![]() ![]() For the latest developments in business technology news, follow on Twitter. Get the first word on what the important tech news really means with the InfoWorld Tech Watch blog. This story, " Apple's radical new Mac server strategy," was originally published at. As I've alluded to here and will elaborate on in a forthcoming review, Lion Server takes a hard turn toward usability and places an emphasis on service to users with Apple hardware. Apple's commitment to standards means that Lion Server remains a good candidate for general-purpose use. For $49, it equips your network with any combination of file, email, calendar, Web, chat, podcast, VPN, directory, and backup (Mac only) services. That's just one of Lion Server's rich array of services. After the profile is loaded, updates can be pushed to a device over the air, along with emergency commands like remote wipe and password change. In both cases, all the user has to do is visit a Web portal that Lion sets up and hosts automatically no tethering to an IT configuration terminal is required. Company-owned iPads and iPhones can be locked down with profiles that apply to arbitrarily defined groups of users or devices. For user-owned devices that connect to company infrastructure, Profile Manager can configure the device for company services, including services not hosted by Mac OS X or iCloud. Lion Server's Profile Manager is key to enterprise deployments of iOS devices. ![]() One server facility in particular illustrates Apple's new approach. It appears instead to signal a shift in mission: Instead of trying to displace enterprise Windows, Linux, and big iron Unix servers, Lion Server focuses primarily on providing easily managed native network services to workgroups of iOS and Mac users. ![]() Lion Server looks nothing like a last gasp. However, I seriously doubt that's an issue. The $49 price tag doesn't mitigate the risk of implementing a server platform that's in decline. Critics will point to Lion Server's drop in price, the abolishment of node-locked licensing, and simplification of the administrative GUI as foreshadowing Apple's departure from the server market. Enter the User Name you created on your macOS Server in the form of UserNamemac-mini-host-name.local. Select Jabber from the Account Type dropdown list. Select Add Account from the drop-down menu. Sounds like a steal, but it's also a move that raises prickly questions. Click Messages in the App menu in the upper left corner of the screen. With Mac OS X Lion Server, a Mac Pro with a Fibre Channel card becomes a scary-fast, bulletproof distributed storage server for Mac networks. For a long time thereafter, Mac OS X Server was an entirely separate product that you had to purchase separatelyat a hefty price. To sweeten the deal, Apple is throwing in Xsan, the SAN software Apple used to sell for $999. With that, Mac OS X Server as we knew it is no more. The first app made for Lion to hit the App Store is a real eye-opener: Mac OS X Lion Server, costing $49, a tiny fraction of Snow Leopard Server's $499 price tag. ![]()
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