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Discover Juniper's continued commitment to the enterprise with its new line of LAN switches and a series of partnerships with several IT vendors, including IBM, Microsoft and Oracle. Customers can expect a tighter integration between Juniper and its vendor partner's products. Get all of the details in this informative report from respected consulting firm IDC.
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So what? There is much more to life than computers, etc.
Maybe they grow roses, play music, etc.
IT...- Anonymous
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Voice over IP (VoIP) has much to offer in cost savings but some customers have concerns about VoIP call quality compared to the quality of traditional voice services. This white paper will help you learn how to take the right steps so that voice quality is assured.
Managing your network is serious business. This paper discusses the benefits of integrating configuration change-awareness into your network fault management solution
Google has begun scanning the streets of Paris, gathering data for its Street View service, which adds street-level photography to the satellite views offered by Google Maps. The search company will gather a wealth of data from the project but, thanks to France's strict privacy laws, it may also pick up a few lawsuits on the way if it chooses to publish the photos unedited.
Two Google employees were spotted on the Western outskirts of Paris on Friday as they mounted a sophisticated array of cameras and laser scanners on the roof rack of their black Opel Astra. The equipment was connected to a Dell computer visible inside the car. Although the vehicle was unmarked, the driver and passenger said they worked for Google.
Similar vehicles, some of them bearing the Google Street View logo, have been spotted in other European cities in recent weeks, indicating that Google is gathering data on a massive scale in preparation for the launch of the service in Europe.
But as the company offers global access to its most popular services, it will also have to think about local legislation and culture.
The sun is out in Paris and the streets in front of the capital's cafés are already packed with Parisians, so Google's cars are bound to catch a few of them on camera. Yet in France, citizens have a "droit à l'image," the right to their own image: pictures identifying them as they go about their private business may not be published without their permission. That could put the brakes on Google's deployment of Street View in France, unless the camera-cars are accompanied by an army of clipboard-wielding legal assistants asking bystanders to sign release forms as they sip their coffee.
So far, Google plans to hold back in Europe, launching the service only when it has worked out how to do so while respecting local laws, a company official recently told IDG News Service. Among the technical solutions it is considering are blurring faces in images, which would require an enormous amount of image processing, or only publishing unidentifiable low-resolution images, which would severely limit the interest and usefulness of the service.