BYOD, or Bring Your Own Device, sprang up on the popularity of the iPad. Corporate executives would get a shiny-new tablet for Christmas or for their birthday and then proclaim to the IT department that it was wonderful and that everybody should be allowed to use them.
It’s fine in theory that all computers should be able to work well together; after all, they just communicate in 1’s and 0’s (zeros). As you’ll know, however, not only do all devices not communicate with each other nicely sometimes, but the ...