Ivanti vs Front
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Ivanti's Secure Access Client ships weekly mobile point releases — 22.7.4 through 22.8.7 — with documentation as the only visible signal.
The visible Ivanti feed is dominated by weekly Supported Platforms Guides for the Ivanti Secure Access Client (formerly Pulse Secure) on iOS, Android, and ChromeOS, spanning versions 22.7.4 through 22.8.7. A cumulative Android release notes index for 22.2.1–22.8.6 and accompanying admin and MDM deployment guides confirm steady mobile-client cadence. The captured content is documentation landing pages, not detailed change descriptions.
With only documentation pages observable, product trajectory is hard to read concretely. The frequent point releases suggest active maintenance of the mobile security client; the historical Pulse Secure → Ivanti rebrand and the Classic UI / New-UI dual maintenance both indicate gradual consolidation rather than a fresh directional move.
Expect continued weekly point releases on 22.8.x and a likely transition to 22.9.x or a 23.x line later in 2026. Substantive product moves probably exist in detailed release notes the crawler isn't reaching — a different ingestion path (the per-version release notes endpoints, not the SPG landing pages) would surface more useful signal.
Front is doubling down on AI as the primary surface, not a side feature.
The release stream is dense with AI work: knowledge-source connectors (Guru, Confluence) feeding Copilot and Autopilot, fact invalidation controls so admins can curate what AI cites, AI Translate landing across SMS/WhatsApp/Messenger/Chat, and new agent-runtime integrations like One that bridge Front to thousands of external tools. Non-AI work (Salesforce/Asana templates, Zoom Contact Center, analytics) is still landing but plays second fiddle to the AI cadence.
Front is positioning as an AI-native customer comms hub rather than a shared-inbox tool with AI bolted on. The pattern — grounding AI in private knowledge, exposing admin governance over what AI says, broadening channel coverage — is the playbook for moving AI from gimmick to production-trusted. The integration push (Zoom CC, One, omnichannel surfaces) suggests Front wants to be the operator console for AI-mediated support, not just one of many inboxes.
Expect the next directional move to be deeper Autopilot autonomy — measurable AI-resolved ticket metrics, escalation rules tied to confidence, or AI-led drafting that promotes itself to send-without-review under specific governance gates. The fact-invalidation feature is a precondition for that.
See more alternatives to Ivanti →
See more alternatives to Front →