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Tag: Google Enterprise

  • Google Enterprise Gets Name Change To ‘Google For Work’

    Google announced the rebranding of Google Enterprise to “Google for Work,” broadening the connotation of its workplace tools brand.

    Over the years, Google has significantly increased the amount of tools and products it offers for businesses of all sizes, so this makes a great deal of sense.

    Executive Chairman Eric Schmidt reflected on all of this in a blog post, and concluded that a rebranding was in order.

    “Work today is very different from 10 years ago,” he wrote. “Cloud computing, once a new idea, is abundantly available, and collaboration is possible across offices, cities, countries and continents. Ideas can go from prototype to development to launch in a matter of days. Working from a computer, tablet or phone is no longer just a trend—it’s a reality. And millions of companies, large and small, have turned to Google’s products to help them launch, build and transform their businesses, and help their employees work the way they live. In other words, work is already better than it used to be.”

    “But technology for the workplace isn’t just about a better way of doing business,” he added. “It’s about empowering anyone, whether they’re a developer with an idea in their basement or a baker with a better cupcake or a company with thousands of employees, to have an impact. We never set out to create a traditional “enterprise” business—we wanted to create a new way of doing work. So the time has come for our name to catch up with our ambition.”

    The Google Enterprise site now features the Google for Work branding, and provides some stats about businesses and schools using Google products. These include: over five million businesses that have “gone Google;” over a million Chromebooks sold to schools in Q2; and 64% of the Fortune 500 has gone Google.

    Featured products include: Gmail, Drive, Docs, Hangouts, App Engine, Compute Engine, Cloud Storage, BigQuery, Site Search, Search Appliance, Earth Pro, Maps Engine, Maps Coordinate, Chrome, Chromebook, and Chromebox.

    Image via YouTube

  • Chrome OS For Enterprise Devices Get Four Years Of Support

    Did your company make the switch to Chrome OS devices in the last few years? You may have made the switch thinking that Google wouldn’t pull the rug out from under you like Microsoft does when it ends support for past versions of Windows. While it’s true that Chrome OS is an evolving platform with no end of life date, the hardware it runs on will one day stop being supported.

    If you ever wanted to know when your Chromebook is going to become obsolete, look no further than Google’s Chrome OS End of Life Policy page. Each Chrome OS product currently available is listed with its End of Life date. After the date listed, the hardware will stop being officially supported by the Google Enterprise team.

    Here’s the full list:

    Chrome OS For Enterprise Devices Get Four Years Of Support

    Google notes that the above list isn’t set in stone. End of Life dates can be pushed back if Google deems it necessary. You won’t have to worry about dates being pushed forward though as Google gives all Chrome OS devices four years of official support.

    So, what happens to a device after the Google Enterprise team stops supporting it? For starters, it will no longer receive automatic software updates. It’s unknown if Google will allow admins to manually download the latest versions of Chrome OS. Even more pressing, however, is the fact device management through admit control will no longer work.

    In short, you can keep on using your Chrome OS devices after their End of Life date. It just won’t be a pleasant experience. Just as those businesses who use Windows will have to upgrade to Windows 7 or 8 at some point this year, businesses using Chrome OS devices will have to buy all new devices every four years.

    [h/t: Digital Trends]
    Image via Google

  • Google Adds New Ways to Manage and Share Contacts

    You already know that Google is always looking for ways to enhance user experience and this time they are adding some new features that will Google+Enterprise+Blog%29″>allow you to share your contacts list in different ways. As always, the inspiration for the upgrades comes via feedback from users.

    To begin with, they have added a contact delegation feature. It sounds like an invasion of privacy to merely hand over your information to someone so they extract contacts from your personal “My Contacts” list, but they have addressed the issue.

    Here’s how they explain it on their support site:

    Contacts delegation allows users to delegate full access to the contacts in their “My Contacts” group without granting access to their mail or anything else in their accounts. This is a common delegation practice between some executive users and their assistants and may be used in any situation where a user wishes to share all of his or her contacts with another user.

    Contacts delegation uses a familiar Apps sharing interface. You may delegate your contacts only to other users within your domain. Like mail delegation, you may delegate your contacts to no more than 25 other users at the same time. Delegation allows the sharing of the entire “My Contacts” list only. You cannot delegate a subset of your “My Contacts” or delegate contacts not in your “My Contacts.”

    Here are some step-by-step directions:

    1.) Go to Google Contacts.

    2). Click the More pulldown menu immediately above your contacts list and select Manage Delegation Settings.

    3). In the Add people text box, enter the email addresses of the users you wish to share your contacts.

    4). Click Share & save to finish granting the specified users access to your contacts.

    Google has also added a shared directory for everyone in your domain to edit and share. It is a browseable and searchable list of user names and email addresses that even includes nicknames and aliases. As the administrator you can adult the settings to control who does and who doesn’t appear in the directory.

    To change which email addresses appear in the Google Apps Directory:

    1). Sign in to the Google Apps administrator control panel.

    The URL is https://www.google.com/a/cpanel/primary-domain-name, where primary-domain-name is the domain name you used to sign up for Google Apps.

    2). Click Settings in the menu bar, then Contacts in the left menu.

    3). Under Contact Settings, select Enable contact sharing.

    4). Specify which email addresses to include in the shared contact list:

    * Show all email addresses: Include both the primary email address and nicknames or alias addresses for users in the domain
    Note: Domain aliases and multiple domain addresses remain hidden in the domain’s Global Address List (GAL), Directory, and autocomplete.

    * Hide nicknames: Include only primary email addresses; aliases and nicknames are hidden

    * Hide the primary email address if the user has a nickname: Include a user’s manually entered nickname for all contacts; hide the user’s primary email address, aliases, and other user’s nicknames for the contact

    5). Choose what is shown in the browsable directory in Contact Manager:

    * Show only domain profiles: Include profiles of users with accounts in your domain only.

    * Show only domain shared contacts: Include contacts added to the list using the Domain Shared Contacts API. They are people who don’t have email addresses in your domain, but who your people need to be able to contact.

    * Show both domain profiles and domain shared contacts: Include both the aforementioned internal users and external contacts.

    6). Click Save changes.

    Hopefully these changes will make your life a little easier and your user experience more pleasant. To learn more about any of the features follow the links associated with them.