Archivo de la categoría: Featured

The Wireless Market in 2017 (Part 2)

In the second video of a three-part series, Network & Security Solutions Architect, Dan Allen, discusses wireless solutions and topologies, trends in the market and what to think about when starting your wireless project. Stay tuned for Part 3 later this week. To view part 1 of the series, click here.

If you would like to discuss how to make your next wireless project a success, reach out to us.

Download this free White Paper and get 6 quick tips to avoid common mistakes and to help ensure your wireless infrastructure can support the demanding needs of the business.

By Dan Allen, Network & Security Solutions Architect

Tech News Recap for the Week of 01/02/2017

Were you busy this week? Here’s a tech news recap of articles you may have missed for the first week of the new year!

Top 5 technology predictions for 2017. Cisco talks about 2017 SD-WAN predictions. Wireless solutions in 2017. Three key factors for making your VDI project a success in 2017. The worst hacks of 2016. Lenovo launches Smart Assistance, an Amazon Echo competitor. Azure Site Recovery adds support for Citrix XenDesktop and XenApp. AWS reports spike in demand for its database migration service and more tops news this week you may have missed!

Remember, to stay up-to-date on the latest tech news throughout the week, follow @GreenPagesIT on Twitter.

Tech News Recap

 

By Jake Cryan, Digital Marketing Specialist

Dish Network is Thriving Because of Transformation

Today I was working from home and waiting on the repair of a recalled Samsung washer (if you don’t know about the recall the washer can “explode” under heavy load on fast spin cycle, click here). When the repair technician arrived in a Dish Network van and sporting natty Dish Network attire, you can imagine my head was spinning (get it? washer humor!).  Of course, the first thing I did was ask the technician why Dish Network was performing this service.  His answer is the reason for this post.

Home pay network television delivered by traditional cable or satellite is on a downturn with the advent of internet streaming services such as Netflix, Hulu, Amazon Prime and HBO Go.  Dish Network has built a large field services capability that today is under-utilized due to slowdown in their core services.  While many organizations may have scaled back on their services and cut their teams to only what was necessary to service current customers, Dish saw an opportunity to expand their value and brand by instead leveraging what they had spent millions building.

Dish branched into services areas that they had no direct expertise in.  You could say that at the time they had the core ability to perform these services but no specific knowledge of how to complete the tasks.  What they did have was capacity in the form of people, trucks, equipment, and customer service and logistics experience.  And by combining that ability with capacity you get a new capability

Ok, but what does this have to do with IT?  It’s simple, really.  The type of transformation that Dish services are undertaking is in response to market demands and a need to optimize the investments they have made in their core service delivery.  IT can learn a valuable lesson from this by creating new ways for their delivery capabilities to service their constituents.  For example, if you have an IT help desk that is manned 24/7, why wouldn’t you enable that team to perform infrastructure tasks or administration duties during down time?  This can be achieved via development of Knowledge Centric Services (KCS) methodologies and has the added benefit of averaging down the costs of performing those tasks.  Or, maybe, because the help desk has the soft skills necessary to interface with users, they can become a vehicle for advancing user training or community adoption of policies such as security awareness.

Likewise, in the operations teams, if the user community (“market”) is consuming cloud services (“shadow IT”), what really is the lift for IT to regain control of these new compute and service assets?  With today’s service platforms such as Vistara and on-demand, consumption based services for SysOps and DevOps, the old traditional barriers for IT operations, are greatly reduced.  The teams you have invested in can acquire new delivery skills through service brokerage without giving up control or governance.  Sometimes, all it takes is finding the right partner to do that delivery on your behalf.

And that is the story here.  Samsung had a need to fix 3 million washers in the US, therefore they brokered the service to Dish Network because of that company’s capability.  Not because Dish is known as the appliance repair mecca of the free world, but because they had all the tools and resources necessary and could be educated to perform the actual task.  And while a Dish service technician may not have gotten into his career to fix washers, he recognized an opportunity to expand his skills and retain his value to his employer.

You can now have your smartphone screen repaired in your home via a Dish technician, and soon, Dish might be installing your homes solar panels.  By expanding their vision of what it means to be valuable to their customers, and leveraging what they already had invested in, they have expanded their market and created new revenue streams.  IT can do this too, by taking off the traditional operational blinders and re-imagining a future state where all of the business technology requirements can be fulfilled simply and effectively through an expanded services portfolio.

With the advent of next-gen technologies, aaS offerings, and self-healing infrastructures, many in IT operations may feel that their days are numbered, and that their value is slipping.  However, it doesn’t need to be this way.  The future of IT operations is bright, as long as you are willing to expand your horizons and adapt to the “new normal” of information technologies consumption, and just as importantly user expectations.

 

Click here to learn about how modern IT Help Desk approaches and how cloud platforms and a tech-savvy workforce have fundamentally changed the support game

By Geoff Smith, Director of MS Business Development

 

Tech News Recap for the Week of 12/05/2016

Were you busy this week? Here’s a tech news recap of articles you may have missed for the week of 12/05/2016!

What IT decision makers will be focusing on in 2017, why AWS is the IBM for the cloud computing age, ThyssenKrupp is the victim of a massive cyber attack, HPE rolls out micro datacenter, NetSuite goes global under Oracle’s flag, banks are gearing up for blockchain and more tops news this week you may have missed!

Remember, to stay up-to-date on the latest tech news throughout the week, follow @GreenPagesIT on Twitter.

Tech News Recap

 

Join us at Cisco On The Road on 12/15 at Gillette Stadium in Foxboro, Massachusetts. Keynote presentations include “What’s Next for Networking Engineering,” “Security Architecture for Present Day Threats,” and more. Plus experience the latest in Cisco Meraki Cloud Management in a special hands-on lab!

By Jake Cryan, Digital Marketing Specialist

Tech News Recap Week of 11/28/2016

Were you busy this week? Here’s a tech news recap of articles you may have missed for the week of 11/28/2016!

Mirai botnet attack hits thousands of home routers, throwing users offline. Eight tech startup trends to watch in 2017. AWS drives deeper partner ecosystem engagement with VMware. Blockchain and IoT devices could revolutionize the supply chain. San Francisco transport system hit by ransomware attack and more tops news this week you may have missed!

Remember, to stay up-to-date on the latest tech news throughout the week, follow @GreenPagesIT on Twitter.

Tech News Recap

 

Are you wondering if hyper-converged infrastructure is a good fit for your business? Download this on-demand webinar to learn more!

By Jake Cryan, Digital Marketing Specialist

Tech News Recap for the Week of 11/21/2016

Were you busy during the holidays last week? Here’s a tech news recap of articles you may have missed during the short Thanksgiving work week.

Oracle acquires DNS provider Dyn, subject of recent DDoS attack. Alibaba cloud expands footprint with four new data centers. New Lambda features show Amazon is server-less computing. AWS is cutting and simplifying its storage prices. Walmart is testing blockchain to improve food safety. GreenPages picks for top tech gifts this holiday season and more tops news this week you may have missed!

Remember, to stay up-to-date on the latest tech news throughout the week, follow @GreenPagesIT on Twitter.

Tech News Recap

  • Oracle acquires DNS provider Dyn, subject of recent DDoS attack
  • Coop, Denmark grocery chain, replaces NetApp with VMware software defined VSAN
  • AWS is cutting and simplifying its storage prices
  • Microsoft embraces open source in the cloud and on-premises
  • CIO’s Top Three Concerns for 2017: Alignment, Security, Skill Shortages
  • 10 tips from the front lines of enterprise public cloud use
  • New Lambda features show Amazon is server-less computing
  • Alibaba cloud expands footprint with four new data centers
  • Walmart testing blockchain to improve food safety
  • How AI will transform cybersecurity
  • Our picks for the top tech gifts this holiday season
  • In 5 years, IBM’s Watson AI will be behind your every decision
  • IBM’s AI software can estimate a persons age based on speech

Are you wondering if hyper-converged infrastructure is a good fit for your business? Download this on-demand webinar to learn more!

By Jake Cryan, Digital Marketing Specialist

How SimpliVity Gave Me Back My Weekend

At GreenPages, we have a well outfitted lab environment that is used for customer facing demos and as a sandbox for our technical team to learn/experiment/test various solutions in the market.  We’ve been in the process of refreshing the lab for a couple of months but have kept a skeleton environment up and running for simple administrative remote access.  As part of the refresh, we had been cleaning up old VMs, systems, storage, etc. to reduce our footprint, and as part of the cleanup we moved several management VMs from an aging HP blade environment over to a small 2+1 SimpliVity OmniStack environment.  I really didn’t think much about it at the time as I just needed a place to put these VMs that had no tie to older systems, which were being decommissioned. Also, the OmniStack made sense because it had plenty of capacity and performance self-contained, thus freeing up any reliance on other external storage and older compute environments.

I just recently came back from a West coast trip. While I was there, I needed to re-configure something so that a colleague could do some other configuration work.  I brought up my RDP client to login to the jump box terminal server we use to administer the lab, and I got an error that said my profile wouldn’t load.  So, I VPN in to check out the VM, logged in as the local administrator, and quickly discovered the box had been pwned with ransomware and a good majority of the data files (my profile included) were encrypted.  After saying a few choice words to myself I investigated and determined an old lab account with a less than secure password had been used to access the system.   I got the account disabled and started thinking to myself how long it’s going to take me to either attempt to ‘clean’ the box and get the files decrypted (assuming I could even find a tool to do it) or to just trash and rebuild the box.  I figured that was going to take up most of my weekend but then the thought crossed my mind that we had moved all of the management VMs over to the SimpliVity boxes.

For those who may not be aware, SimpliVity’s core value proposition is all around data protection via integrated backup, replication, and DR capabilities.  I knew we had not configured any specific protection policies for those management VMs, we had simply dumped them into newly created resource pool, but I figured it was worth a look.  I logged into the vSphere client and took a look at the SimpliVity plugin for that terminal server VM and, low and behold, it had been backed up and replicated on a regular basis from the moment it was put into the environment.  From there, I simply went back a couple of days in the snap-in, right click, restore VM.  Within about half a second, the VM had been restored, and I powered it up and within another five minutes, I was logging into it via my RDP session from the West coast.  Bottom line, SimpliVity took a four to six hour process and transformed it into something that takes less than six minutes.  Therefore, I suggest you check it out.  Thank you SimpliVity, for being kind enough to donate some gear to our lab and for giving me some family time back this weekend!

By Chris Ward, CTO, GreenPages Technology Solutions

If you would like to discuss how SimpliVity could fit into your IT strategy, reach out to us here.

Key Announcements from VMworld with Chris Ward

GreenPages’ CTO, Chris Ward, recently held a webinar detailing all of the key U.S. and European announcements made at VMworld 2016. In case you missed it, watch Chris’s short webinar recap below highlighting all the news, including VMware Cloud Foundation, Cross-Cloud Services, vSphere 6.5, and vSan 6.5. If you are interested in hearing Chris dive deeper into these key announcements, download the entire webinar here.

Or watch the video on our YouTube page.

By Chris Ward, CTO, GreenPages Technology Solutions

VMware Blog: Top 3 Mobility Concerns for Today’s Healthcare Organizations

This post originally appeared on VMware’s AirWatch blog and was authored by Scott Szymanski. Be sure to check VMware’s blog for more great content.

 

mobilityMobile devices have been a huge hit for healthcare. In fact, a recent report from Research and Markets expects mobility in healthcare to grow from $24 billion this year to $84 billion in 2020. From accessing medical records to real-time translation services, doctors and nurses are seeing an incredible transformation in how they administer care using mobility.

While this is exciting for patients and doctors alike, healthcare IT teams must reconcile the government red tape and employee concerns inevitable with new technologies. These teams must meet HIPAA compliance and maintain patient trust without creating a labyrinth of security that medical staff find difficult to navigate regularly.

Fortunately, many healthcare organizations, including Florida-based Adventist Health System, have delivered successful mobile transformations across their teams. Watch the Adventist Health System video to learn how mobility is transforming healthcare. Then, take a look at the top three healthcare concerns to consider when researching mobility.

Security

There’s hardly anything more cringe-worthy in healthcare than security. From electronic medical records to staff communications, there is a lot of sensitive client and staff information that needs protecting. And if this information is left in the open, it could have devastating repercussions. According to IDC Health Insights, 50% of healthcare organizations will have experienced anywhere from 1-5 cyberattacks—and one-in-three attacks will be successful.

Luckily, security and mobility can work together. Look for enterprise mobility management (EMM) solutions that can track devices, push applications, enforce security policies and more without getting in the way of physicians. Some solutions can even wipe lost or stolen devices remotely, ensuring IT can quickly react when problems arise. Keeping information safe starts with strong security.

 

Simplicity

While security is primary, don’t forget the importance of simplicity. Mobile devices are redefining how medical staff diagnose, treat and report on patient health, and the last thing doctors need is another “helpful tool” that hinders timely and effective patient care. Devices that are difficult to use generally aren’t used at all, and worse than that, they could be used incorrectly in ways that might circumvent the security you worked hard to put in place.

Remember: sometimes less steps equal greater success. Simplifying the sign-in process to devices and applications might encourage a doctor to check a patient’s records twice before ordering a prescription. Tablets and smartphones could reduce training and the number of troubleshooting incidents serviced by IT, leading to independent but connected physicians across your entire medical network.

 

Patient Engagement

No matter how you use mobility, remember who physicians care about most: patients. Delivering timely and accurate information to patients is one of the most important elements of quality healthcare. Patients want to know their treatments and why they are receiving them. Unfortunately, according to a study done at the North Shore University Hospital in New York, less than half of patients surveyed were able to state their doctors’ diagnoses, an issue that could affect patient health and trust.

With connected mobile devices, you could deliver up-to-date patient information to physicians in real-time. Not only could this contribute to more accurate diagnoses, patients might feel safer sharing information with their doctors, ultimately leading to better care. Mobile devices are also more interactive than traditional computers and paper charts, and they could help doctors better illustrate medical procedures or conditions in ways patients actually understand. More informed patients are happier patients, and mobility could be the solution in your organization.

 

GreenPages has strong AirWatch expertise. If you have any questions or need any help on AirWatch projects, be sure to reach out!

Tech News Recap for the Week of 10/12/2015

Were you busy last week? Here’s a quick tech news recap of articles you may have missed from the week of 10/12/2015.

Tech News Recap

Tech News RecapThe biggest news story last week was Dell purchasing EMC for $67 billion in the largest tech deal ever. Companies are switching from Google Apps back to Office 365. Chinese domestic DRAM and NAND flash consumption is dramatically increasing with the rise in popularity of Chinese PCs and smartphones.

  • Dell buys EMC in largest tech deal ever
  • Why companies are switching from Google Apps to Office 365
  • Cisco supplying SDN and NFV to Softbank
  • Top Windows 10 Apps To Boost Your Productivity
  • China to consumer nearly 30% of the world’s flash, 21% of DRAM
  • Google graveyard: What Google has killed off in 2015
  • 6 Tips to Ensure a Successful Wireless Project
  • Too many healthcare employees complacent about security
  • Fake LinkedIn profiles lure unsuspecting users
  • The Innovative Mindset Your Company Can’t Afford to Lose
  • Is There a ‘Holy Grail’ In The Cloud
  • The secret to first-rate mobile apps for customers? Iterate, iterate, iterate

If you’re looking for tips to ensure a successful wireless project, download this whitepaper. If you’d like expert insight on the VMware NSX vs. Cisco ACI debate, you can download this on-demand webinar.

 

By Ben Stephenson, Emerging Media Specialist