The Growing Network

I remember myself back in the 1990s, lectures students on networked services. The good old days that I call. DNS, DHCP, WINS, Exchange, then it was very large. The network of 2ks have taken a new look and feel. I remember having regard to the 80/20 rule, where 80% of the services of a network should be local. The technology has nearly reversed this rule. The decrease in bandwidth costs, has changed the introduction of wireless LANs, QoS, mobility, given the incessant cry for network management. Somesad that networks are ill defined. File-sharing, has been revolutionized.

Instantaneous access to user demand, since it is less tolerant to delay. So are the applications. Vendor interoperability has created a mix of friendly neighbors devices. The IT department or tech guys, as they are called, by additions overwhelmed. It is not uncommon to see sales representatives from three or more companies at the site in one day. The downtime will be a no, no. Growth in the ManagedService provider is as a direct response to this phenomenon. Companies pay thousands of dollars to get the much needed proactive support. The stakeholders must now be knowledgeable in the purchase of this service. Cisco, IBM, Dell and HP, to name but a few have all the managed service market. The good news is that there are companies that are making this invaluable service available to small networks. Business owners are aware, no more that the break-fix modelprofitable.

I already have companies that recover times of poorly planned growth. The adoption of WiFi by some companies led technician sent out to receive formal training for the implementation. Managed Services eradicate most of these everyday problems by moving to implement the customer solutions that optimize the plan to them, and to successfully run the business with proven methods and tools.



0 ความคิดเห็น:

แสดงความคิดเห็น

 

Copyright © 2009 Atomic Clock Designed by csstemplatesmarket

Converted to Blogger by BloggerThemes.Net