Unified Communications »
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iOS 6 Maps Twitter account skewers Apple, gets suspended, resurrects itself
A Twitter account dubbed iOS6Maps enjoyed a short, smart-alecky life of poking fun at Apple's switch from Google Maps to its own Map app, but was apparently suspended by the microblogging site late Wednesday night. However, a second account has surfaced overnight.
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Medibank Health Solutions to deploy video access to medical specialists
Medibank Health Solutions is gearing up to extend its online consultation service – Anywhere Healthcare – to enable patients in regional Queensland to connect with selected medical specialists over a video link provided at their GP’s office.
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California Prop 30 puts new social influence website to the test
A new website launched by UC Berkeley to measure social networking influence's role in spreading knowledge will use California Proposition 30 as its first test case.
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Connections: Looking to the future of business communications
Enterprise communications is being significantly influenced by a series of trends -- many of which originate from the consumer market, particularly from Generation Y -- that are changing the way organizations do business.
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Aging hardware drives core router and switch upgrades
IT departments are grappling with aging network equipment while also juggling demand for new network projects such as unified communications and mobile device management, reports TheInfoPro.
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Opinion: Facebook and Twitter and their long, slow slide into irrelevance
Today's major social media providers have a problem: How to make money, can they find the unicorn?
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New Kindle Fire HD 4G LTE tablet priced like $US499 iPad, surprising analysts
Amazon has announced new e-readers and tablets but the biggest surprise to analysts was a $US499 Kindle Fire HD 4G LTE tablet.
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Purported BlackBerry 10 image leaks, new RIM phones coming to Verizon
RIM's upcoming BlackBerry 10 managed to eke out a bit of attention this week even though most of the buzz has been reserved for the new Windows 8-based Nokia phones, Motorola's new Droid RAZR lineup and Apple's anticipated iPhone 5.
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Alcatel-Lucent launches open source platform for API management
In a bid to make it easier for operators to open up their networks to developers, Alcatel-Lucent has introduced an open source and cloud-based API (application programming interface) management platform called apiGrove.
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Bank customers want video services: Telstra
Video could be a competitive differentiator for financial institutions as banks increasingly use technology to gain an edge on rivals, according to a Telstra white paper published Wednesday. Telstra is seeking to sell network management and unified communications services to banks to handle technological challenges that come with a move to videoconferencing.
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Review: 6 free email servers for small business
Even as social networking continues to gain in popularity, email remains the undisputed workhorse of messaging, far eclipsing all other forms of electronic communication. Email administration can be a costly function, especially for small to midsized organizations, and many administrators are looking for alternatives to enterprise-sized (and priced) commercial products.
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How to Choose a Mail Server
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Windows Server 2012 Release Preview: Compelling new features
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Droid Incredible 4G LTE review: Great sound, good price
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Samsung Galaxy S III review: A rock star phone, but does it deliver?
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Microsoft Lync 2010: Unified communications comes of age
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Check Point enables SSL VPN access to non-Web apps via handheld devices
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Web conferencing evolves
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SIP PBXes stake a claim
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LTE telephony finally off the ground, but take-up will be slow
Last week saw the launch of the first commercial Voice-over-LTE (VoLTE) services, but most operators are likely to take a cautious approach as they face technical and business challenges.
Applying technology to boost customer loyalty
The cloud services explosion
Hendrickson keeps on truckin' with UCaaS
With iPad Mini, Apple would remain tablet king through 2016, says IDC
10 crazy IT security tricks that actually work
Beyond BlackBerry: 3 steps to prepare for its demise
Google Now advances search, aims for Apple's Siri
Opinion: Five things to look forward to in Apple's iOS 6
First look: Microsoft Surface tablets
Communications without borders
NZ town looking to raise the UC bar with Nortel deployment
Telstra off-shoot dishes up AI
Open source telephony new star at TV producer
VOIP freeing colleges from wired phones
Komatsu shifts IT up a gear
Meeting Client Demand
VOIP: an invaluable asset
Case Study: Industry insiders blast IP telephony myths
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NBN offers slim pickings for smaller ISPs
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Data sovereignty still misunderstood in Australia: Microsoft
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Blind and online: Progress, not perfection, for visually impaired tech users
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NBN won't close broadband gap, say advocates for rural communities
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Roxon turns to YouTube for data retention argument
The innovator’s perfect storm: Agile, Project Management, Information Security and Cloud
The drive to innovate is, in part, fuelling Cloud adoption, where the ‘need for speed’ often trumps conventional risk, total cost, project management, application development and other key governance considerations. In this mix, how do the foundational business technology management frameworks help or hinder this rush to get products and processes ‘out the door’? Do the conventional methodologies such as agile application development, project management and information security need to be redesigned or to have their rigour diluted to meet the new environment? This paper explores 7 key considerations that every business must consider in order to guarantee successful outcomes.
Gadwin GeForms
GeForms allows you to create your own forms or fill in existing forms electronically. Using GeForms you are provided with sophisticated form design tools which ...
Case Study: Gadens Law Firm Reclaims 22 Hours of Lost Productivity Each Month
For the past eight years, Gadens Brisbane has used a “big three” security vendor to protect its network against malware and other threats. Despite deploying a complete antivirus package, the firm still experienced up to three infections across the network every week. This gap in security meant the firm’s IT team was spending up to six hours a week on security management, resulting in lawyers being unable to work on their computers for hours a time – an inconvenience for the individual, and costly for a business reliant on hourly charging. Read how Gadens Law Firm have reduced their security management time from about 6 hours a week to 30 minutes a week.
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