Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-06-21 Thread Stephen Price
 encourages the IT department to
 be open in what they will support (extending the Internet into their
 environment) but being much more security conscious about sensitive 
 systems.
 It might mean the end of the egg-shell defence.



 The whole who pays for it question is probably a separate one. Suncorp
 might be doing this to avoid paying for a laptop refresh, and possibly some
 licenses, but they need to be careful. For example, if you have a grad
 working there, and they are using Office Student edition to do work for
 Suncorp that could be a violation of the agreement.



 So the whole mechanics of software licensing is going to have to change
 as well. If I was a Microsoft Account Manager, or any other account manager
 I would be a little bit nervous because suddenly Suncorp doesn’t have as
 much buying power, which affects the ability to make one sale to heavily
 impacts quota. Their targets (if they are smart) are going to start to be
 built around applications, and server licenses, not the desktop.



 They should be lining up with vendors such as Dell and Lenovo to produce
 compelling offers inside Suncorp which include the hardware, os, and
 productivity suite.



 My 2c



 Regards

 *Mitch Denny
 *Readify | Chief Technology Officer

 Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC
 3008 | Australia

 M: +61 414 610 141 | E: mitch.de...@readify.net | W: www.readify.net

 [image: Description: Description: cid:image006.png@01CAF06E.1EF9B2F0]

 The content of this e-mail, including any attachments is a confidential
 communication between Readify Pty Ltd and the intended addressee and is for
 the sole use of that intended addressee. If you are not the intended
 addressee, any use, interference with, disclosure or copying of this
 material is unauthorized and prohibited. If you have received this e-mail 
 in
 error please contact the sender immediately and then delete the message and
 any attachment(s).



 *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:
 ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *David Connors
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 30 March 2011 8:42 AM
 *To:* ozDotNet
 *Cc:* David Kean

 *Subject:* Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp



 On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:05 AM, David Kean david.k...@microsoft.com
 wrote:

 Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines.
 I’m failing to see why this is a good thing.



 I'm with you. This is batshit crazy. Plus who the hell is going to bring
 their machine from home and join it to a domain or run VS.NET through
 citrix all day.



 Pass.



 Work buying you an awesome machine and allowing you to take it home for
 some personal use is a benefit - but buggered if I'd be interested in the
 other way around.



 --
 *David Connors* | da...@codify.com | www.codify.com
 Software Engineer
 Codify Pty Ltd
 Phone: +61 (7) 3210 6268 | Facsimile: +61 (7) 3210 6269 | Mobile: +61
 417 189 363
 V-Card: https://www.codify.com/cards/davidconnors
 Address Info: https://www.codify.com/contact





image001.png

Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-04-13 Thread Scott Barnes
 there, and they are using Office Student edition to do work for
 Suncorp that could be a violation of the agreement.



 So the whole mechanics of software licensing is going to have to change
 as well. If I was a Microsoft Account Manager, or any other account manager
 I would be a little bit nervous because suddenly Suncorp doesn’t have as
 much buying power, which affects the ability to make one sale to heavily
 impacts quota. Their targets (if they are smart) are going to start to be
 built around applications, and server licenses, not the desktop.



 They should be lining up with vendors such as Dell and Lenovo to produce
 compelling offers inside Suncorp which include the hardware, os, and
 productivity suite.



 My 2c



 Regards

 *Mitch Denny
 *Readify | Chief Technology Officer

 Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC
 3008 | Australia

 M: +61 414 610 141 | E: mitch.de...@readify.net | W: www.readify.net

 [image: Description: Description: cid:image006.png@01CAF06E.1EF9B2F0]

 The content of this e-mail, including any attachments is a confidential
 communication between Readify Pty Ltd and the intended addressee and is for
 the sole use of that intended addressee. If you are not the intended
 addressee, any use, interference with, disclosure or copying of this
 material is unauthorized and prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in
 error please contact the sender immediately and then delete the message and
 any attachment(s).



 *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:
 ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *David Connors
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 30 March 2011 8:42 AM
 *To:* ozDotNet
 *Cc:* David Kean

 *Subject:* Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp



 On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:05 AM, David Kean david.k...@microsoft.com
 wrote:

 Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I’m
 failing to see why this is a good thing.



 I'm with you. This is batshit crazy. Plus who the hell is going to bring
 their machine from home and join it to a domain or run VS.NET through
 citrix all day.



 Pass.



 Work buying you an awesome machine and allowing you to take it home for
 some personal use is a benefit - but buggered if I'd be interested in the
 other way around.



 --
 *David Connors* | da...@codify.com | www.codify.com
 Software Engineer
 Codify Pty Ltd
 Phone: +61 (7) 3210 6268 | Facsimile: +61 (7) 3210 6269 | Mobile: +61
 417 189 363
 V-Card: https://www.codify.com/cards/davidconnors
 Address Info: https://www.codify.com/contact




image001.png

Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-04-12 Thread Scott Barnes
Like.

That being said, there is gray areas around IP and who owns what etc
especially when it comes to Copyright. After just having to deal with a
minor skirmish around Copyright ownership with a Govt Dept (I used a
throw-away design I did on my blog as an example of metro.. the took offence
to it even after i pulled it down once i learnt they were sad...*gasp*), the
lesson I learnt is that once you connect to a corporate network the IP in
itself becomes yours. As even though some contracts state you have to hand
over all work that belongs to blah blah in the end my legal advice given was
that because the work defined in around ownership wasn't clear and the fact
I used my laptop to produce the work, then unless it was created prior to my
arrival i owned copyright both under the Design Act 2003 and Generic
Copyright laws (except it was also a dark area given Copyright
in Australia basically says that if no agreement is in place you the creator
own it automatically unless your doing work for govt... talk about stacking
the pack :D).

Anyway, I innocently did my thing and didn't think much of it until i get
drawn over the coals for copyright all because I connected a laptop to the
network that i owned..so...i'd prefer to see how this legally impacts the
individuals specifically around IP/Copyright first before I start getting
all sugar high on socketing a laptop into the network of a company...

(as I type this on my laptop into a company...didn't say i learnt my lesson
:D).

---
Regards,
Scott Barnes
http://www.riagenic.com


On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 7:48 AM, Mitch Denny mitch.de...@readify.netwrote:

 I must say that “I don’t care” what others are going to do, all I know is
 that I am way more productive with my home setup (four 1920x screens) with
 complete control over my environment. As a consultant it also makes things
 much easier, companies like Suncorp waste a lot of money going through their
 desktop provisioning process when they won’t let contractors and consultants
 drop their machines on their network.



 From a security point of view, it also encourages the IT department to be
 open in what they will support (extending the Internet into their
 environment) but being much more security conscious about sensitive systems.
 It might mean the end of the egg-shell defence.



 The whole who pays for it question is probably a separate one. Suncorp
 might be doing this to avoid paying for a laptop refresh, and possibly some
 licenses, but they need to be careful. For example, if you have a grad
 working there, and they are using Office Student edition to do work for
 Suncorp that could be a violation of the agreement.



 So the whole mechanics of software licensing is going to have to change as
 well. If I was a Microsoft Account Manager, or any other account manager I
 would be a little bit nervous because suddenly Suncorp doesn’t have as much
 buying power, which affects the ability to make one sale to heavily impacts
 quota. Their targets (if they are smart) are going to start to be built
 around applications, and server licenses, not the desktop.



 They should be lining up with vendors such as Dell and Lenovo to produce
 compelling offers inside Suncorp which include the hardware, os, and
 productivity suite.



 My 2c



 Regards

 *Mitch Denny
 *Readify | Chief Technology Officer

 Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC 3008
 | Australia

 M: +61 414 610 141 | E: mitch.de...@readify.net | W: www.readify.net

 [image: Description: Description: cid:image006.png@01CAF06E.1EF9B2F0]

 The content of this e-mail, including any attachments is a confidential
 communication between Readify Pty Ltd and the intended addressee and is for
 the sole use of that intended addressee. If you are not the intended
 addressee, any use, interference with, disclosure or copying of this
 material is unauthorized and prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in
 error please contact the sender immediately and then delete the message and
 any attachment(s).



 *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:
 ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *David Connors
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 30 March 2011 8:42 AM
 *To:* ozDotNet
 *Cc:* David Kean

 *Subject:* Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp



 On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:05 AM, David Kean david.k...@microsoft.com
 wrote:

 Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I’m
 failing to see why this is a good thing.



 I'm with you. This is batshit crazy. Plus who the hell is going to bring
 their machine from home and join it to a domain or run VS.NET through
 citrix all day.



 Pass.



 Work buying you an awesome machine and allowing you to take it home for
 some personal use is a benefit - but buggered if I'd be interested in the
 other way around.



 --
 *David Connors* | da...@codify.com | www.codify.com
 Software Engineer
 Codify Pty Ltd
 Phone: +61 (7) 3210 6268 | Facsimile: +61 (7) 3210 6269 | Mobile: +61

Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-04-12 Thread Stephen Price
 use, interference with, disclosure or copying of this
 material is unauthorized and prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in
 error please contact the sender immediately and then delete the message and
 any attachment(s).



 *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:
 ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *David Connors
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 30 March 2011 8:42 AM
 *To:* ozDotNet
 *Cc:* David Kean

 *Subject:* Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp



 On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:05 AM, David Kean david.k...@microsoft.com
 wrote:

 Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I’m
 failing to see why this is a good thing.



 I'm with you. This is batshit crazy. Plus who the hell is going to bring
 their machine from home and join it to a domain or run VS.NET through
 citrix all day.



 Pass.



 Work buying you an awesome machine and allowing you to take it home for
 some personal use is a benefit - but buggered if I'd be interested in the
 other way around.



 --
 *David Connors* | da...@codify.com | www.codify.com
 Software Engineer
 Codify Pty Ltd
 Phone: +61 (7) 3210 6268 | Facsimile: +61 (7) 3210 6269 | Mobile: +61 417
 189 363
 V-Card: https://www.codify.com/cards/davidconnors
 Address Info: https://www.codify.com/contact



image001.png

Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-30 Thread Joseph Cooney
Why would you get paid extra to work at home?

On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:07 AM, djones...@gmail.com wrote:

 It's also justification to make people work at home for no extra money.

 .02c

 Davy

 When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. I feel
 much the same way about xml
 --
 *From: * David Kean david.k...@microsoft.com
 *Sender: * ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com
 *Date: *Tue, 29 Mar 2011 15:05:22 +
 *To: *ozDotNetozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
 *ReplyTo: * ozDotNet ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
 *Subject: *RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

  Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I’m
 failing to see why this is a good thing.



 *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:
 ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *Grant Molloy
 *Sent:* Tuesday, March 29, 2011 4:21 AM
 *To:* ozDotNet
 *Subject:* Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp



 The ideas good, but I wouldn't want to take a home pc to work and leave it
 there, laptop maybe...

 Good on suncorp for trying something different..

 The company I work for gave me a Quad Core with 8gb Ram, and then put the
 standard SOE (XP 32 Bit) on it, in which I have to run a VM to do the dev
 work..



 All ass about as far as I'm concerned..

 They've got the cash to put out for the box, something stupid like $8k
 through their supplier, but won't give me the environment to make my life
 easier..







 On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 9:14 PM, Stephen Price step...@littlevoices.com
 wrote:

 I've always thought that if your team are not coming into work complaining
 about how crap their home computer is compared to their work PC then you're
 not looking after your developers. I'm currently working from home Tuesdays
 and Thursdays (the boss thinks productivity is higher if you go dark, which
 I think has some merit). 30 monitor and 27.5 montior at home. 2 x 24 at
 work. Got a newer desktop at work than home... I did have to buy myself an
 SSD drive for my home PC to try to keep up with my work PC. :D

 Pertty cool idea people being able to bring their own machines to work.
 Downsides I can see, more people using laptops (possibly more future cases
 of workers comp from hunching over a laptop rather than eye level monitor?)
 and putting the responsibility of your hardware back on the worker. No car
 == no job, may become no laptop == no job.



 Should help cut down situations where people are using 8 year old laptops
 to try to do their job. Man what a way to abuse your staff. unless they are
 contractors of course...  (no no, it's ok. I'll take the 1Gb ram machine. )



 On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 6:11 PM, Simon Haigh smha...@gmail.com wrote:

 Not as exciting as it sounds.  Definately not going to be be a open slather
 policy about bringing your favourite device to work and plugging it into the
 network.  From what I've heard, all access to the company network will be
 through the Citrix portal.

 Still it might be the justification I need to buy a new high powered laptop
 and push a little harder to be able to telecommute.  :-)

 Simon



 On 29/03/2011 7:11 PM, Paul Stovell wrote:

 I think this is pretty exciting:



 The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest
 insurers means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their
 company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and
 smartphones into the enterprise network.



 We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in their
 Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the
 device they feel the most productive in.



 It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and
 retain top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire
 them to do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have
 infrastructure be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.



 From The Australian:




 http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986












-- 

w: http://jcooney.net
t: @josephcooney


RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-30 Thread Jorke Odolphi
Isn't that why a lot of companies give people laptops?.. So they work for free..

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Joseph Cooney
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 9:38 PM
To: djones...@gmail.com; ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

Why would you get paid extra to work at home?
On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:07 AM, 
djones...@gmail.commailto:djones...@gmail.com wrote:
It's also justification to make people work at home for no extra money.

.02c

Davy

When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. I feel much 
the same way about xml


From: David Kean david.k...@microsoft.commailto:david.k...@microsoft.com
Sender: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com
Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2011 15:05:22 +
To: ozDotNetozdotnet@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
ReplyTo: ozDotNet ozdotnet@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
Subject: RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I'm 
failing to see why this is a good thing.

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com 
[mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Grant Molloy
Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2011 4:21 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

The ideas good, but I wouldn't want to take a home pc to work and leave it 
there, laptop maybe...
Good on suncorp for trying something different..
The company I work for gave me a Quad Core with 8gb Ram, and then put the 
standard SOE (XP 32 Bit) on it, in which I have to run a VM to do the dev work..

All ass about as far as I'm concerned..
They've got the cash to put out for the box, something stupid like $8k through 
their supplier, but won't give me the environment to make my life easier..



On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 9:14 PM, Stephen Price 
step...@littlevoices.commailto:step...@littlevoices.com wrote:
I've always thought that if your team are not coming into work complaining 
about how crap their home computer is compared to their work PC then you're not 
looking after your developers. I'm currently working from home Tuesdays and 
Thursdays (the boss thinks productivity is higher if you go dark, which I think 
has some merit). 30 monitor and 27.5 montior at home. 2 x 24 at work. Got a 
newer desktop at work than home... I did have to buy myself an SSD drive for my 
home PC to try to keep up with my work PC. :D
Pertty cool idea people being able to bring their own machines to work. 
Downsides I can see, more people using laptops (possibly more future cases of 
workers comp from hunching over a laptop rather than eye level monitor?) and 
putting the responsibility of your hardware back on the worker. No car == no 
job, may become no laptop == no job.

Should help cut down situations where people are using 8 year old laptops to 
try to do their job. Man what a way to abuse your staff. unless they are 
contractors of course...  (no no, it's ok. I'll take the 1Gb ram machine. )

On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 6:11 PM, Simon Haigh 
smha...@gmail.commailto:smha...@gmail.com wrote:
Not as exciting as it sounds.  Definately not going to be be a open slather 
policy about bringing your favourite device to work and plugging it into the 
network.  From what I've heard, all access to the company network will be 
through the Citrix portal.

Still it might be the justification I need to buy a new high powered laptop and 
push a little harder to be able to telecommute.  :-)

Simon


On 29/03/2011 7:11 PM, Paul Stovell wrote:
I think this is pretty exciting:

The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest insurers 
means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their 
company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and smartphones 
into the enterprise network.

We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in their 
Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the device 
they feel the most productive in.

It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and retain 
top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire them to 
do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have infrastructure 
be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.

From The Australian:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986







--

w: http://jcooney.net
t: @josephcooney



RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-30 Thread Ben.Robbins
I think you're thinking of Blackberries ;-)


From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Jorke Odolphi
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 6:58 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

Isn't that why a lot of companies give people laptops?.. So they work for free..

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Joseph Cooney
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 9:38 PM
To: djones...@gmail.com; ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

Why would you get paid extra to work at home?
On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:07 AM, 
djones...@gmail.commailto:djones...@gmail.com wrote:
It's also justification to make people work at home for no extra money.

.02c

Davy

When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. I feel much 
the same way about xml


From: David Kean david.k...@microsoft.commailto:david.k...@microsoft.com
Sender: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com
Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2011 15:05:22 +
To: ozDotNetozdotnet@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
ReplyTo: ozDotNet ozdotnet@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
Subject: RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I'm 
failing to see why this is a good thing.

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com 
[mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Grant Molloy
Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2011 4:21 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

The ideas good, but I wouldn't want to take a home pc to work and leave it 
there, laptop maybe...
Good on suncorp for trying something different..
The company I work for gave me a Quad Core with 8gb Ram, and then put the 
standard SOE (XP 32 Bit) on it, in which I have to run a VM to do the dev work..

All ass about as far as I'm concerned..
They've got the cash to put out for the box, something stupid like $8k through 
their supplier, but won't give me the environment to make my life easier..



On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 9:14 PM, Stephen Price 
step...@littlevoices.commailto:step...@littlevoices.com wrote:
I've always thought that if your team are not coming into work complaining 
about how crap their home computer is compared to their work PC then you're not 
looking after your developers. I'm currently working from home Tuesdays and 
Thursdays (the boss thinks productivity is higher if you go dark, which I think 
has some merit). 30 monitor and 27.5 montior at home. 2 x 24 at work. Got a 
newer desktop at work than home... I did have to buy myself an SSD drive for my 
home PC to try to keep up with my work PC. :D
Pertty cool idea people being able to bring their own machines to work. 
Downsides I can see, more people using laptops (possibly more future cases of 
workers comp from hunching over a laptop rather than eye level monitor?) and 
putting the responsibility of your hardware back on the worker. No car == no 
job, may become no laptop == no job.

Should help cut down situations where people are using 8 year old laptops to 
try to do their job. Man what a way to abuse your staff. unless they are 
contractors of course...  (no no, it's ok. I'll take the 1Gb ram machine. )

On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 6:11 PM, Simon Haigh 
smha...@gmail.commailto:smha...@gmail.com wrote:
Not as exciting as it sounds.  Definately not going to be be a open slather 
policy about bringing your favourite device to work and plugging it into the 
network.  From what I've heard, all access to the company network will be 
through the Citrix portal.

Still it might be the justification I need to buy a new high powered laptop and 
push a little harder to be able to telecommute.  :-)

Simon


On 29/03/2011 7:11 PM, Paul Stovell wrote:
I think this is pretty exciting:

The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest insurers 
means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their 
company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and smartphones 
into the enterprise network.

We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in their 
Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the device 
they feel the most productive in.

It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and retain 
top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire them to 
do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have infrastructure 
be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.

From The Australian:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986







--

w: http://jcooney.net
t: @josephcooney


This email is intended for the named recipient only.  The information it 
contains

Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-30 Thread mike smith
On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 9:38 PM, Joseph Cooney joseph.coo...@gmail.com wrote:
 Why would you get paid extra to work at home?

You're leasing them office space and services (power/net) that they do
not need to supply at their regular office.  Therefore they can use a
smaller, cheaper regular office.   If you're using your home for this,
it could be you're liable for commercial rates of land tax, etc.
IANAL or accountant, so the last sentence would need to be qualified
with one.


 On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:07 AM, djones...@gmail.com wrote:

 It's also justification to make people work at home for no extra money.

 .02c

 Davy

 When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. I feel
 much the same way about xml

 
 From: David Kean david.k...@microsoft.com
 Sender: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com
 Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2011 15:05:22 +
 To: ozDotNetozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
 ReplyTo: ozDotNet ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
 Subject: RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

 Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I’m
 failing to see why this is a good thing.



 From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com]
 On Behalf Of Grant Molloy
 Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2011 4:21 AM
 To: ozDotNet
 Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp



 The ideas good, but I wouldn't want to take a home pc to work and leave it
 there, laptop maybe...

 Good on suncorp for trying something different..

 The company I work for gave me a Quad Core with 8gb Ram, and then put the
 standard SOE (XP 32 Bit) on it, in which I have to run a VM to do the dev
 work..



 All ass about as far as I'm concerned..

 They've got the cash to put out for the box, something stupid like $8k
 through their supplier, but won't give me the environment to make my life
 easier..







 On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 9:14 PM, Stephen Price step...@littlevoices.com
 wrote:

 I've always thought that if your team are not coming into work complaining
 about how crap their home computer is compared to their work PC then you're
 not looking after your developers. I'm currently working from home Tuesdays
 and Thursdays (the boss thinks productivity is higher if you go dark, which
 I think has some merit). 30 monitor and 27.5 montior at home. 2 x 24 at
 work. Got a newer desktop at work than home... I did have to buy myself an
 SSD drive for my home PC to try to keep up with my work PC. :D

 Pertty cool idea people being able to bring their own machines to work.
 Downsides I can see, more people using laptops (possibly more future cases
 of workers comp from hunching over a laptop rather than eye level monitor?)
 and putting the responsibility of your hardware back on the worker. No car
 == no job, may become no laptop == no job.



 Should help cut down situations where people are using 8 year old laptops
 to try to do their job. Man what a way to abuse your staff. unless they are
 contractors of course...  (no no, it's ok. I'll take the 1Gb ram machine. )



 On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 6:11 PM, Simon Haigh smha...@gmail.com wrote:

 Not as exciting as it sounds.  Definately not going to be be a open
 slather policy about bringing your favourite device to work and plugging it
 into the network.  From what I've heard, all access to the company network
 will be through the Citrix portal.

 Still it might be the justification I need to buy a new high powered
 laptop and push a little harder to be able to telecommute.  :-)

 Simon

 On 29/03/2011 7:11 PM, Paul Stovell wrote:

 I think this is pretty exciting:



 The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest
 insurers means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their
 company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and
 smartphones into the enterprise network.



 We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in
 their Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the
 device they feel the most productive in.



 It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and
 retain top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire
 them to do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have
 infrastructure be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.



 From The Australian:




 http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986










 --

 w: http://jcooney.net
 t: @josephcooney




-- 
Meski

Going to Starbucks for coffee is like going to prison for sex. Sure,
you'll get it, but it's going to be rough - Adam Hills


[OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread Paul Stovell
I think this is pretty exciting:

The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest insurers 
means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their 
company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and smartphones 
into the enterprise network.

We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in their 
Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the device 
they feel the most productive in.

It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and retain 
top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire them to 
do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have infrastructure 
be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.

From The Australian:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986




Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread DotNet Dude
Reminds me of a time back in the early 2000's when a uni wanted to do
this. Didn't happen though

On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 8:11 PM, Paul Stovell paul.stov...@readify.net wrote:
 I think this is pretty exciting:



 The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest
 insurers means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their
 company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and
 smartphones into the enterprise network.



 We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in their
 Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the
 device they feel the most productive in.



 It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and retain
 top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire them
 to do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have
 infrastructure be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.



 From The Australian:



 http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986






Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread Simon Haigh


  
  
Not as exciting as it sounds. Definately not going to be be a open
slather policy about bringing your favourite device to work and
plugging it into the network. From what I've heard, all access to
the company network will be through the Citrix portal. 

Still it might be the justification I need to buy a new high powered
laptop and push a little harder to be able to telecommute. :-)

Simon

On 29/03/2011 7:11 PM, Paul Stovell wrote:

  
  
  
  
I think this is pretty exciting:

The BYO (bring
  your own) device program at one of Australia's largest
  insurers means staff will be able to break free from the
  shackles of their company-issued PCs and plug in their
  personal laptops, tablets and smartphones into the enterprise
  network.

"We can supply
  you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in their
  Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should
  use the device they feel the most productive in.

"It is part of
  Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and retain
  top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to
  inspire them to do great things." Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal
  was not to have infrastructure be a constraint to people's
  innovation and ingenuity.

From The Australian:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986


  

  



Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread Grant Molloy
The ideas good, but I wouldn't want to take a home pc to work and leave it
there, laptop maybe...
Good on suncorp for trying something different..
The company I work for gave me a Quad Core with 8gb Ram, and then put the
standard SOE (XP 32 Bit) on it, in which I have to run a VM to do the dev
work..

All ass about as far as I'm concerned..
They've got the cash to put out for the box, something stupid like $8k
through their supplier, but won't give me the environment to make my life
easier..



On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 9:14 PM, Stephen Price step...@littlevoices.comwrote:

 I've always thought that if your team are not coming into work complaining
 about how crap their home computer is compared to their work PC then you're
 not looking after your developers. I'm currently working from home Tuesdays
 and Thursdays (the boss thinks productivity is higher if you go dark, which
 I think has some merit). 30 monitor and 27.5 montior at home. 2 x 24 at
 work. Got a newer desktop at work than home... I did have to buy myself an
 SSD drive for my home PC to try to keep up with my work PC. :D
 Pertty cool idea people being able to bring their own machines to work.
 Downsides I can see, more people using laptops (possibly more future cases
 of workers comp from hunching over a laptop rather than eye level monitor?)
 and putting the responsibility of your hardware back on the worker. No car
 == no job, may become no laptop == no job.

 Should help cut down situations where people are using 8 year old laptops
 to try to do their job. Man what a way to abuse your staff. unless they are
 contractors of course...  (no no, it's ok. I'll take the 1Gb ram machine. )

 On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 6:11 PM, Simon Haigh smha...@gmail.com wrote:

  Not as exciting as it sounds.  Definately not going to be be a open
 slather policy about bringing your favourite device to work and plugging it
 into the network.  From what I've heard, all access to the company network
 will be through the Citrix portal.

 Still it might be the justification I need to buy a new high powered
 laptop and push a little harder to be able to telecommute.  :-)

 Simon


 On 29/03/2011 7:11 PM, Paul Stovell wrote:

  I think this is pretty exciting:



 The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest
 insurers means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their
 company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and
 smartphones into the enterprise network.



 We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in
 their Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the
 device they feel the most productive in.



 It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and
 retain top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire
 them to do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have
 infrastructure be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.



 From The Australian:




 http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986









RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread David Kean
Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I'm 
failing to see why this is a good thing.

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Grant Molloy
Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2011 4:21 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

The ideas good, but I wouldn't want to take a home pc to work and leave it 
there, laptop maybe...
Good on suncorp for trying something different..
The company I work for gave me a Quad Core with 8gb Ram, and then put the 
standard SOE (XP 32 Bit) on it, in which I have to run a VM to do the dev work..

All ass about as far as I'm concerned..
They've got the cash to put out for the box, something stupid like $8k through 
their supplier, but won't give me the environment to make my life easier..



On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 9:14 PM, Stephen Price 
step...@littlevoices.commailto:step...@littlevoices.com wrote:
I've always thought that if your team are not coming into work complaining 
about how crap their home computer is compared to their work PC then you're not 
looking after your developers. I'm currently working from home Tuesdays and 
Thursdays (the boss thinks productivity is higher if you go dark, which I think 
has some merit). 30 monitor and 27.5 montior at home. 2 x 24 at work. Got a 
newer desktop at work than home... I did have to buy myself an SSD drive for my 
home PC to try to keep up with my work PC. :D
Pertty cool idea people being able to bring their own machines to work. 
Downsides I can see, more people using laptops (possibly more future cases of 
workers comp from hunching over a laptop rather than eye level monitor?) and 
putting the responsibility of your hardware back on the worker. No car == no 
job, may become no laptop == no job.

Should help cut down situations where people are using 8 year old laptops to 
try to do their job. Man what a way to abuse your staff. unless they are 
contractors of course...  (no no, it's ok. I'll take the 1Gb ram machine. )

On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 6:11 PM, Simon Haigh 
smha...@gmail.commailto:smha...@gmail.com wrote:
Not as exciting as it sounds.  Definately not going to be be a open slather 
policy about bringing your favourite device to work and plugging it into the 
network.  From what I've heard, all access to the company network will be 
through the Citrix portal.

Still it might be the justification I need to buy a new high powered laptop and 
push a little harder to be able to telecommute.  :-)

Simon


On 29/03/2011 7:11 PM, Paul Stovell wrote:
I think this is pretty exciting:

The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest insurers 
means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their 
company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and smartphones 
into the enterprise network.

We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in their 
Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the device 
they feel the most productive in.

It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and retain 
top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire them to 
do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have infrastructure 
be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.

From The Australian:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986






Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread djones147
It's also justification to make people work at home for no extra money.

.02c

Davy

When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail. I feel much 
the same way about xml

-Original Message-
From: David Kean david.k...@microsoft.com
Sender: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com
Date: Tue, 29 Mar 2011 15:05:22 
To: ozDotNetozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
Reply-To: ozDotNet ozdotnet@ozdotnet.com
Subject: RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I'm 
failing to see why this is a good thing.

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Grant Molloy
Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2011 4:21 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

The ideas good, but I wouldn't want to take a home pc to work and leave it 
there, laptop maybe...
Good on suncorp for trying something different..
The company I work for gave me a Quad Core with 8gb Ram, and then put the 
standard SOE (XP 32 Bit) on it, in which I have to run a VM to do the dev work..

All ass about as far as I'm concerned..
They've got the cash to put out for the box, something stupid like $8k through 
their supplier, but won't give me the environment to make my life easier..



On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 9:14 PM, Stephen Price 
step...@littlevoices.commailto:step...@littlevoices.com wrote:
I've always thought that if your team are not coming into work complaining 
about how crap their home computer is compared to their work PC then you're not 
looking after your developers. I'm currently working from home Tuesdays and 
Thursdays (the boss thinks productivity is higher if you go dark, which I think 
has some merit). 30 monitor and 27.5 montior at home. 2 x 24 at work. Got a 
newer desktop at work than home... I did have to buy myself an SSD drive for my 
home PC to try to keep up with my work PC. :D
Pertty cool idea people being able to bring their own machines to work. 
Downsides I can see, more people using laptops (possibly more future cases of 
workers comp from hunching over a laptop rather than eye level monitor?) and 
putting the responsibility of your hardware back on the worker. No car == no 
job, may become no laptop == no job.

Should help cut down situations where people are using 8 year old laptops to 
try to do their job. Man what a way to abuse your staff. unless they are 
contractors of course...  (no no, it's ok. I'll take the 1Gb ram machine. )

On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 6:11 PM, Simon Haigh 
smha...@gmail.commailto:smha...@gmail.com wrote:
Not as exciting as it sounds.  Definately not going to be be a open slather 
policy about bringing your favourite device to work and plugging it into the 
network.  From what I've heard, all access to the company network will be 
through the Citrix portal.

Still it might be the justification I need to buy a new high powered laptop and 
push a little harder to be able to telecommute.  :-)

Simon


On 29/03/2011 7:11 PM, Paul Stovell wrote:
I think this is pretty exciting:

The BYO (bring your own) device program at one of Australia's largest insurers 
means staff will be able to break free from the shackles of their 
company-issued PCs and plug in their personal laptops, tablets and smartphones 
into the enterprise network.

We can supply you with desktops here, but if people want to bring in their 
Macs or other devices, then that's their choice. People should use the device 
they feel the most productive in.

It is part of Suncorp's fundamental strategy to attract, develop and retain 
top talent and to give them a great place to work, and try to inspire them to 
do great things. Mr Smith said Suncorp's goal was not to have infrastructure 
be a constraint to people's innovation and ingenuity.

From The Australian:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/suncorp-goes-byo-in-hardware-as-staff-are-encouraged-to-plug-in-their-devices/story-e6frgakx-1226029655986







Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread Craig van Nieuwkerk
Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I’m
 failing to see why this is a good thing.


 I'm with you. This is batshit crazy. Plus who the hell is going to bring
 their machine from home and join it to a domain or run VS.NET through
 citrix all day.

  Pass.

 Work buying you an awesome machine and allowing you to take it home for
 some personal use is a benefit - but buggered if I'd be interested in the
 other way around.


It sounds like cost saving to me. But in many enterprises I have worked at
the developers get the same crappy SEO machine the receptionist or accounts
do, some 3 year old P4 or similar. This is often woefully inadequate to do
the job, I would gladly bring my own in.

Craig


RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread Mitch Denny
I must say that “I don’t care” what others are going to do, all I know is that 
I am way more productive with my home setup (four 1920x screens) with complete 
control over my environment. As a consultant it also makes things much easier, 
companies like Suncorp waste a lot of money going through their desktop 
provisioning process when they won’t let contractors and consultants drop their 
machines on their network.

From a security point of view, it also encourages the IT department to be open 
in what they will support (extending the Internet into their environment) but 
being much more security conscious about sensitive systems. It might mean the 
end of the egg-shell defence.

The whole who pays for it question is probably a separate one. Suncorp might be 
doing this to avoid paying for a laptop refresh, and possibly some licenses, 
but they need to be careful. For example, if you have a grad working there, and 
they are using Office Student edition to do work for Suncorp that could be a 
violation of the agreement.

So the whole mechanics of software licensing is going to have to change as 
well. If I was a Microsoft Account Manager, or any other account manager I 
would be a little bit nervous because suddenly Suncorp doesn’t have as much 
buying power, which affects the ability to make one sale to heavily impacts 
quota. Their targets (if they are smart) are going to start to be built around 
applications, and server licenses, not the desktop.

They should be lining up with vendors such as Dell and Lenovo to produce 
compelling offers inside Suncorp which include the hardware, os, and 
productivity suite.

My 2c

Regards
Mitch Denny
Readify | Chief Technology Officer
Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC 3008 | 
Australia
M: +61 414 610 141 | E: mitch.de...@readify.netmailto:mitch.de...@readify.net 
| W: www.readify.nethttp://www.readify.net/

The content of this e-mail, including any attachments is a confidential 
communication between Readify Pty Ltd and the intended addressee and is for the 
sole use of that intended addressee. If you are not the intended addressee, any 
use, interference with, disclosure or copying of this material is unauthorized 
and prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error please contact the 
sender immediately and then delete the message and any attachment(s).

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of David Connors
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 8:42 AM
To: ozDotNet
Cc: David Kean
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:05 AM, David Kean 
david.k...@microsoft.commailto:david.k...@microsoft.com wrote:
Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I’m 
failing to see why this is a good thing.

I'm with you. This is batshit crazy. Plus who the hell is going to bring their 
machine from home and join it to a domain or run VS.NEThttp://VS.NET through 
citrix all day.

Pass.

Work buying you an awesome machine and allowing you to take it home for some 
personal use is a benefit - but buggered if I'd be interested in the other way 
around.

--
David Connors | da...@codify.commailto:da...@codify.com | 
www.codify.comhttp://www.codify.com
Software Engineer
Codify Pty Ltd
Phone: +61 (7) 3210 6268 | Facsimile: +61 (7) 3210 6269 | Mobile: +61 417 189 
363
V-Card: https://www.codify.com/cards/davidconnors
Address Info: https://www.codify.com/contact
inline: image001.png

RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread Ken Schaefer
There’s no way that people are going to be able to use software installed on 
the laptop to do work. There’s no enterprise, especially a bank, that would 
allow such a thing (banks, especially, have regulatory requirements to meet).

I’m going to strongly suspect that access to company apps will be via a VPN and 
thin client software. The VPN will inspect the machine and make sure it’s 
compliant with some baseline security policy (like having the company’s AV 
software installed) and then the thin client software (Citrix, whatever) will 
be used to publish the company’s apps.

If you don’t bring your own laptop, you’ll get the company provided one. If you 
want to choose your own laptop because you prefer to have something faster, or 
with a bigger screen or what-have-you, then you’re welcome to bring that.

Cheers
Ken

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Mitch Denny
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 5:49 AM
To: ozDotNet
Cc: David Kean
Subject: RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

I must say that “I don’t care” what others are going to do, all I know is that 
I am way more productive with my home setup (four 1920x screens) with complete 
control over my environment. As a consultant it also makes things much easier, 
companies like Suncorp waste a lot of money going through their desktop 
provisioning process when they won’t let contractors and consultants drop their 
machines on their network.

From a security point of view, it also encourages the IT department to be open 
in what they will support (extending the Internet into their environment) but 
being much more security conscious about sensitive systems. It might mean the 
end of the egg-shell defence.

The whole who pays for it question is probably a separate one. Suncorp might be 
doing this to avoid paying for a laptop refresh, and possibly some licenses, 
but they need to be careful. For example, if you have a grad working there, and 
they are using Office Student edition to do work for Suncorp that could be a 
violation of the agreement.

So the whole mechanics of software licensing is going to have to change as 
well. If I was a Microsoft Account Manager, or any other account manager I 
would be a little bit nervous because suddenly Suncorp doesn’t have as much 
buying power, which affects the ability to make one sale to heavily impacts 
quota. Their targets (if they are smart) are going to start to be built around 
applications, and server licenses, not the desktop.

They should be lining up with vendors such as Dell and Lenovo to produce 
compelling offers inside Suncorp which include the hardware, os, and 
productivity suite.

My 2c

Regards
Mitch Denny
Readify | Chief Technology Officer
Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC 3008 | 
Australia
M: +61 414 610 141 | E: mitch.de...@readify.netmailto:mitch.de...@readify.net 
| W: www.readify.nethttp://www.readify.net/

The content of this e-mail, including any attachments is a confidential 
communication between Readify Pty Ltd and the intended addressee and is for the 
sole use of that intended addressee. If you are not the intended addressee, any 
use, interference with, disclosure or copying of this material is unauthorized 
and prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error please contact the 
sender immediately and then delete the message and any attachment(s).

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of David Connors
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 8:42 AM
To: ozDotNet
Cc: David Kean
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 1:05 AM, David Kean 
david.k...@microsoft.commailto:david.k...@microsoft.com wrote:
Sounds like a justification for spending less money on work machines. I’m 
failing to see why this is a good thing.

I'm with you. This is batshit crazy. Plus who the hell is going to bring their 
machine from home and join it to a domain or run VS.NEThttp://VS.NET through 
citrix all day.

Pass.

Work buying you an awesome machine and allowing you to take it home for some 
personal use is a benefit - but buggered if I'd be interested in the other way 
around.


inline: image001.png

Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread David Connors
The article says Citrix and open source.

Hands up who wants to run VS.NET over Citrix. WPF app development would be
*awesome*.

On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 9:34 AM, Mitch Denny mitch.de...@readify.netwrote:

 Hi Ken,



 You are probably right in the first instance. They definitely looking at
 virtualised desktops from the way that article reads, but then they have
 statements like this:



 There will be no restrictions -- products that ran on
 platforms by Microsoft, Apple, Google and others were all welcome, he said.



 Regardless, it’s a pretty gutsy move for a financial organisation which are
 generally quite conservative. So the general trend is interesting.



 Regards

 *Mitch Denny
 *Readify | Chief Technology Officer

 Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC 3008
 | Australia

 M: +61 414 610 141 | E: mitch.de...@readify.net | W: www.readify.net

 [image: Description: Description: cid:image006.png@01CAF06E.1EF9B2F0]

 The content of this e-mail, including any attachments is a confidential
 communication between Readify Pty Ltd and the intended addressee and is for
 the sole use of that intended addressee. If you are not the intended
 addressee, any use, interference with, disclosure or copying of this
 material is unauthorized and prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in
 error please contact the sender immediately and then delete the message and
 any attachment(s).



 *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:
 ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *Ken Schaefer
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 30 March 2011 9:52 AM
 *To:* ozDotNet

 *Subject:* RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp



 There’s no way that people are going to be able to use software installed
 on the laptop to do work. There’s no enterprise, especially a bank, that
 would allow such a thing (banks, especially, have regulatory requirements to
 meet).



 I’m going to strongly suspect that access to company apps will be via a VPN
 and thin client software. The VPN will inspect the machine and make sure
 it’s compliant with some baseline security policy (like having the company’s
 AV software installed) and then the thin client software (Citrix, whatever)
 will be used to publish the company’s apps.



 If you don’t bring your own laptop, you’ll get the company provided one. If
 you want to choose your own laptop because you prefer to have something
 faster, or with a bigger screen or what-have-you, then you’re welcome to
 bring that.



 Cheers
 Ken



 *From:* ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:
 ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] *On Behalf Of *Mitch Denny
 *Sent:* Wednesday, 30 March 2011 5:49 AM
 *To:* ozDotNet
 *Cc:* David Kean
 *Subject:* RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp



 I must say that “I don’t care” what others are going to do, all I know is
 that I am way more productive with my home setup (four 1920x screens) with
 complete control over my environment. As a consultant it also makes things
 much easier, companies like Suncorp waste a lot of money going through their
 desktop provisioning process when they won’t let contractors and consultants
 drop their machines on their network.



 From a security point of view, it also encourages the IT department to be
 open in what they will support (extending the Internet into their
 environment) but being much more security conscious about sensitive systems.
 It might mean the end of the egg-shell defence.



 The whole who pays for it question is probably a separate one. Suncorp
 might be doing this to avoid paying for a laptop refresh, and possibly some
 licenses, but they need to be careful. For example, if you have a grad
 working there, and they are using Office Student edition to do work for
 Suncorp that could be a violation of the agreement.



 So the whole mechanics of software licensing is going to have to change as
 well. If I was a Microsoft Account Manager, or any other account manager I
 would be a little bit nervous because suddenly Suncorp doesn’t have as much
 buying power, which affects the ability to make one sale to heavily impacts
 quota. Their targets (if they are smart) are going to start to be built
 around applications, and server licenses, not the desktop.



 They should be lining up with vendors such as Dell and Lenovo to produce
 compelling offers inside Suncorp which include the hardware, os, and
 productivity suite.



 My 2c



 Regards

 *Mitch Denny
 *Readify | Chief Technology Officer

 Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC 3008
 | Australia

 M: +61 414 610 141 | E: mitch.de...@readify.net | W: www.readify.net

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RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

2011-03-29 Thread Ken Schaefer
I suspect this isn’t for everyone in the bank.

There will be travelling people who won’t always have a connection back to the 
DC (e.g. those on planes), developers/sys admins, certain execs. There’ll be 
other options for those people.

Cheers
Ken

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of David Connors
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 7:38 AM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

The article says Citrix and open source.

Hands up who wants to run VS.NEThttp://VS.NET over Citrix. WPF app 
development would be *awesome*.

On Wed, Mar 30, 2011 at 9:34 AM, Mitch Denny 
mitch.de...@readify.netmailto:mitch.de...@readify.net wrote:
Hi Ken,

You are probably right in the first instance. They definitely looking at 
virtualised desktops from the way that article reads, but then they have 
statements like this:

There will be no restrictions -- products that ran on platforms 
by Microsoft, Apple, Google and others were all welcome, he said.

Regardless, it’s a pretty gutsy move for a financial organisation which are 
generally quite conservative. So the general trend is interesting.

Regards
Mitch Denny
Readify | Chief Technology Officer
Suite 408 Life.Lab Building | 198 Harbour Esplanade | Docklands | VIC 3008 | 
Australia
M: +61 414 610 141 | E: mitch.de...@readify.netmailto:mitch.de...@readify.net 
| W: www.readify.nethttp://www.readify.net/

The content of this e-mail, including any attachments is a confidential 
communication between Readify Pty Ltd and the intended addressee and is for the 
sole use of that intended addressee. If you are not the intended addressee, any 
use, interference with, disclosure or copying of this material is unauthorized 
and prohibited. If you have received this e-mail in error please contact the 
sender immediately and then delete the message and any attachment(s).

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com 
[mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Ken Schaefer
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 9:52 AM
To: ozDotNet

Subject: RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

There’s no way that people are going to be able to use software installed on 
the laptop to do work. There’s no enterprise, especially a bank, that would 
allow such a thing (banks, especially, have regulatory requirements to meet).

I’m going to strongly suspect that access to company apps will be via a VPN and 
thin client software. The VPN will inspect the machine and make sure it’s 
compliant with some baseline security policy (like having the company’s AV 
software installed) and then the thin client software (Citrix, whatever) will 
be used to publish the company’s apps.

If you don’t bring your own laptop, you’ll get the company provided one. If you 
want to choose your own laptop because you prefer to have something faster, or 
with a bigger screen or what-have-you, then you’re welcome to bring that.

Cheers
Ken

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com 
[mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.commailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Mitch Denny
Sent: Wednesday, 30 March 2011 5:49 AM
To: ozDotNet
Cc: David Kean
Subject: RE: [OT] BYO Computer @ Suncorp

I must say that “I don’t care” what others are going to do, all I know is that 
I am way more productive with my home setup (four 1920x screens) with complete 
control over my environment. As a consultant it also makes things much easier, 
companies like Suncorp waste a lot of money going through their desktop 
provisioning process when they won’t let contractors and consultants drop their 
machines on their network.

From a security point of view, it also encourages the IT department to be open 
in what they will support (extending the Internet into their environment) but 
being much more security conscious about sensitive systems. It might mean the 
end of the egg-shell defence.

The whole who pays for it question is probably a separate one. Suncorp might be 
doing this to avoid paying for a laptop refresh, and possibly some licenses, 
but they need to be careful. For example, if you have a grad working there, and 
they are using Office Student edition to do work for Suncorp that could be a 
violation of the agreement.

So the whole mechanics of software licensing is going to have to change as 
well. If I was a Microsoft Account Manager, or any other account manager I 
would be a little bit nervous because suddenly Suncorp doesn’t have as much 
buying power, which affects the ability to make one sale to heavily impacts 
quota. Their targets (if they are smart) are going to start to be built around 
applications, and server licenses, not the desktop.

They should be lining up with vendors such as Dell and Lenovo to produce 
compelling offers inside Suncorp which include the hardware, os, and 
productivity suite.

My 2c

Regards
Mitch Denny
Readify | Chief Technology Officer
Suite