![]() When employees use a personal device at work, User Enrollment creates cryptographic separation for work data, to ensure employee data remains private while company data remains secure. IT managers can enforce critical security settings such as FileVault for full-disk encryption on Mac, and Activation Lock to protect devices that may be lost or stolen - and Apple Business Essentials ensures these aren’t turned off by mistake. With Apple Business Essentials, it’s simple to maintain strong security across the organization. Strong Security with FileVault, Activation Lock, and User Enrollment In addition, Collections will install the new Apple Business Essentials app on each employee’s home screen, where they can download corporate apps assigned to them, such as Cisco Webex or Microsoft Word. ![]() When employees sign in to their corporate or personally owned device with their work credentials, Collections automatically push settings such as VPN configurations and Wi-Fi passwords. Within Apple Business Essentials, Collections enable IT personnel to configure settings and apps for individual users, groups, or devices. Simple Setup and Onboarding with CollectionsĪpple Business Essentials is a complete solution that makes employee onboarding simple, allowing a small business to easily configure, deploy, and manage Apple products from anywhere. “Apple Business Essentials is designed to help streamline every step of employee device management within a small business - from setup, onboarding, and upgrading, to accessing fast service and prioritized support, all while keeping data backed up and secure, so companies can focus on running their business.” “Small businesses are at the core of our economy, and we’re proud that Apple products play a role in helping these companies grow,” said Susan Prescott, Apple’s vice president of Enterprise and Education Marketing. Available today in beta, the service supports small businesses through the total device management life cycle - from device setup to employee onboarding and device upgrades - while providing strong security, prioritized support, and secure data storage and backup. The company also unveiled a new Apple Business Essentials app that enables employees to install apps for work and request support.Īpple Business Essentials saves precious time for small businesses as they grow. The new service, available today in beta, brings device management, support, and storage into one complete subscription for small businessesĬUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA Apple today announced Apple Business Essentials, an all-new service that brings together device management, 24/7 Apple Support, and iCloud storage into flexible subscription plans for small businesses with up to 500 employees. ![]() If you spend a lot of time creating one and customizing it, you’ll have to duplicate that work on another Mac, if you use more than one, or if you do a clean installation of macOS, you’ll have to re-create it as well.Apple introduces Apple Business Essentials ![]() The only downside to SSBs (and this is true of Fluid also) is that they are not very easy to backup or move/copy to another Mac. So now I have two new apps that I will be using with my Setapp subscription, for no additional cost. Plus, you get Brave’s build-in ad-blocking and privacy features, which I find myself more and more interested in. Unite will create SSBs based on Safari / Webkit.Ĭoherence will create SSBs based on Chrome or Brave which means that you can use Chrome extensions. At first I ignored this, because I had Fluid.app, but I recently decided to take a closer look. However, as part of Setapp, I came across Unite and Coherence – both of which are apps which make SSBs. It seemed like a tool for people who needed to do this once and just wanted to get it done with ASAP. There have been some solutions out there which would allow you to make SSBs based on Chrome, but they were always a little fidgety / twitchy, and often even required using the command line… which I use all the time, but didn’t seem the right UI for this. The biggest drawback is that Fluid.app browsers, which are based on Webkit, can’t use Safari extensions. However, the development appears mostly stagnant, and there are some annoyances. I have used Fluid.app for several years when I want to make a “Single Site Browser” (SSB), and have been generally pleased with the results.
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