Monday, March 21, 2011

Peer Power: 10 Key Area's of Attention For Your Business

Arlin Sorensen's blog - making running a business look easy!

Peer Power: 10 Key Area's of Attention For Your Business

Saturday, March 19, 2011

Skills complimentary to your IT knowledge?

I remember doing work experience at a chemical plant and a steel mill in the late eighties (yup, showing my age here). The guy I was shadowing made a point of saying that IT skills alone were not enough to succeed and that I would need to have some complimentary skills and knowledge, such as chemistry or physics. Granted, most of the systems I 'worked' on during this time were process control systems rather than office admin type functions, so his comments were probably true.

I later took a full-time position at that chemical plant (along with a large percentage of the people I went to school with in all honesty) and though I didn't need any specific chemical knowledge, I did have to know a bit about accounting when dealing with the finance people, a bit about warehousing and transport when working with the logistics guys and so on. We spend so much time and effort (and money) on IT training, it is easy to forget that to properly support people running IT hardware and software, you really do need to know a about what they do and how they do it. Otherwise, you are just offering generic advice that may not suit the specific situation.

The same applies at all levels of IT. As a salesman, if you don't understand the requirements of the customers you are selling to, you are going to give them the wrong solution which then has pretty serious ramifications for the relationship going forward. In the almost 20 years I've been in and out of IT, I've learned about finance and accounting, factory production lines, steel fabrication, food processing, legal documentation, airline ticketing, construction and property management ..... I could go on!

So I was thinking the other day about the guy telling me I needed to go and learn about chemistry and thinking he was pretty much spot on - not specifically on chemistry but on needing to know a lot more than IT to be successful in IT. Here endeth the lesson.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Jailbreaking your iDevice

Jailbreaking - the process of removing your device from the restrictions imposed upon it by the manufacturer. Opening the operating system up to allow new addons and installations.

I'm on my third iDevice now and I've always had them jailbroken. There are so many great apps out there that Apple wouldn't allow in the App Store - often because they replicate features that exist in the stock firmware and quite often because they do it better!

There are lots of contentious issues around jailbreaking your device. Apple have tried to say it invalidates the warranty but most jurisdictions have ruled otherwise. Apple will tell you that allowing 'unsupported' third-party apps on your iDevice poses security risks. And while this may be true to an extent, time and again we have seen the 'hackers' fix security holes that Apple has taken months to attend to.

From a personal point of view, jailbreaking allows me the freedom to do whatever I like with the device I have spent my hard-earned dollars on. Why should Apple dictate how I use my own device? I bought it, I don't rent it from them. Can you imagine buying a 50" high-def plasma and the manufacturer saying "well yes, you can only watch it in black and white". Not bloody likely!

Anyway, what prompted me to write this short piece was an interesting article on jailbreaking on Gizmodo.com.au. Have a read and tell me what you think.

Saturday, March 12, 2011

How do you manage smartphones?

They are everywhere these days. And not just smartphones but tablets and other mobile devices. Whatever flavour they are, they all have the ability to access and store all manner of information. Email and calendar sure but in some cases they will have access to your CRM, your terminal server and even files from your network. So how do you manage this? Or do you manage this?

From a business point of view, if a member of staff comes in on Monday with a new iPhone and wants to read their email on it, it is probably seen as a positive thing. So you give them the details they need and they start syncing.

From that point on, you need to at least have a policy telling your staff what they can and can’t do - what information should they have on the device, force secure passwords, force entry of a PIN or password when the device is unattended, etc. You should also have procedures in place to remote wipe a device to protect your IP. Blackberry has had remote wipe functionality for a long time through BES and the iPhone has had this since version 3. This at least gives you the ability to remove data from a lost or ‘rogue’ device. BES also gives you a certain amount of control over what a user can do with the device, as can third-party tools such as Good Mobile.

You are very protective of the data you store on your computer systems, so shouldn’t this protection extend to your mobile devices? These devices are so powerful these days that they really are just another part of your network and should be treated as such.

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

Backing up your cloud services

So you've moved into the cloud and you use Google Apps, Picasa, Flickr, etc, etc. Great. But can you trust these sites - particularly the free ones - to look after your data with the care and attention that you would like? Maybe not - even Google lost a heap of mail recently.

I came across a web site service that offers to back up your Gmail, Google Apps, Flickr albums and even your Facebook and Linkedin feeds - Backupify. I've signed up for the freebie account for starters and first impressions are good - the very simple interface is a bonus.

I'll let you know how it goes when it has done a few backups for me but I just wanted to share what looks like a little gem with you.