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These Macs mean business

These Macs mean business

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 07 Sep 2008 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

Apple’s products my have a shot at enterprise adoption after all, according to the Enterprise Desktop Alliance. IDC says more companies are building applications for the Macintosh platform

A group of companies that build products to ease the integration of Macs in the enterprise had been separately championing a heterogeneous IT environment where both Macs and Windows can co-exist. Combining those efforts into an umbrella organization seemed like a good idea.

“We started seeing each other at tradeshows, we started talking individually and… we felt that doing it as a whole would be far more powerful than doing it individually,” said co-founder Peter Frankl.

Formed just a few months ago, the consortium, Enterprise Desktop Alliance (EDA), includes LANrev, Group Logic, Centrify, Atempo, and Parallels. It seeks to combat perceptions that an enterprise-wide deployment of Mac machines would be more trouble than it’s worth. “There’s this great misperception out there that Macs are difficult to use and manage in Windows environments. And it’s simply not true,” said Frankl, who is also the founder and chief operating officer at LANrev.

The EDA members want to fill the vacuum around information on Mac deployments available to enterprise IT managers, and help them realize that both platforms, Apple and Windows, can be managed within the same infrastructure.

More in ComputerWorld Canada

Macs in the enterprise: How do you like them Apples?

In fact, the key requirements of enterprise IT — for instance, authentication, management, Active Directory integration, and backup — are already met with tools that exist for Mac machines, and “gives what IT needs, but not everybody knows that,” said Reid Lewis, EDA co-founder and CEO at Group Logic.

Driven away by ennui

It may have been the case that enterprise Mac deployments were tricky due to the lack of Windows-compatible applications and enterprise-specific tools that enable network manageability, said Richard Shim, research manager with IDC’s personal computing group.

“But that’s gradually changing with third-party companies building more applications for the Mac, and those [companies] that allow the Mac to be able to live in the Windows world,” said Shim, referring to vendors like those comprising the EDA.

But what’s changed accordingly is the market share that Macs hold in the enterprise, rising to eight per cent from approximately four, according to Vince Londini, research analyst with London, Ont.-based Info-Tech Group Ltd.

There are several drivers pushing the growth. For one, said Londini, there’s “an ennui with Microsoft” given the lengthy position of dominance the software mogul has held. “Apple has been successful at capitalizing on that by pitching itself as the bright, cheery, usable alternative.”

And the release of the Vista operating system that Londini described as “not stunningly, startlingly better” than its predecessor is yet another driver. He doesn’t think Vista is necessarily bad but at the end of the day, users question whether the upgrade was worth the time and money.


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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more

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Comments (4)

Make Macs Work Harder
by andre folot 8/27/2008 12:00:00 AMtu peut lire cet article de 3 pages a ITworldcanada.com Au haut de la page dans le petit carr? Quicklink entre 084688
Systems Manager
by Tracey Reid 9/8/2008 12:00:00 AMThe newspaper industry has successfully used Mac with Windows-mixed environments for a long while. I hope it is finally becoming apparent to business and software developers that Macs are more reliable, quicker and have almost no viruses to speak of. What could be a better business solution?
BSD & Linux?
by Joe McGuire 8/26/2008 12:00:00 AMKathleen, You quote in your article that BSD is of the Linux family. It's a fairly common opinion, but it is not in fact the case. BSD has been in existence far longer than Linux, has a somewhat different outlook on kernel structure and is distributed under a different license. Sure, many BSDs offer Linux binary compatibility, but that is a function of BSD. It may be closer to Linux than, say, AIX, but it's no more than a distant cousin twice removed.
BSD & Linux?
by Joe McGuire 8/26/2008 12:00:00 AMKathleen, You quote in your article that BSD is of the Linux family. It's a fairly common opinion, but it is not in fact the case. BSD has been in existence far longer than Linux, has a somewhat different outlook on kernel structure and is distributed under a different license. Sure, many BSDs offer Linux binary compatibility, but that is a function of BSD. It may be closer to Linux than, say, AIX, but it's no more than a distant cousin twice removed.
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