The firm’s first device running Esper Foundation is the Lenovo ThinkCentre M70a, an all-in-one desktop PC fitted with an up to 12th-Gen Intel Core i9 CPU, alongside 16GB DDR4 RAM and up to 512GB SSD. It’ll be followed by the Lenovo ThinkCentre M70q, M90n-1 IoT, and the ThinkEdge SE30 v2 machines by the end of 2023.
What are you going to do on such a device running android?
Esper Foundation is based on Android 11 and has customizable branding, peripheral compatibility, quarterly security patches, and three years of support. The MDM system, meanwhile, remotely deploys, manages, and updates devices from a single view.
It's based on 3 years old android. Promises quarterly security updates and provides only 3 years of support. I fail to see why any business in their right mind would get this instead of a decent specs chromebook or even a windows computer.
Still, I fail to see the point of running android on a desktop vs. chromeOS, Windows, or even linux; which get decades of updates, and have desktop apps supported natively for all your workflow. How or rather why would anyone get this instead of buying one of those. What android apps would you run on a large screen anyway?
What are you going to do on such a device running android?
It's based on 3 years old android. Promises quarterly security updates and provides only 3 years of support. I fail to see why any business in their right mind would get this instead of a decent specs chromebook or even a windows computer.
Longer term updates aren't a big deal when the hardware gets replaced in a corporate environment.
Still, I fail to see the point of running android on a desktop vs. chromeOS, Windows, or even linux; which get decades of updates, and have desktop apps supported natively for all your workflow. How or rather why would anyone get this instead of buying one of those. What android apps would you run on a large screen anyway?
I agree there. That's the part I'm wondering about.