I traveled the Baltic Sea during the second half of August, in part testing a simple but very powerful (and remarkably cost-effective) approach to mobile unified communications.
We've been having a wide-ranging and productive day discussing every aspect of 802.11ac, and there's still a few hours left to get in
Rule #1: Nothing is secure if the other guys have a lot of money. Rule #2: It’s regardless time to take control of your own security yourself.
It is difficult to understand how Microsoft can continue to make one bad move after another, but the hits (make that misses) just keep on coming.
Please join us (via the Web, of course) on 9 September for an entire day with Wi-Fi expert Matthew Gast, author of *the* book on 802.11ac.
I remain not a fan of anything Microsoft. But even I must admit that the latest version of Windows is the best lipstick ever to grace a pig.
Killer chargers. An Apple exchange program. And my own little piece of recharging bizarreness to boot.
A new agreement between Tangoe and Rogers points the way to the future of EMM for many enterprises and organizations.
Predicting the future is never easy, but relying purely on the past as an indicator of what might happen next is hardly a good idea – especially with respect to rapidly-evolving technologies like Wi-Fi.
IDS/IPS leader AirTight is in the Wi-Fi systems business now, with a comprehensive and flexible offering that combines the best of access and assurance.