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Jul 26

Written by: Tim
Monday, July 26, 2010 5:45 PM  RssIcon

Apple’s iPhone is still perceived as primarily marketed to individuals rather than corporates. However, I was interested to see how much Apple is doing to attract corporate developers. First, Apple now supports some basic enterprise-friendly features, such as Microsoft Exchange (with a few caveats), VPN, remote wipe, and the ability to lock down iTunes to some extent. Without these capabilities, the devices would not be acceptable in many environments, making it pointless to consider them for custom applications.

Unfortunately iTunes is still needed for activation, deploying software updates, and installing applications. It is silly that Apple requires business users to install a music library to use its phone, I guess reflecting the device’s history as a music player. It is also a somewhat intrusive application especially on Windows.

If you then want to develop internal applications, you sign up for the iPhone Developer Enterprise Program. At $299 per year this is more expensive than the more general equivalent, but no big deal. Then you have to get a digital certificate from Apple. Next, create one or more “provisioning profiles” that install onto the device and authorize it to run your applications. Applications you create must be signed with your digital certificate. Finally, you can add the signed applications to an iTunes library, and users can then drag it to their iPhone or iPad. It will only run on devices that have the matching provisioning profile installed. Organisations can also revoke applications by revoking the identity used to sign the provisioning profile.

As Adobe pointed out to me, since these apps do not go through Apple’s approval process, there is nothing to stop corporate developers using the Flash Packager for iPhone that is available in Creative Suite 5.

There is more detail on Apple’s iPhone in Business page.

Related posts:

  1. Spotify for iPhone looks great – if Apple allows it
  2. Why it’s hard to compete with Apple in mobile app development and deployment
  3. Apple iPad vs Windows Tablet vs Google Chrome OS

Originally published in Tim Anderson's blog here

Tags:
Categories: Development
Location: Blogs Parent Separator Tim Anderson

3 comment(s) so far...


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Re: Enterprise app development on Apple iPhone and iPad

There are a couple of great websites around that will help you find a developer for a mobile app project. Try androidappdevelopers.net, or iphoneappdevelopers.com. Both websites take your information and match you with three developers that will bid on your app project. Seems like a pretty good concept.

By jason on   Wednesday, November 24, 2010 8:53 AM
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Re: Enterprise app development on Apple iPhone and iPad

i want to confirm is there any way of running AC for iphone development on AMD processor.I tried hard but unable to do so.

By Paul Harris on   Thursday, November 25, 2010 11:28 AM
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Re: Enterprise app development on Apple iPhone and iPad

Hi Paul

Not sure what you mean by AC?

Tim

By Tim Anderson on   Thursday, November 25, 2010 11:46 AM
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