Evenif you find a way to look down your container, there is no way to lock down the image. If someone realy wants to know how you image looks like, they can save it as a tar archive, analyze the individual layers, which are nothing else then a tar achive themself + metadata that tells if a file is a new, updates a file from an underlaying layer or delete (actualy hide) a file from an underlaying layer.
You can lock down the iPad to "Single App Mode" so that the user can't exit the app. You could also use the Parental Controls feature to restrict the browser to a short list of approved domains and subdomains (*.
acme.org)
Now you open Safari, triple tap on the home button. Lo and behold, you now have a kiosk-mode iPad that only will run Safari with your specific URL. Still, you as an admin are able to change settings by just triple tapping and providing your passcode or Touch ID.
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We have wild adoption that is quickly out growing licenses. Inviting members is open to ALL Asana users. To control license usage, we would like to see this locked down to admins. This way we can control licensing and account for a true number of licenses needed.
A. In every public school there shall be a lock-down drill at least once during the first 20 school days of each school session, in order that students and teachers may be thoroughly practiced in such drills. Every public school shall hold at least one additional lock-down drill after the first 60 days of the school session. Every public school shall provide the parents of enrolled students with at least 24 hours' notice before the school conducts any lock-down drill, provided, however, that nothing in this section shall be construed to require such notice to include the exact date and time of the lock-down drill.
B. Pre-kindergarten and kindergarten students shall be exempt from mandatory participation in lock-down drills during the first 60 days of the school session. Local school boards shall develop policies to implement such exemption. Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this subsection, each pre-kindergarten and kindergarten student shall participate in each lock-down drill after the first 60 days of each school session.
Once this is done, only the base creator will have the ability to modify the field options for that multi-select field. Other collaborators won't be able to add new options ad hoc, though they'll still be able to select from the existing options.
The "Customize field type" option has been renamed to "Edit Field", and what you listed as your solution locks off the entire field from being edited. It doesn't prevent creators from adding new options to the multi-select options.
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Ok we seem to be getting closer. The only thing is that I don't see an explaination of how I can install these programs and use them? The apple page is very vague on how to actually get the products and use them.
What will his employees be using them for? If he really feels that placing such restrictions and controls is vital to productivity, it seems that laptops might be a better option as they are easier to manage. What is unique about the iPad that makes him want to use them?
Well, if he's investing in them just to "jump on the bandwagon" then buyer beware... this is a very expensive investment to make if he doesn't have a business plan to use them and doesn't trust his employees to use them. If I was in his situation, based on your descriptions, I wouldn't try to deploy them - it makes no sense to do so without a specific reason and without trained employees who can be trusted with an expensive device.
If you want to control your employee Internet use it might be easier to accomplish this via technology applied at the router and firewall network level rather than at the device or client level. Barracuda Networks, Mobicip, OpenDNS, Webroot, etc. are some vendors to look into for this. If you really just want an app check out Safe Eyes and Mobicip.
Yes, use the iPhone Configuration Utility. You can install a set of authorized apps and prevent other apps or features being installed. There's other information available at the Apple page I linked to.
You can't stop the employees from checking their Facebook pages or any other websites once the device has left your network. If you also block Facebook at work, the same network blocking and restrictions will affect the iPad.
If the iPad is tied to your work iTunes account, you will have a record of any external apps downloaded and purchased. If they set it up with their own iTunes account, it will erase any business apps you've installed, but then you'll know because they can't do their work.
May I ask why you're supplying your workers with iPads? I don't mean to offend, but you don't seem to trust them to use them responsibly. You might want to check out the iPad educators Ning, as most of the restrictions you are looking for are similar to those schools are facing when providing iPads to their students.
Download and install the iPhone Configuration Utility from the link I gave you. There's a download link right there on the page. You can get a Mac or Windows version. On the Mac, it's installed in Applications/Utilities.
Launch the program, and create a new configuration profile. Using the "Restrictions" tab, set whatever restrictions are appropriate (eg, disallow iTunes Store, installing apps, etc). Then either email the profile, or assign it to a connected iPad.
I am setting up the ipad to work in a friend business. If his employees treat the ipad like they treated his computer, then I would definitely want to put restrictions on the ipads. The ipad will no leave the office space. The ipads are not their personal ipads but ipad used only at work.
I would say it's a more of jump on the band wagon type thing. Touchpads are starting to show up every where from restaurants to medical practice to the board room. To be honest we really don't need computers period. It's just makes you feel oh so good to have them.
Besides, I have to admit. The way apps are programed are much easier to use and understand than computer programs. When you start meeting 72 years lugging a ipad, then you know the computer has finally reached the masses. I really don't understand why it took so long to make computing easy.
What's the need for a business plan thousands of people buyt touch pads and computers every day and don't know how to use them. More or less they end up being paper weights. Beside the restrictions are instented to stop misuse. And who said he didn't have a business plan. the ipads replace pen and paper and so employee enter information directly into the server. This lets the employee be mobile and still do their work. It's being done in places all around the world. Ipad is an computer for the most part.
That's why these companies build in this security stuff any way. You are protecting your investment by taking the proper steps to make sure that the equiptment is not misused. Where do you work where your Boss let's you do whatever you want on his or her computer. Play games? Get viruses?
I do work with computers - with children and adults. They do not have unlimited access - but we trust our elementary school students at a very different level than our teachers. We let our teachers visit websites, we let our students visit websites; sometimes we do get hit, but that pales to the use we get out of them. Sometimes our teachers do, I'm sure, play games and visit personal sites during work hours; sometimes (but less often) our students do, as we have tighter restrictions on them. I guess I'm fortunate enough to work in a place where all the employees are trusted to make decisions about how to use the technology provided for them - and sometimes that technology has been taken away when misused, but the overwhelming majority use them responsibly. You and your friend seems to have the opposite approach - bad things might happen, so nobody can use anything and everything must be blocked.
I just wanted to respond that the ipad does have "Restrictions" you can set, similar to the way Parental Controls are set. You can lock them out of the App store, and pornographic content. They can't view Flash anyway, so that will cut down on a number of things.
You can only allow them to view a page in the app store just for your organization. It will only contain the apps you want. You can do this following the instructions in the Apple Enterprise Deployment Guide.
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