Samsung Knox 2.0: Ready For Small Businesses And Cloud Management

Samsung Knox 2.0: Ready For Small Businesses And Cloud ManagementLaunched last year at Mobile World Congress, Samsung’s security platform Knox is about to see a second evolution which will bring significantly important new use cases and potentially serve a lot more users in the small business (SMB) space. To mark the importance of Knox in Samsung’s overall strategy, Mr. J.K Shin himself (CEO of Samsung Mobile and IT) presided the event and introduced a high-level view of the current state of affairs and where the platform was going. (more…)

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  • Samsung Knox 2.0: Ready For Small Businesses And Cloud Management original content from Ubergizmo.

        



    FreedomPop now lets you bring your own phone, offers $99 HTC Evo 4G

    FreedomPop now lets you bring your own phone, offers $99 HTC Evo 4G

    FreedomPop’s free cellphone plan is tempting, but we doubt that everyone wants to use one of the carrier’s few available handsets. Thankfully, they won’t have to. The discount provider has just launched a bring-your-own option that lets anyone with a compatible Sprint phone (CDMA plus LTE or WiMAX) jump on FreedomPop’s extra-frugal services. Subscribers who don’t yet have a phone are getting a little more choice at the same time; the carrier is simultaneously resurrecting the HTC Evo 4G, which is available for $99 contract-free. You’ll still have to live in an area with healthy Sprint coverage for FreedomPop’s plans to make sense, but the new option means that you won’t have to abandon a favorite device if you’re interested in switching.

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    Source: FreedomPop

    T-Mobile brings Simple Choice plans to business customers on August 26th

    TMobile brings Simple Choice plans to business customers on August 26th

    Coming August 26th, T-Mobile will make its Simple Choice plans available to business customers, effectively severing the tie between the cost of devices and mobile service. The pricing structure is geared to customers with six lines or more, with rates that start at $20 per line for unlimited talk, text and 500MB of overage-free / throttled data. Keeping in line with its approach on the consumer end, business users can then pay for additional data, starting at $30 for an extra 2GB and going up to $50 for unlimited 4G data (and 2.5GB of limited hotspot use). T-Mobile is hoping its new approach will be popular with the BYOD crowd, but it’s also performing a balancing act with a subsidized Simple Choice Classic plan that runs an additional $20 per month. Meanwhile, companies with less than six lines can tap into T-Mobile’s small business plans, which parallels the pricing that individuals pay.

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    Via: Android Community

    Source: T-Mobile

    MetroPCS launches GSM-based Bring Your Own Phone service in four cities

    MetroPCS launches BYOD service for GSM phones in four cities

    We’d heard rumors that T-Mobile would take advantage of its MetroPCS deal to offer bring-your-own-device service to more customers, and it isn’t letting us down with the launch of MetroPCS’ Bring Your Own Phone. Much like T-Mobile itself, MetroPCS can now offer its plans to customers with unlocked GSM phones. Don’t be too quick to hop aboard, however. Only those in Boston, Dallas, Hartford and Las Vegas can switch service right away, and the carrier’s official support is limited to Android, iPhone and Windows Phone devices. Should everything line up, though, Bring Your Own Phone is available today.

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    Via: FierceWireless

    Source: MetroPCS

    More Data Showing iOS, Especially The iPhone, Still Killing It In The Enterprise, At Android’s Expense

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    Apple’s iOS is consolidating its grip on the enterprise market and taking share from Android, according to customer data from enterprise file sharing and hybrid cloud storage company Egnyte, which offers cloud back-up and storage services for a mix of customers, from large corporates with thousands of seats to SMEs with just a handful.

    Of course different enterprises have very different needs and requirements when it comes to mobile devices. Take a look at governments, for instance, and you’d be convinced BlackBerry is still killing it. But as a snapshot of the mobile OSes being favoured by different sized companies, mostly U.S.-based (80 percent of the data, with the other 20 percent pertaining to European businesses), this data is an interesting subset to add to the pile.

    The data, shared directly with TechCrunch, covers 100,000 of Egnyte’s paying customers over the last year-and-a-half+, tracking which OS they are using to access its services on mobile devices and also splitting out iPhone and iPad use. The numbers look strong for Apple, with the iPhone especially growing its proportion of users since the second half of 2011 to-date — perhaps helped by the halo effect of iPads arriving in the enterprise and persuading business folk to trade their BlackBerrys for iPhones. Egnyte’s data doesn’t specifically refer to BlackBerrys but does show Apple taking share away from Android.

    “Apple seems to have at least temporarily won the hearts and minds of business users with its products accounting for about 70 percent of our traffic,” Egnyte told TechCrunch.

    In Q3/Q4 2011, Egnyte’s data shows the following device breakdown — giving iOS a 68 percent majority of Egnyte’s enterprise user-base:

    • iPhone 28%
    • iPad 40%
    • Android 30%  (phones and tablets)
    • other 2%

    In 2012, the iPhone grew its proportion, while the iPad’s very sizeable share shrank to below a third — suggesting iPhone usage cannibalised iPad usage to an extent. Overall, though, Apple’s percentage rose to 69 percent:

    • iPhone 42%
    • iPad 27%
    • Android 30% (phones and tablets)
    • other 1%

    Egnyte has also scraped some early data for Q1 2013, which shows both iPhone and iPad usage rising — this time apparently at the expense of Android phones and tablets, which had previously held a steady share of 30 percent. There is also no sign as yet of a Microsoft enterprise mobile resurgence with its Windows Phone OS (the ‘other’ catch-all category doesn’t yet figure in the 2013 data). Apple holds a whopping, ‘Pacman-shaped’ 78 percent share of the user base as of Q1 2013:

    • iPhone 48%
    • iPad 30%
    • Android 22% (phones and tablets)

    Egnyte’s data on enterprise users’ preference for iPhones tallies broadly with data from mobile device management company Good Technology, covered recently by CITEworld. Good reported even higher percentages for iOS — with nearly 77 percent of devices activated by its corporate customers in Q4 2012 powered by iOS, up from 71 percent in the fourth quarter of 2011. Good also found Android’s enterprise mobile shared declining, dropping to 22.7 percent in Q4 2012, down from 29 percent in Q4 2011. (It also tracked a 0.5 percent rise for Windows Phone.)

    Returning to Egnyte’s data for 2012, almost a fifth (19 percent) of the Android traffic was generated using a Nook tablet — so despite the iPad’s popularity with business users, some enterprises are evidently not immune to the lure of using cheaper tablet hardware.

    The company also breaks out Wi-Fi access by device for 2012. It found that 40 percent of iPad sessions occurred over Wi-Fi, while just 31 percent of iPhone sessions did — suggesting the iPhone still prevails as the device of choice in the most mobile situations, ie when users are moving around a lot or aren’t in range of a Wi-Fi network (perhaps because businesses have purchased Wi-Fi only iPads to keep ongoing costs down).

    Egnyte speculates that smartphones are fractionally quicker to begin using than tablets, typically sitting within easy reach, so tend to be the device of choice for viewing files on the fly, with users waiting for a more comfortable environment before getting out the tablet to do some editing.  ”Overall, tablet use in the corporate marketplace hasn’t been as high as we would expect, but… we think this may be more due to people’s love affairs with their phones, than for any lack in the capabilities of a tablet,” the company said.

    Commenting generally on the data, Egnyte told TechCrunch:

    While initially iPads dominated our use, iPhones have taken over.  2011 use showed the iPad accounting for 40 percent of our usage, in 2012 iPhones are now 42 percent of usage, and Android has remained constant at about 30 percent of use. There are two interesting points here, first, Apple seems to have at least temporarily won the hearts and minds of business users with its products accounting for about 70 percent of our traffic. This is important because it’s a flip-flop from the days of old, where Apple products were rarely seen in the corporate landscape.   It’s also an indication that when BYOD wrested control over what devices consumers used from IT, they overwhelmingly chose an easy to use product that focused on UI and usability, perhaps even at times over depth.

    The second interesting point is that while tablets are certainly hot, iPhones are driving most of the traffic. This may be due to the fact that the iPad doesn’t replace a laptop yet as the corporate device of choice, but try and take a business person’s smartphone away from them, and you may not have a hand left.  Smartphones are a must have, and we suspect that since people are already checking email on such a phone while they are working remotely, it’s an extra step to get out and bootup your tablet, so if you have a great phone app that does the same thing, just use it to view your files. Most editing we think still happens on the laptop/desktop.  This ‘on the go’ access is further confirmed by the fact that only 31 percent of iPhone sessions occurred over Wi-Fi, that means over three-quarters of access happens via cellular services.

    Finnish BYOD Startup, Miradore, Raises €1.2 Million Series B, Backed By Inventure, For Global Sales Push

    Screen Shot 2012-11-13 at 15.42.06

    Another bring your own device-focused investment to add to the pile: Miradore, a Finnish mobile device management startup, has announced it’s just closed a €1.2 million Series B funding round, with new backers including Finnish VC firm Inventure and Belgian ICT executive Willem Hendrickx. Hendrickx, currently SVP EMEA at Riverbed Technology, has served as an advisor to Miradore since June 2011 and will also now join the board, bringing “extensive expertise in building and developing direct and indirect global sales channels,” according to the startup. Sami Lampinen, managing director at Inventure, also joins the board.

    The investment will be used primarily to strengthen Miradore’s global sales. The majority of its business is still in Finland, but it says partners and sales are “ramping up” in several international markets — including the U.S., UK, Germany, the Netherlands, Belgium, Portugal, Brazil, Singapore and Hong Kong. ”The funding round ensures we have the resources required for the next steps in our path to the global IT and mobile device management markets and the capability to serve both existing and new customers in an optimal way,” said Kristian Järnefelt, CEO of Miradore, in a statement.

    As with other competitors in this space, Miradore’s technology aims to make it easier for organizations to manage the increasingly diverse portfolio of devices being pushed inside their walls by the BYOD trend that’s washing away the prescriptive IT department model of yesteryear. (A recent report by Forrester on mobile adoption in the enterprise found that 66 percent of employees now use two or more devices every day, including desktops, laptops, smartphones and tablets.)

    Miradore offers a single cloud-based dashboard for unified remote management of what it describes as “a wide variety” of computers, tablets and smartphones — a dashboard that it says can scale to cover tens of thousands of devices. Its platform supports Windows, Linux, OS X for Mac, Android, iOS for iPhone/iPad, Symbian and Windows Phone. Key customer segments include managed service providers (MSPs) — who provide IT services to multiple customers with diverse IT environments — and retail chains with a number of geographically dispersed outlets.

    One such partner on the retail side is Fujitsu America, which uses Miradore’s technology in its point-of-sale management offering — branded “Fujitsu Retail Systems Management, powered by Miradore” — although that is not a BYOD-related deployment. The startup says it can also track network printers and routers and switches.

    Järnefelt tells TechCrunch the startup has about 30 active MSP customers — in turn serving a total of around 200 end customers. “Our largest end customer reference is UPM, which is the third largest paper and pulp company in the world, with about 35,000 managed devices, and smallest end customer is a SMB company having just five devices. In total Miradore is used to manage about 200,000 devices,” he says.

    Miradore is not short of big-name competitors. Järnefelt lists the likes of BMC, CA, Symantec, IBM, HP, LanDesk, Kaseya, N-Able, and Dell Kace as offering rival BYOD services, although he reckons Microsoft’s configuration management offerings are at least complementary to what it can offer. “We regard them more as a partner, because we can complement them by offering asset management, license management and some other features too that they do not have,” he notes.

    “Miradore is on the verge of an international breakthrough,” added Inventure’s Lampinen in a statement. “The core team has worked extremely hard to open doors to international markets and has shown great progress in building partnerships and scaling the business. With the new capital, they are better positioned to benefit from the sales potential in growth markets such as Asia and Brazil.”


    Fido switches on LTE, gives Canadians a taste of slightly more budget-minded 4G

    Fido switches on LTE, gives Canadians a taste of slightly more budgetminded 4G

    Canadians have had fairly limited options for LTE-based 4G if they didn’t want to turn to the three main carrier brands: they could go to a Bell-owned Virgin Mobile, and that’s it. While there isn’t a truly independent LTE carrier yet, Rogers’ lower-cost Fido label has just taken its promised LTE access live to at least offer some competition among the smaller names in the field. Calgary, Montreal, Ottawa, St. John’s, Toronto and Vancouver can immediately hop on the network at speeds of up to 100Mbps. Bring-your-own-device users don’t have to pay a premium to get the faster speeds, although there’s currently little choice in hardware if you want to buy straight from the source: the lone LTE device on offer is Sierra Wireless’ AirCard 763S hotspot, which costs $50 on a two-year contract. The flexible rate data-only plan also isn’t the greatest deal, starting at $22 for a gone-in-five-minutes 100MB per month to $92 for 9GB. All the same, light data users in the True North will be glad to know they don’t have to be relegated to 3G to save a few dollars.

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    Fido switches on LTE, gives Canadians a taste of slightly more budget-minded 4G originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 30 Aug 2012 13:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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    Qantas replacing staff BlackBerrys with iPhones, Australian flights may be held up by Tiny Wings

    Qantas Airbus A380

    RIM has already been feeling the sting of lost customers. That sting isn’t getting any gentler, as Qantas just outlined plans to replace all 1,300 BlackBerry phones in the fleet with iPhones. As the airline explains to The Australian, a mix of cost overhead and employee feedback is steering the decision to wing it Apple’s way. We also imagine Qantas may be facing the usual airline dilemma of having to replace large swaths of equipment after clinging to old technology for dear life. Naturally, the company is keen to reassure passengers that the security is up to snuff as well, and a Bring Your Own Device effort could see Android fly once it’s approved. The time scale is indefinite enough that it’s unlikely that we’ll see the airline crew members distracted by a game of Amazing Alex on that next flight to Melbourne — we only know that they’ll be weaning themselves off of BlackBerry Messenger before too long.

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    Qantas replacing staff BlackBerrys with iPhones, Australian flights may be held up by Tiny Wings originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 16 Jul 2012 18:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Permalink N4BB  |  sourceThe Australian (subscription required)  | Email this | Comments