Laptops allow staff to work anywhere. However, they also allow staff to do
other things - break the keyboard or screen, drop the thing under a bus, or
render it unusable because their family has misused it while it was at home.
In other words, staff working happily on desktop PCs can become a liability
when they are packed off with mobile machines. Any small business moving to
mobile working is going to have to - at the very least - balance these extra
costs against the benefits they expect to gain.
"Whatever the size of a company, it needs to be 100 percent sure that the end
user on the road will keep productive even if something goes wrong," says Mike
Walker, mobile business development manager for the UK at
Lenovo. His company has some special
angles, but the industry mostly agrees on the basics.
First, the business needs to consider the reliability of the machines
themselves. Over recent years, laptops have become more reliable, but they still
lag behind desktops for the obvious reason that they are designed for
portability, and they get moved around a lot.
According to a study by analyst firm Gartner, one fifth of laptops will fail
during their lifetime. Fifteen percent will fail in the first year, and 22
percent will fail over the first four years. By comparison, only five percent of
desktops will fail in the first year, and twelve percent will fail in four
years, according to Gartner’s figures for 2006.
This is a big step in the right direction - in 2004, twenty to 28 percent of
new laptops would fail. Much of that improvement is down to better designs - and
any laptop buyer should get some detail on the screen, keyboard and hard disk of
a potential purchase.
Screens used to be the weak spot of a laptop, but their odds of survival have
been improved, partly by making laptop lids more rigid and providing more space
between the screen and the keyboard when the lid is closed, according to Leslie
Fiering, research vice president at Gartner.
Hard drives - mechanical parts vulnerable to impacts - have also been a major
source of failure, but again this danger has been reduced by technological
fixes, such as shock-resistant mountings. Hard drives for laptops should also
have motion sensors that
park the
drive heads as soon as the laptop begins to fall, to prevent damage to the
disk platters on impact.
Beyond this, it's pretty obvious that, as memory prices reduce, laptop hard
drives will eventually be replaced by solid state drives built on Flash memory.
Flash disks are more reliable, and also lighter. At the moment, though, this is
an expensive option, and leads to reduced storage at greater cost.
Motherboards have become the most-often replaced component, not because of
decreasing reliability, but because more components have been integrated onto
the board, and any failure is likely to mean replacing the whole thing.
Keyboard failures are common, due to spillages or mechanical failure, but
laptop designs now tend to be modular, to allow easy replacement. Latches and
hinges also tend to go wrong eventually.
It is worth checking that your supplier, whether the original manufacturer or
a reseller, keeps a full complement of spare parts. "We stock all the spare
parts, and we have the lowest return rates in the industry," says Lenovo’s
Walker.
Rugged machines
For anyone looking for something more reliable than business-grade laptops,
there are rugged or semi-rugged machines - but for most small businesses, these
will be overkill.
The best-known brand here is
Panasonic's
Toughbook - often seen in the hands of an AA or British Gas engineer. The
other big brand is Itronix, which claims
that its GoBook can be safely immersed
in petrol, and then used without danger of an electrical spark causing an
explosion. The firm says users can drop these machines out of a window, or drive
a car over them, and carry on working.
However, most people don't actually need to do these things regularly, and
most people quickly decide it isn't worth spending £2,500 or more for a laptop
that will usually have a lower, slower specification than the norm, and weigh
something like twice as much (4kg as compared with 2kg if you go for a
lightweight model). Most users should put the money aside for the
much-less-than-20-percent chance that their laptop will break irreparably in the
first year.
Besides choosing the right hardware, it's possible to boost reliability by
software-based techniques. "There are
ThinkVantage
tools on every single unit we ship out of the door, at no extra cost," says
Walker. "This includes a rescue and recovery feature, based on a hard disk image
stored on the laptop, and kept up to date." If the laptop fails, the last stable
version of the system can be restored from the hard disk.
They also help with support: "It's always been harder to support a mobile
workforce from a helpdesk," says Walker. "If end users are running into
problems, it helps to log into their system remotely." Centralised management
can keep software up to date, and spot when a disk is going to be full, or even
when it is experiencing error rates that mean it should be replaced.
These functions have been out of the reach of smaller companies, but
Intel's
AMT - included in
Centrino Pro - and
other remote control technologies mean they can be offered through outsourcers,
either as a low-cost add-on to laptop purchase, or as an ongoing management
contract. "There used to be a distinct fence between small businesses and larger
ones, but that is disappearing now," says Walker. "The technology is reaching
all levels, and it's affordable technology now."
London-based Qual-IT, for instance,
ships laptops to small businesses and individuals, and offers a remote fix
service based on the widely-used VNC
remote control system developed by AT&T, and a courier
pick-up-and-replace service. "There's no hidden costs, and we usually come in
cheaper than buying the laptop direct from the manufacturer," says Suzanne
Tompkins, sales manager at Qual-IT.
Other providers have moved up the food chain.
Level Platforms started as a
managed service provider, and now provides management technology based on AMT to
enable other managed service providers.
"MSPs like these can handle the management of machines and do the worrying,"
says David Hollway, technical marketing engineer at Intel. A nominated IT person
in the end user company can log into a web page and use a browser to check the
health of the company's laptops on a dashboard, he says. "It might say 'here are
ten machines, one with a hard disk that is 95 percent full, and another three
patch revisions out of date,'" he says.
So, if reliability is a major concern over laptops, you can probably dismiss
it. Laptops are more reliable, and they're more easy to manage than they used to
be. And there are people out there who want to help you do it.
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