Consumer Technologies Driving IT
fiannaFailMan writes to point out The Economist's reporting on the way consumer-driven software products are increasingly making their presence felt in the corporate world. Some CIOs are embracing the influx while others continue to resist it. From the article: "In the past, innovation was driven by the military or corporate markets. But now the consumer market, with its vast economies of scale and appetite for novelty, leads the way. Compared with the staid corporate-software industry, using these services is like 'receiving technology from an advanced civilization,' says [one university CIO]... [M]ost IT bosses, especially at large organizations, tend to be skeptical of consumer technologies and often ban them outright. Employees, in return, tend to ignore their IT departments. Many young people... use services such as Skype to send instant messages or make free calls while in the office. FaceTime, a Californian firm that specializes in making such consumer applications safe for companies, found in a recent survey that more than half of employees in their 20s and 30s admitted to installing such software over the objections of IT staff."
... is being able to squeeze the cust^H^H^H^Hconsumer for the maximum amount of money while getting away with being able to provide a minimum of (or no) quality, service and support (or alternatively, charge ridiculous amounts for each of those three). This is possible because the individual "consumer" has very little leverage against the "producer" ('Not gonna buy your stuff anymore!'), compared to what a corporation could muster ('Not gonna buy several megabucks worth of your stuff anymore!').
If you're worried about near computer-illiterates fubaring their machines, why not simply have a "one strike and you're out" sort of policy? Everyone gets a liberal security policy to start with - maybe even full local admin access. The first time you screw your machine up, it gets reimaged and locked down on the grounds that you can't be trusted not to screw it up again.
That lets those of us who know what we're doing and have never needed to call the support desk for anything other than hardware failure get on with our jobs with the minimum of inconvenience, while protecting those that clearly need to be hand-held.
It's official. Most of you are morons.