Apple Makes Another Acquisition: IT Startup Fleetsmith (arstechnica.com) 13
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Apple has acquired device-management startup Fleetsmith. The technology and personnel that will join Apple as part of the acquisition could help Apple expand upon device enrollment and introduce better ways to set up new devices like iPads and Macs within organizations. Fleetsmith's proposition to customers (and Apple) seems perfectly tailored to our times: the company offers a way for organizations to equip remote workers' (or workers otherwise not located in the central office) devices and have those devices automatically registered and set up for enterprise use as soon as they're first turned on. After that, Fleetsmith automatically ensures devices get needed software updates. It also provides IT managers with a dashboard for managing the fleet.
If you've used Jamf, a more widespread competitor, you get the general idea. But Fleetsmith already had a special focus on Apple devices, it has an Apple-like design sensibility, and it was likely a much cheaper option for Apple than Jamf, to boot. Jamf appears to be on a different path, with a $3 billion IPO planned. Speaking of money, though, neither Apple nor Fleetsmith has revealed the purchase price. Fleetsmith did publish a blog post about the acquisition, though. While the blog post notes that Fleetsmith will continue business as usual and serve both new and existing customers, Seth Goldin from Freethink Media claims that's not the full story. "Apple has completely eliminated core functionality from the app with absolutely no notice," says Goldin in a series of tweets, noting there are "hundreds of users" on the MacAdmins Slack workspace that are "totally outraged because Apple has pulled the rug out from under them."
If you've used Jamf, a more widespread competitor, you get the general idea. But Fleetsmith already had a special focus on Apple devices, it has an Apple-like design sensibility, and it was likely a much cheaper option for Apple than Jamf, to boot. Jamf appears to be on a different path, with a $3 billion IPO planned. Speaking of money, though, neither Apple nor Fleetsmith has revealed the purchase price. Fleetsmith did publish a blog post about the acquisition, though. While the blog post notes that Fleetsmith will continue business as usual and serve both new and existing customers, Seth Goldin from Freethink Media claims that's not the full story. "Apple has completely eliminated core functionality from the app with absolutely no notice," says Goldin in a series of tweets, noting there are "hundreds of users" on the MacAdmins Slack workspace that are "totally outraged because Apple has pulled the rug out from under them."
apple could do a lot more (Score:5, Interesting)
apple should have limited OS roll back for new har (Score:2)
apple should have limited OS roll back for new hardware enterprise only.
Re: (Score:2)
I was with you for most of your post, but then you actually started listing a lot of things that Apple already does. For instance...
Multi user ipads ?
This already exists, but isn't available to the general public. Enterprise and education users already have the ability to do so, but it comes with the usual caveats in those settings, like organization-level device management and profiles.
network based time machines for all users in the house ?
Apple got out of that business. They used to make a standalone device called a Time Capsule that was exactly what you describe: a router wit
Re: (Score:2)
Can I opt-out please? (Score:3)
Apple recruiting top talent (Score:2)
Apple recruiting more top talent in a ground-up effort to develop revolutionary new technologies, right boys?
Re: (Score:2)
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"totally outraged because Apple has pulled the rug out from under them."
But they'll stand in line to buy the next piece of overpriced and underpowered shiny that Apple wants to foist on them. SMH
Why? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
. I have heard workers use this argument. Then, they lose their device in a cab. Without MDM, they "forget" if they had enabled encryption. It is unlikely they did. Now, data must be cons
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It's because Apple's MDM software is pathetic. At best it's a piece of demo software to show how you can use MDM to manage devices, but you've been better off using anything from BES (yes, Blackberry is still around) to many other products to manage deployment of iPhones and iPads and other things throughout the enterprise. With this, hopefully Apple's tools grow to be more usable for SMEs because really, the MDM stuff out there is geared towards large enterprises, Apple's is geared to demonstration on triv
Apple always does this (Score:2)
"Apple has completely eliminated core functionality from the app with absolutely no notice,"
The only surprising thing here is that this person is surprised.