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iPhone in the enterprise? Don't go there

iPhone in the enterprise? Don't go there

By:   On: 14 Jan 2008 For: Network World Canada Creator

Analysts warn the iPhone's security and application support aren't up to snuff for enterprise users.

For months, it was a hotly debated rumour. Then it was a widely anticipated future launch. Then, in January 2007 at Macworld Expo, Apple CEO Steve Jobs took the wraps off the iPhone, now arguably the company’s flagship product.

In a little over two months, Apple sold one million of the smart phones, despite the fact that they were available only in one country, the U.S., and from one carrier, AT&T. With that phenomenal demand, research firm Gartner Inc. says Apple could become one of the Top 5 smart phone suppliers by the end of this year.

Gartner distinguished analyst Ken Dulaney says that from a business perspective, the iPhone is emblematic of the consumerization of IT, and may drive a renewed interest from the enterprise.

But there will be challenges integrating the iPhone with the enterprise. While it’s still unavailable in Canada to date, Rogers Wireless is slated to market them, though on no firm timeline. Companies here can start to look at how – and if – they will accommodate the iPhone and the generations of phones from other companies that will follow Apple’s lead.

For now, Dulaney’s saying: Don’t go there.

“It does not meet minimum security requirements for our client base,” Dulaney says. “Because you don’t have access to the development tools, no one independently can check the security of the device.”

Read more

CIO.com's Al Sacco provides 10 reasons to keep the iPhone out of the enterprise.

The fact that enterprises can’t install third-party software on it makes it a bad fit, he says. It’s that ability that allows companies to enforce policies on their handhelds like forcing password changes or strong passwords, or wiping the device if it’s lost, Dulaney says. “None of those can be implemented on iPhones because (Apple does) not permit the device to be open at this point,” he says.

“I believe it’ll take them about a year before they put these things into the environment, at which time I would change my recommendation to our client base to permit it in the enterprise, but only to a limited extent. The problem with it for applications is there is no other hardware supplier for the iPhone, and that would violate a basic principle of the enterprise (which says) they have to have backup vendors.”

Michelle Warren, a Toronto-based senior analyst with Info-Tech Research Group, says Apple’s consumer-focused practices aren’t always enterprise friendly.

“IT departments have to be responsive to the business managers and what they want to do,” Warren says. “But when it comes to IT security and corporate security, the IT manager has to reign a little bit there in order to provide a secure environment for the enterprise.”


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