Computer Science, asked by shreya24048, 8 months ago

how have organization adopted to BYOD with networking​

Answers

Answered by nidhirandhawa7
2

Answer:

Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) is a vastly adapted policy in which companies allow their employees to use their own mobile devices for work. This decision brings several positives and negatives for a network environment. Business owners and network managers must agree on the type of support, additional software to manage mobile devices such as mobile device management (MDM) software, amendments to the network security policy, creating a separate BYOD policy, and Voice over IP (VoIP) usage, to name just a few things. This article explores some of these areas of consideration for implementing a BYOD policy.

Security

Above all, security should be the main concern when adopting BYOD into a network. Employees will bring multiple devices using multiple operating systems connected to multiple wireless and service networks. Managing everything may require MDM software to reduce administrative levels of effort to take control and minimize security vulnerabilities.

A BYOD security policy should provide company governance to help network administrators manage mobile devices and ensure that no personally owned devices used for work compromise security. Most MDM software includes remote wipe technology that allows the user or support personnel to wipe a device’s work-related files upon an employee’s termination or resignation or in the event of device loss; remote provisioning to push updates, patches, and documents to employees; and access control security.

VoIP

A company that already has a VoIP system that offers VoIP apps can enforce the app’s use for business calls. Employees can keep their personal and work-related calls separate and won’t have to rely on their personal voice plan and minutes. Company-purchased VoIP apps are useful for voice and video calls as well as file sharing. These apps should include user access authentication and authorization, such as a login and password, to increase security.

Answered by anjalimaurya3876
0

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Chemical weathering typically increases as temperatures rise and rain falls, which means rocks in hot and wet climates experience faster rates of chemical weathering than do rocks in cold, dry climates.

Physical weathering occurs more often in cold climates, because the different minerals within rocks expand and contract at different rates when they are heated and cooled. Repeated heating and cooling cycles eventually cause rocks to fracture. Desert and mountain climates experience a wide range of temperatures from low to high during a day and night, which accounts for the breakdown of rocks known as physical weathering.

Biological weathering occurs when living organisms break up rocks. Tree roots, for example, can fracture rocks in the same way they buckle pavement. Warm, humid climates are most favorable to life. Contrast the rich diversity of life in a rainforest, for example, with the scarcity of life in the dry Sahara or the frigid Antarctic. Consequently, rates of biological weathering are most rapid in warm humid climates like those in tropical regions.

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