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A group of five vendors has formed an alliance to help push Macintosh desktops into managed Windows environments on corporate networks.
The efforts of the Enterprise Desktop Alliance (EDA) – which was formed Monday by Atempo, Centrify, Group Logic, LANrev and Parallels – are not about displacing Windows but raising awareness that the Macintosh is a viable alternative because it can be managed using integration tools and existing Windows infrastructure.
Many IT issues with the Macintosh in the past had to do with networking and management.
The vendors, which are hoping to add some user members, develop tools that help companies deploy, integrate and manage Macintoshes using Windows-based infrastructure.
The evolution of the Macintosh platform over the past few years, including a shift to the Intel architecture, has brought it into closer alignment with the needs of enterprise computing even though Apple largely ignores the corporate market.
Surveys of Macintosh penetration in the enterprise typically peg market share around 4% to 8%. In October of last year, IDC reported that the Macintosh’s share of the PC shipment market was up to 6.9%. Also, the rise in laptop use, the popularity of Macintosh-based notebooks, and devices like the iPhone are helping fuel both back-door raids and front-office assaults by the Macintosh.
“Sometimes it happens top down,” says Peter Frankl, COO of LANrev. “We have one customer where the top four C-level executives ended up getting iPhones in an all Windows infrastructure. They liked them so much they got MacBook Pros and then suddenly IT was charged with supporting its four most important clients using MacBooks.”
Technologies like virtualization and Apple’s BootCamp, which both let Windows and Windows-based applications run on the Macintosh, also are blurring the lines between an either/or choice for IT. Also, migration costs and hardware overhauls associated with Microsoft’s Vista are leading corporate IT to explore all its options.
Now the EDA is saying infrastructure to support the Macintosh platform should not be an issue because for Windows shops it is already there.
EDA members develop software that hits a number of integration points between Windows and Macintosh with Atempo providing data protection, Centrify identity and access management, Group Logic file and print services, LANrev systems lifecy-cle management and Parallels virtualization.
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Comments (3)
What Alliance?By Anonymous on July 8, 2008, 2:43 pmThis is really a major event in the world of OS's. Five companies that no one has ever heard of are forming an alliance. Watch out PC-based corporate users. We...
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Mac in Windows EnterpriseBy Anonymous on July 3, 2008, 5:32 pmHow about an article that addresses the cost of the Windows license and the need for additional third party products like ADmit-Mac to make Macs really work with...
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Consortiums seem to be back in vogueBy Microsoft Subnet on July 3, 2008, 10:49 amThis new consortium of software makers that make products to allow Windows apps (and Windows infrastructure) to work with Macs is but one example of a new consortium...
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