Apple Losing Out To Microsoft and Google in US Classrooms (macrumors.com)
Apple is losing its grip on American classrooms, which technology companies have long used to hook students on their brands for life. From a report on MacRumors: According to research company Futuresource Consulting, in 2016 the number of devices in American classrooms that run iOS and macOS fell to third place behind both Google-powered laptops and Windows devices. Out of 12.6 million mobile devices shipped to primary and secondary schools in the U.S., Chromebooks accounted for 58 percent of the market, up from 50 percent in 2015. Meanwhile, school shipments of iPads and Mac laptops fell to 19 percent, from about 25 percent, over the same period, while Microsoft Windows laptops and tablets stayed relatively stable at about 22 percent.
I have the feeling price may be a factor here.
and not on professional tools anymore, ...
Let's be real, most workplaces use Windows/Linux. So kids are better off.
Chromebooks are so much easier to manage and maintain from the get-go, without having to purchase any other management software. Just using the G-Suite admin console lets us keep tens of thousands of these devices up to date, and with the necessary apps pushed out. Windows was a nightmare. We didn't even bother with Apple.
No school should accept to be vendor locked-in. Making all students to buy a device from a single vendor, buying (and maybe even developing) applications for that platform, and not being able to switch easily to another hardware provider is dumb.
At least with chromebooks and Windows PCs, you have plenty of choice of hardware vendors, which is a huge step above Apple.
You remain locked-in to a software OS, but especially for the chromebook I expect most applications to be web based and should work on any OS.
Back in the 80s Apple pioneered mainstream computing in classrooms. They had very active educational programs and, most importantly, did the accounting, training, and political legwork that made it easy for schools to adapt apple hardware.
A smart sales rep would sell the program to your board or state education department. You could send your teachers to training where they got their own computer to train on and take home.
They worked closely with the legendary MECC to help create those early educational titles of legend all kids of the 80s remember (some fondly)
Apple, now, doesn't do any of that stuff. Why? Who knows. Probably because they don't think it's worth their time and effort.
Google and Microsoft, on the other hand, are aggressively making it easy for Schools to acquire and manage cloud based services. Google in particular is a DREAM for a school IT department to manage thousands of Chromebooks through easy web based utilities.
The real news is that Google is eating Microsoft's school lunch in the US, and starting to become noticeable abroad. Not that I am in love with Google but, as of today, it is vastly preferable over the Redmond beast.
Are we talking about actual computers or tablets and web appliances.
A good test may be if you can write and run a C program.
Personally in IT and we have chromebooks (10k almost), iPads and PCs. Ipads by far are the hardest to manage and I think have the least instructional value.
-We can't afford an MDM like Casper or Meraki so I use Apple's half-baked profile manager software which is pretty terrible. I know it's more of less free, but if they cared about getting education market share they might want to come up with something a little better. Chromebook management model is an extra $35 for a lifetime license fee which is baked-in and much easier for the purchasers to swallow. Oh yea, free google apps as well and the google admin console is a DREAM. It also integrates with Active Directory via Google Apps Directory Sync and I have SSO set up with SimpleSamlPHP. It's awesome.
-Because I have a MDM that I'm constantly scared is going to crash (I've had to rebuild it twice trying to get app deployment to work, ultimately it didn't and couldn't get apple to figure out why) I don't trust using the Device Enrollment Program so you NEED a mac to use the configurator for initial setup. I would say Chromebooks are an order of magnitude faster to deploy.
-iPads don't have keyboards. Chromebooks are cheaper and have a keyboard so you can do ACTUAL WORK.
-Apple constantly has trouble getting us on-site repairs
Apple makes shiny single-user devices and I'm glad they missed the boat on education. I only hope I can get people to stop buying the products because "We can't use photoshop on a PC!", just get a bigger monitor and you'll save hundreds!
Rant over. That felt great.
Managing them, at least in my school system, was a nightmare. It cost money any way we looked at it, money we didn't have. If they had just built active directory hooks, or given us a way to manage them for free, or less than inflated 3rd party mdm pricing, we might have supported them, we decided not to, but the schools are autonomous. They bought them anyway, then cried when we said we wouldn't touch them. They tried self management, paid for MDM, etc. and no one knew how to work any of it... It was funny.
"Science is the power of man"
The Apple tablets also have problems with SSO and AD environments that use Radius for wireless authentication. Special credentials have to be created on the devices with matching accounts on the authentication server in order to bypass the lack of standard end-user sign-on. This becomes a problem when attempts to streamline result in reusing these generic credentials that the end-user normally never sees and associated problems with credential passing initiated at the device-end causing the account to be locked out, all devices using the credential are then locked out.
Unfortunately it's a headache to create thousands of extra credentials and then keep the association 1:1 with devices, so either you have to deal with the problems of the shared device credentials or else you have to be prepared to manage and keep straight thousands of accounts. Basically a lose/lose situation. The Chrome devices and the Windows devices do not have this problem.
Do not look into laser with remaining eye.
Let's be real, most workplaces use Windows/Linux. So kids are better off.
This is not true for scientific research, particularly in the mathematical-based sciences, where Linux/Unix is the de facto standard (although I am sure some do use Windows). However of the past couple of years I have noticed that the number of mac laptops used by students in my lectures has declined enormously to be replaced by a large variety of windows machines.
As I see it the reasons are twofold: price and ability to write on the screen. Students cannot afford the insanely inflated prices for new hardware which is now far from the leading edge. Plus the ability to write on the screen in tablet mode makes it very easy to email mathematical working and diagrams to professors which is really useful for subjects like physics.
Furthermore with the addition of the Linux subsystem for Windows these machines can now run Linux executables without rebooting. The increasing innovation and price/performance advantage of Windows machines has been enough to get me to convert from mac and while I would love to be able to run MacOS on my Dell laptop, I am happier saving $1000 (Canadian) for a better spec of machine and a less desirable but still workable (and improving) OS.
They have long focused on iOS products to the detriment of OS X because that is what happens when you have a typical MBA who chases raw revenues and a designer calling the shots. Numbers and shiny. Jobs never neglected the Mac in a serious way because iOS needs a moat on the PC side. The Surface Studio should have been a ground-shaking, holy fucking shit moment at Apple, but I'd bet $100 it was laughed at rather than taken as the deadly serious portent of things to come for how Microsoft is coming after Apple by leapfrogging them.
If I had a kid going into STEM, I'd buy them an Asus or Alienware laptop with a Linux on it and a Windows VM. If they were undecided, I'd buy them the Chromebook until they declare a major. At no point would I look at Apple's lineup and say "a $1k-$2.5k soldered together toy with an oft neglected Unix OS is the right starting laptop."
Mac osx sever for VM on any base hardware! It can be done apple just needs to give people the licence to do it.
Of course it is losing out. No competent IT manager for any facility would go apply because of the very high costs. It's a fashion accessory like Rolex, etc. There are some advantages with Apple in somethings but overall at scale it's an absolutely awful brand for consumers. Some of its advantages come from the smaller userbase.
Even if Apply subsidises in education the people coming out of it need to splash out hugely on Apple and simply wont about it. It's not universally accessible by a long shot and will not represent real world usage. Schools also wont operate in a bubble. The use of Apple can impact surrounding elements.
Apple nowadays does not care about the products that attracted many of us to the Apple world, which was reliable computing in an innovative and competitive platform. And forgets technical guys also attract many people, has many come to us asking advice.
I estimate I might have caused directly over the years for Apple to sell around 100 devices, and maybe half of that indirectly. But I digress.
The iPhone is getting a joke, the only argument to buy it nowadays is that is gets so far less malware than Android. The Macbooks pro are outdated, the touch bar is stupid as it gets, or rather cutting one row of keys, and having only USB-C a fransktein.
To add insult to injury, in Europe and in my country, you end up paying around 300-400 dollars more for an iPhone, and 600 hundred more for a Macbook than the equivalent models in the US. So it makes much more sense to buy a surface, and hack it to run Linux. Do not tell me it is the taxes, because MS manages to have the same price of surface here than it has in USA.
I will never be dependent on a dongle to be able to display sides on AV equipment in the classroom, often old (read HDMI, etc.)
Well, you can always edit your config.sys. :^D
Actually, somebody should do a new ad. "Sorry the presentation is taking so long. I'm trying to find the right dongle." "I have a DVI-to-VGA." "I have a HDMI-to-DVI!" "I have a USB-C-to-DisplayPort!"
"Get a Dell!"
I worked with a school's IT as a consultant. The biggest issue is price for one (comparing Chromebooks and iPads) but another big issue is control. Apple for years never bothered with an MDM solution and schools needed to use expensive thriparty solutions. They've just this past year finally put out their own solution but its probably too late. Google with Chromebooks and G Suite/MDM are just a better solution. Google went after that market aggressively and it paid off.
5 years old, most schools were buying the 13" non-retina MBP, which is a 2012 vintage model.
Personally I'd rather have my idiots at home glued to the TV than out doing idiotic things
My son was given an iPad for school this year. Most ridiculous decision ever. No keyboard (unless you buy it yourself), and most anything Apple is locked out anyway in favor of G-suite apps. Anything he uses on it on a daily basis is web. They could have had Chromebooks *designed* to work with Google + web for 1/2 the cost, and had a keyboard and touch pad or mouse to boot.
I caught him putting together a presentation on the iPad and told him to use the computer. The response I got was that they were told to use their iPads.
This is kind of a moot point on the "Google" end of things, considering they just announced they are GIVING UP on the Chromebook-business. And I don't think they have a viable Tablet now...
So, I assume that the Headline is a FUCKING JOKE, like the rest of TFS.
Let's see what those percentages will be like once the Chromebooks fall over, or the OS or Apps stop working because Google has abandoned them, too...
Does Apple manufacture computers? It looks like they are focusing on tablets and phones.
Apple, Microsoft and Google are all walled gardens, just of different flavours.
I don't care unless the educators finally get a real clue and adopt Gnu/Linux for the classroom, but even I know that just isn't going to ever happen because the Apple/MS/Google all have too much money to ever let it.
Mac users expect to pay for good software, but Windows and Linux freeware abounds and schools don't have much money.
apple forces os updates / windows gives you downgrade rights
I worked for Apple from 1995 until 2001 in the K12 division. They abandoned education gradually as soon as the focus became consumer goods like ipods.
Also, they ignored competitive advantages they had by not leveraging the Apple Share IP servers which could serve windows clients as well. They made the tech- and never pushed it. At the time it was apparent to me they were pulling out. It was also apparent with the Darwin kernel and the tools taken from NeXT that they had an ready to go enterprise solution in Server 10.
15 years later.... it's apparent they have pulled out of computers in general. It's sad too. When I pull out my alpha disks of OSX it's apparent that a revolution was lost. I can still load the alpha/pre-alpha OSX on present day Intel hardware. Go figure.
It's debatable as to whether they made the right decision or not- could they make a bundle in the enterprise? But to the engineers that worked there at the time paradise was indeed lost.
Another consultant who stuck it out.
"We are the Priests, of the Temples of Syrinx..."
Unix is king in some scientific domains.
There you'll see a *lot* of Linux workstations, and quite a few linux laptops
(with the remaining being mostly Mac OS X laptops - also a variant of Unix, but at least the OS-and-hardware integration is done by one single company, removing a few headache of "how do I install Linux on this weird hardware ?")
Most popular distros here around seems to be :
- Redhat / Fedora (because "enterprise") mostly on the workstations.
- Ubuntu (because ultra-popular) mostly on the laptops
- Mint for the "I don't want to be an Ubuntu sheep" crowd, specially those who vocally criticize Ubuntu.
- Suse (for the people who actually want to be a real alternative to the Redhat and Ubuntu users, for the people who appreciate Suse stellar hardware support, for the people who appreciate Tumbleweed being a serious rolling distro made accessible for the non hard-core geek).
- Gentoo (yup ! real people using gentoo in a production environment) for the hardcore geeks.
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
This motherfucker right here. Fuck, yeah.
#naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
Students and tax-payers losing out to corporate profits?
You are being ripped off every second of every day, so that advertisers can help rip you off even more tomorrow.
Instead of giant licensing deals and flashy hardware, they bulk buy an education board... like a pi, and have the computer lab teach a class of kids how to set em up for use in the classrooms? Why is this such a tough concept? Teach the kids to help teach the kids teaching kids! Damn board is DESIGNED for this sort of thing, and at 35 bucks, its a steal.
You are being ripped off every second of every day, so that advertisers can help rip you off even more tomorrow.
home.. Gotcha!!
At an even more basic level Apple missed the boat. We order computers in lots of 500 or 1000. These eMacs - they do not stack well. Regular Dell desktops made of metal - you can stack these right up to the ceiling. Good luck trying to find someone willing to learn how to swap logic boards in a MacBook. Apple service parts are expensive. Just had to buy a MacBook top case $170.00 - Chromebook part? $50.00 and one Phillips screwdriver - none of those tri-lobe jobs. Can't stack Apples; too difficult/expensive to repair. Apple has not been thinking of us education tech support people in a very long time. What IT manager wants to have to put-up with whiney staff because Macs were purchased? But, Apple Remote Desktop is fantastic - lightyears better than Crosstec for computer lab management. Still I would rather repair 50 Chromebooks than 1 screen-cracked iPad.
This, and then some. Seriously - that should make for a seriously stark commercial. Heck, if you could get away with it without getting sued somehow in our wonderfully litigious society, you show somebody fumbling around with trying to find the right dongles, while another person sets a laptop down, opens the lid, and just jacks the cord right into it. When everyone stares at him dumbfounded, he should just shrug, smile, and say "It just works."
Londovir
One counterexample: I saw plenty of Macs in use at IBM, far from an art-focused company.
To be fair - Chromebooks have to be purchased with a management license - only certain vendors even let you do that. iPad's can be managed from the get-go using device enrollment program - then tie them in with your existing mdm.