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Apple iPhone-loving workers who've grown disenchanted with corporate IT might love to ditch their PCs for Macs. But are we really on the cusp of greater enterprise adoption of Apple? Hurdles remain.
Sometimes, IT leaders are told that the company runs Windows, period. But that doesn't stop them from wishing for the forbidden fruit: One CIO explains why he'd like to bring Apple to his enterprise.
For some tech chiefs, the Apple magic wears off. Here's why one IT leader recently came back to the Windows world, after spending years on the Mac side.
BlackBerrys and iPhones are vying for the top spot of business-class users. The competition is a lot fiercer than it may appear, even in enterprises that already support Macs.
Imagine if Bill Gates had studied food science instead of computer science. A world without the Empire That DOS Built would be a very different world...
A greater number of professors at Oregon State are relying on Apple Macs. Here's why.
Gartner's crystal ball for next three years: Apple gains 50 percent market share, Green IT flowers and consumer tools gain even more influence.
From Wal-Mart's technology failure to networking tips for shy people to reasons to use the Mac to speculating what would happen if Yoda ran IBM, these are the most popular articles from October through December 2007.
As Apple user camp swells, hackers are increasingly targeting malware at Macs, says a new report from security vendor Sophos.
If your company is deploying Apple Macintosh systems, say experienced IT administrators, don't expect to retrain your Windows support staff. Instead, find a Linux or UNIX admin. You'll save yourself from a world of hurt.
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