Podcasts about airwatch

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Best podcasts about airwatch

Latest podcast episodes about airwatch

Rights, Rorts and Rants
Airwatch air monitor project launch

Rights, Rorts and Rants

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 22:26


BMUC's Ann-Maree McEwan and presenter Merran Maclaren discuss the upcoming launch of the Airwatch project where 20 Air monitors have been installed throughout the Greater Blue Mountains region. You can book a free ticket to the launch here. BMUC's community Airwatch campaign is covered. Ann-Maree explains some of the science of how the monitors work. From the launch onwards BMUC wants everyone to access air quality using these monitors by searching the Purpleair map at map.purpleair.com and looking for your nearest location. The interview illustrates the importance of a campaign that involved the whole community, unions and state and local government, environmental scientists, Planetary Health Initiative, Lithgow Environment Group and the 20 participants who agreed to instal a PurpleAir monitor, and succeeded after 7 years. An example of how many worthwhile campaigns usually take a long time to come to fruition. The show was first broadcast on Radio Blue Mountains 89.1 FM on 20 September 2024 by Blue Mountains Unions & Community and presented by Merran Maclaren. The podcast was produced by Ann-Maree McEwan.  If you'd like to add to the discussion, you can ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠leave an audio comment about our show⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, which may be added to one of our podcasts. ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Apply to be a guest on our radio show⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, Rights, Rorts and Rants on Radio Blue Mountains 89.1FM, Fridays from 4pm to 6pm or livestreamed via ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠rbm.org.au.⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Join a union - 1300 486 466 or ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠join online⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠.   Join ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠BMUC⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠. Blue Mountains Unions & Community pays its respect to and acknowledges, the Darug and Gundungurra First Peoples of the Blue Mountains area and acknowledges this is Aboriginal Land that was never ceded. Authorised by D Smith, Secretary, ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠Blue Mountains Unions Council Inc⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠, 52-52A Great Western Hwy, Mount Victoria, NSW.

Hyphens Haven
Jay Allen - Producer, Co-Head of Development at Swirl Films

Hyphens Haven

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 8, 2024 32:02


Connect to Jay Allen on InstagramConnect to Jay Allen on FacebookSwirl Films WebsiteAs Co-Head of Development at Swirl Films, Jay Allen is a results-driven professional who is committed to bringing compelling content to audiences worldwide. He oversees the entire content production process, from conception to post-production, serving as the main liaison and point of contact for the projects he leads. Jay's most significant accomplishment to date was taking the popular TV One television series, UNCENSORED, from ideation to a fully-formed show that has consistently dominated Ad-Supported Cable among African-American viewers in its time slot. Additionally, Jay played a pivotal role in co-creating and producing the highly acclaimed "Freaknik: The Wildest Party Never Told" documentary for Hulu, which chronicles the history and cultural significance of the annual spring break event in Atlanta.Originally from Charlotte, North Carolina, Jay is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Wilmington, where he majored in Communication and Media Studies and was a member of the Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity. He is also an Instagram influencer with over 16,000 followers, using the platform to showcase his passion for storytelling.Before joining Swirl Films, Jay honed his skills in Enterprise Sales at the Atlanta startup Airwatch, which sold to VMware for $2 billion in 2014.Now is a great time to act on your dreams! If this episode helped you, please share to a friend!https://www.instagram.com/HyphensHaven/http://www.dreamofdrea.com/Watch on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@DreamofDreaLLC/podcasts

SMB Community Podcast by Karl W. Palachuk
The IT Magnificent Seven

SMB Community Podcast by Karl W. Palachuk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2023 39:43


Segment One: MSP Question of the Week/Notes on the News We combine our two segments-- With Twitter X's arrival (and departure, which social media should MSPs be using? We compile a list of our social media necassities for MSPs and how to take advantage of it.  And...Is our industry dominated by the “Magnificent Seven?” Reuters: “The outsized gains have come with big earnings expectations for the seven companies: Apple (AAPL.O), Microsoft (MSFT.O), Alphabet (GOOGL.O), Amazon (AMZN.O), Nvidia (NVDA.O), Tesla (TSLA.O) and Meta Platforms (META.O). BofA Global Research projects they will increase earnings by an average of 19% over the next 12 months, more than double the 8% estimated rise for the rest of the S&P 500.” --- Segment Two: Fives Minutes with A Smart Person - Lucas Acosta  "I'm a fixer. I left Apple to provide business-class solutions for businesses using Apple products. We've got a fantastic team offering a few specific solutions for businesses using Apple products. I'd love to connect and learn how you're using your Mac, iPhone, iPad, Watch, or HomePod! ;) Specialties: Mobile Device Management (MDM), Mobile Content Management (MCM), Asdeq, MobileIron, AirWatch, Casper Suite, Mac consulting, iPad consulting, Apple IT, Mobile Security, Mac training, iPad training, Group training. Did I mention I work with people I love? I'm proud of every single one of my team members. I hire only full-time W2 employees with benefits. We've got a fantastic culture built around servanthood, and hospitality." Lucas's LinkedIn page:  https://www.linkedin.com/in/lucasacosta/ Blog and newsletter on MSP best practices: https://lucasacosta.com  --- Our Social Media:  https://www.linkedin.com/in/james-kernan-varcoach/ https://www.instagram.com/james_kernan/?hl=en https://twitter.com/JKernan https://www.linkedin.com/in/karlpalachuk/ https://www.instagram.com/karlpalachuk/?hl=en https://www.youtube.com/@smallbizthoughts   Sponsor Memo: Small Biz Thoughts Technology Community NOW is the time to join the Small Biz Thoughts Technology Community. Check us out at https://SmallBizThoughts.ORG There is no better value for training and education in managed services. Forms, templates, and checklists are just the start. Our Community includes ALL of the best-selling books on managed services in all available formats, plus free 5-week courses, members-only programs, and the best business training available to managed service providers anywhere. Prices go up July 1st. Join now and you can lock in the lower price for life. See all the details and Join us today at https://www.SmallBizThoughts.org.

The Cloudcast
The Decisions that VMware made

The Cloudcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2023 31:17


VMware was one of the great IT successes, but their journey from start-up to behemoth was fraught with decisions that led to the Broadcom acquisition. How did they get here?SHOW: 685CLOUD NEWS OF THE WEEK - http://bit.ly/cloudcast-cnotwCHECK OUT OUR NEW PODCAST - "CLOUDCAST BASICS"SHOW SPONSORS:CloudZero - Cloud Cost Intelligence for Engineering TeamsSection is the fastest, easiest and most cost-effective way to run applications across multiple clouds.Cloudcast listeners can experience the benefits of unparalleled performance and uptime, plus the ability to scale as needed. There's no risk to try it out – run one project for free with no credit card required!SHOW NOTES:EMC acquires VMware for $625M (2004)VMware's 1st IPO (2007)History of VMware acquisitionsDiane Greene replaced by Paul Maritz as CEO (2008)VMware revenue history (2005-2022)VMware acquires Nicira (2012)Pat Gelsinger named CEO (2012)VMware launches VMware vCloud Hybrid Service (2013)VMware launches vSAN hyper converged (2013)VMware acquires Airwatch (2014)VMware on AWS cloud service announced at AWS re:Invent (2016) HOW MUCH VMWARE COULD CONTROL MAKE NEVER TRULY BE KNOWNVMware was acquired by EMC in 2004, and operated as an “independent” entity, but how independent was it really?What might VMware have become if they weren't owned by an infrastructure company?HOW TO FOCUS ON CHANGES, ADDITIONS, AND SUBTRACTIONSWhat happens if VMware is allowed to be spun out from EMC? How much did it impact growth? How much did it impact innovation?What happens if Paul Maritz doesn't acquire all the companies that tried to become Microsoft? What happens if VMware didn't spinout Pivotal, and instead delivered a more vertical software stack?What happens if Pat Gelsinger doesn't buy Nicira, and instead focuses on the public cloud offerings 4 years earlier? (AWS revenues by year)Why didn't VMware define the integrated computing model (e.g. Cisco UCS)? What happens if VMware (or Pivotal) had adopted Kubernetes in 2015 instead of 2019? FEEDBACK?Email: show at the cloudcast dot netTwitter: @thecloudcastnet

The History of Computing
Research In Motion and the Blackberry

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2022 25:45


Lars Magnus Ericsson was working for the Swedish government that made telegraph equipment in the 1870s when he started a little telegraph repair shop in 1976. That was the same year the telephone was invented. After fixing other people's telegraphs and then telephones he started a company making his own telephone equipment. He started making his own equipment and by the 1890s was shipping gear to the UK. As the roaring 20s came, they sold stock to buy other companies and expanded quickly. Early mobile devices used radios to connect mobile phones to wired phone networks and following projects like ALOHANET in the 1970s they expanded to digitize communications, allowing for sending early forms of text messages, the way people might have sent those telegraphs when old Lars was still alive and kicking. At the time, the Swedish state-owned Televerket Radio was dabbling in this space and partnered with Ericsson to take first those messages then as email became a thing, email, to people wirelessly using the 400 to 450 MHz range in Europe and 900 MHz in the US. That standard went to the OSI and became a 1G wireless packet switching network we call Mobitex. Mike Lazaridis was born in Istanbul and moved to Canada in 1966 when he was five, attending the University of Waterloo in 1979. He dropped out of school to take a contract with General Motors to build a networked computer display in 1984. He took out a loan from his parents, got a grant from the Canadian government, and recruited another electrical engineering student, Doug Fregin from the University of Windsor, who designed the first circuit boards. to join him starting a company they called Research in Motion. Mike Barnstijn joined them and they were off to do research.  After a few years doing research projects, they managed to build up a dozen employees and a million in revenues. They became the first Mobitex provider in America and by 1991 shipped the first Mobitex device. They brought in James Balsillie as co-CEO, to handle corporate finance and business development in 1992, a partnership between co-CEOs that would prove fruitful for 20 years.  Some of those work-for-hire projects they'd done involved reading bar codes so they started with point-of-sale, enabling mobile payments and by 1993 shipped RIMGate, a gateway for Mobitex. Then a Mobitex point-of-sale terminal and finally with the establishment of the PCMCIA standard, a  PCMCIP Mobitex modem they called Freedom. Two-way paging had already become a thing and they were ready to venture out of PoS systems. So  in 1995, they took a $5 million investment to develop the RIM 900 OEM radio modem. They also developed a pager they called the Inter@ctive Pager 900 that was capable of  two-way messaging the next year. Then they went public on the Toronto Stock Exchange in 1997. The next year, they sold a licensing deal to IBM for the 900 for $10M dollars. That IBM mark of approval is always a sign that a company is ready to play in an enterprise market. And enterprises increasingly wanted to keep executives just a quick two-way page away. But everyone knew there was a technology convergence on the way. They worked with Ericsson to further the technology and over the next few years competed with SkyTel in the interactive pager market. Enter The Blackberry They knew there was something new coming. Just as the founders know something is coming in Quantum Computing and run a fund for that now. They hired a marketing firm called Lexicon Branding to come up with a name and after they saw the keys on the now-iconic keyboard, the marketing firm suggested BlackBerry. They'd done the research and development and they thought they had a product that was special. So they released the first BlackBerry 850 in Munich in 1999. But those were still using radio networks and more specifically the DataTAC network. The age of mobility was imminent, although we didn't call it that yet. Handspring and Palm each went public in 2000.  In 2000, Research In Motion brought its first cellular phone product in the BlackBerry 957, with push email and internet capability. But then came the dot com bubble. Some thought the Internet might have been a fad and in fact might disappear. But instead the world was actually ready for that mobile convergence. Part of that was developing a great operating system for the time when they released the BlackBerry OS the year before. And in 2000 the BlackBerry was named Product of the Year by InfoWorld.  The new devices took the market by storm and shattered the previous personal information manager market, with shares of that Palm company dropping by over 90% and Palm OS being setup as it's own corporation within a couple of years. People were increasingly glued to their email. While the BlackBerry could do web browsing and faxing over the internet, it was really the integrated email access, phone, and text messaging platform that companies like General Magic had been working on as far back as the early 1990s. The Rise of the BlackBerry The BlackBerry was finally the breakthrough mobile product everyone had been expecting and waiting for. Enterprise-level security, integration with business email like Microsoft's Exchange Server, a QWERTY keyboard that most had grown accustomed to, the option to use a stylus, and a simple menu made the product an instant smash success. And by instant we mean after five years of research and development and a massive financial investment. The Palm owned the PDA market. But the VII cost $599 and the BlackBerry cost $399 at the time (which was far less than the $675 Inter@ctive Pager had cost in the 1990s). The Palm also let us know when we had new messages using the emerging concept of push notifications. 2000 had seen the second version of the BlackBerry OS and their AOL Mobile Communicator had helped them spread the message that the wealthy could have access to their data any time. But by 2001 other carriers were signing on to support devices and BlackBerry was selling bigger and bigger contracts. 5,000 devices, 50,000 devices, 100,000 devices. And a company called Kasten Chase stepped in to develop a secure wireless interface to the Defense Messaging System in the US, which opened up another potential two million people in the defense industry They expanded the service to cover more and more geographies in 2001 and revenues doubled, jumping to 164,000 subscribers by the end of the year. That's when they added wireless downloads so could access all those MIME attachments in email and display them. Finally, reading PDFs on a phone with the help of GoAmerica Communications! And somehow they won a patent for the idea that a single email address could be used on both a mobile device and a desktop. I guess the patent office didn't understand why IMAP  was invented by Mark Crispin at Stanford in the 80s, or why Exchange allowed multiple devices access to the same mailbox. They kept inking contracts with other companies. AT&T added the BlackBerry in 2002 in the era of GSM. The 5810 was the first truly convergent BlackBerry that offered email and a phone in one device with seamless SMS communications. It shipped in the US and the 5820 in Europe and Cingular Wireless jumped on board in the US and Deutsche Telekom in Germany, as well as Vivendi in France, Telecom Italia in Italy, etc. The devices had inched back up to around $500 with service fees ranging from $40 to $100 plus pretty limited data plans. The Tree came out that year but while it was cool and provided a familiar interface to the legions of Palm users, it was clunky and had less options for securing communications. The NSA signed on and by the end of the year they were a truly global operation, raking in revenues of nearly $300 million.  The Buying Torndado They added web-based application in 2003, as well as network printing. They moved to a Java-based interface and added the 6500 series, adding a walkie-talkie function. But that 6200 series at around $200 turned out to be huge. This is when they went into that thing a lot of companies do - they started suing companies like Good and Handspring for infringing on patents they probably never should have been awarded. They eventually lost the cases and paid out tens of millions of dollars in damages. More importantly they took their eyes off innovating, a common mistake in the history of computing companies. Yet there were innovations. They released Blackberry Enterprise Server in 2004 then bolted on connectors to Exchange, Lotus Domino, and allowed for interfacing with XML-based APIs in popular enterprise toolchains of the day. They also later added support for GroupWise. That was one of the last solutions that worked with symmetric key cryptography I can remember using and initially required the devices be cradled to get the necessary keys to secure communications, which then worked over Triple-DES, common at the time. One thing we never liked was that messages did end up living at Research in Motion, even if encrypted at the time. This is one aspect that future types of push communications would resolve. And Microsoft Exchange's ActiveSync.  By 2005 there were CVEs filed for BlackBerry Enterprise Server, racking up 17 in the six years that product shipped up to 5.0 in 2010 before becoming BES 10 and much later Blackberry Enterprise Mobility Management, a cross-platform mobile device management solution. Those BES 4 and 5 support contracts, or T-Support, could cost hundreds of dollars per incident. Microsoft had Windows Mobile clients out that integrated pretty seamlessly with Exchange. But people loved their Blackberries. Other device manufacturers experimented with different modes of interactivity. Microsoft made APIs for pens and keyboards that flipped open. BlackBerry added a trackball in 2006, that was always kind of clunky. Nokia, Ericsson, Motorola, and others were experimenting with new ways to navigate devices, but people were used to menus and even styluses. And they seemed to prefer a look and feel that seemed like what they used for the menuing control systems on HVAC controls, video games, and even the iPod.  The Eye Of The Storm A new paradigm was on the way. Apple's iPhone was released in 2007 and Google's Android OS in 2008. By then the BlackBerry Pearl was shipping and it was clear which devices were better. No one saw the two biggest threats coming. Apple was a consumer company. They were slow to add ActiveSync policies, which many thought would be the corporate answer to mobile management as group policies in Active Directory had become for desktops. Apple  and Google were slow to take the market, as BlackBerry continued to dominate the smartphone industry well into 2010, especially once then-president Barack Obama strong-armed the NSA into allowing him to use a special version of the BlackBerry 8830 World Edition for official communiques. Other world leaders followed suit, as did the leaders of global companies that had previously been luddites when it came to constantly being online. Even Eric Schmidt, then chairman of google loved his Crackberry in 2013, 5 years after the arrival of Android. Looking back, we can see a steady rise in iPhone sales up to the iPhone 4, released in 2010. Many still said they loved the keyboard on their BlackBerries. Organizations had built BES into their networks and had policies dating back to NIST STIGs. Research in Motion owned the enterprise and held over half the US market and a fifth of the global market. That peaked in 2011. BlackBerry put mobility on the map. But companies like AirWatch, founded in 2003 and  MobileIron, founded in 2007, had risen to take a cross-platform approach to the device management aspect of mobile devices. We call them Unified Endpoint Protection products today and companies could suddenly support BlackBerry, Windows Mobile, and iPhones from a single console. Over 50 million Blackberries were being sold a year and the stock was soaring at over $230 a share.  Today, they hold no market share and their stock performance shows it. Even though they've pivoted to more of a device management company, given their decades of experience working with some of the biggest and most secure companies and governments in the world. The Fall Of The BlackBerry The iPhone was beautiful. It had amazing graphics and a full touch screen. It was the very symbol of innovation. The rising tide of the App Store also made it a developers playground (no pun intended). It was more expensive than the Blackberry, but while they didn't cater to the enterprise, they wedged their way in there with first executives and then anyone. Initially because of ActiveSync, which had come along in 1996 mostly to support Windows Mobile, but by Exchange Server 2003 SP 2 could do almost anything Outlook could do - provided software developers like Apple could make the clients work. So by 2011, Exchange clients could automatically locate a server based on an email address (or more to the point based on DNS records for the domain) and work just as webmail, which was open in almost every IIS implementation that worked with Exchange. And Office365 was released in 2011, paving the way to move from on-prem Exchange to what we now call “the cloud.” And Google Mail had been around for 7 years by then and people were putting it on the BlackBerry as well, blending home and office accounts on the same devices at times. In fact, Google licensed Exchange ActiveSync, or EAS in 2009 so support for Gmail was showing up on a variety of devices. BlackBerry had everything companies wanted. But people slowly moved to that new iPhone. Or Androids when decent models of phones started shipping with the OS on them. BlackBerry stuck by that keyboard, even though it was clear that people wanted full touchscreens. The BlackBerry Bold came out in 2009. BlackBerry had not just doubled down with the keyboard instead of full touchscreen, but they tripled down on it. They had released the Storm in 2008 and then the Storm in 2009 but they just had a different kind of customer. Albeit one that was slowly starting to retire. This is the hard thing about being in the buying tornado. We're so busy transacting that we can't think ahead to staying in the eye that we don't see how the world is changing outside of it.  As we saw with companies like Amdahl and Control Data, when we only focus on big customers and ignore the mass market we leave room for entrants in our industries who have more mass appeal. Since the rise of the independent software market following the IBM anti-trust cases, app developers have been a bellwether of successful platforms. And the iPhone revenue split was appealing to say the least.  Sales fell off fast. By 2012, the BlackBerry represented less than 6 percent of smartphones sold and by the start of 2013 that number dropped in half, falling to less than 1 percent in 2014. That's when the White House tested replacements for the Blackberry. There was a small bump in sales when they finally released a product that had competitive specs to the iPhone, but it was shortly lived. The Crackberry craze was officially over.  BlackBerry shot into the mainstream and brought the smartphone with them. They made the devices secure and work seamlessly in corporate environments and for those who could pay money to run BES or BIS. They proved the market and then got stuck in the Innovator's Dilemna. They became all about features that big customers wanted and needed. And so they missed the personal part of personal computing. Apple, as they did with the PC and then graphical user interfaces saw a successful technology and made people salivate over it. They saw how Windows had built a better sandbox for developers and built the best app delivery mechanism the world has seen to date. Google followed suit and managed to take a much larger piece of the market with more competitive pricing.  There is so much we didn't discuss, like the short-lived Playbook tablet from BlackBerry. Or the Priv. Because for the most part, they a device management solution today. The founders are long gone, investing in the next wave of technology: Quantum Computing. The new face of BlackBerry is chasing device management, following adjacencies into security and dabbling in IoT for healthcare and finance. Big ticket types of buys that include red teaming to automotive management to XDR. Maybe their future is in the convergence of post-quantum security, or maybe we'll see their $5.5B market cap get tasty enough for one of those billionaires who really, really, really wants their chicklet keyboard back. Who knows but part of the fun of this is it's a living history.    

Five & Thrive
June 3rd's Weekly Rundown

Five & Thrive

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 5:01


Welcome to Five & Thrive: a weekly podcast highlighting the Southeast's most interesting news, entrepreneurs, and information of the week, all under 5 minutes.  The Company Coming Up: I met with this founder a few weeks ago and his product is pretty legit. The name of the company is called XComms. The use case is interesting. The easiest way I can explain it is like an Amber Alerts for a company. Let's say you have a business with 1000, 2000, 10,000 + employees and you have to get a message out to the entire company as quickly and urgently as possible. Enter XComms:  https://www.xcomms.com/   Frank, the CEO, emailed me and is looking for a technical lead and possible CTO. He will be speaking at the upcoming Atlanta Startup Convos on June 8th at 8:00 a.m. if you want to see the product live. Link in the show notes.     Companies to Apply To: Which three companies are worth applying to right now? Apptegga which raised $37M in March is hiring like crazy particularly on the sales side. Gavin Harris is the VP of Sales and has done it before with AirWatch which was acquired by VMWare. Apptega reduces the cost and burden of managing cybersecurity and compliance audits.    Another company with 10+ open positions is Grayscale. Ty Abernethy is the CEO and they are looking for folks in Customer Success, Engineering and Enterprise Sales. Grayscale is a feature-rich candidate engagement tool for recruiters.     Lastly, CivicEagle is hiring for some key roles. Damola Ogundipe is the CEO they are hiring for specifically a VP of Sales, Talent Acquisition Manager, and a Senior Data Engineer. CivicEagle's goal is to be the world's dominant player in public policy software and they are well on their way.    Beta Product of the Week:  Cartet    Rekemo, the CEO, is solving the problem of too many tabs during the ecommerce experience. If you're someone who gets lost in the cacophony of checkouts Rekemo's private beta Chrome extension aggregates your checkouts in one simple, seamless experience. C-A-R-T-E-T   Events to Put on the Calendar: Last week we had ATLUnlocked at the Atlanta Tech Village. 5 of the technology hubs got together to clink glasses and talk shop. Also, on June 8th, we have an Atlanta Startup Convos.     Best Blog Post of the Week: YC's Advice to Founders - The high level theme if you are planning to raise in the next 6-12 months, it would be sage to re-evaluate your plan, extend your current runway and make sure you do everything to grow responsibly which means limiting your burn exposure.   Raise Your Glass: Lastly, two companies who have had mega-rounds in Atlanta include Sean of Stord led by FranklinTempleton Ventures. Shout out to Sean and team! Also, the sneaky whale that was announced was of course GreyOrange out of Roswell, Georgia. Do not sleep on Roswell, do not sleep on Peachtree Corners, do not sleep on places like Norcross and definitely Alpharetta…or Gwinnett. Anyways, GreyOrange which provided robotic solutions for the automated warehouse raised $110M from Mithril Capital and Blackrock and are hiring over 300 folks. A great example of a silent killer in the Southeast.     Annnnd, that's 5 minutes.   Thank you for listening to Five and Thrive. We provide 5 minutes of quality information, so you can thrive in the upcoming week. Please subscribe to the show and spread the good word!    Resources discussed in this episode:   Climbing Companies: xcomms Cartet Events: Atlanta Startup Convos Event Blog of the week: YC advises founders to ‘plan for the worst' amid market teardown Russell Center Raise your Glass: Apptega raises $37M Stord raises $100+ Million GreyOrange raises $110M How you can get involved:  Visit atlantaventures.com/ if you're interested in learning more about Atlanta Ventures.    Where you can find us: Website: www.atlantaventures.com/ Twitter: @atlantaventures Instagram: @atlventures Facebook: @AtlantaVentures LinkedIn: @Atlanta-Ventures YouTube: Here

VMware Communities Roundtable
#605 - Enterprise Mobility Management w/Adarsh Kesari Staff Solutions Engineer, EUC

VMware Communities Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 55:44


Listen to Matt and Eric talk with EUC Staff Solutions Engineer talking about the state of Enterprise Mobility Management. From the days of AirWatch to today's full enterprise management with VMware Workspace One solutions.

Teaching Learning Leading K-12
Tyce Miller, CEO of MobileMind, The Modern Professional Learning Hub for Schools - 464

Teaching Learning Leading K-12

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2022 44:46


Tyce Miller, CEO of MobileMind, The Modern Professional Learning Hub for Schools. This is episode 464 of Teaching Learning Leading K12, an audio podcast. Awesome conversation! With over twenty years of experience in the software industry, Tyce Miller's career spans sales and sales leadership roles with companies such as SAS, IBM, and AirWatch(VMware).  While at AirWatch, he led the Education Division, where he discovered traditional professional development for teachers was falling short with the pace of change and complexity of new mobile and cloud technologies.  This led to the creation of MobileMind, The Modern Professional Learning Hub for Schools.  Tyce leads the company's mission of providing personalized learning opportunities that empower educators to transform learning with technology, ensuring positive student outcomes. Thanks for listening. But wait... Could you do me a favor? Please go to my website at https://www.stevenmiletto.com/reviews/ or open the podcast app that you are listening to me on and would you rate and review the podcast? That would be Awesome. Thanks! Ready to start your own podcast? Podbean is an awesome host. I have been with them since 2013. Go to https://www.podbean.com/TLLK12 to get 1 month free of unlimited hosting for your new podcast.  Remember to take a look at NVTA (National Virtual Teacher Association) The NVTA Certification Process was created to establish a valid and reliable research-based teacher qualification training process for virtual teachers to enhance their teaching and develop their ongoing reflective skills to improve teaching capacity. NVTA is an affiliate sponsor of Teaching Learning Leading K12, by following the link above if you purchase a program, Teaching Learning Leading K12 will get a commission and you will help the show continue to grow.  Don't forget to go to my other affiliate sponsor Boone's Titanium Rings at www.boonerings.com. When you order a ring use my code - TLLK12 - at checkout to get 10% off and help the podcast get a commission. Oh by the way, you can help support Teaching Learning Leading K12 by buying me a soft drink (actually making a donation to Teaching Learning Leading K12.) That would be awesome! You would be helping expand the show with equipment and other resources to keep the show moving upward. Just go to https://www.buymeacoffee.com/stevenmiletto Thanks! Connect & Learn More: https://www.mobilemind.io/ Tyce@mobilemind.io https://www.facebook.com/mobilemindedu https://twitter.com/mobilemindedu Length - 44:46

Rights, Rorts and Rants
After the fires: Airwatch report on the effects of smoke

Rights, Rorts and Rants

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2021 32:35


This episode features an edited version of the recent Airwatch zoom meeting, presented by Blue Mountains Unions Council and the Blue Mountains Environment Sustainability Network, to discuss the ongoing campaign of the Lithgow and Blue Mountains AirWatch. The meeting focuses on the quality of the air we breathe, and presents new evidence showing that when the air becomes polluted by bushfire smoke containing fine toxic particles, it becomes a killer. As Peter Lammiman, organiser and host of the meeting says "It's not the bushfires that kill people it's the smoke afterwards, with over 400 people dying from smoke inhalation on the eastern seaboard during and after the “black summer” of 2019-20". The first speaker is Julie Favell, from the Lithgow Environment Group, followed by Maggie Davidson, adjunct lecturer in Environmental Health and Occupational Hygiene from the School of Sciences at Western Sydney University, and the final speaker, Natasha Flores, is the industrial officer at Unions New South Wales. This episode was first broadcast on Radio Blue Mountains 89.1FM on 22/10/2021. Rights, Rorts and Rants is broadcast from 4pm to 6pm on 89.1FM or can be live streamed from rbm.org.au. If you'd like to add to the discussion, you can leave an audio comment about our show, which may be added to one of our podcasts..Apply to be a guest on our show. Join BMUC. Join a union - 1300 486 466 or join online. Disclaimer: We seek a range of perspectives but that means that views expressed in these podcasts are not necessarily endorsed by the Blue Mountains Unions Council Inc. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/rightsrortsandrants/message

She Said Privacy/He Said Security
Building Trust With Privacy Compliance

She Said Privacy/He Said Security

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 36:21


Blake Brannon is the Chief Strategy Officer at OneTrust, the #1 platform to operationalize privacy, security, and data governance. In this role, Blake is responsible for strategy, partnerships, sales engineering teams, and defining the privacy, security, and governance market. He was the first Chief Technology Officer at OneTrust, building the technology platform of trust that has been awarded more than 150 patents. Before OneTrust, Blake was one of the first employees at AirWatch, where he served as the Global Director of Sales Engineering and the Vice President of Product Marketing. He was also a research assistant at Georgia Tech, his alma mater. In this episode… Privacy used to be pretty straightforward for companies. All they had to do was write the terms of service policy or privacy statement at the end of a contract or on the bottom of a website. Now, there are many more aspects to consider if you don't want to get sued. But besides avoiding a lawsuit, how can privacy benefit your company? Privacy isn't just about dodging the courtroom — it's about building trust. For example, Apple released a new ad that says “Privacy. That's iPhone.” Those three words speak volumes about the lengths Apple is willing to go to preserve data privacy — and consumers are eating it up. Users want to know how companies will handle their sensitive information and data. If you can prove that your employees, processes, and tools are dedicated to protecting consumer privacy, your customers will keep coming back for more. In this episode of She Said Privacy/He Said Security, Jodi and Justin Daniels sit down with Blake Brannon, the Chief Strategy Officer at OneTrust, to discuss how your company's privacy policies can build client trust. Blake talks about the privacy challenges that companies face today, how to build programs that work in harmony with your privacy software, and the importance of hopping on current privacy trends.

Digital Workspace Tech Zone Podcast
Moving to the Hub Services App Catalog from the legacy AirWatch Web Clip Catalog

Digital Workspace Tech Zone Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2021


Azure DevOps Podcast
Jeremy Likness on Working with Data on .NET - Episode 141

Azure DevOps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2021 40:45


This week, Jeffrey Palermo is joined by return guest, Jeremy Likness! Jeremy is an internationally selling author, keynote speaker, and professional coder with a personal mission to empower developers to be their best! He has worked on commercial enterprise software for 25 years and specializes in web technology. Currently, he is also a Sr. Cloud Developer Advocate for Microsoft, but previously held roles at iVision, Wintellect, and AirWatch.   Last year when Jeremy was on the podcast last, they discussed DevOps automation. In this episode, they focus the discussion on working with data on .NET. Jeremy shares about the work that he had been doing on the .NET Data team for the last year, Entity Framework Core, Microsoft Dataverse, GraphQL, and more!   Topics of Discussion: [:38] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes. [:51] About The Azure DevOps Podcast, Clear Measure, the new podcast Architect Tips, and Jeffrey’s offer to speak at virtual user groups. [1:28] About today’s episode with Jeremy Likness. [1:53] Jeffrey welcomes Jeremy back to the podcast! [2:15] Jeremy gives an overview of his role as the Senior Program Manager working on .NET Data and the work that his team does. [5:37] About Microsoft Dataverse and Jeremy and his team have been working with the Azure Storage and Dataverse teams. [8:28] Of the different methods of working with data in C#, what’s the general distribution? Which methods have greater adoption? [11:17] Jeremy and Jeffrey discuss different .NET project types and whether Entity Framework 5.0 the latest stable release. [11:55] Jeremy shares what is most exciting to him with this upcoming .NET release. [13:25] What’s the go-to store on the client-side? [16:04] The new inheritance strategies in EFCore: are they fully implemented and ready? [19:21] Jeremy talks about the focus on speed for EFCore 6. [21:37] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [22:08] Why developers are “forced” to learn object-oriented programming through EFCore’s features. [24:32] How Jeremy goes about testing code that uses Entity Framework. [27:30] Jeremy highlights where to access invaluable EFCore resources. [28:54] Jeremy touches on how the EF code team uses ReSharper. [29:15] What GraphQL is and why it might be useful if you have a .NET application. [32:40] Jeremy highlights another good QL platform: Hot Chocolate by ChilliCream. [34:06] The architecture of GraphQL and whether it is a database engine or a library. [35:33] If you have a .NET app running in App Service and you’ve already got Azure SQL, and you want to get some of your data and use Graph QL, is this a new Azure resource? Architecturally, what would you do to adopt this? [39:18] Jeffrey thanks for Jeremy for joining the podcast!   Mentioned in this Episode: Architect Tips — New video podcast! Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook! Jeffrey Palermo’s Youtube Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! The Azure DevOps Podcast’s Twitter: @AzureDevOpsShow Azure DevOps Podcast Ep. 76: “Jeremy Likness on DevOps Automation” Jeremy Likness’ Blog Jeremy Likness’ Twitter Jeremy Likness’ LinkedIn Jeremy Likness’ GitHub Jeremy’s Email: Jeremy.Likness@Microsoft.com  GraphQL Microsoft Dataverse Microsoft Azure Storage Blazor OData Entity Framework Core .NET MAUI Uno Platform Docs.Microsoft.com/EF Azure Cosmos DB GitHub.com/DOTNET/EFCOREReSharper Hot Chocolate by ChilliCream   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition
OneTrust nabs $300M Series C on $5.1B valuation to expand privacy platform

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2020 5:11


OneTrust, the 4-year old privacy platform startup from the folks who brought you AirWatch (which was acquired by VMWare for $1.5B in 2014), announced a $300 million Series C on an impressive $5.1 billion valuation today. The company has attracted considerable attention from investors in a remarkably short time. It came out of the box […]

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition
OneTrust nabs $300M Series C on $5.1B valuation to expand privacy platform

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2020 4:27


OneTrust, the 4-year old privacy platform startup from the folks who brought you AirWatch (which was acquired by VMWare for $1.5B in 2014), announced a $300 million Series C on an impressive $5.1 billion valuation today. The company has attracted considerable attention from investors in a remarkably short time. It came out of the box […]

Azure DevOps Podcast
Jeremy Likness on DevOps Automation - Episode 76

Azure DevOps Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2020 39:02


Today’s guest is Jeremy Likness — an internationally selling author, keynote speaker, and professional coder with a personal mission to empower developers to be their best! Jeremy has worked on commercial enterprise software for 25 years and specializes in web technology. Currently, he is also a Sr. Cloud Developer Advocate for Microsoft, but previously held roles at iVision, Wintellect, and AirWatch. In his free time however, he enjoys running, hiking, and shooting nine-ball and one-pocket.   In today’s episode, Jeffrey and Jeremy discuss DevOps Automation. Jeremy shares his philosophy on starting a new project, provides key insights about Azure DevOps Services, speaks about what is new with Azure DevOps in general, gives his thoughts on GitHub Actions, explains how he’s utilizing Azure ARM templates, and shares some of his best practices and go-to resources.   Topics of Discussion: [:39] Be sure to visit AzureDevOps.Show for past episodes and show notes. [1:08] About today’s guest, Jeremy Likness. [1:49] Jeffrey welcomes Jeremy to the podcast. [1:40] Jeremy describes two of his favorite hobbies: nine-ball and one-pocket. [3:15] Jeremy speaks about his career and how it has progressed over the years. [8:11] Jeremy speaks about his current role at Microsoft and what Cloud Advocate really means. [9:51] Jeremy shares his philosophy on starting a project. [13:58] Jeremy provides some key insights when bringing Azure DevOps Services into the mix. [15:41] What’s new in Azure DevOps in general? [20:38] A word from Azure DevOps Podcast’s sponsor: Clear Measure. [21:03] Jeffrey gives some quick announcements. [22:52] Jeremy gives his thoughts on GitHub Actions. [25:48] Jeremy speaks about what the experience is like with GitHub Actions when you have a release candidate that you’re deploying to your environments (environment 1, environment 2, etc.), all the way up to production. He also provides some examples. [28:14] When deploying, is Jeremy still using Azure ARM templates? Or does he use a mix of things to provision his infrastructure? [34:55] Jeremy gives a quick piece of random nostalgia from his past. [35:47] Jeremy’s go-to resources to learn more about the topics discussed on today’s show. [37:45] Where to get in touch with Jeremy! [38:15] Jeffrey thanks Jeremy for joining him in this episode.   Mentioned in this Episode: Azure DevOps Clear Measure (Sponsor) .NET DevOps for Azure: A Developer's Guide to DevOps Architecture the Right Way, by Jeffrey Palermo — Available on Amazon! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsebook — Click here to download the .NET DevOps for Azure ebook! bit.ly/dotnetdevopsbookforcommunity — Visit to get your hands on two free books to give away at conferences or events! Jeffrey Palermo’s Youtube Jeffrey Palermo’s Twitter — Follow to stay informed about future events! Jeffrey@Clear-Measure.com — Email Jeffrey for a free 30-point DevOps inspection (regularly priced at $5000!) — Spaces are limited! Jeremy Likness’ Blog Jeremy Likness’ Twitter Jeremy Likness’ LinkedIn Jeremy Likness’ GitHub Jeremy’s Email: Jeremy.Likness@Microsoft.com Azure DevOps Services Abel Wang The Azure DevOps Podcast: “Abel Wang on DevOps Infrastructure - Episode 73” Hugo GitHub Actions Azure Resource Manager (ARM) Microsoft Ignite Blazor Docs.Microsoft.com/en-us/Learn   Want to Learn More? Visit AzureDevOps.Show for show notes and additional episodes.

amazon microsoft sr automation spaces right way devops azure github actions azure devops airwatch cloud developer advocate jeremy likness wintellect
Splunk [Foundations/Platform Track] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides
Best Practice of EMM deployment for Splunk Mobile [Splunk Mobile]

Splunk [Foundations/Platform Track] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019


This session is for customers who would like to extend their Splunk usage to mobile devices and understand how Enterprise Mobility Management (EMM) works. It also will benefit customers who have existing mobility management solutions, including mobile device management (MDM) and mobile application management (MAM) systems, and want to enroll the Splunk mobile apps. The session will include an introduction and live demos showing detailed integration with the most popular mobile device management (MDM) solutions: AirWatch, MobileIron, and Blackberry. We also will have live demos to illustrate how to configure different Splunk mobile apps with the enterprise mobility management (EMM) solutions from scratch. Topics to be discussed will include profile configuration, authorized devices, app wrapping, and MDM/MAM-specific features. Speaker(s) Roy Zhang, Principle QA, Splunk Strong Yuan, Senior Software Engineer in Test, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/FN1886.pdf?podcast=1577146200 Product: Splunk Mobile Track: Foundations/Platform Level: Intermediate

Splunk [Industrial IoT | Mobile | SignalFx | VictorOps] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides
Best Practice of EMM deployment for Splunk Mobile [Splunk Mobile]

Splunk [Industrial IoT | Mobile | SignalFx | VictorOps] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019


This session is for customers who would like to extend their Splunk usage to mobile devices and understand how Enterprise Mobility Management (EMM) works. It also will benefit customers who have existing mobility management solutions, including mobile device management (MDM) and mobile application management (MAM) systems, and want to enroll the Splunk mobile apps. The session will include an introduction and live demos showing detailed integration with the most popular mobile device management (MDM) solutions: AirWatch, MobileIron, and Blackberry. We also will have live demos to illustrate how to configure different Splunk mobile apps with the enterprise mobility management (EMM) solutions from scratch. Topics to be discussed will include profile configuration, authorized devices, app wrapping, and MDM/MAM-specific features. Speaker(s) Roy Zhang, Principle QA, Splunk Strong Yuan, Senior Software Engineer in Test, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/FN1886.pdf?podcast=1577146261 Product: Splunk Mobile Track: Foundations/Platform Level: Intermediate

Splunk [All Products] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides
Best Practice of EMM deployment for Splunk Mobile [Splunk Mobile]

Splunk [All Products] 2019 .conf Videos w/ Slides

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2019


This session is for customers who would like to extend their Splunk usage to mobile devices and understand how Enterprise Mobility Management (EMM) works. It also will benefit customers who have existing mobility management solutions, including mobile device management (MDM) and mobile application management (MAM) systems, and want to enroll the Splunk mobile apps. The session will include an introduction and live demos showing detailed integration with the most popular mobile device management (MDM) solutions: AirWatch, MobileIron, and Blackberry. We also will have live demos to illustrate how to configure different Splunk mobile apps with the enterprise mobility management (EMM) solutions from scratch. Topics to be discussed will include profile configuration, authorized devices, app wrapping, and MDM/MAM-specific features. Speaker(s) Roy Zhang, Principle QA, Splunk Strong Yuan, Senior Software Engineer in Test, Splunk Slides PDF link - https://conf.splunk.com/files/2019/slides/FN1886.pdf?podcast=1577146223 Product: Splunk Mobile Track: Foundations/Platform Level: Intermediate

The History of Computing
The History Of Apple's Mobile Device Management

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2019 14:23


Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because by understanding the past, we're better prepared for the innovations of the future! Today we're going to talk about Apple's Mobile Device Management; what we now call Mobility. To kick things off we'll take you back to the year 2001. 2001 was the year Nickelback released How You Remind Me. Destiny's Child was still together. Dave Matthews released The Space Between, and the first real Mobile Device Management was born. The first real mobile management solution to gain traction was SOTI, which launched in 2001 with an eye towards leveraging automation using mobile devices and got into device management when those options started to emerge. More and more IT departments wanted “Over The Air” management, or OTA management. So Airwatch, founded by John Marshall in 2003 as Wandering Wi-Fi, was the first truly multi-platform device management solution.  This time, rather than try to work within the confines of corporate dogma surrounding how the business of IT was done, Apple would start to go their own way. This was made possible by the increasing dominance of the iPhone accessing Exchange servers and the fact that suddenly employees were showing up with these things and using them at work. Suddenly, companies needed to manage the OS that ships on iPhone, iOS. The original iPhone was released in 2007 and iOS management initially occurred manually through iTunes. You could drag an app onto a device and the app would be sent to the phone over the USB cable, and some settings were exposed to iTunes. Back then you had to register an iOS device with Apple by plugging it into iTunes in order to use it. You could also backup and restore a device using iTunes, which came with some specific challenges, such as the account you used to buy an app would follow the “image” to the new device. Additionally, if the backup was encrypted or not determined what was stored in the backup and some information might have to be re-entered.  This led to profiles. Profiles were created using a tool called the iPhone Configuration Utility, released in 2008. A Profile is a small xml file that applies a given configuration onto an iOS device. This was necessary because developers wanted to control what could be done on iOS devices. One of those configurations was the ability to install an app over the air that was hosted on an organization's own web server, provided the .ipa mime type on the web server was defined. This basically mirrored what the App Store was doing and paved the way for internal app stores and profiles that were hosted on servers, both of which could be installed using in-house app stores. During that same time-frame, Jamf, Afaria (by SAP), and MobileIron, founded by Ajay Mishra and Suresh Batchu, in the previous year, were also building similar OTA profile delivery techniques leveraging the original MDM spec.  At this point, most OTA management tasks (such as issuing a remote wipe or disabling basic features of devices) were done using Exchange ActiveSync (EAS). You could control basic password policies as well as some rudimentary devices settings such as disabling the camera. With this in mind, Apple began to write the initial MDM specifications, paving the way for an entire IT industry segment to be born. This was the landscape when the first edition of the Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide was released by Apress in 2010. Additional MDM solutions were soon to follow. TARMAC released MDM for iOS devices using a server running on a Mac in late 2011. AppBlade and Excitor was also released in 2011. Over the course of the next 8  years, MDM became one part of a number of other lovely acronyms: • Mobile Content Management, or MCM, is really just a Content Management System that sends content and services to mobile devices.  • Mobile Identity Management, or MIM, refers to where the SIM card of one's mobile phone works as an identity • Enterprise Mobility Management, or EMM, gets more into managing apps and content that gets put on devices  • Unified Endpoint Management, or UEM, brings traditional laptops and then desktops into the management feature, merging EMM with traditional device management.  X-Men First Class came in 2011, although the mail server by the same name was all but gone by then. This was a pivotal year for Apple device management and iOS in the enterprise, as Blackberry announced that  you would be able to manage Apple devices with their Blackberry Enterprise Server (BES), which had been created in 1999 to manage Blackberry devices. This legitimized using Apple's mobile devices in enterprise environments and also an opportunistic play for licensing due to the fact that the devices were becoming such a mainstay in the enterprise and a shift towards UEM that would continue until 2018, when BlackBerry Enterprise Server was renamed to BlackBerry Unified Endpoint Manager.  An explosion of MDM providers has occurred since Blackberry added Apple to their platform, to keep up with the demand of the market. Filewave and LANrev added MDM to their products in 2011 with new iOS vendors NotifyMDM and SOTI entering into the Apple Device Management family. Then Amtel MDM, AppTrack, Codeproof, Kony, ManageEngine (a part of Zoho corporation), OurPact, Parallels, PUSHMANAGER, ProMDM, SimpleMDM, Sophos Mobile Control, and Tangoe MDM were released in 2012. MaaS360 was acquired by IBM in 2013, the same year auralis, CREA MDM, FancyFon Mobility Center (FAMOC), Hexnode, Lightspeed, and Relution were released, and when Endpoint Protector added MDM to their security products. Citrix also acquired Zenprise in 2013 to introduce XenMobile. Jamf Now (originally called Bushel), Miradore, Mosyle, and ZuluDesk (acquired by Jamf in 2018 and being rebranded to Jamf School) were released in 2014, which also saw VMware acquired Airwatch for $1.54 billion dollars and Good Technology acquire BoxTone, beefing up their Apple device management capabilities. 2014 also saw Microsoft extend Intune to manage iOS devices.  Things quieted down a bit but in 2016 after Apple started publishing the MDM specifications guide freely, an open source MDM called MicroMDM was initially committed to github, making it easier for organizations to build their own fork or implement that should they choose. Others crept on the scene as well during those year, such as Absolute Manage MDM, AppTech 360, Avalanche Mobility Center, Baramundi, Circle by Disney, Cisco Meraki (by way of the Cisco acquisition of Meraki), Kaseya EMM, SureMDM, Trend Micro Mobile Security, and many others. Each one of these tools has a great place in the space. Some focus on specific horizontal or vertical markets, while others focus on integrating with other products in a company's portfolio. With such a wide field of MDM solutions, Apple has been able to focus efforts on building a great API and not spend a ton of time on building out many of the specific features needed for every possible market.  A number of family or residential MDM providers have also sprung up, including Circle by Disney. The one market Apple has not made MDM available to has been the home. Apple has a number of tools they believe help families manage devices. It's been touted as a violation of user privacy to deploy MDM for home environments and in fact is a violation of the APNs terms of service. Whether we believe this to be valid or not, OurPact, initially launched in 2012, was shut down in 2019 along with a number of other screen time apps for leveraging MDM to control various functions of iOS devices. The MDM spec has evolved over the years. iOS 4 in 2010 saw the first MDM and Volume Purchase Program. iOS 5 in 2011 added over the air os updates, Siri management, and provided administrators with the ability to disable the backups of iOS devices to Apple's iCloud cloud service. iOS 6 saw the addition of APIs for 3rd party developers, managed open in for siloing content, device supervision (which gave us the ability to take additional management tasks on devices we could prove the ownership of) and MDM for the Mac. That MDM for the Mac piece will become increasingly important over the next 7 years. Daft Punk weren't the only ones that got lucky in 2013. That year brought us iOS 7 for macOS 10.9. The spec was updated to manage TouchID settings, give an Activation Lock bypass key for supervised devices, and the future of per-app settings management came with Managed App Config. 2014 gave us iOS 8 and MacOS 10.10. Here, we got the Device Enrollment Program which allows devices to enroll into an MDM server automatically at setup time and and Apple Configurator enrollments, allowing us to get closer to zero touch installations again. 2015 brought with it The Force Awakens and awakened Device-based VPP in iOS 9 and macOS 2015, which finally allowed administrators to push apps to devices without needing an AppleID, the B2B App Store which allowed for pushing out apps that weren't available on the standard app store, supervision reminders which are important as it was the first inkling of prompting users in an effort to provide transparency around what was happening on their devices, the ability to enable and disable apps, the ability to manage the home screen, and kiosk mode, or the ability to lock an app into the foreground on a device.  The pace continued to seem frenzied in 2016, when Justin Timberlake couldn't stop the feeling that he got when in iOS 10 and macOS 10.12 he could suddenly restart and shut down a device through MDM commands. And enable Lost Mode. This was also the year Apple shipped their first operating system in a long, long time when APFS was deployed to iOS. Millions of devices got a new filesystem during that upgrade, which went oh so smoothly due to the hard work of everyone involved. iOS 11 with macOS 10.13 saw less management being done on the Mac but a frenzy of updates bringing us Classroom 2 management, FaceID management, AirPrint management, the ability to add devices to DEP through Apple Configurator, QR code based enrollment, User Approved Kernel Extension Loading for Mac and User Approved MDM enrollment for Mac. These last two meant that users needed to explicitly accept enrollment and drivers loading, again trading ease of use out for transparency.  Many would consider this a fair trade. Many administrators are frustrated by it. I kinda' think it is what it is. 2018 saw the Volume Purchase Program, the portal to build an Apple Push Notification certificate, and the DEP portal collapsed into Apple Management Programs, with the arrival of Apple Business Manager. We also got our first salvo of Identity providers with oauth for managed Exchange Accounts, we got the ability to manage tvOS apps on devices and we could start restricting password auto-fill. And this year, we get new content caching configuration options, bluetooth management, autonomous single app mode, os update deferrals, and the automatic renewal of Active Directory Certificates. This year we also get a new enrollment type which uses a Managed Apple ID and then separate encrypted volumes for data storage.  What's so special about Apple's MDM push? Well, for starters, they took all that legacy IT industry dogma from the past 30 years and decided to do something different. Or did they? The initial MDM options looked a lot like At Ease, a tool from the 1980s. And I mean some of the buttons say the same thing they said on the screens for Newton management. The big difference here is that Push Notifications needed to be added as you couldn't connect to a socket on a device running on your local network. Because most of the iPhones weren't on that network. But the philosophy of managing only what you have to to make the lives of your coworkers better means pushing settings, not locking users from changing their background. Or initially it meant that at least.  The other thing that is so striking is that this was the largest and fastest adoption of enterprise technology I've seen. Sometimes the people who have survived this era tend to get a bit grumpy because the cheese is moved… EVERY YEAR! But keep in mind that Apple has sold 1.4 billion iPhones as have 423 million iPads, and don't forget a couple hundred million Macs. That's over 2 billion devices we've had to learn to cope with. Granted, not all of them are in the enterprise. But imagine this: that's more than the entire population of China, the US, and Indonesia. How many people in those three out of the top 5 populated countries in the world go to work every day. And how many go to school. It's been a monumental and rapid upheaval of the IT world order. And it's been fun to be a part of!

#gkgab
Intune: MDM und MAM

#gkgab

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2018 50:49


In der Vergangenheit spielten Third-Party-Lösungen wie Blackberry, AirWatch und MobileIron eine große Rolle im Mobile Device Management, heute wünschen sich die meisten Unternehmen eine Lösung für das Management aller Devices. Intune ist in den letzten Jahren als Lösung ausgebaut worden und neben klassischen Management und Security Features für iOS und Android Devices kam die Option des Application Managements hinzu (MAM). Unsere langjährigen Experten geben eine Übersicht über die Architektur und den Leistungsumfang von Intune MDM und MAM und zeigen auf, wie große Unternehmen bereits heute alle Devices mit Intune provisionieren und managen.

Login TechCast
#09 - Joris Adriaanse over Airwatch en Windows 10

Login TechCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2018 37:32


In deze negende aflevering van de Login TechCast spreken Sander en Eric met Joris Adriaanse over Airwatch en hoe je mobile devices daarmee kan beheren. Joris is Business Development Manager bij FONDO. Hij blogt op de website van FONDO en hij sprak onlangs op het vEUC TechCon (VMware End-User Computing Tech Conference). Tijd om te luisteren! Press play….

Login TechCast
#Extra 03 - TechCast On-Tour: vEUCTechCon 2018

Login TechCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2018 34:45


De Login TechCast gaat On Tour en dus komen Eric en Sander voor deze derde extra aflevering naar je toe vanaf de vEUC TechCon 2018 in de Utrechtse Jaarbeurs. Hier spreken ze oude bekenden, vrienden en bezoekers over hun bezoek aan dit VMware Community event. Horizon Cloud on Azure, AirWatch en Security zijn slechts een kleine greep uit de onderwerpen, maar centraal staan de sprekers en bezoekers en hoe zij deze beurs beleven. Verwacht gezellige gesprekken en hier en daar een tipje van de sluier van wat er komen staat in de Login TechCast en de wereld van End User Computing.

Mac Admins Podcast
Episode 71: Apple Business Manager?

Mac Admins Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2018 81:04


SYNOPSIS: The Hosts cover what little we know about Apple Business Manager, some news about the iMac Pro, SCEP in 10.13.4, Munki in Airwatch, and SAML vulnerabilities, then we welcome Diana Birsan of Shopify and Bryson Tyrrell of Jamf to talk about MacADUK! YOUR HOSTS: Tom Bridge, Partner at Technolutionary LLC [@tbridge] Pepijn Bruienne, R&D Engineer at Duo Security [@bruienne], Proprietor of EnterpriseMac.Bruienne.com Charles Edge, Director of Marketplace at Jamf, [@cedge318] James Smith, IT Administrator at Culture Amp, [@smithjw] GUESTS: Diana Birsan, Internal Security Developer, Shopify Bryson Tyrrell, System Administrator II, Jamf Software LISTEN! LINKS & NOTES Tweet about iMac Pro Imaging Generating Pre-populated Munki Manifests utilizing the Airwatch API SCEP is broken in 10.13.4 Defaults Command deletes invalid plists SAML Vulnerabilities affecting multiple implementations COMMUNITY CALENDAR, SPONSORED BY WATCHMAN MONITORING Conference Sites ​ Brainstorm Wisconsin March 4-6, 2018 Brainstorm Sandusky May 6-8, 2018 MacDevOps YVR in Vancouver, June 7-8, 2018 X World in Sydney Australia, June 27-29, 2018 Penn State University Mac Admins in State College, PA July 10th-13th Meetups Nederlandse MacBeheerders will meet at IO Building at Technical University of Delft on March 9th at 2pm. East Midlands Mac Admins will meet in Nottingham at Jigsaw24 at 1900 on March 14th. Melbourne Apple Admins will meet at Culture Amp on March 15th at 6:30pm. Utah Apple Admins will meet at University of Utah’s Marriott Library at 11am on March 21st. [Houston Apple Admins] will also meet on the 21st at Conservatory in Downtown Houston at 6pm. Check the #houston channel in Slack for more information. Sydney Apple Admins will meet on March 27th at 5:45pm, check the site for more details. MacDeployment Meetup will happen at 1025 10th St SE in Calgary Alberta on March 28th at 6:30pm. London Apple Admins will meet on 12 April at 6:30pm at Treatwell. RATE US ON ITUNES! Give Us Five Stars! SPONSOR MAC ADMINS PODCAST! If you’re interested in sponsoring the Mac Admins Podcast, please email podcast@macadmins.org for more information. SOCIAL MEDIA Get the latest about the Mac Admins Podcast, follow us on Twitter! We’re @MacAdmPodcast!

Knee-deep in Tech
Episode 20

Knee-deep in Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 30, 2017 30:08


The twentieth episode is up, a.k.a the “hammer and sauce” episode! We talk about he death of the SCCM model, a new Data Management Gateway release, a new Data Migration Assistant release, that Airwatch now can do Chromebook management, expectations of Windows Server 1709 at Ignite, the new SSMS 17.2 release and data masking shenanigans. A shock-full episode indeed!We are now on iTunes, or, sort of, we’re still ironing out the quirks.As always we gladly accept tips and criticism, as well as ideas for content for us to cover. Just tweet me (@arcticdba) or Simon (@bindertech)! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Enterprise Endpoint Experts (E³)
Enterprise Endpoint Experts: Adi Kunduri

Enterprise Endpoint Experts (E³)

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2017 22:02


This podcast answers IT pros’ key questions about AirWatch: what it does, how it works, who it’s for—and if it works with ConfigMgr! Adi Kunduri from VMware talks about devices, apps, security, and much more.

World Wide Technology - TEC17
VMware AirWatch

World Wide Technology - TEC17

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2016 17:42


In Part Two of our discussion on how vmware AirWatch helps companies manage Enterprise Mobility Management, our experts talk about how AirWatch drives partner integration into the EMM platforms, how WWT and vmware deliver support services to customers and partners, and the value that WWT’s Advanced Technology Center brings to customers and partners.

World Wide Technology - TEC17
VMware AirWatch

World Wide Technology - TEC17

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2016 18:25


Listen as a panel of experts discuss Enterprise Mobility Management and meeting increased user demand with vmware AirWatch.  In Part One, our experts talk about the benefits that AirWatch brings to Enterprise Mobility Management, managing mobile devices, the End User experience and managing Windows 10.

Hudson Institute Events Podcast
Why the U.S. is the Center of Software Innovation: A Discussion with Technology Entrepreneur Alan Dabbiere

Hudson Institute Events Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2016 70:42


Noted technology entrepreneur Alan Dabbiere joins Harold Furchtgott-Roth to discuss American leadership in software innovation.

Hudson Institute Events Podcast
Why the U.S. is the Center of Software Innovation: A Discussion with Technology Entrepreneur Alan Dabbiere

Hudson Institute Events Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2016 70:42


Noted technology entrepreneur Alan Dabbiere joins Harold Furchtgott-Roth to discuss American leadership in software innovation.

Tech Talk on the SoftwareONE Radio Network
Tech Talk on the SoftwareONE Radio Network - Live from VMWare, IT GAME CHANGER!

Tech Talk on the SoftwareONE Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2015 180:08


Hey Tech Talkers, Tune in to this week's show as we will be live from the VMWare Office in Austin Texas to go over their solutions to your business problems and boy are you in for a treat! So listen in as we discuss the Software Defined Data Center, their Hybrid Cloud solution with vCloud Air, and what's up with their End User Computing Solutions! Also we will find out how Airwatch can be incorporated into your operational environment! And don't forget to score some holiday cash by calling in to contribute to the conversation as every caller will get an Amazon Gift Card! Only on the SoftwareONE Radio Network!12:00 PM EST - SoftwareONE at VMWare 12:30 PM EST - The Software Defined Data Center - Kyle Geisler 1:00 PM EST - The Hybrid Cloud on vCloud Air – Jon Purcell 1:30 PM EST - The Hybrid Cloud on vCloud Air Part 2 – Jon Purcell 2:00 PM EST - End User Computing – Jennifer Shrum 2:30 PM EST - AirWatch – Arden Henderson 

Tech Talk on the SoftwareONE Radio Network
Tech Talk on the SoftwareONE Radio Network - Live from VMWare, IT GAME CHANGER!

Tech Talk on the SoftwareONE Radio Network

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2015 180:08


Hey Tech Talkers, Tune in to this week's show as we will be live from the VMWare Office in Austin Texas to go over their solutions to your business problems and boy are you in for a treat! So listen in as we discuss the Software Defined Data Center, their Hybrid Cloud solution with vCloud Air, and what's up with their End User Computing Solutions! Also we will find out how Airwatch can be incorporated into your operational environment! And don't forget to score some holiday cash by calling in to contribute to the conversation as every caller will get an Amazon Gift Card! Only on the SoftwareONE Radio Network!12:00 PM EST - SoftwareONE at VMWare 12:30 PM EST - The Software Defined Data Center - Kyle Geisler 1:00 PM EST - The Hybrid Cloud on vCloud Air – Jon Purcell 1:30 PM EST - The Hybrid Cloud on vCloud Air Part 2 – Jon Purcell 2:00 PM EST - End User Computing – Jennifer Shrum 2:30 PM EST - AirWatch – Arden Henderson 

Health Connect South
AirWatch by VM Ware

Health Connect South

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 4, 2015


AirWatch by VM Ware On this week’s episode we sat down with Aamir Siddiqi, the Executive Director for Enterprise Sales, Healthcare, for AirWatch by VM Ware. AirWatch is known as an industry leader and innovator in the mobile enterprise security and services space. The rise and evolution of mobile devices as business tools has been […] The post AirWatch by VM Ware appeared first on Business RadioX ®.

Top Docs Radio
AirWatch – Top Docs Radio

Top Docs Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2014


  AirWatch by vmware This week on TopDocsRADIO we sat down with Paul McRae of AirWatch by vmware. Healthcare is evolving. As information technology advances and our health laws change, greater importance is being placed on electronic health records. Today, digital data is flowing between departments in a hospital, to physician offices, to practitioners in […] The post AirWatch – Top Docs Radio appeared first on Business RadioX ®.

Info Risk Today Podcast
AirWatch Chairman on Mobile Security

Info Risk Today Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2014


Government Information Security Podcast
AirWatch Chairman on Mobile Security

Government Information Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2014


Healthcare Information Security Podcast
AirWatch Chairman on Mobile Security

Healthcare Information Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2014


Data Breach Today Podcast
AirWatch Chairman on Mobile Security

Data Breach Today Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2014


Careers Information Security Podcast
AirWatch Chairman on Mobile Security

Careers Information Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2014


Banking Information Security Podcast
AirWatch Chairman on Mobile Security

Banking Information Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2014


Credit Union Information Security Podcast
AirWatch Chairman on Mobile Security

Credit Union Information Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2014


The Cloudcast
The Mobilecast #20 - VMware acquires AirWatch

The Cloudcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2014 36:42


Brian Katz talks with Sanjay Poonen (@spoonen) and John Marshall (AirWatch CEO) about VMware’s acquisition of AirWatch which was announced last week.

TAGTV Online - TAG Radio
John Marshall, AirWatch Founder & CEO

TAGTV Online - TAG Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2014 17:58


013114 Marshall

The Cloudcast
The Mobilecast #16 - Enterprise Mobility Mgm't Space

The Cloudcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2013 32:34


Brian chats with John Marshall, CEO of AirWatch while at the AirWatch Connect Users Conference. They talk about MDM and how it's turning into Enterprise Mobility Management. They touch on some of the general things that enterprises are asking for and looking in these all encompassing products. They hit on some of the new features announced and shown for AirWatch's new release and then talk about the future landscape of EMM.

TAGTV Online - TAG Radio
John Marshall, Founder and CEO, AirWatch

TAGTV Online - TAG Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2013 17:58


020513 Marshall