerful as laptops were just a few years ago. Yet, their operating system’s security has not benefited from the test of time, and lacks most of the security controls we’d expect to find in a “legacy” workstation OS.

Mr. Zeltser argues we need to understand how to model the threat vectors related to mobile devices and how to adjust the security of the enterprise architecture accordingly. The measures will probably involve:

  • Greater segmentation of the company’s network,
  • Treating any device that users interact with, whether it’s a desktop or a mobile phone, as an untrusted node,
  • Standards and tools to lock down the configuration of mobile devices,
  • Practices and technologies for managing vulnerabilities in applications and the OS of mobile devices,
  • Incident response plans that incorporate both “legacy” IT infrastructure assets and mobile devices.

BYO tech? Three ways business is getting it all wrong

BYO tech? Three ways business is getting it all wrongSilicon.com had an article describing Three ways business are getting BYOD all wrong. The author claims the days of the standard work-issue laptop are numbered as businesses let staff use their own computers and gadgets in the workplace.

However, in the rush to adopt bring-your-own tech, businesses are placing too many restrictions on how personal devices can be used at work according to Anthony Vigneron, collaboration services global manager at global law firm Clifford Chance. He estimates that about 10 per cent of firms’ 7,000 staff share the same device at home and work.

Mr. Vigneron described for silicon.com three ways businesses get it wrong when it comes to letting staff use personal devices at work.

1. Businesses are often advised to provide personal devices with secure access to corporate systems using sand-boxed virtual machines. These sand-boxed machines allow remote access to corporate apps and data via a virtual desktop that is run from the business’ data center.

Much better, he argues, to let users access corporate data and apps from their device’s own OS. “Trying to deliver applications within some kind of sandbox is not what users want. That’s not consumerization, that’s just another way of providing the same apps on different hardware,” he said.

“People want to use the native applications. They don’t want to have to log in through some other system.” He concludes “The business should be able to control some of the applications staff use but you don’t want all those things inside another application.”

2. Mr. Vigneron argues that the line were work life ends and private life begins is becoming increasingly blurred. So it doesn’t make sense to treat them as two separate entities. By not allowing workers to merge their work and home calendars, contacts and emails, businesses are imposing an artificial distinction on their staff, he said. “You do want some separation … People want the choice of being able to work with the same interface.”

3. Letting staff use their personal smartphone while working may seem like a good idea but they might be in for an unpleasant shock when they get their phone bill. Mr. Vigneron said “For companies to allow for consumerization, the price has to get to an equivalent of what we can get as a corporate. They’re not doing that at the moment.”

Acer Halts eMachines

Acer Halts eMachinesTaiwanese PC maker Acer confirmed to ChinaTechNews.com that the company has terminated the operations of its eMachines brand, which was gained during the company’s 2007 $710 million acquisition of GatewayGateway acquired eMachines in 2004 for $30 million, and Packard Bell in 2007.

eMachinesThe termination of the operation of eMachines brand is in line with the streamlining policy announced at the end of 2011 by J.T. Wang, chairman of Acer (ACEIY) The company will continue to implement brand integration and the entire process is expected to be completed in three years. Reportedly, Acer will continue to invest in post-PC Gateway and Packard Bell products to sell “a variety of devices that would have been thought of as beyond the PC in the past,” Lisa Emard, an Acer spokeswoman, said in an email to PCWorld.

Acer was the fourth largest PC vendor behind HP (HPQ), Lenovo (LNVGY) and Dell (DELL), with shipments of around 7 million units, a drop of 28.2 percent compared year over year reports PCWorld.

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eMachines, the ultimate throw-away machine, has fallen victim of the iPad. I had an eMachines for a while at the turn of the century, and yes it survived Y2K. Do you think it matters that Acer stopped selling eMachines?

 

Internet of Things

Adding computer communication to otherwise dumb devices isn’t new. As far back as the 1990s, a whole list of Internet-enabled Coke machines around the world had varying functionality. The granddaddy of them all was the Coke machine at Carnegie Mellon University, set up in the 1970s.

Smart meters vulnerable to false data injection

Smart meters vulnerable to false data injectionThe power grid delivers electricity to charge iPads and run data centers. The power grid connect users with electricity producers through interconnected transmission and distribution networks. In these networks, system monitoring is necessary to ensure reliable power grid operation. The analysis of smart meter measurements and power systems are a routine part of system monitoring.

Help Net Security reports that most energy security professionals told nCircle they did not believe smart meters are secure enough. When asked, “Do smart meter installations have enough security controls to protect against false data injection?” 61% of the 104 energy security professionals said “no”. False data injection attacks introduce arbitrary errors into state variables while bypassing existing techniques for bad measurement detection to exploit the power grid.

Patrick Miller, the founder, CEO and president of EnergySec, noted, “Smart meters vary widely in capability and many older meters were not designed to adequately protect against false data injection. It doesn’t help that some communication protocols used by the smart meter infrastructure don’t offer much protection against false data injection either.”

“… we need to make sure that all systems that process usage data, especially those that make autonomous, self-correcting, self-healing decisions, assure data integrity,” Miller added.

Related articles

Railroad Sensors Predict Derailments Wirelessly

Railroad Sensors Predict Derailments WirelesslyUnion Pacific (UNP), the nation’s largest railroad company, has deployed Internet of Things technology throughout its network. according to Dailywirless.org the IoT can predict certain kinds of derailments days or weeks before they are likely to occur. Theis will improve safety and avoid millions of dollars in damages.

According to the article, Union Pacific, which moves 900 trains a day, started using acoustic sensors 10 years ago to monitor noises from vibrations of ball bearings in train wheels. This allows the company to get trains off the track before a faulty bearing causes a derailment. More recently, the company started using visual sensors that can detect when wheels begin to flatten–another factor that can cause accidents on the rails.

Lynden Tennison, CIO at Union Pacific, told CIO Journal, that the company can now check 40 million patterns every day and can alert the train operators of any anomaly in a bearing within five minutes. “Our goal was to design a system that requires very little maintenance,” he said.

To do this, Union Pacific worked with Intel (INTC) which addressed some of the unique challenges of designing a wireless sensor network for a rail system (pdf). The blog states that to overcome the battery-life issues, Millennial Net paired its i-Bean wireless technology with “energy harvesting” technology from startup Ferro Solutions. An inductive vibration generates power to send [battery free] at 115 Kbps over a distance of 30 m,” said Tod Riedel, cofounder and vice president of business development at Millennial Net.

Are you ready for appliances that are smarter than you?

Are you ready for appliances that are smarter than you? Stacey Higginbotham at GigaOM asks “Are you ready for appliances that are smarter than you?” She points out that LG has introduced its first connected appliance, a Smart Thinq refrigerator that knows what’s inside it. The appliance can communicate with your phone. Your kitchen is about to get a similar level of connectivity as your living room.

The Smart Thinq refrigerator got a lot of press at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas as smart appliances were all the rage. The Android-based OS that enabled the fridge to communicate with your smartphone and share information like the contents of the fridge excited the press. The idea, according to the author, was that when someone got home from the grocery store they could choose to tell the fridge what was inside using a touchscreen or they could scan a bar code on their receipt that would contain the information about their purchases.

In this ideal world, the fridge would then be able to suggest recipes for the family based on their weight goals, age, gender and whatnot. If the consumer selected a fridge-offered recipe the appliance could shoot the recipe to the Smart Thinq oven and it could preheat. All of the connectivity occurs via Wi-Fi, and controled by the phone and in the touchscreen.

The article explains that other features include such as calorie counting and notifications of expiration dates. And if grocery stores take part – then the fridge could show when certain items are out and order them for home delivery.

Is Your Dishwasher Really Yearning for the Internet?

Is Your Dishwasher Really Yearning for the Internet? A startup called Ube thinks so. The firm is betting that smart devices and smartphone apps will make home automation cheap and easy.

In MIT’s Technology Review article “Is Your Dishwasher Really Yearning for the Internet?” Glen Burchers Ube’s chief marketing officer says that more and more home gadgets will ship with microprocessors, enabling the automation and remote control of everything from your lights to your laundry. Until this is a widespread reality, he’d like to sell you a wall outlet.

The wall outlet includes an ARM processor, runs Google’s Android mobile operating system, and can connect to the Internet. This means anything you plug into it can be controlled via your smartphone, and it will also track how much power your devices are consuming.

According to TR, the startup plans to sell the outlet along with a “smart” dimmer switch and plug for $60 to $70 apiece. The Austin, TX firm also plans to offer a free smartphone app that can control these and other Internet-enabled devices.

The blog reports that the Ube app will access a Wi-Fi network to scan for nearby Internet-enabled devices it can manage and lets you know what it can control. Mr. Burchers says the app can control more than 200 devices, most of which are gaming systems, set-top boxes, and TVs.

Mr. Burchers believes that Ube’s first products are just the beginning. He told TR most new electronics will be able to connect to the Web, and home builders will offer smart dimmers to new home buyers as they do granite countertops.

 

Tablet Info

iPad thefts from Cleveland Heights-University Heights middle school students prompt community soul searching

iPad thefts from Cleveland Heights-University Heights middle school students prompt community soul searching The Cleveland.com reports that iPad thefts from middle school students in Cleveland Heights-University Heights school district is causing an iPad re-think.

The school district gave 1,300 Apple (AAPL) iPads to middle school students at the start of the school year. The report says students were permitted to take the iPads home as a continuing educational tool.

The experiment lasted less than three weeks because the students became targets for thieves. Between Sept. 26 and Oct. 13, a dozen middle school students had the iPads stolen while on their way to and from school, Cleveland Heights police chief Jeff Richardson said.

Since mid October, the district has collected the iPads at the end of the school day and students no longer could take them home.

More than 130 people attended a meeting seeking answers about how to proceed and whether crime will win out over education. The reporter writes that the meeting was meant as an information-gathering session for police, principals and other officials to determine if the district could safely revive the “Take home iPad Plan” sometime in the near future.  Crowd reaction was mixed about how to proceed.

Superintendent John Deasy’s $17.5M request for computer tablet funds nixed

StopThe Los Angles Daily News reports that the panel that oversees spending of Los Angeles Unified’s bond revenue refused Superintendent John Deasy’s request for nearly $17.5 million to jump-start the purchase of computer tablets for every student.

The Bond Oversight Committee voted 7-3 for the plan, but that was one vote short of the eight needed for passage, officials said.

The $17.5 million would have funded the first phase of his long-range technology program, including the pilot project at 14 secondary schools. Mr. Deasy said the tablets are needed for the district to implement the new curriculum known as Common Core State Standards taking effect in 2014.

Ultimately, he wants to buy tablets for all 650,000 LAUSD students, a project estimated to cost upwards of $400 million.

IDC Figures Show Samsung and ASUS Challenging Apple’s Grip on the Tablet Computing Market

IDC Figures Show Samsung and ASUS Challenging Apple's Grip on the Tablet Computing Market MIT’s Technology Review pointed out new data from IDC suggest that Apple’s dominance of the global tablet computer market may be giving way. Competing tablet makers, led by Samsung (005930), gained substantial ground during the third quarter of 2012.

Apple‘s (AAPL) market share dropped from 65 percent in the second quarter to just over 50 percent in the third quarter. Meanwhile, Samsung share doubled to 18 percent, and Amazon (AMZN) and ASUS (2357) each saw their share rise from under five percent to around nine percent.

2012 3Q Worldwide tablet shipments

As is evident from the graph above, TR concludes that it’s too early to tell how quickly the market is diversifying. Apple’s lag was at least partly due to rumors about its plans to release the iPad Mini, which led some consumers to hold off on buying a new iPad, according to IDC. Now that the Mini is out, analysts expect Apple to have a strong fourth quarter.

The iPad Mini’s $329 starting price, however, is well above that of many Google (GOOG) Android tablets, which is why IDC’s analysts believe there is “plenty of room for Android vendors to build upon the success they achieved in the third quarter.”

Android-powered smartphones are already more popular than Apple’s iPhone in the U.S. as well as other countries, like China

Tablet Makers Pursue Public Schools

Tablet Makers Pursue Public SchoolsSchools are a large and growing market for Apple’s iPad. Teachers claim that tablets help students with lessons, improve memory and language skills, and cause them to act more independently. The excitement among tablet makers is almost as great. Tablet makers like Apple are pursuing public schools for more sales.

MIT’s Technology Review brings us data from IDC which says global shipments of tablets will reach 177 million this year, and 11 million of them were purchased by businesses or government of those, IDC analyst Tom Mainelli says, the “vast majority” were sold to schools.

Mr. Mainelli thinks that within a few years all U.S. students will have some access to a tablet at school. With 55 million students in the country’s schools, that’s a lot of potential sales. The article says it’s not just a one-time product push: beyond selling tablets to schools and districts, tablet makers see a chance to set up future sales by establishing brand loyalty with young users. “All these guys see huge opportunities here,” he says.

The most successful tablet maker in the education market is Apple (AAPL). In its July 2012 quarterly report, the company said it sold one million iPads to schools. TR notes that Apple hasn’t reported education numbers since then, but it did unveil a smaller, cheaper model that it expects will also appeal to students and educators: the $329 iPad Mini.

Amazon (AMZN) also highlighted its interest in the education market with the debut of Whispercast, a service to manage its Kindle e-readers en masse. Jay Marine, vice president of product management for the Kindle, the company sees the education market as “a meaningful business opportunity.”

Smaller companies are making tablets aimed specifically at the education market. Two firms are: CurriculumLoft, which makes the Kuno tablet, and Brainchild, which sells the Kineo.

Brainchild CEO Jeff Cameron claims his company’s $299 tablet, which runs on Google‘s (GOOG) Android software is better than mass-market devices because it was built for educational use. TR says that unlike most tablets, the Kineo has a replaceable battery, resulting in a longer lifespan. Its touch screen is meant to withstand spills, and it has more physical buttons than an iPad.

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