WHITE PAPER:
Learn how you can improve the efficiency and productivity of nurses providing patient care, as well as how they work with each other, physicians and other staff. This allows professionals to spend more time providing “hands-on” care to patients, and less time on coordination of that care.
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 white paper explores ping commands and flags, and how those flags vary from one operating system to another. With a better understanding of ping, organizations and home users can easily troubleshoot a network.
WHITE PAPER:
This resource details the current state of targeted attacks and explores why putting an effective defensive strategy in place is so critical. View now to uncover the effects of these potentially disastrous attacks and what you can do to stay protected.
EZINE:
Despite the rise of smartphones and tablets, many organizations still depend on the IP telephone, because of its reliability and functionality.But with hundreds of models on the market and a plethora of available features, how do you choose the right one for your business? This issue of Network Evolution dials in on that question and more.
WHITE PAPER:
This white paper will take a look at how failures can unexpectedly disrupt core network services and the applications that depend on them despite employing traditional approaches to providing redundant configurations. Read this white paper to learn how to minimize the effects of failures to ensure business continuity.
EZINE:
Most enterprises can't get the most out of 802.11ac Wave 2. The problem is Ethernet speeds in the access layer: 1 GbE is too slow and 10 GbE too expensive. Could 2.5 and 5 GbE could be its salvation?
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.