- #FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL PRO#
- #FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL SOFTWARE#
- #FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL LICENSE#
- #FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL PROFESSIONAL#
- #FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL DOWNLOAD#
We check books out, why not software?” Perfect!
#FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL SOFTWARE#
I was afraid that the program would be dead in the water without a great pool of software to choose from, so I had to come up with a way to spread this software out. However, I only had a total of 5 licenses, meaning this program would be awesome for the first 5 students, and useless for everyone else.
#FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL LICENSE#
When they graduated, I could reclaim the license and pass it along to another student. Now I had a new problem: The original idea was to let students “own” this software for as long as they were associated with the university.
#FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL PRO#
So, using over half of my budget, I purchased 3 licenses for Final Cut Pro and 2 licenses for Logic Pro. The problem was that these programs are very expensive and I did not have enough funding to get 5 licenses each, let alone 50 licenses.
#FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL PROFESSIONAL#
Unsurprisingly, the overwhelming majority of requests on macOS were for professional editing software like Final Cut Pro and Logic Pro. When I originally started the pilot project for our BYOD, I planned on having a group of about 50 students and asked them about the software they would be most interested in. If you would like to know more about MDM, JAMF has some great resources here: Mobile Device Management 101 VPP License Assignment Effectively giving your institution its own “App Store” of software with available licenses. With a few API calls, extension attributes, and a little imagination, the entire process with queuing and license revocation can all be automated. JAMF Pro gives administrators the ability to finely tune the scoping of these licenses that keeps everything nice, neat and very modular. Once there are no longer any VPP licenses available, the application cannot be downloaded by any other users until one of the licenses is no longer in use no muss, no fuss. From the user’s perspective, it’s seamless and intuitive.
#FINAL CUT LIBRARY MANAGER 3.23 SERIAL DOWNLOAD#
This allows us to automatically assign the VPP license to the client then starts the download of the application. Here at the Marriott Library, we use JAMF Pro as our MDM server which includes some very nifty features that allow us to make VPP apps available via Self Service. Using any MDM solution, those licenses can then be distributed out to any client system enrolled. Without going into too much technical detail, here’s the general idea: Apple’s VPP allows an institution or business to purchase licenses of any software available on the App Store.
![final cut library manager 3.23 serial final cut library manager 3.23 serial](https://dfzljdn9uc3pi.cloudfront.net/2020/9414/1/fig-2-full.png)
So I wanted to start by putting this out there: MDM, VPP, and Managed Applications Barring the typical procedural and technical hurdles like establishing our departmental VPP account, maintaining 3rd-Party Installer Certificates, designing custom workflows to allow for proper scoping and distribution of software licenses, and a very limited budget, we came across one hurdle that completely stopped the entire project in its tracks… Almost 6 months later, and we’re still waiting for Apple to fix it.
![final cut library manager 3.23 serial final cut library manager 3.23 serial](https://media.springernature.com/full/springer-static/image/art%3A10.1038%2Fs41598-021-85337-9/MediaObjects/41598_2021_85337_Fig1_HTML.png)
We had all the tools in place, between Apple’s Volume Purchase Program (VPP) and JAMF Pro as our Mobile Device Management (MDM) server, we could finally get this longtime goal up and running.Īlas, as many of you know, getting something of this scale up and off the ground is never that easy. On paper, the concept sounds amazing! We could reduce the overhead of buying hardware and reallocate that money into more software licenses for students. They would be able to use the software for as long as they were affiliated with the University of Utah, and as soon as they weren’t, we would be able to reclaim the licenses for use by other students. The concept was simple: allow students to use software licenses we had purchased on their own personal devices. Historically, there hasn’t been much of a choice on the matter, but what if we could find a way to give students a choice?Ībout 10 months ago, I started trying to implement a Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) program here at the Marriott Library. One of the major reasons being that computer labs can deliver software like: Logic Pro X, Final Cut Pro X, and other high-end specialized software that is not easily afforded on a student’s budget. Students are still using computer labs however. It’s an undeniable trend, more and more students are relying on their own personal devices for their computing needs.