Today, IBM revealed some surprisingly positive findings from its early Mac experiments, reports AppleInsider:
Only 5% of IBM employees with MacBooks need help desk support from the IT department, versus 40% of PC users.
In fact, that lessened need for
the help desk helps justify the higher up-front cost of a MacBook versus
a comprable Windows PC, IBM VP Fletcher Previn said on stage at a JAMF Software user conference in Minneapolis today.
Plus, it means that IBM is supporting over 130,000 combined iPhone,
iPad, and MacBook users with just 24 dedicated help desk staff.
IBM is at that conference
because of its somewhat untraditional corporate laptop deployment
process. Basically, employees get a shrinkwrapped, brand new MacBook. By
using Apple Device Enrollment and JAMF Software's Casper software, IBM
employees can get their own computers set up with the tools and software
they need to do their jobs, all in accordance with IBM policy.
Consumers love Apple, as evidenced by never-ending iPhone-mania. But businesses have long been caught between a rock and a hard place, when it comes to officially supporting it as a business device.
The IBM partnership is
supposed to bridge that gap, making Apple technology an easier sell to
business customers, in a win-win for both parties.
And now, it looks like IBM is
finding its own success with that idea internally. It should vindicate a
lot of Apple fans, who have long championed Apple's OS X as the
superior, more user-friendly operating system.
"I felt a great disturbance in
the Force. As if millions of voices suddenly cried out, 'We’ve been
telling you this for 30 years,'" as Daring Fireball's John Gruber put it.
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