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Introducing Improvements to Managed Open In and Restrictions Profiles
Iru Team

2 min read

Introducing Improvements to Managed Open In and Restrictions Profiles

Kandji is excited to announce the release of a new Library Item that will give Apple admins finer control over data flows on iOS and iPadOS devices, as well as updates to Restrictions profiles. Both take advantage of features introduced in macOS Monterey and iOS/iPadOS 15.

Product Update
Kandji Raises $100 Million Series C to Advance Apple in the Enterprise
Iru Team

3 min read

Kandji Raises $100 Million Series C to Advance Apple in the Enterprise

Kandji has announced that it has raised $100 million in Series C funding, at a nearly 10x increase in valuation since the company’s Series A funding round one year ago. This latest round was led by Tiger Global with participation from Definition and Frontline Ventures and from existing investors First Round Capital, Greycroft, Felicis Ventures, The Spruce House Partnership, B Capital Group, SVB Capital, and Okta Ventures. Today’s financing—the company’s third round since last year—brings Kandji’s total funding raised to $188.5 million. Kandji will use these funds to further evolve its product offerings, increase global hiring, and open a London office.

Recent News
Kandji Passport Coordinates Local, Cloud Identities for Authentication
Iru Team

2 min read

Kandji Passport Coordinates Local, Cloud Identities for Authentication

Today, Kandji announced the release of Passport, an authentication product that creates a seamless, one-password sign-in experience for users. Kandji Passport validates the credentials a user provides during Mac login against an organization’s cloud-based identity provider (IdP), so users need to remember just one password for both their Mac computers and the organization’s single sign-on (SSO) provider. Passport provides a native Mac login experience while streamlining device configuration, management, and security tasks for IT admins. “Fewer passwords for users to remember and for admins to manage can enhance an organization’s end-to-end security,” said Adam Pettit, CEO at Kandji. “Additionally, IT teams see many help desk tickets from users who can’t log in because they’re not sure which password to use or who get locked out for typing in the wrong password too many times. Having both the cloud identity password and local password synced creates a better user experience and reduces the ticket load on Mac admins.”

Product Update
Mac Admin Panel: Apple and the Future of Device Management
Iru Team

5 min read

Mac Admin Panel: Apple and the Future of Device Management

Apple device management has changed dramatically over the past decade, and it’s poised to change even more dramatically in the not-too-distant future. Recently, Kandji hosted a panel discussion to discuss the ways device management can and should evolve—both where it’s been and where it’s heading.

Recent News
Hybrid Workforce Boosts Apple Adoption in the Enterprise, Survey Finds
Iru Team

3 min read

Hybrid Workforce Boosts Apple Adoption in the Enterprise, Survey Finds

Kandji, the leader in modern Apple device management, today announced the results of a global survey of more than 300 IT professionals about the correlation of hybrid work and Apple adoption in the enterprise. Commissioned by Kandji and conducted by Dimensional Research, the survey found 70% of companies more than doubled the number of remote or hybrid workers in the past two years, while 76% of respondents reported employee use of Apple devices also increased in that same time period.

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What Apple Admins Need to Know About iCloud Private Relay
Iru Team

4 min read

What Apple Admins Need to Know About iCloud Private Relay

iCloud Private Relay is Apple's latest initiative to protect consumer privacy. The service—which debuts as a public beta in macOS Monterey and iOS and iPadOS 15 and will be included with iCloud+ subscriptions—is designed to make it harder for third-parties to track users on local and remote networks. When a user browses the internet—whether at home, in the office, or a coffee shop—specific details, such as their DNS records and IP address, are visible to network providers and the websites they visit. Those providers and websites can collect those details to determine the user’s location and browsing habits. That information can then be used to develop a personal profile of the user’s interests, which can, in turn, help target the user with ads and other marketing vehicles. In a worst-case scenario, if the user’s email is correlated with their device, that information can be used to initiate phishing attacks. These kinds of privacy invasions are what iCloud Private Relay is designed to prevent.

Recent News
Getting Ready for Apple's OS Updates: How Mac Admins Are Testing
Iru Team

4 min read

Getting Ready for Apple's OS Updates: How Mac Admins Are Testing

Back in June, Apple announced new versions of its operating systems: macOS Monterey and iOS/iPadOS 15. Sometime this fall, those new OSes will be officially released. In the meantime, Apple has made prerelease versions of the new operating systems available to you for testing. As we've said before, we think it’s a really good idea to test those OSes before they’re released, so you can (a) get an idea of how well they’ll work with your existing tech infrastructure and (b) give Apple and other vendors feedback on the new software and its compatibility with the apps and services your organization relies on. But that’s just our opinion. We were curious to find out what real-world Apple admins think about the whole testing question. So we asked a select group of our blog readers what their testing regimes were like. Their answers are anecdotal, of course. But we think they shine some light on what’s really happening out there as we all wait for macOS Monterey and iOS/iPadOS 15 to officially ship.

Recent News
Getting Ready for Apple's Next OS Updates: How to Create a Test Plan
Iru Team

6 min read

Getting Ready for Apple's Next OS Updates: How to Create a Test Plan

Last week, we talked about why it’s important to test prerelease operating systems. The reasoning is straightforward: You need to test new operating systems before deploying them widely—ideally before they’re officially released—to see how they get along with your existing technical infrastructure. We also talked recently about where and how to download beta OSes. But once you’ve downloaded the software, what’s next? What’s the best way to test a prerelease OS? Of course, the specific answers depend entirely on your particular circumstances—the kinds and quantity of Apple hardware you manage, the apps and services your organization uses, how much time you have, and so on. But here are some general guidelines for thinking about testing macOS Monterey and iOS/iPadOS 15 now.

Recent News
Introducing Enhancements to Automated Device Enrollment
Nick McDonald

3 min read

Introducing Enhancements to Automated Device Enrollment

Kandji is pleased to announce our redesigned Automated Device Enrollment Library Item in the Kandji web app.

Product Update
Getting Ready for Apple's Next OS Updates: Why You Should Be Testing Now
Iru Team

3 min read

Getting Ready for Apple's Next OS Updates: Why You Should Be Testing Now

Last week, we wrote about three ways to access Apple beta software (including one that’s designed specifically for Apple admins, AppleSeed for IT). But some might wonder: Why bother downloading beta software in the first place? Why not wait until the operating system is publicly released? Waiting certainly makes sense for your home Mac or iPhone. Apple makes it incredibly easy to upgrade, and the majority of Apple users are ready to pull the trigger on day one. You upgrade, and most of the time, everything works great — you are up and running within the hour. But in a business context, it’s vital to test operating systems before they’re released. Here’s why.

Recent News
Getting Ready for Apple's Next OS Updates: AppleSeed for IT
Iru Team

4 min read

Getting Ready for Apple's Next OS Updates: AppleSeed for IT

Testing prerelease versions of upcoming operating systems to see how they get along with your existing technology infrastructure is a critical project for IT administrators. While there are several ways to get early access to new versions of macOS, iOS, and iPadOS, AppleSeed for IT is the only one specifically designed for Apple admins. In this guide, we’ll explore that program’s features; why it’s the best way for Apple admins to get access to prerelease versions of macOS Monterey, iOS 15, and iPadOS 15; how you can access it; and how you can use it to test those betas.

Recent News
How Mac Admins Are Preparing for the Hybrid Workplace
Iru Team

5 min read

How Mac Admins Are Preparing for the Hybrid Workplace

Along with the rest of the world, corporate workplaces were turned upside down over the past year and a half. In a shockingly short period of time, enterprise employees switched from going to the office every day to working from home. Organizations large and small scrambled to figure out how to keep their businesses going with their newly remote workforces. Much of the burden of that transition fell on IT departments, which had to figure out how to keep their coworkers connected and productive. To a remarkable degree, they succeeded. But now, as many companies begin asking their employees to return to the office at least part of the time, admins face a new challenge: a hybrid workplace, in which some workers are on-site and others remote and they may switch from one to the other depending on the day. How will you manage IT needs in this new environment?

Recent News
Why Apple's WWDC Announcements Are Good News for IT Admins
Iru Team

5 min read

Why Apple's WWDC Announcements Are Good News for IT Admins

Every year, veteran tech journalist Jason Snell asks a panel of Apple experts to assess the company’s product performance over the preceding 12 months. He then publishes a “report card” based on those responses on his Six Colors blog. (Here’s the 2020 edition.) We’ve always been big fans of Jason’s work and thought it’d be interesting if he could do something similar that focused exclusively on Apple’s moves in the enterprise market. He was game, so Kandji commissioned the report and then stood back to let him do his work. He posted the results—“Apple in the Enterprise: A 2021 report card”—in early June. It was a great snapshot of the issues that matter most to Mac admins: Service and support for enterprise customers; hardware and software innovation and reliability; security and privacy; identity management; the MDM protocol; and more. image: sixcolors.com Jason’s report came out just before Apple convened its 2021 Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC). Now that we’ve had a few weeks to digest the news that emerged from that conference, we wanted to take a look at Apple’s enterprise announcements from WWDC, to see how they align with the issues raised in the Six Colors survey.

Recent News
Introducing Kandji's Integration with Vanta
Iru Team

1 min read

Introducing Kandji's Integration with Vanta

Kandji is excited to announce our integration with Vanta. Information about devices in your Kandji instance can now be used to inform Vanta’s security and compliance rules.

Product Update
Preview: Apple Admins to Get More Control of Software Updates
Iru Team

4 min read

Preview: Apple Admins to Get More Control of Software Updates

At this year’s Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC 2021), Apple announced a slew of exciting new tools for IT admins. Several of them are specifically aimed at giving those admins more control over software updates in the upcoming macOS Monterey and iOS and iPadOS 15. Here's what they are and how they'll help: Separating Updates for iOS, iPadOS Managing macOS Releases Deferring Software Updates Deploying Software Updates Enforcing Software Updates

Recent News

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