|
June
2007 In this
issue...
►Product Focus: Cymphonix
Network Composer ►Is VoIP Right for Your Business ►New Wave of
SPAM ►RSS Feeds ►Outlook
Anywhere
|
Outlook
Anywhere
Remote access of
Exchange-based email is a requirement of most mobile workers.
In the past, Outlook Web Access provided some, but not all, of
the functionality of Outlook. Remote users who wanted to use
their native Outlook software were forced to use a VPN
connection to access the corporate network. VPN's, however,
are more complex to configure and enable access to more
network services than are required for simple e-mail access.
Outlook 2003 and
2007 now offers a simpler alternative to VPN connections — RPC
over HTTP (which Microsoft has mercifully renamed "Outlook
Anywhere"). With this feature, users can have
security-enhanced access to their Exchange Server accounts
from the Internet when they are working outside your
organization's firewall. Users do not need any special
connections or hardware, such as smart cards and security
tokens, and they can still get to their Exchange accounts even
if the Exchange server and client computer are behind
firewalls on different networks. The user runs the same
Outlook used inside the network and has all of Outlook's
functionality enabled including shared calendars, contact
lists and public folder access.
Outlook Anywhere
runs on Windows XP and Vista and requires Microsoft Exchange
Server 2003, 2007 or Microsoft Small Business Server 2003.
Take advantage of Outlook's power and flexibility outside your
office with Outlook Anywhere. Contact your account manager at
SL Powers or the Helpdesk for more
information. |

|
| Product Focus:
Cymphonix Network
Composer
Did you ever wonder
why your internet connection sometimes seems to drag? Our
helpdesk deals with slow connection complaints on a regular
basis and our findings have been interesting. Many of the
speed issues we have diagnosed have been due to employees
using their computers for things that may not have been work
related, and in some cases are downright illegal. Users and
their applications are fighting for limited internet
resources, and where all that bandwidth on your DSL or T-1 is going may surprise
you.
The Cymphonix
Network Composer is a smart gateway appliance that scans,
identifies, and controls applications, users, spyware,
viruses, web content, instant messaging, and video and audio
streaming. Many of these seemingly innocuous programs are
slowing down your network and causing all of your employees to
slow down too. Network Composer's correlated reporting is a
tool which shows you in a very intuitive and clear way what
people are spending their internet time on. Based on the
reports it provides, it enables you to optimize the
performance of your network by literally banning unproductive
web traffic with one click. This enables you to free up
bandwidth so that you will no longer need that extra T-1 or
DSL line just to do business.
Many of our clients
have noted that the Network Composer paid for itself in a
matter of weeks! It's very low entry point makes it a
necessity for any sized business. Find out right now why this
is one tool you cannot afford to be without. For a
demonstration, or for more information, contact your account
manager or our sales department today. |
|
Is VoIP Right for
Your Business?
More and more businesses tired
of racking up high telecommunications bills are turning to the
Internet for their phone service.
Voice over Internet
Protocol (VoIP) services enable businesses to conduct calls
across the same network to access the Internet and get email –
and at a fraction of the cost of traditional voice networks.
However, VoIP developers have been focused on quality and
reliability versus security. Therefore, if you choose to adopt
VoIP, it is up to you to take the proper steps to secure
it.
Background and
benefits The technology behind VoIP has been around
for a few years; early incarnations of VoIP were plagued by
spotty service, muddled and dropped calls. Only in the last
few years has VoIP service improved enough to make it
sufficiently reliable and stable for business use. In fact,
businesses are finding that a well-planned and implemented
VoIP system can provide call quality and reliability that
rivals mobile phone or landline calls.
Read
more |
|
The New Wave of
Spam
Spam continues to
be a pervasive problem that all small to mid-sized businesses
must deal with. According to the most recent Symantec Internet
Security Threat Report:
- Between July 1
and December 31, 2006, spam made up 59% of all monitored
email traffic. This is an increase over the first six months
of 2006 when 54% of email was classified as spam.
- 65% of all spam
detected during this period was written in English.
- Spam related to
financial services made up 30% of all spam during this
period, the most of any category.
- During the last
six months of 2006, 44% of all spam detected worldwide
originated in the United States.
Dealing with spam
is a waste of valuable employee time. According to a new study
conducted by Nucleus Research, two out of every three email
messages received by today's business users are spam. The
study also says that users are spending 16 seconds identifying
and deleting each spam email, at a cost of $712 per employee
in lost productivity, which translates into an annual cost of
$70 billion to all U.S. businesses.
Read
more |
|
|
Microsoft Office: RSS Feeds RSS
Feeds provide easy, up-to-date information, delivered to you
straight from the Internet. Learn the essentials here so that
you can find, add, and read the articles or blogs in an RSS
Feed right in Microsoft Outlook 2007, as conveniently as you
receive and read your e-mail.The Internet
contains a lot of information on just about any topic. For
example, you might use the Internet to read the newspaper or
check stock reports. But finding what you need can be
time-consuming. Wouldn't it be nice if, instead of
surfing and searching, you could simply have information
delivered to you?Help is here! Take
this course and learn how, with Outlook 2007, your Web
browser, and an Internet connection, you can get the news and
information that you choose, delivered to your own Outlook
Mailbox.After completing
this course you will be able to:
-
Identify Web
pages that contain RSS Feeds.
Subscribe to an
RSS Feed and set up Outlook for delivery.
Read RSS articles
and blogs in Outlook.
Remove an RSS
Feed from Outlook.
-
Choose where RSS
Feed articles are delivered in Outlook.
SEE DEMO ON MICROSOFT WEBSITE | |