Posts Tagged ‘Networking’

The link between outsourcing and networking

October 5th, 2010

A trend of the last years is that more and more companies and organisations focus even more on their “core business”. As a consequence they outsource the activities they consider less important or less critical to other companies.

It started with outsourcing the maintenance of offices. Then the kitchen staff was outsourced. Then in the nineties many companies started hiring masses of specialised IT and other experts.

What does this mean when we look at the future?

This trend of outsourcing or temporary or flexible labour will only continue and even at a faster rate than until now. As a consequence a large number of employees will be asked to leave the company only to be rehired again on a self-employed basis afterwards.

“Which implications will this trend have”? you might ask.

One of the implications will be that networking skills will become even more important than they are today. And for all parties involved.

These are the reasons:

1. For the new self-employed

• The new self-employed will at least need a network with administrative expertise about running a business.
• Also other tasks like financing, insurance and juridicial assistance will have to be done by other parties due to the increasing complexity of all those fields.
• A third aspect is the question of putting all their eggs in one basket (the former employer who hires them back) or work for other companies as well.

2. For the ones who stay behind

They are left in a new situation: they have to:
• Work together with those new self-employed
• Find backups for the new-self employed (or for the companies who take care of the outsourced activities) because they are less sure to be available the whole time
• Create new ways of working together. Not only contracts and service level agreements, but also technology to collaborate.

So for both parties it will be necessary to have the right networking skills, networking attitude and network of people !

But how do you find the “best people” or “best organisations” for this new way of working together? Often people find it very difficult to ask for help, let alone finding the best parties.

This simple step-by-step process can help:

1. Locate the best people in your network to help you reach your goal (in this case the goal is to find the best partner). Since you already know the people from your network, this step is relatively “safe”. You don’t have to go for out of your comfort zone. This will help you get confidence in contacting the “best people”.

2. Next, ask yourself: “Is this person really the person in the best position to help me?” During the process of finding the right people, you will get more insights in who really is the person in the best position. Maybe you realise that someone else from your network is in a better position than your current number one.

3. When you feel comfortable making contact with the “best people” from your current network, it is time to look outside your network. Ask yourself: “Who is the best person in my field of expertise, in my sector, in my state, in my industry,…?” Maybe it is time for the next expert to join your network.

4. Repeat steps 2 and 3 for the rest of your life for all your goals.

Source:http://www.asanway.com/computers/51898-the-link-between-outsourcing-and-networking/

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

Cisco buying extendmedia, three screen content platform + networking

August 29th, 2010

Cisco knows the future of the Internet. They should, they build a lot of its infrastructure with super fast networking appliances. So it should be no surprise that they know the future of the Internet is video and are making moves to be there in full force. In fact, this is a brilliant move for them I think.

Cisco is the maker of some of the fastest and biggest network switches, routers, wireless and secure network appliances on the planet. So they know the capabilities of the Internet as well as anyone might be able to. The fact that they’re looking to acquire a content management platform could be an ideal situation because, they know how to get data from point A to point B. Couple that with a management system for large files, in our case video, and you’ve got a highly optimized content delivery solution.

Obviously, ExtendMedia is agreeable to this acquisition as they’ve even posted news about it on their own website. The company recently expanded its offering to cover emerging markets like Android, iPhone and other mobile platforms as well as Sony PS3, Oregan Onyx-based set-top boxes and connected TVs, and the Yahoo! TV Widgets framework.

This could definitely put Cisco squarely in the CDN arena and a major contender. I imagine that since they make the hardware the drives the Internet they can also optimize data flowing through that hardware better than anyone else can. Than means better viewing experiences and faster data streams. It could also then transfer into better engagement, less viewer drop off and a range of things that make publishers and advertisers happy since the viewers will get the video faster.

If you remember, Cisco has already made several moves into the online video arena with the purchase of Tandberg who make videoconferencing systems and Pure Digital who make the Flip camera. At the rate they are going they could suddenly be an end-to-end solution for online video providers.
Look at the pieces they’ve assembled. They have a video camera maker, meaning you could have Cisco hardware in your hand that is recording your video. They have a videoconferencing technology which means that same camera could stream the video live, to somewhere. Where do you stream it to? Why, their new three screen video management solution, that’s where. From there it gets transmitted around the world at blazing speeds thanks to Cisco having built the hardware the data passes through. That is, as far as I’m concerned, a real end-to-end solution, from video creation straight through to video viewing. Sure, there are some pieces yet missing like editing, advertising, etc… but give them time, I’m sure they’ll move into those areas as well.
ExtendMedia’s CMS software, which will integrate with Cisco’s current IP video offerings, will be a core component of Cisco’s next-generation video architecture.
Cisco is on a buying spree having already got CoreOptics and product design consulting firm Moto Development Group earlier this year. That could also signal new video-based products on the horizon as well…an optics firm and a design firm.

Source:-http://www.reelseo.com/cisco-buying-extendmedia-screen-content-platform-networking/

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

Secrets 3 keys for overcoming fear of public speaking

August 12th, 2010

You probably already know this but public speaking is something that can cause alot of fear and anxiety…you get so nervous at even the thought of speaking in front of a group it makes you want to….well, you can imagine where I’m heading with this.

The good news is, public speaking need not be stressful for you at all. There are certain key principles which one can use, and this could enable you to make it a satisfying and enjoyable experience. If you read on, you’ll discover three secrets very few people know about overcoming the fear of public speaking.

Learn Your Topic Intimately

Having a good knowledge about your topic can increase your chances of performing well by ten times. It’s also very helpful in easing a person’s public speaking fears. When people attend the popular speaking club, Toastmasters, they are asked to give an “icebreaker” speech about themselves. The purpose being of course, to help new people relax and get used to standing and presenting in front of an audience.

This same type of principle related to any topic you present. The better you come to know your material, the less fear you’ll have, and the more effective you’ll become at presenting.

Get Your Audience to Laugh

Obviously not everyone’s a born comedian. However, If you’re comfortable with trying, you can use humor to really lighten the mood of the room and better relate to your audience. Not comfortable using your own humor? No problem. You could find a funny video or audio clip to play for your crowd instead. The effect is the same and it will loosen up the room’s energy.

Imagine Your Are Speaking to “One” Person

I saved the best secret for last. In public speaking, an amazingly effective technique is to imagine you’re speaking to just one person – even a close friend of yours. You need not be overly formal. Remember, you are not there to impress your audience with your articulate language. Instead, you want to deliver a message that will benefit people in some way or another and people react best when spoken to as if they were your close friend.

Source:http://www.itweb365.com/business/3-key-secrets-to-overcoming-the-fear-of-public-speaking.html

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

The British Philippine Outsourcing council to hold Networking event in London’s Mayfair

February 5th, 2010

The British Philippines Outsourcing Council (BPOC) will be holding an networking event on February 18th from 5:00pm at Hush in London’s Mayfair. Supported by The Philippines Embassy in London, BPOC (bpoc.uk.com) aims to promote The Philippines as an outsourcing destination for call centre, BPO and IT outsourcing to British businesses.

BPOC provides research, contacts and location specific information to allow British business to successfully benefit from the immense human capital available in the archipelago and to act as a networking tool to allow Philippines based vendors and British business to connect.

The outsourcing industry in The Philippines already employs over 200,000 people predominantly in the call centre industry but has also been successful in IT outsourcing and other back office functions. Manila now employs more people in the business processing outsourcing industry than any other city worldwide. The country has been especially popular in attracting voice call centre activity and whilst most activity is still for American based businesses, an increasing number of British businesses have moved activity there from other locations including India. This first event of 2010 will provide a casual forum for conversations and stories to be shared as The Philippines aims to replicate the success it has achieved in The American marketplace in The UK.

The founding members of The British Philippines Outsourcing Council include Cyber City Teleservices, Adec Solutions and Merlin Information Systems. Call centre outsourcing veteran and long-time advocate of The Philippines, Rob O’Malley has been appointed as The Chairman of BPOC to guide it through the initial phases and will be supported by fellow BPOC board members, Ian McGowan of Adec and Richard Patterson of Merlin.

Source:http://www.newswiretoday.com/news/64542/

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

Talent Alliance Exhibiting This Fall at Onrec on November 3 & 4

October 22nd, 2009

As more companies enforce across-the-board pay cuts and unpaid furloughs, a rising tide of IT professionals is seeing its annual compensation decline and must decide whether to switch employers as a result.

Among the companies that have instituted broad pay cuts this year are National Public Radio, the New York Times, Nucor and the Georgia State government. These organizations are slashing the pay of even their most in-demand IT staff, such as Web developers, information security specialists, enterprise resource planning gurus and IT architects.

Some IT professionals jump ship immediately after their pay is cut.

For example, one Indiana firm eliminated annual bonuses at the end of 2008 for all of its employees, including the IT staff. A few months later, all employees making more than $90,000 saw their salaries cut by 10%, which impacted two IT managers. Both IT managers left the firm within a few months of the10% pay cut, a knowledgeable source said.

IDG, the parent company of Network World, instituted across-the-board pay cuts of 10% in May. Rob Rebecchi, Manager of Technology Support Services for IDG, says his group of five analysts, who handle tech support calls for the Framingham, Mass., publishing firm, was affected by the pay cut.

“I’ve lost one junior analyst since then,” Rebecchi says. “All the IT groups in IDG were affected by the pay cuts, and there have been some [staffing] changes in each group as a result.”

Overall, IT pay and perks continues to shrink in 2009. A Janco Associates survey released in June found that total compensation for IT professionals fell an average of 19% between January 2008 and June 2009.

Companies must include IT workers in their across-the-board pay cuts, argues Sarah Mitchell, associate director of The Alexander Group, a San Francisco recruiting firm. The Alexander Group has instituted salary cuts for everyone, including IT staff. No one has left the firm as a result of the pay cuts, she says.

“To exclude one group would be a really bad idea because of morale issues,” Mitchell says. “If you have to do it, you have to do it across-the-board. You can’t release anyone from the pay cut.”

Mitchell recommends that companies who cut the pay of in-demand IT professionals respond by offering training opportunities and new responsibilities.

“It’s a cost/benefit analysis,” Mitchell says, adding that instituting a 5% pay cut is huge boon to a company’s bottom line. “You’re going to risk losing people, but it’s worth the risk because of the broader morale drop you would see if different groups of employees were treated differently.”

Another suggestion from Mitchell: “Commit to your team that you will make up the pay eventually or try to get them whole by a certain point in time.”

Cutting the pay of IT professionals is risky, agrees David Foote, CEO of Foote Partners, an IT compensation research firm in Vero Beach, Fla.

“I’ve heard of it, but it’s not widespread,” Foote says. “Retention is a huge problem in IT, and [companies] need to start realizing that. If you make across-the-board pay cuts, the best people will leave.”

Foote says that layoffs are more common than pay cuts for IT professionals.

“What companies are doing is firing people and putting the work on the backs of other people,” Foote says. “We see a lot of highly paid but burned out people in IT.”

Foote says IT department pay cuts are more common in small and midsized firms where employees have an equity stake in the business.

“My advice to CIOs is — without a doubt — don’t cut pay unless you’re a small company and you have other avenues of rewarding employees,” Foote says.

Some organizations are instituting pay cuts in the form of unpaid furloughs. National Public Radio is requiring all of its employees to take five days of unpaid leave, which equates to a 2% pay cut. Of NPR’s 840 employees, 72 are IT professionals, including 45 in Information Services, 17 in Distribution and 10 in Digital Media.

NPR spokeswoman Danielle Deabler says all of the steps that NPR has taken to limit employee compensation – including eliminating NPR’s contributions to retirement accounts, eliminating its “flex” credit, implementing the five-day furlough, changing three NPR-paid holidays into unpaid holidays, and eliminating pay increases for 2010 — apply to all of its union and non-union employees, including IT staff.

Dennis Haarsager, NPR’s senior vice president for systems resources and technology, apparently fared worse.

“While employees [faced] these cuts effective May 1, these cuts were already implemented with NPR leadership at the VP level or above effective April 1,” Deabler says. “Additionally, NPR leadership did not receive the annual increases given to staff in January 2009 and [worked] the final two weeks of fiscal year 2009 without pay.”

The Georgia Technology Authority, which is responsible for IT infrastructure and managed network services for all state government agencies, was required by the state to institute three furlough days for its employees, which equates to a 1% pay cut. No one has left the agency since the furloughs began, says Michael Clark, Director of GTA’s Office of Communications.

“We’ve already had one furlough day – the Friday before Labor Day – and we have two more scheduled: the Wednesday before Thanksgiving and the Wednesday before Christmas,” Clark says. “You don’t come to work, and you don’t get paid for that day. You cannot take it as a vacation. It helps cut the state budget because you come off the payroll.”

Clark says GTA’s 170 employees have not complained about the furloughs, which affected everyone including Georgia’s CIO Patrick Moore.

“I haven’t heard any griping about the furloughs,” Clark says. “People understand what’s going on in the economy. State revenues have declined. What I’m hearing from people is that they don’t mind taking a furlough day if it means no more layoffs.”

GTA has shrunk from a staff of 550 to 170 employees in recent months, because of the elimination of several functions including project management as well as the award of two major outsourcing contracts. On April 1, GTA transferred 291 employees to IBM as part of a 10-year, $873 million IT infrastructure services deal struck last year. On May 1, GTA transferred 33 employees to AT&T as part of a five-year, $346 million managed network services deal.

With all the cuts, GTA has retained its expertise in service management, information security, IT standards and IT policy setting.

Clark doesn’t think the furloughs will affect GTA’s ability to retain top IT talent, which is always a challenge for state and local government agencies. No furloughs are scheduled for 2010.

“We only got three furlough days, and when the economy turns around the state revenues will come back and the pressure for the furloughs will no longer be there,” Clark says. “So far it has not had an impact on our ability to get the work done.”

Source : http://news.idg.no/cw/art.cfm?id=786F3D34-1A64-6A71-CE3E406B667D0F0E

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

IT pay cuts: Are you next?

October 22nd, 2009

As more companies enforce across-the-board pay cuts and unpaid furloughs, a rising tide of IT professionals is seeing its annual compensation decline and must decide whether to switch employers as a result.

Among the companies that have instituted broad pay cuts this year are National Public Radio, the New York Times, Nucor and the Georgia State government. These organizations are slashing the pay of even their most in-demand IT staff, such as Web developers, information security specialists, enterprise resource planning gurus and IT architects.

Some IT professionals jump ship immediately after their pay is cut.

For example, one Indiana firm eliminated annual bonuses at the end of 2008 for all of its employees, including the IT staff. A few months later, all employees making more than $90,000 saw their salaries cut by 10%, which impacted two IT managers. Both IT managers left the firm within a few months of the10% pay cut, a knowledgeable source said.

IDG, the parent company of Network World, instituted across-the-board pay cuts of 10% in May. Rob Rebecchi, Manager of Technology Support Services for IDG, says his group of five analysts, who handle tech support calls for the Framingham, Mass., publishing firm, was affected by the pay cut.

“I’ve lost one junior analyst since then,” Rebecchi says. “All the IT groups in IDG were affected by the pay cuts, and there have been some [staffing] changes in each group as a result.”

Overall, IT pay and perks continues to shrink in 2009. A Janco Associates survey released in June found that total compensation for IT professionals fell an average of 19% between January 2008 and June 2009.

Companies must include IT workers in their across-the-board pay cuts, argues Sarah Mitchell, associate director of The Alexander Group, a San Francisco recruiting firm. The Alexander Group has instituted salary cuts for everyone, including IT staff. No one has left the firm as a result of the pay cuts, she says.

“To exclude one group would be a really bad idea because of morale issues,” Mitchell says. “If you have to do it, you have to do it across-the-board. You can’t release anyone from the pay cut.”

Mitchell recommends that companies who cut the pay of in-demand IT professionals respond by offering training opportunities and new responsibilities.

“It’s a cost/benefit analysis,” Mitchell says, adding that instituting a 5% pay cut is huge boon to a company’s bottom line. “You’re going to risk losing people, but it’s worth the risk because of the broader morale drop you would see if different groups of employees were treated differently.”

Another suggestion from Mitchell: “Commit to your team that you will make up the pay eventually or try to get them whole by a certain point in time.”

Cutting the pay of IT professionals is risky, agrees David Foote, CEO of Foote Partners, an IT compensation research firm in Vero Beach, Fla.

“I’ve heard of it, but it’s not widespread,” Foote says. “Retention is a huge problem in IT, and [companies] need to start realizing that. If you make across-the-board pay cuts, the best people will leave.”

Foote says that layoffs are more common than pay cuts for IT professionals.

“What companies are doing is firing people and putting the work on the backs of other people,” Foote says. “We see a lot of highly paid but burned out people in IT.”

Foote says IT department pay cuts are more common in small and midsized firms where employees have an equity stake in the business.

“My advice to CIOs is — without a doubt — don’t cut pay unless you’re a small company and you have other avenues of rewarding employees,” Foote says.

Some organizations are instituting pay cuts in the form of unpaid furloughs. National Public Radio is requiring all of its employees to take five days of unpaid leave, which equates to a 2% pay cut. Of NPR’s 840 employees, 72 are IT professionals, including 45 in Information Services, 17 in Distribution and 10 in Digital Media.

NPR spokeswoman Danielle Deabler says all of the steps that NPR has taken to limit employee compensation – including eliminating NPR’s contributions to retirement accounts, eliminating its “flex” credit, implementing the five-day furlough, changing three NPR-paid holidays into unpaid holidays, and eliminating pay increases for 2010 — apply to all of its union and non-union employees, including IT staff.

Dennis Haarsager, NPR’s senior vice president for systems resources and technology, apparently fared worse.

“While employees [faced] these cuts effective May 1, these cuts were already implemented with NPR leadership at the VP level or above effective April 1,” Deabler says. “Additionally, NPR leadership did not receive the annual increases given to staff in January 2009 and [worked] the final two weeks of fiscal year 2009 without pay.”

The Georgia Technology Authority, which is responsible for IT infrastructure and managed network services for all state government agencies, was required by the state to institute three furlough days for its employees, which equates to a 1% pay cut. No one has left the agency since the furloughs began, says Michael Clark, Director of GTA’s Office of Communications.

“We’ve already had one furlough day – the Friday before Labor Day – and we have two more scheduled: the Wednesday before Thanksgiving and the Wednesday before Christmas,” Clark says. “You don’t come to work, and you don’t get paid for that day. You cannot take it as a vacation. It helps cut the state budget because you come off the payroll.”

Clark says GTA’s 170 employees have not complained about the furloughs, which affected everyone including Georgia’s CIO Patrick Moore.

“I haven’t heard any griping about the furloughs,” Clark says. “People understand what’s going on in the economy. State revenues have declined. What I’m hearing from people is that they don’t mind taking a furlough day if it means no more layoffs.”

GTA has shrunk from a staff of 550 to 170 employees in recent months, because of the elimination of several functions including project management as well as the award of two major outsourcing contracts. On April 1, GTA transferred 291 employees to IBM as part of a 10-year, $873 million IT infrastructure services deal struck last year. On May 1, GTA transferred 33 employees to AT&T as part of a five-year, $346 million managed network services deal.

With all the cuts, GTA has retained its expertise in service management, information security, IT standards and IT policy setting.

Clark doesn’t think the furloughs will affect GTA’s ability to retain top IT talent, which is always a challenge for state and local government agencies. No furloughs are scheduled for 2010.

“We only got three furlough days, and when the economy turns around the state revenues will come back and the pressure for the furloughs will no longer be there,” Clark says. “So far it has not had an impact on our ability to get the work done.”

Source : http://news.idg.no/cw/art.cfm?id=786F3D34-1A64-6A71-CE3E406B667D0F0E

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks

“Outsourcing” IT to End Users: Is There an App for That?

October 21st, 2009

Forget the economic downturn—Apple Computer is hotter than hot.

In its fourth-quarter earnings report released this week, Apple, with its Mac computers and iPhones, reported fourth-quarter sales of almost $10 billion, up almost 25% from the year ago quarter. For the fiscal year, the company reported earnings of more than $36 billion, up 12% from last year.

What does this mean to enterprises? Right now, on the surface, not much. But the long-term implications may be enormous.

Unlike most other large vendors in the IT space, Apple’s success is not built on enterprise IT adoption, but on individual sales. Apple is very much a consumer device and computer provider. However, the runaway success of such mobile devices mean companies need to start making choices in terms of what direction they want to take IT.

There’s been growing talk, in fact, of IT departments getting out of the business of end-user computing and leaving end users to make their own decisions, even to the point of bringing their own hardware into the workplace. Gartner analysts David Mitchell Smith and Tom Austin said as much at the recent IT Symposium, said it’s high time IT was outsourced—to the users.

IT has been expending time and energy trying to hold off the tsunami for years—attempting to lock down systems and regulate the types of devices that are used to get their organizations’ work done.

You can see the productivity benefits IT would see as a result of this shift of responsibilities. IT can focus on back-end integration work, service-oriented architecture and even cloud computing.

But there are organizational benefits as well. I like the way Bob Lewis put it in a post last year: Leave it up to the end users to supply their own computers on the job, and their productivity would flourish. Users need to be unleashed to get their jobs done with the tools they see fit.

So why not let employees do their thing with their own PCs and smartphones? As Lewis put it, “no corporate-owned PCs at all. Let employees buy their own — whatever they think they need to do their jobs … Only central IT remains. Employees take over ownership of the periphery, including responsibility for their own PC support.”

IT is more productive, and employees are more productive; what’s not to like? We already know the self-service ethic is a winning approach for many companies. Insurers have seen tremendous gains thanks to self-service portals for agents and consumers. Self-service portals for employees are also gaining traction in the industry. Why not self-service IT?

We already see plenty of instances of employees using their own mobile devices for work-related connectivity. And, countless users log in from their homes to check into the intranet or for updated communications. Gartner even suggests that it would be far cheaper to simply provide employees a stipend to buy their own machines rather than attempt corporate-level purchases.

Of course, there are data security issues that need to be worked through—there will need to be more thorough date encryption strategies, for example. Lewis suggests that virtualization—having end users accessing virtual environments versus actual production environments—may be the way to secure back-end systems a little better. This is especially an acute issue for insurance carriers. But at the same time, there is a great opportunity for mobile workers, such as field claims adjusters.

Source : http://www.insurancenetworking.com/blogs/insurance_technology_outsourcing_IT_end_users_Apple-23422-1.html

Share and Enjoy:
  • Twitter
  • FriendFeed
  • LinkedIn
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • MySpace
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Sphinn
  • Mixx
  • Blogplay
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Live
  • Posterous
  • Technorati
  • Add to favorites
  • RSS
  • email
  • Print
  • Tumblr
  • Identi.ca
  • Hyves
  • IndianPad
  • Yahoo! Bookmarks
Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes