Apple's rapid enterprise growth in Mac, iOS & Apple TV targeted by new Jamf Pro 10 release...

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in Mac Software
Addressing 1,500 attendees at its Jamf Nation User Conference, Jamf CEO Dean Hager announced an October 31 general availability of Jamf Pro 10, the latest version of the company's enterprise device management suite for Macs, iOS devices and Apple TV.


Jamf Pro 10


As a company, Jamf is focused specifically on enterprise and organizational management of devices in the Apple ecosystem, rather than offering a generic management tool aimed at a variety of different platforms.

"Somebody has to recognize the Apple experience can not be achieved by treating all devices from all manufacturers the exact same," Hager stated. "Apple users want the Apple experience and Jamf seeks to provide that."

The company's latest release, Jamf Pro 10, handles the deployment, management and configuration of fleets of Apple devices for businesses, hospitals, education and other organizations.

The new version overhauls the user interface of its management console, retaining familiarity for existing users while making improvements to enhance the ability of new users to get started and be productive. The new dashboard improves reporting features and provides new breadcrumbs and collapsible navigation elements and contextual error warnings.

The company also worked to optimize Jamf Pro 10 for mobile use, enabling IT administrators to handle tasks and monitor inventory and reporting from iPad.

The release also enables organizations to customize the management tool client with their own branding, and improves the system's ability to selectively roll out updates and configuration profiles to specific systems.

The company also outlined partnership integrations with third parties, including eSpark, a company that delivers dynamic iPad app management for classrooms; Tableau, Splunk, RobotCloud and Microsoft's EMS (Enterprise Mobility + Security) package for identity-based security of cloud services.



A Movement: Apple in the enterprise

Speaking in the opening keynote session at what he called "the largest gathering of Apple IT professionals in the world," Hager described an "incredible momentum for the Mac" in the enterprise, noting an ongoing growth trend he referred to as "a movement," driven by the Mac being "the people's choice."

That shift has grown rapidly over the last decade, driven largely by iPhone demand that sparked BYOD ("bring your own device") policies across companies that had previously made centralized IT product buying decisions.


Jamf CEO Dean Hager: Mac is 'the people's choice'


While Jamf first got started in managing Macs in the enterprise back in 2002, the company acknowledged that Apple initially seemed to only see limited potential for selling its products to businesses.

"Apple helped the enterprise focus on the user"

Hager cited comments by Steve Jobs, made in 2010, that expressed that Apple was focused on building devices for individuals rather than seeing enterprise sales as a major opportunity. This was largely due to the fact that IT groups at large companies had long bought devices for their users, often based on their existing relationships with vendors, in particular Microsoft and its PC partners.

Apple's enterprise efforts were actively resisted by companies for years following Jobs' return to Apple in 1997. However, the huge productivity leap in mobile afforded by iPhone in 2007 radically changed this.

iPhone quickly penetrated into businesses as executives and other employees began insisting that IT support them, fundamentally changing how enterprise buying decisions were made. This has resulted in employee performance gains, higher satisfaction and cost savings, particularly in regard to user support and device reliability.

The broad shift in enterprise purchase policy has also changed Apple. Earlier this year, Tim Cook stated that "enterprise is the mother of all markets" for Apple. While this shift has commonly been attributed to individuals pushing their companies toward BYOD policies, Hager noted that in reality, "Apple helped the enterprise focus on the user."

Jamf riding Apple's ascent

The shift in companies and organizations such as hospitals and schools seeking to accommodate the needs of their users rather than simply rolling out centralized solutions from the top down has been a windfall for Jamf.

Hager called his company a barometer indicating Apple's surge in the enterprise. Jamf started with one customer in 2002, growing to 5,990 customers in 2015. Two years later, the company now has 13,000 customers; 10,000 using Jamf Pro and 3,000 paid users of Jamf Now. Hager called his company a barometer indicating Apple's surge in the enterprise

The company's products are also used by an even larger number that use a free tier, with over 21,000 organizations making use of the free-to-use, entry version of Jamf Now.

The company also counts 53,000 members of its Jamf Nation online user group, a community the company addressed with new social media features for highlighting useful support documents.

Answering his own question of whether the company would continue to be focused on Apple, Hager remarked, "Hell yes!"

Jamf CEO on Mac, iPad Pro, Apple Watch, Apple TV in the enterprise

Beyond the growth of Macs in business, Hager also specifically noted the rise of iPad Pro, which he said has been the first tool that has allowed him to become entirely paperless at work.

He called iPad "transformative," in that it brings technology to users in environments such as hospitals, schools and in retail where classic computing form factors-- even light weight MacBooks-- don't make as much sense.

Hager cited iPhone as the central hub of activity in business, calling AirPods-- which he called out as his favorite new product of the last year-- not merely wireless headphones but "an enterprise business machine hanging from your ears."

He described Apple Watch as an "informer" business machine, joking that it currently tells you to stand or breathe and who knows what it will dictate next.' But he also called out the productivity gains seen in wearing Apple Watch by business users with active schedules and in need of regular updates of business information, calling Apple Watch "the ultimate notifications machine in the world."

Whether notifications of inventory running low or doctors having hands-free access to a system that keeps them updated on patient status and tells them where they are needed and what to do next, Hager noted Apple Watch as an emerging business tool with enthusiastic users. He outlined that use cases will improve as the device becomes easier to manage and deploy by companies.

Hager also called attention to Apple TV as more than just being an entertainment device for the home living room, describing it as a tool for educators, conference presenters, hospitals and hotels-- noting in particular that it is effortless to configure remotely using centralized mobile device management after simply plugging it it.

Jamf's conference in Minneapolis, Minnesota is hosting a series of speakers over the next three days from Apple, partners including Microsoft and clients who use the product ranging from Walmart to SAP to Capital One bank to school districts and charitable groups such as the Bungie Foundation, which works to install and manage iPads benefitting children in hospitals.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 16
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    cornchipmagman1979gregg thurmanmacxpresslolliverwilliamlondonJWSC
  • Reply 2 of 16
    This puts Microsoft solutions to absolute SHAME!!! This system management is so elegant, functional, well thought out, and just a joy to use for the end-user, and the system administrator!

    Man what I wouldn't GIVE to let my MS-loving workplace see the light and make the decision to transition to Mac!!!
    calilollivercharlesgreswilliamlondon
  • Reply 3 of 16
    calicali Posts: 3,494member
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    I’m waiting for the trolls to say this article is biased because DED is reporting facts.

    They won’t come out because he didn’t mention the competition. 
    lolliver
  • Reply 4 of 16
    This puts Microsoft solutions to absolute SHAME!!! This system management is so elegant, functional, well thought out, and just a joy to use for the end-user, and the system administrator!

    Man what I wouldn't GIVE to let my MS-loving workplace see the light and make the decision to transition to Mac!!!
    Microsoft solidified its strangle hold on the enterprise with two initiatives: Office and MSCE certification.  IT types with an MSCE certificate were beholding to Microsoft because of their training and myopic knowledge (only Microsoft).  Apple didn't help with its proprietary connectors and protocols.

    Instead of attacking Microsoft's position directly, Apple adopted industry standard protocols and focused on the user experience.  The iPhone made the difference between Apple technology and everyone else's blindly apparent, leading to the demise of former industry giants such as Nokia, Motorola, RIMM and Windows Mobile.  The iPad cemented the deal.

    Among those switching to iPhone were significant 1st tier decision makers who asked IT "Why not?" and didn't accept the standard "Its not Microsoft" response.
    magman1979d_2lolliverchiawilliamlondon
  • Reply 5 of 16
    macxpressmacxpress Posts: 5,801member
    This puts Microsoft solutions to absolute SHAME!!! This system management is so elegant, functional, well thought out, and just a joy to use for the end-user, and the system administrator!

    Man what I wouldn't GIVE to let my MS-loving workplace see the light and make the decision to transition to Mac!!!

    Yes, as an IT Professional who uses Microsoft's SCCM and jamf Casper (jamf Pro), jamf pro is 1,000x easier to use and just as powerful, if not more powerful. Even something as simple as creating a search query is stupidly simple in jamf Pro, where as in SCCM you basically have to be a scripting genius to make it function properly with all of these %20% crap, and stuff like that. Everything is so much harder in SCCM. I also love the way jamf Pro integrates directly with the App Store for both iOS and macOS. As long as you have your VPP account mapped to jamf Pro everything automagically just works.

    I also love jamf Pro's inventory feature so I can inventory everything from Macs, Windows PC's, and iOS devices and it integrates with Apple's GSX system so you can pull warranty information, purchasing information etc. They've just all around done a great job and its well worth the money you have to pay for this software. There's a very nice community called jamfnation where you can post your question(s) and there's always something willing to assist.

    SCCM is typical Microsoft crap that is 10,000x more complicated than it should be to even do the simplest task. I hate using it...I feel stupid trying to use it. Its very unintuitive and had to be designed by some Windows Admin geek. It has a very poor interface and sometimes takes FOREVER to do things as it seems like everything needs time to process in the background before you can do something like image a PC after adding it to SCCM, or setting up a deployment to a collection of PC's. Its just very clunky and outdated. They could definitely make a page out of jamf's book thats for sure.

    I'm sure if a Windows admin see's this they will totally disagree with nearly everything I've said about SCCM, but in the real world, I see both on a daily basis and jamf Pro I think runs circles around SCCM.

    edited October 2017 magman1979lolliverchiawilliamlondonMacPro
  • Reply 6 of 16
    cornchipcornchip Posts: 1,945member
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
  • Reply 7 of 16
       
    edited October 2017
  • Reply 8 of 16


    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    Bootcamp
    JWSC
  • Reply 9 of 16
    cornchipcornchip Posts: 1,945member


    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    Bootcamp
    Like I said, he doesn’t want to deal with that.
  • Reply 10 of 16
    rob53rob53 Posts: 3,241member
    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    Interesting read at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intuit about Intuit. Looks like they copied Microsoft's plan of working to keep competitors out of any market they were in. Maybe it's time to investigate Intuit's business practices. I talked to a new co-op market who uses Quickbooks and they can't, or don't want to, run anything else. Of course, their system was slow to respond and I had to wait a long time just to get my receipt printed out. Typical Windows program.....
  • Reply 11 of 16
    thedbathedba Posts: 762member
    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    This was my dilemma, since my company is supporting various clients that have a mixture of Oracle and SQL Server based systems. All my Oracle customers I can easily support on my MBP natively. For SQL Server unfortunately I was using a company issued Dell laptop.  What a f#$*in nightmare. 
    Since acquiring Parallels desktop, I have a Windows VM on my Mac and do all of my SQL Server work on it.  Never had to use this piece of cr@p Dell since. 
    Added bonus, with Parallels VM I've created multiple Linux servers running Oracle in various configs (Data Guard, RAC, standalone, etc.). One machine does it all.  

    My colleagues on the other hand are still struggling with their company issued sub $1000 Windows laptops.  So much for savings and the so called Apple tax. 
  • Reply 12 of 16
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,718member
    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    It was always strange to me that Bill Campbell Jnr. while sitting on Apple's board was so directly connected to Intuit all the while they killed so many Mac sales because of the lack of cross platform compatibility or even parity. I recall founders Scott Cook wrote the PC version in an early form of MS Basic while Tom Prouix used Pascal for the Apple ][.  I wish Apple had done more to help with a better Mac version in the mid 80's. Of course Steve was booted out by Mr. Fizzy water around that time and Apple was the new Pepsi...  Ha!
    JWSC
  • Reply 13 of 16
    MacProMacPro Posts: 19,718member

    thedba said:
    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    This was my dilemma, since my company is supporting various clients that have a mixture of Oracle and SQL Server based systems. All my Oracle customers I can easily support on my MBP natively. For SQL Server unfortunately I was using a company issued Dell laptop.  What a f#$*in nightmare. 
    Since acquiring Parallels desktop, I have a Windows VM on my Mac and do all of my SQL Server work on it.  Never had to use this piece of cr@p Dell since. 
    Added bonus, with Parallels VM I've created multiple Linux servers running Oracle in various configs (Data Guard, RAC, standalone, etc.). One machine does it all.  

    My colleagues on the other hand are still struggling with their company issued sub $1000 Windows laptops.  So much for savings and the so called Apple tax. 
    Excellent story.  I love to read about such situations.  Sadly so many IT people have too much power and fear for their MS Certified job security if they actually let intelligent people like you run amok. ;). Of course we all know here that the MS certification is all about knowing how to get around the crap programming and making it all look like intentional features and of course never showing an end user what the real problem was.
    edited October 2017 williamlondonthedba
  • Reply 14 of 16
    thedbathedba Posts: 762member
    MacPro said:

    thedba said:
    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    This was my dilemma, since my company is supporting various clients that have a mixture of Oracle and SQL Server based systems. All my Oracle customers I can easily support on my MBP natively. For SQL Server unfortunately I was using a company issued Dell laptop.  What a f#$*in nightmare. 
    Since acquiring Parallels desktop, I have a Windows VM on my Mac and do all of my SQL Server work on it.  Never had to use this piece of cr@p Dell since. 
    Added bonus, with Parallels VM I've created multiple Linux servers running Oracle in various configs (Data Guard, RAC, standalone, etc.). One machine does it all.  

    My colleagues on the other hand are still struggling with their company issued sub $1000 Windows laptops.  So much for savings and the so called Apple tax. 
    Excellent story.  I love to read about such situations.  Sadly so many IT people have too much power and fear for their MS Certified job security if they actually let intelligent people like you run amok. ;). Of course we all know here that the MS certification is all about knowing how to get around the crap programming and making it all look like intentional features and of course never showing an end user what the real problem was.
    Thanks for the compliment. I do however want to clarify that not all certified professionals are dufuses, be they Oracle, MS, Cisco, whatever. 
    Those who actually study to learn something shine through. Unfortunately certification exams have become so standard nowadays, that I’ve come across many that only know how to pass the exam. 
    Project management types, ITIL, PMP are the worst IMO. 
    Sorry in advance if I ruffle a few feathers. 

  • Reply 15 of 16
    cornchip said:


    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    Bootcamp
    Like I said, he doesn’t want to deal with that.
    I don’t see that in the post. VMware =! Bootcamp, but if they use Quickbooks, then that doesnt seem like the customer base JAMF / Apple Enterprise is targeting.
  • Reply 16 of 16
    macxpressmacxpress Posts: 5,801member
    cornchip said:


    cornchip said:
    lkrupp said:
    Shhhhhhh... keep this quiet. It might upset the troll army who still claim “real” work can only be done on a Windows PC.
    The one and only reason the owner of my company still has a Windows machine as his work desktop is because of Quickbooks.

    Yes, there’s quickbooks for Mac, but it’s not compatible with the Windows version and all the features aren’t there for web version and it’s apparently a big clusterfook. And he doesn’t want to deal with the VMware scenario for obvious reasons. He uses iPhone & would love to be on Mac, but intuit makes it basically impossible. 
    Bootcamp
    Like I said, he doesn’t want to deal with that.
    I don’t see that in the post. VMware =! Bootcamp, but if they use Quickbooks, then that doesnt seem like the customer base JAMF / Apple Enterprise is targeting.
    jamf Pro is mainly for Education (K-12/Higher Ed) and businesses. Its expensive if you only have a couple of Macs. Its $6,000 upfront just for the mandatory training (5 days on your site). A certified jamf rep comes to you, installs the software on your server (Mac or Windows) and trains you on how to use it. They will even help you get some things setup and configured for you. You also have to pay for a license per Mac (Between $14-16/Mac). Price varies depending on how many Macs you're going to enroll and you renew this annually. iOS device pricing is different as is the training price. 

    So unless you have more than a few Macs, this probably isn't worth it and you can just use something more cost effective. Server (aka macOS Server) is only $20 and has watered down features available as part of Server. All MDM's use the same dev kit Apple provides so they at least all provide the same basic services. 
    edited October 2017
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