Eric Doyle preferred

A Bring Your Own Device policy has many attractive attributes but the security risks can be enormous and, as yet, unfathomed, says Eric Doyle

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Mark-Williams-Pensar-preferred
On by Mark Williams 1

As the BYOD trend continues, IT departments face a number of challenges integrating Apple devices into a Wintel work environment, says Mark Williams

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judgepreferred2

The UK police's BlackBerry project has been criticised, but is kicking BlackBerry just this year's fashion, asks Peter Judge

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Nicholas-Kolakowski-preferred-PREFERRED

The severing of ties between Jon Rubenstein and HP marks the end of the company's WebOS efforts as it looks to Windows 8, says Nicholas Kolakowski

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Simon Wilcox s
On by Simon Wilcox 0

'Bringing Your Own Device' to work allows people the freedom to work with devices best suited to them. But, as Simon Wilcox writes, it requires informed network management.

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If this year’s CES is anything to go by, Nokia’s Windows Phone strategy is twofold. Nicholas Kolakowski looks at how the company aims to target the high end and midmarket

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jgerrypurdylead

After interesting times in 2011, J. Gerry Purdy looks at what is in store for smartphones, tablets, enterprise applications and cloud computing in the next 12 months

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judgepreferred

It may be called the Consumer Electronics show but CES is an event the business IT community can't ignore, says Peter Judge

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waynerash2

The vast majority of Windows Phone 7 critics have never seen a Windows Phone 7, let alone used one. Maybe they should, says Wayne Rash

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waynerash2

Mobile operators are shamefully silent about monitoring software, but BlackBerry-maker RIM's response is exmplary, says Wayne Rash

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