Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide

Is the iPhone ready for the enterprise? How about the iPad or iPod Touch? What can you do to create value for your users and environments? What are some of the things currently being done with these devices? How do you deploy them in large quantities, and once deployed, how do you make changes to...

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Tác giả chính: Edge, Charles
Định dạng: Sách
Ngôn ngữ:English
Được phát hành: Apress 2012
Những chủ đề:
Truy cập trực tuyến:http://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/31002
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spelling oai:scholar.dlu.edu.vn:DLU123456789-310022014-01-20T06:31:27Z Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide Edge, Charles Technologies Is the iPhone ready for the enterprise? How about the iPad or iPod Touch? What can you do to create value for your users and environments? What are some of the things currently being done with these devices? How do you deploy them in large quantities, and once deployed, how do you make changes to the configurations? What about applications? In this book, we look at many of the questions that systems administrators have and answer them in a practical manner, to guide you through deployments and management of devices. In Chapter 1 we look at strategy. This is the big picture. Here, we introduce the larger concepts for integrating iOS into the enterprise. Chapter 2 looks at procurement: how do you purchase the devices? What options are available for manual configuration (although we won’t discuss the actual manual configuration until Chapter 3)? Do you really need iTunes on all the computers with mobile devices? If so, how can you manage what users are able to do with iTunes? In Chapter 3, we look mostly at how to perform the basic tasks on the devices manually. Here, we look at setting up access to the corporate virtual private network (VPN) and network. We will look at other basic setup and configuration tasks that are built right into the device without the need for third-party tools. Chapter 4 is all about groupware. Although the focus is on Microsoft Exchange integration, we will look at other solutions and options for everyone else. Because most environments will also configure a number of policies from their Exchange servers, we’ll also take this opportunity to discuss doing so and cover the options available to deployments from Exchange 2003 to Exchange 2010. One of the biggest differences between a mobile device and a full desktop computer is how they interact with files. In Chapter 5 we will look at various options for getting files onto the portable devices. This includes sharing to the device, sharing from the device, and manually synchronizing to the device. But we also look at some of the more popular cloud-based solutions and what to do with files after you have them on the devices.> 2012-06-11T06:50:25Z 2012-06-11T06:50:25Z 2010 Book 978-1-4302-3010-6 http://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/31002 en application/pdf Apress
institution Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt
collection Thư viện số
language English
topic Technologies
spellingShingle Technologies
Edge, Charles
Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide
description Is the iPhone ready for the enterprise? How about the iPad or iPod Touch? What can you do to create value for your users and environments? What are some of the things currently being done with these devices? How do you deploy them in large quantities, and once deployed, how do you make changes to the configurations? What about applications? In this book, we look at many of the questions that systems administrators have and answer them in a practical manner, to guide you through deployments and management of devices. In Chapter 1 we look at strategy. This is the big picture. Here, we introduce the larger concepts for integrating iOS into the enterprise. Chapter 2 looks at procurement: how do you purchase the devices? What options are available for manual configuration (although we won’t discuss the actual manual configuration until Chapter 3)? Do you really need iTunes on all the computers with mobile devices? If so, how can you manage what users are able to do with iTunes? In Chapter 3, we look mostly at how to perform the basic tasks on the devices manually. Here, we look at setting up access to the corporate virtual private network (VPN) and network. We will look at other basic setup and configuration tasks that are built right into the device without the need for third-party tools. Chapter 4 is all about groupware. Although the focus is on Microsoft Exchange integration, we will look at other solutions and options for everyone else. Because most environments will also configure a number of policies from their Exchange servers, we’ll also take this opportunity to discuss doing so and cover the options available to deployments from Exchange 2003 to Exchange 2010. One of the biggest differences between a mobile device and a full desktop computer is how they interact with files. In Chapter 5 we will look at various options for getting files onto the portable devices. This includes sharing to the device, sharing from the device, and manually synchronizing to the device. But we also look at some of the more popular cloud-based solutions and what to do with files after you have them on the devices.>
format Book
author Edge, Charles
author_facet Edge, Charles
author_sort Edge, Charles
title Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide
title_short Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide
title_full Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide
title_fullStr Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide
title_full_unstemmed Enterprise iPhone and iPad Administrator's Guide
title_sort enterprise iphone and ipad administrator's guide
publisher Apress
publishDate 2012
url http://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/31002
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