Now that we know the Apple iPad exists and that it is similar to the
iPhone/iTouch, what are the implications for enterprise IT
managers?
If the "consumerization of IT" trend continues, it's safe to say
that the iPad will start showing up on corporate networks as employees bring
their personal iPad to the office.
It's also safe to say that some employees will want to integrate their work
e-mail and calendar information with those applications on the iPad. And since
there are thousands of business-oriented App Store applications already
available for the iPhone and iTouch, including connectors to Salesforce.com,
it's only a question of "when" not "if" the iPad will wend
its way into your organization.
Since the iPad isn't shipping today, here are my speculative thoughts about
what IT enterprise managers should be thinking about to preempt iPad
issues.
Will the iPad, like the iPhone, integrate with business messaging and
management infrastructure? The iPhone works with Microsoft Exchange to provide
over-the-air push e-mail, calendar and contacts synchronization. The iPhone
also supports Cisco IPSec VPN and WPA2 for secure network access. If Apple
provides similar integrations for the iPad, then I'll be looking for remote
wipe and other policy controls that are available on the iPhone to be applied
to the iPad.
My labs colleague Andrew Garcia has pointed out that mobile device
management companies have been developing products to deal with iPhone
monitoring, provisioning and configuration. If the iPad uses the same OS as the
iPhone, it seems that these tools will also work to manage the iPad too. Now is
the right time to ask vendors including Boxtone, Zenprise, Odyssey and
MobileIron about their plans to support the iPad.
At the Jan. 27 iPad announcement, much was made of the single-charge battery
life. Unlike the MacBook Pro announcement last year, nothing was said about the
expected lifespan of the sealed iPad battery. Steve Jobs did say that iPad
components are highly recyclable.
All this implies that the iPad is intended to last the span of its battery
and then be disposed of, which is not intrinsically negative from a corporate
point of view. This does mean that in-house IT service of iPad hardware
(battery and drive) will likely be limited to issuing a new unit with user data
installed rather than break/fix battery or drive replacement that I normally
associate with mobile device maintenance.
The iPad will make its way into the business computing world. IT managers
have an opportunity to use skills already honed from managing the iPhone to get
a jump on ensuring that the iPad entry adds to productivity.