who the hell still uses exchange Jeeps!
Just about every company in the world ... if not exchange than lotus notes.
There's no real alternative. And no, hosting e-mail in the cloud is not possible for many companies.
who the hell still uses exchange Jeeps!
I know. We are in the same boat. Not in the same field though.[...] People from that same time that actually understand and have a passion for computers can do a much better job, but they seem outnumbered by huge numbers of incompetant IT people.
If I could I would urge people never to touch Microsoft Exchange due to the fact that admins have the ability to wipe your phone with one click and no permission.
What a buncha ******** that is...
who the hell still uses exchange Jeeps!
pls join the 21st century
it's not 1995 anymore
Why do I have to set a system-wise password just to access to one of my many mail accounts?
who the hell still uses exchange Jeeps!
pls join the 21st century
it's not 1995 anymore
who the hell still uses exchange Jeeps!
pls join the 21st century
it's not 1995 anymore
iOS is a toy (for kids). *lol*Instead of simply sending a notification to the meeting organizer that the user will not attend, iOS 6 is sending meeting cancellation notices to the entire distribution list, effectively canceling the invitation for all attendees.
Neither iCloud nor Exchange ask the phone for permission before wiping it, so I'm not sure why you're suggesting one over the other for that reason.
iOS needs to have the ability to sandbox private from work like BB10. That way if your work admin wipes your work stuff it won't affect your private data.
Edumacate us then:
I think it's acceptable to have IT director approve smartphone wipes, more to track hardware that was lost than the loss of irreplaceable data. We have systems to regularly track approval processes and I'd be shocked if you didn't as well.
Again, if I was in your organization, I'd be lobbying for apps that didn't silo data on smartphones (any smartphones) to begin with.
OK, picking up on your edited post. That's the cost of BYOD in the enterprise. Users have to understand how and why they need to backup their phones, and that losing it with corporate data means the phone has to be wiped.
admins have the ability to wipe your phone with one click and no permission.
who the hell still uses exchange Jeeps!
pls join the 21st century
it's not 1995 anymore
I would hope a company of these sizes would not be recommending any x.0 software updates.
With iCloud you can choose to wipe your phone, with Exchange some ******* IT guy can wipe your phone without you asking.
I'm calling BS on the whole story until we at least know which "Fortune 500 Company" this is.
Edumacate us then:
I think it's acceptable to have IT director approve smartphone wipes, more to track hardware that was lost than the loss of irreplaceable data. We have systems to regularly track approval processes and I'd be shocked if you didn't as well.
Again, if I was in your organization, I'd be lobbying for apps that didn't silo data on smartphones (any smartphones) to begin with.
OK, picking up on your edited post. That's the cost of BYOD in the enterprise. Users have to understand how and why they need to backup their phones, and that losing it with corporate data means the phone has to be wiped.
I'm calling BS on the whole story until we at least know which "Fortune 500 Company" this is.
That is what I am concerning about. My company's admins forced anyone who uses the exchange server to have a password on its phone. Why do I have to set a system-wise password just to access to one of my many mail accounts?
With iCloud you can choose to wipe your phone, with Exchange some ******* IT guy can wipe your phone without you asking.