BYOD:帶上你的設(shè)備來上班
????當(dāng)年黑莓(Blackberry)統(tǒng)治企業(yè)市場時,IT部門的工作是何等輕松。如今的辦公室已經(jīng)被iPhone、Android手機(jī)以及大量平板電腦所充斥,而且越來越多的公司和機(jī)構(gòu)甚至還鼓勵員工用“BYOD”(帶上你自己的設(shè)備——例如,購買任何你喜歡的設(shè)備)方式來包辦與工作相關(guān)的電話、電子郵件和其它溝通聯(lián)絡(luò)。 ????如今,很多IT團(tuán)隊都被不斷增多的個人設(shè)備所困擾,所幸還有不少公司在幫助他們。MobileIron是一家位于加州山景城的公司,它向客戶出售軟件,幫助他們跟蹤、管理及保護(hù)(這一點最重要)各種無線接入的手機(jī)和平板電腦。MobileIron的軟件囊括所有主流移動操作平臺,其客戶包括芝加哥大學(xué)(the University of Chicago)和半導(dǎo)體公司科磊(KLA-Tencor)等。 ????利用MobileIron的軟件,公司技術(shù)人員可以監(jiān)控大量手機(jī),而且一旦移動設(shè)備落入不法分子之手,還能遠(yuǎn)程清除設(shè)備上的敏感數(shù)據(jù)。MobileIron還向公司員工提供工具,以便他們自行完成Wi-Fi連接注冊、定位丟失設(shè)備等維護(hù)工作。如果員工遺漏了關(guān)鍵更新或是用非法方式操作了設(shè)備,系統(tǒng)會及時向IT部門發(fā)出警告。位于紐約的律師事務(wù)所Proskauer最近給600位律師配備了iPad,該公司高級技術(shù)戰(zhàn)略家馬爾科姆?科林伍德表示:“MobileIron能讓我們管理公司的iPad用戶。如果蘋果(Apple)發(fā)布了安全更新,我們能非常迅速地發(fā)現(xiàn)哪些員工已經(jīng)升級到最新版iOS,我們還能跟蹤那些尚未升級的員工?!?/p> ????對移動設(shè)備進(jìn)行管理的想法在好些年前就出現(xiàn)了。MobileIron創(chuàng)立于2007年,其競爭對手——位于加州紅木海岸的Good Technology則創(chuàng)立于1996年。但這一行業(yè)在過去一年半才開始火爆起來。今年早些時候,科技調(diào)查公司高德納(Gartner)發(fā)布了一份針對該產(chǎn)業(yè)的分析報告,包括了23家提供設(shè)備監(jiān)控工具的公司,其中不乏提供全方位安全方案和企業(yè)級軟件的公司,如英特爾(Intel)旗下的邁克菲(McAfee)、SAP旗下的賽貝斯(Sybase)等。 ????MobileIron表示歡迎競爭,該公司最近募集到2,000萬美元資金并在3個月內(nèi)簽下了200家客戶。MobileIron的首席執(zhí)行官鮑比?廷克稱:“我認(rèn)為目前有機(jī)會打造一項獨立的、有利可圖的產(chǎn)業(yè)。(MobileIron目前并未盈利,不過其募集資金總額已達(dá)5,700萬美元。)我們的市場規(guī)模正在不斷壯大,發(fā)展速度也越來越快?!贝_實如此,隨著越來越多的公司給予員工日益多樣化的移動設(shè)備選擇權(quán)(Good Technology稱,公司客戶中,有60%已向員工提供了BYOD方案,還有30%則計劃在今年年底前推出該方案),移動管理行業(yè)將會相當(dāng)繁忙。 ????譯者:項航 |
????Life was a whole lot simpler for IT departments back when BlackBerrys ruled the workplace. Today's offices are populated with iPhones, Android-powered gadgets, and a slew of tablets -- and a growing number of companies and institutions even encourage employees to "BYOD" (bring your own device -- i.e., buy whatever you like) for work-related calls, e-mails, and other communications. ????Now a cadre of companies is stepping up to help beleaguered IT teams handle device proliferation. MobileIron, based in Mountain View, Calif., sells software that enables its customers -- including the University of Chicago and semiconductor company KLA-Tencor (KLAC) -- to track, manage, and, most important, secure a broad range of wireless phones and tablets on all the major mobile operating platforms. ????MobileIron's software lets a company's techies monitor their fleets of phones and remotely wipe a device clean of sensitive data if it falls into the wrong hands. It also offers a tool that allows employees to do some self-maintenance of their machines, such as registering for Wi-Fi access or locating a lost device. And if workers miss an important update or start using their devices in an unauthorized way, the system alerts the IT department. "MobileIron gives us the ability to reach out to our iPad users," says Malcolm Collingwood, senior technology strategist at Proskauer, a New York City-based law firm that recently outfitted 600 attorneys with iPads. "If Apple (AAPL) comes out with security updates, we can very quickly see who has upgraded to the latest version of iOS and then follow up with people who haven't." ????The idea of mobile management has been around a few years -- MobileIron launched in 2007 and rival Good Technology of Redwood Shores, Calif., in 1996 -- but the field has exploded in the past 18 months. Gartner earlier this year published an analysis of the industry and identified 23 companies offering device-monitoring tools, including full-service security and enterprise-software companies such as Intel-owned McAfee (INTC) and Sybase, an SAP (SAP) company. ????MobileIron, which recently raised $20 million in funding and signed up 200 customers in three months, welcomes the competition. "We think there's an opportunity here to build a standalone, profitable business," says Bob Tinker, MobileIron's CEO. (The company is not yet profitable but has raised a total of $57 million.) "We're in a market that just got really big really fast." Indeed, with more companies giving their employees more wireless choices (Good says 60% of its customers already offer employees a BYOD program, and another 30% plan to do so by the end of the year), there's plenty of work to go around. |