Thanks to Laughing Squid for bringing this little bit of genius to my attention…
‘What will be the most widely adopted Enterprise Mobile Device in 2009?’
A few people have written about this over the last few days but I thought I’d mention a few things I’ve not seen mentioned elsewhere.
Over on LinkedIn there’s a Poll asking the question ‘What will be the widestly adopted Enterprise Mobile Device in 2009?’. Although not that scientific (there’s no accounting for whether the respondents are actually in a position to assess or influence the matter) it does pose some interesting questions, for example is the iPhone ready for widespread enterprise adoption?
I reckon it is, but within limits. For people that just want a smartphone that will access their mailbox, calendar, contacts and the web then I reckon the iPhone does a fantastic job. It’s not perfect by any means, but for your average user it’s fine. It does pretty much everything Windows Mobile can do but with a tad more style, and without the extra infrastructure/services a Blackberry solution would need.
What’s more, by supporting Microsoft’s ActiveSync protocol not only does it play nicely with Exchange, it also supports Exchange’s basic device management capabilities (enforce pin codes, remote wipe etc). That support makes the iPhone a lot more acceptable to corporate IS departments – quite how many use device management is another matter…
Of course if you have existing mobile applications you need to support then the iPhone may not fit quite yet. But business apps are starting to trickle through onto the App Store (Salesforce, Oracle) and with Apples simple model for publishing and distribution I’m sure many more will follow.
To me though the key thing the iPhone has in its favour are the end users. Ultimately to most people, phones and smartphones – even their work ones – are personal devices. And even as a long time Windows Mobile user I have to say that the iPhone walks all over it’s competition as a phone everyone can use and enjoy.
I’m still looking forward to seeing Windows Mobile 6.5 and 7.0 though… :)
If I was Google…
Google is I giant, there’s no denying that, but one area where they are only just beginning to make inroads is enterprise IT. It’s pretty obvious this is where they want to be, after all there’s a huge market to be had there. A market currently dominated by Microsoft and the thousands of partners that the MS ecosystem supports.
On the face of it Google have a pretty good suite of products for business. It covers pretty much everything you would need in terms of messaging (email, Calendar, Instant Messaging, Conferencing, email security and spam filtering) and collaboration (word processing, spreadsheets, presentations, video) with large storage allowances and very competitive pricing at $50 per user per year. Certainly if you were a new business you’d have pretty much everything you’d need for very little up-front cost.
The pricing of the Google services is key. $50 dollars per user per year for the fully suite of apps, a mailbox, and 25GB of storage for mail and documents is very cheap. As a comparison MS’s current hosted Exchange model is $10 per user per month just for a 5GB mail box. You can bundle in SharePoint, Office Communications Server and Live Meeting for a cost of $15 dollars per user per month, but you’d still need to buy MS Office (or equivalent) for each user.
To my mind there are two main obstacles that Google will need to overcome in order to quickly gain some of the enterprise market.
First the the concept of having everything in the cloud. Traditionally companies will have built and managed their own systems for mail, storage, etc. It’s a big jump to start giving that up and relying on services you can’t see or touch in the cloud. Fortunately most companies are now becoming more open to this, at least for things that can now be considered as ‘commodity’ services like email. The current economic climate is, if anything, helping cloud services gain some traction. Companies will be very reluctant to go spending Capex on new servers. If a service provider can offer the same or better service , with no capital outlay and vastly reduced operational costs (you don’t need to manage servers you don’t own or host) then that’s a very attractive option. The arguments for and against cloud computing have been done over and over so I won’t go into them again here.
The second obstacle for Google, in my view at least, is that most people working for companies now will simply be used to Microsoft Office. Like it or hate it, Office is the probably the single most important app in many companies. I know from experience that any suggestion of changing it – even just for a new version – has a very serious change management exercise ahead if it’s going to succeed. Moving from Office is going to put a lot of people off of going to a Google Apps solution.
So what would I do? Well I think Google has a lot going for it in its search for the enterprise market. Strangely one advantage is that MS themselves are about to change the way people can buy Exchange. As well as a boxed version you’ll buy and install yourself they’ll be selling it as a hosted/managed service. So once Exchange 14 arrives people will have to start considering cloud services anyway. Google need to get themselves positioned in peoples minds as the natural alternative to Exchange 14. Not only in terms of functionality and cost, but in terms of ease of migration. For some they already are, but it’s not yet an obvious decision.
To do that I think that they need to do a few things.
- Make using Google Mail on the backend completely transparent to Outlook users. Provide a MAPI interface into Google Mail, and make Outlook on Google Mail supports all the same functionality as Exchange. Things like delegates on mailboxes and calendars may not be used by most, but those that do use them are likely to be important people and their secretaries. If your project is going to be seen as a success you want to keep the PA’s happy. I understand that a MAPI interface is coming, but quite how fully featured I’m not sure.
- Provide native support for mobile devices. Whilst the web and Google mobile clients are good, people are used to using the native inbox, contact and calendar tools on their phones. POP and IMAP support helps, but ‘Push’ email is often seen as important and support for the MS ActiveSync protocol would tick a lot of boxes, especially for Windows Mobile and iPhone. Again, I understand it will be available for mail, calendar and contacts at some point this year.
- Improve the out-the-box tools that are available for migration and ongoing operations. Whilst Google’s API’s are very good, and will allow you to do most thing you’d want to do, there don’t seem to be many fully featured tools to help migrate hundreds or thousands of mailboxes or calendars. Whilst changing Exchange isn’t always simple, it is a known quantity. Personally I’d like to see Google provide a good toolset and not refer back to API’s. It’ll help them gain the support of the IT guys on the ground. Maybe these things exist and I’ve not stumbled across them yet?
If Google can become an accepted host for mailboxes with an Outlook client, it’s then a much smaller jump for companies to start using the wider Google Apps package.
If as part of your $50 a year mail solution you’ve also got access to 25GB of collaborative document storage and some office apps to work with, you’d have to think very seriously the next time you MS licensing agreement come around.
Whilst Google Apps isn’t going to be a 100% fit for everyone (even within Google!), there’d be a lot of savings there if a subsection of the user base could get by with Google Apps rather than MS Office.
More PhotoSynth Goodness, this time on iPhone
I’m a bit of a PhotoSynth fan, I think it’s a fantastic technology. The iPhone has always seemed like an obvious candidate for a viewer, the touch interface seems ideal for it. Sarah over on on10.net spotted this, and I thought I’d pass it on… A PhotoSynth viewer for the iPhone!
The great news is that the client works really well, you can search for specific synths or topics, and pick from Recent, Most Viewed and ‘Nice and Synthy’ lists. Once you open up a synth you get the familiar view from one of the camera view points, and can move around the scene from photo to photo.
As well as that though, you can choose to view the point cloud that ties the photos together, and move and zoom around it in 3D. It’s hard to explain, but hopefully the screenshots help. The point cloud is nothing new, you can see it on the PC and Mac views, but it just seems to work better with the iPhone interface.
If you like PhotoSynth it’s a great little app. It seems the the author Greg Pascale was an intern with the PhotoSynth team at Microsoft last year and he’s written it with the teams approval. Good stuff! How about a viewer for XBox?
You can get iSynth for free from the App Store or from iTunes here:
Greg’s site is here:
TED, iPhones, app stores and Xbox
Over the weekend I discovered the TED application for my iPhone. For those not familiar with TED, it’s a conference in the states that focuses on Technology, Entertainment and Design. Speakers are invited to talk for 18 minutes on subjects important to them. There are a huge range of speakers and subjects, from Bill Gates to JJ Abrams. There really is some fascinating stuff there, its that’s well worth a look.
So anyway, I found this iPhone application and spent a few hours on Sunday watching some of the talks. It struck me what a great idea the application was. It’s roughly the same content as the TED website, but it just brings the whole thing together in a single app – another good example of software and services.
Whilst it’s great having this on the iPhone, after a while I did begin to wonder why I was having to watch on a small screen held in my hand. Why couldn’t I use my television? Of course I could hook it up to my PC and use the web site, but that’s a lot of hassle and I’ve already got an Xbox there. Surely I should be able to use that? It would beat the usual repeats of Friends that seem to make up Sunday afternoon TV during the F1 off season! :)
I couldn’t of course, there’s no app for me to use. But there should be, not just for TED but YouTube, maybe the BBC iPlayer. Perhaps a host of other tools that people are used to on the iPhone. MS are missing a trick here I reckon. At the moment there’s a huge amount of Software + Services (an MS terminology) innovation happening on the iPhone. It’s really good stuff, but the device is somewhat limited by the fact it’s a phone. MS should be making the XBox into the home equivalent.
The XNA Creators Club already goes some way to allow home-brew games, written by the community and published on XBox live. So the basic infrastructure is there. They have a well developed development environment (though how suitable it is for non-game applications I don’t know) and a delivery and billing mechanism though XBox Live. App Stores seem to be the next big thing in the mobile world, but I reckon they could be equally important elsewhere.
I’m using XBox as an example here as I have one, but the same would also apply to the PS3 or Wii – indeed I believe you can already use the iPlayer and YouTube on both.