Smartphone use adds to pressure on IT

Latest iPhone will increase the mobile device integration headaches for technology departments

Written by Martin Courtney

The release of Apple’s second generation iPhone in Europe next month highlights the growing pressure on IT departments to integrate different types of smartphones into corporate mobile communications infrastructure.

Sales of all smartphones in Western Europe are set to increase from 113 million units sold in 2008, to 158 million in 2009, according to analyst Gartner. Many will be taken up by employees eager to have corporate email, application and intranet access enabled on one portable device.

Advertisement

This is likely to leave many IT departments with the task of configuring, securing and managing larger numbers of mobile voice and data devices based on many different mobile platforms ­ including iPhone, RIM’s BlackBerry, Windows Mobile or Symbian.

IT professionals will also be called on to organise back-end connectivity and synchronisation of personal information management software, and provide users with other portable applications.

By upgrading internet connectivity from GPRS to faster 3G, adding support for Microsoft Exchange-based email, and securing intranet connections using Cisco-engineered virtual private network connections, the iPhone 2.0 will become attractive to many business users.

But while Apple has made a software development toolkit available to software makers, the iPhone still lacks third-party security and management
applications widely available for rival platforms, and exclusive contracts with operators may continue to deter customers.

Comments

White papers

Related jobs

More Accounting jobs

Spotlight

Ted Bell, Abel and Cole FD

Profile: Ted Bell, FD of Abel and Cole

The combination of the online shopping boom and a hunger...

Top 30 Accounting Networks and Associations 2008

The race to become the biggest firm on the planet...

Barack Obama Accountancy Age cover October 2008

Obama: asset or liability?

What an Obama presidency could mean for you

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Job of the week

More finance jobs

Newsletters

Sign up here for the very latest news delivered to your inbox. Choose from the following options:

Your next job

Have your say

Will proposed tax cuts help to stimulate the economy?
Yes
No

Advertisement

Search white papers

Search white papers

Advertisement