http://news.cnet.com/8301-19882_3-20002550-250.html?tag=nl.e703 

-----Original Message-----
From: Raper, Jonathan - Eagle [mailto:jra...@eaglemds.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, April 20, 2010 1:45 PM
To: NT System Admin Issues
Subject: need suggestions...iPad in a Windows enterprise, anyone?

Ok, I need some insight/thoughts/suggestions...especially if any of you
have come up against this.

I have a pure Windows & Cisco environment, W2k3 AD, 802.11n with 802.1x
authentication (we don't support 802.11b, and 802.11g is on the way out
the door). All desktops are XP, with a small handful of 2000 Pro boxes
left out in the field. We've never supported Vista or Apple-anything on
our network, and pulled the last 9x box off of our network years ago.
We're close to getting rid of all of the 2000 clients off, and we're
starting to look at Windows 7. We're multi-specialty, multi-location,
physician-owned healthcare provider, which means HIPAA is of significant
concern. Not much else applies, since we're not publicly traded (aside
from common sense and the law in general). We have about 425 employees
and around 65 physicians (most of the physicians are shareholders).

I've done a good job of keeping the iPod touch and iPhone users off of
the network thus far, because we simply don't have the people in house
to be able to support any more devices.

Enter the iPad, Apple's answer to the Tablet PC.

We now have physicians who are starting to ask for iPad access on the
network. I'm not sure why, but I suppose because they think it will be
so much better than the Lenovo X200 Tablet PCs that we JUST bought them
for use with our EMR system. We do not yet have a functional wireless
guest network.

I've tried connecting a 64 Gig iPod touch to our wireless network to no
avail, and then discovered that apparently the iPod touch doesn't like
hidden networks. I'm not about to start broadcasting my SSID... this
gives me pause about even considering an iPad, not to mention that I
wouldn't be able to control the machine or authenticate the machine
against the network.

Anyway, do any of you have any arguments for or against allowing the
iPad/iPod/iPhone, both from a support standpoint and a security
standpoint?

Thanks in advance,


Jonathan L. Raper, A+, MCSA, MCSE
Technology Coordinator
Eagle Physicians & Associates, PA
jra...@eaglemds.com
www.eaglemds.com



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~ <http://www.sunbeltsoftware.com/Business/VIPRE-Enterprise/>  ~

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