Summary: Enterprises at the AppNation conference detailed the ups and downs of deploying apps to both employees and customers.
There were some impressive enterprise deployments discussed at the AppNation conference in San Francisco on Thursday.
I’ll lead off with Genentech, the Bay Area biotech firm that is now a subsidiary of Roche. Their 7,000 iPad rollout was news to me, and ranks them sixth on my list of largest iPad deployments in the world.
(View the entire list of more than 530 enterprises that have publicly-confirmed iPad deployments here).
According to mobile application team manager, Paul Lanzi, Genentech has standardized on Apple for mobile, with 17,000 iOS device users worldwide (so by inference, 10,000 iPhones, though it surprises me less and less when I hear about companies deploying iPod Touches, too).
All of the Apple devices are corporate-owned, as the company doesn’t do Bring Your Own Device (BYOD).
Genentech does have 15,000 BlackBerry users, but they are only allowed to do e-mail, no apps. It doesn’t support Android due to the fragmentation-related hassle. “It’s a really tricky one,” Lanzi said.
Looking beyond the spin of Big Pharma PR. But encouraging gossip. Come in and confide, you know you want to! “I’ll publish right or wrong. Fools are my theme, let satire be my song.” Email: jackfriday2011(at)hotmail.co.uk
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Why Genentech Deploys 17,000 iPads and iPhones | ZDNet
via zdnet.com
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