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Strengthening the security barricades 24 January, 2007 12:25:32
Fraudulent attacks on the corporate user and the rising threat from within makes a persuasive argument for tougher authentication solutions. - +
ARN's A-Z guide to networking 19 December, 2007 14:50:54
As business needs change, so do the requirements for the business backbone. ARN looks at networking trends and technologies and reports on predictions for 2008 and beyond. - +
Working with wireless 11 April, 2007 14:19:09
Healthcare is seeing huge benefits from the uptake of wireless networks. Resellers can set their selling sights on this market, along with other verticals, experts suggest. - +
Selling the environment 17 August, 2007 13:33:11
Selling the environment - +
Zenoss: New dog masters old monitoring tricks 30 November, 2007 12:50:00
Zenoss Core 2.1 impresses with object-based approach, strong device discovery, native Windows monitoring, and open source extensibilitySince the dawn of the business network, there has been a need to ensure that the network services provided to the enterprise are alive and responsive. Traditionally, in midsized businesses, this role has been filled by complex, closed source, and fantastically expensive solutions from manufacturers such as BMC, CA, HP, and IBM. And while these extravagant expenses make no customer happy, many users of these packages also complain of their complexity. Enough administrators have spent enough time wrangling with their monitoring systems to make a lot of smart people imagine that there must be a better way.
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Dimension Data is evaluating two RFID solutions from US manufacturers, which it hopes to market into fields as diverse as medicine and equipment hire.
The integrator has been looking at solutions offered by Pango and AeroScout.
DiData national business manager for connectivity, Roland Chia, said the company was currently working with some of its clients in the healthcare industry.
One example could see an RFID chip placed on a patient with dementia. If the patient wandered off, an alert could be sent out to nursing staff or security guards.
He said RFID technology was now so advanced that, should a patient get out, staff could track which door they went through because each one in the hospital would have receivers that report back into a central database.
Another application in the medical field would see expensive hospital equipment tagged to prevent it from going walkabout.
Alternatively, the chips could be used by owners of equipment hire outlets, allowing businesses to keep better track of inventory.
To get companies connected is a fairly straightforward process. They need a wireless access point, a location appliance to track devices via signal strength and some customisation of the front end to be able to manage the project. Chia said DiData was already building demonstrations for such applications.
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