Microsoft System Center Mobile Device Manager 2008 WQA-00011 Manual Do Utilizador

Códigos do produto
WQA-00011
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Wipro Product Strategy & Architecture Practice
Managing Mobile Devices using System Center Mobile Device Manager 2008
exeCuTIve suMMaRy
By year-end 2011, IDC expects nearly 75% of the U.S. workforce will be mobile. 
This  whitepaper  is  written  to  help Technology  Decision  Makers  (TDMs)  understand  how  Microsoft’s 
System Center Mobile Device Manager (MDM) can help lower the complexity and cost of managing 
their organization’s mobile devices. 
Microsoft  retained  Wipro  to  conduct  primary  market  research  to  identify  and  quantify  the  benefits 
corporations  realize  from  using  MDM  to  manage  Windows  Mobile  devices.  These  research  results 
have  been  combined  with  publicly  available  pricing  data  and  configuration  guidelines  to  develop 
a Total  Cost  of  Ownership  Calculator  (TCO  Calculator)  for  MDM  and  other  competing  mobile  device 
management products, including RIM Blackberry Enterprise Server 4.1. 
To  gather  the  relevant  operational  data, Wipro  interviewed  IT  Professionals  (IT  Pros)  from  100  North 
America  corporations  that  manage  500  or  more  mobile  devices  using  a  variety  of  mobile  device 
management products, including MDM. Wipro used the research results to compare the economics of 
existing mobile device management deployments with MDM-enabled solutions. 
The results of this research study are reflected in Microsoft’s MDM TCO Calculator, which was developed 
by Alinean and can be found at 
Wipro used the TCO calculator to estimate and compare the 1 and 3 year lifecycle costs of deploying 
and supporting MDM to mange mobile access to Microsoft Exchange Server 2007 with a comparable 
RIM Blackberry 4.1 solution in both Greenfield and Brownfield examples. 
In the Greenfield example, each solution was used to support six mobile device deployments ranging 
from  2,500  to  15,000  mobile  devices. The  MDM  three  year TCO  was  projected  to  be  approximately  
40% less than the RIM TCO for all six deployment scenarios and 32% less in the one year TCO. 
In  the  Brownfield  example,  a  corporation  was  presumed  to  have  an  existing  number  of  Blackberry 
mobile  devices  being  managed  by  a  BES  and  had  plans  to  expand  the  number  of  mobile  devices. 
In  this  “cap  and  grow”  example,  the  one  year  TCO  that  added  an  MDM  configuration  to  manage 
just  the  additional  mobile  devices  was  less  than  the  RIM  expansion  costs,  without  considering  the 
corresponding increased Management costs. In the MDM scenario, the new mobile devices would be 
Windows Mobile devices rather than Blackberry mobile devices. 
In these examples, MDM has a lower TCO than RIM BES 4.1 because of the following factors: 
 
Reduction in software licensing costs
  Elimination of annual per-device maintenance costs
  Reduction in server and storage requirements (including facilities costs)
  Reduction in mobile device planning, enrollment and provisioning labor
  Reduction in mobile device management and administrative labor
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