Mac Software: Stepchild to Windows Versions No More?
At support software company Bomgar, executives admit their products didn't support Macs very well just a few years ago. But that's been changing over the last 12 months, and last week Bomgar released the latest version of its appliance-based, remote desktop support software with beefed-up Mac features.
"Over the last year or two, vendors have had to make the Mac piece work. They've had to support and test it and put it through a full QA process," says Nathan McNeill, VP of product strategy at Bomgar. "No longer is baseline support enough."
[ Business executives and Windows geeks warm to the Mac, reports CIO.com. | For CIOs, managing Macs can be a nightmare. ]
It's high time Windows enterprise developers get serious about the Mac, Mac engineers say. Like it or not, the Mac's ranks are growing quickly inside corporations. The Enterprise Desktop Alliance, a consortium of Mac vendors, surveyed 300 IT managers earlier this year and found that more than half have already deployed more than 100 Macs. Enterprise Strategy Group analyst Jon Oltsik figures Macs have around a 5 percent penetration rate among companies that allow Macs in their environments.
More importantly, as the Mac moves beyond marketing departments and into the executive suite, user support expectations increase. "I recently heard this expression in the market: 5 percent equals 20 percent," Oltsik says. "The issue is that of that 5 percent penetration rate, a large portion are C-level folks. The PC support people say that because of the expectations of executives, providing Mac support occupies about 20 percent of their time."
Now throw in the main gripe among Mac engineers: Windows software vendors deliver poor Mac products and support. IT groups must use these inadequate Mac versions, which, in turn, lead to more executive complaints, says a Mac engineer at a hospital, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The hospital had been managing PCs with LANDesk, a Windows desktop management software suite, says the engineer. When the number of Macs began to grow in the last 15 months, from 80 to nearly 180 earlier this year (and tracking to 230 by next year), the hospital turned on the Mac option in the Windows suite.
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Either way you look at it Microsoft Data Center management did not follow standards or best practices in this failure. In which case it makes me wonder more about the outsourcing of corporate data much less personal data.
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