EGUIDE:
In the following e-guide, experts relay recommendations to secure IP printing and fax devices. Learn where to find guidance on copier and multifunction device security, and how often you should perform vulnerability scans on printers and related systems.
WHITE PAPER:
To enable effective mobile communication, organizations are increasingly spending to ensure productivity and availability. Discover cost-effective applications that improve communications, connect workers, enable collaboration and streamline processes.
WHITE PAPER:
This paper addresses the way incumbent fixed, mobile or cable operators may leverage both IMS and existing assets, in order to respond to customer requirements for diversity and simplicity. Download this white paper to learn more.
WHITE PAPER:
Platform digit manipulation may be needed for many business phone calls as they traverse their gateways. his guide explores the role of digit manipulation techniques and various is ways it can benefit for your business.
WHITE PAPER:
This technical white paper is the second in a series that is designed to help map I/O best practices from the physical world into the virtual world supported by logical domains.
WHITE PAPER:
The video surveillance market is in the throes of transition. IP surveillance is rapidly taking over from traditional analog CCTV. Within the next three years more than half the surveillance cameras used in North America will be IP cameras, according to the research firm Frost & Sullivan. Read this whitepaper to learn more.
WHITE PAPER:
This resource examines the complexity of IP multicasting and an approach to overcome these limitations – delivering new levels of performance, scalability and resiliency to IP multicasting.
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper explains the differences between the VPN technologies and provides criteria for deciding whether you should replace your IPSec VPN with SSL VPN. It also presents a step-by-step, practical approach to implementing your replacement.
WHITE PAPER:
The demand for personal video for organizational communication is growing rapidly. By 2015, over 200 million workers globally will run corporate-supplied video conferencing from their desktops.