More than half of Android devices being used in the enterprise are made
by Samsung, according to a report from mobile device management company
Fiberlink that surveyed more than 250,000 devices worldwide.
Fiberlink, which is owned by IBM, pulled device information from users
of its MDM products around the world to determine which Android gadgets
were popular among enterprise users. Samsung took first place by a
comfortable margin, with 56% of the market, followed by Motorola at 22%,
HTC at 8% and a host of other companies with 2% or less.
+MORE ON NETWORK WORLD: Crowded U.S. airwaves desperately in search of breathing room | Linux snapshot: Pay rates and employers with the most job ads +
The company also identified the most popular smartphone and tablet for
each of the major Android OEMs Samsung’s Galaxy S III was its most-used
enterprise phone, and Motorola’s was the DROID RAZR M. HTC’s Droid
Incredible 2 was its top handset, and LG’s Nexus 4 took the prize.
Fiberlink spokesperson Jonathan Dale said in a statement that Samsung’s
emphasis on security features had helped push the company’s products to
the top along with their more general popularity among consumers.
“Samsung has invested heavily in enterprise security features that make
IT professionals more comfortable having their devices in the
workplace,” he said. “We’ve also been hearing from businesses that
Samsung is making devices that have more curb appeal and generally rank
high on the cool factor.”
This week’s launch of the Samsung Galaxy S 5 did, indeed, focus in part
on enterprise security features, as the company pushed its Knox security
suite to the foreground at the release event. Knox 2.0, Samsung said,
offers advanced new features like two-factor authentication provided via
a fingerprint scanner/password combination and real-time code
monitoring.
Android gear is still small potatoes next to Apple products in the enterprise, however another recent report, this one from Good Technology,
found that nearly three-quarters of all new business smartphones and
tablets activated in the fourth quarter of 2013 ran iOS, not Android.
Read more about anti-malware in Network World’s Anti-malware section.
This story, "Samsung preferred for Android business use" was originally published by
NetworkWorld
.
ليست هناك تعليقات:
إرسال تعليق