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January 2010
In this issue:
■
Windows 7 Case Study
■
4 Battery Tips
■
Prevent Your Laptop
From Being Stolen
■
Empower Mobile Workers
■
Sensitive Data on Laptops
■
Securing Your Smartphone
■
Secure Remote Workforce
■
Case Study
■
Opportunities
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When Mobile Systems Fail
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Should sensitive data be stored on laptops?

BOSTON, Massachusetts (AP) -- Every month seems to bring another
episode of sensitive personal information escaping into the wild
because a corporate or government laptop computer is lost or
stolen. A common response is a lot of hand-wringing over how the
data should have been encrypted.
But
some key questions usually go unanswered. Why is so much private
data allowed to be on laptops to begin with?
Read more
Securing Your Smartphone or PDA

Don't overlook the security needs of these small devices. Here
are some key security measures to take to protect your
smartphone or PDA.
Smartphones and personal digital assistants (PDAs) have become
important business tools in recent years, and that trend appears
to be continuing. According to Gartner Inc, worldwide PDA
shipments in the first quarter of 2006 increased 6.6 percent
compared to the first quarter of 2005.
Read More

Key Steps to a
Secure Remote Workforce
Key Steps to a Secure Remote Workforce
Abstract
The workplace has undergone fundamental changes over the past
decade. No longer is the corporation housed within physical
walls; it now transcends those buildings, even extending beyond
distant geographic borders. The corporate network too, expands
far beyond the corporate perimeter to provide access to
partners, clients, suppliers, and traveling workers.
Read More |
SIX EMAZZANTI CUSTOMERS FEATURED AS PART OF MICROSOFT EARLY
ADOPTER WINDOWS 7 CASE STUDY PROGRAM
Aug 07, 2009
Hoboken, New Jersey - 09-01-2009 – If more is better,
eMazzanti Technologies, Hoboken, New Jersey, takes top
honors in Microsoft’s pre-launch Windows 7 case study
program—called Ignite— by being invited to include six (6)
of its premier customers in the program: Essential Apparel,
Dewey Pegno & Kramarsky Law, Bergen County Camera, Flowers
and O’Brien Law, GameWear, and MXINSPECT. “Because of our
deep, long-standing relationship with Microsoft, we were
able to get twice as many customers involved in this
terrific early-adopter Windows 7 program. The free
marketing, international exposure and bragging rights
benefit all of us,” noted Carl Mazzanti, chief executive
officer, eMazzanti Technologies.
Read More
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4 Battery
Tips for Your Mobile Gadgets
By Christopher Elliott
Reprinted with
permission from the Microsoft Small Business Center
Mention
the words "battery life." The first gadget that comes to
mind is probably the energy-consuming laptop computer —
particularly if you're on the go a lot.
If not, it
should be. There never seems to be enough juice to run
your portable PC, as I griped about in a previous
article. Ah, but if laptop PCs were the extent of your
battery blues, you might not feel so, well, powerless.
But power
problems plague other mobile devices. For example, a
2003 In-Stat/MDR survey found that long battery life
ranked as the most important feature to business users
when selecting a wireless handset. Users of personal
digital assistants (PDAs) are just as concerned about a
possible energy crisis. I know because I am one and I
never seem to stop worrying about running dry.
So, what about
mobile gadgets? How do you make sure your batteries last
as long as possible? Here are four tips.
Read more |
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Five Ways
to Prevent Your Laptop from Being Stolen
When your laptop gets stolen, you lose a lot more than
your computer and the cost of the replacement; that is
why it makes sense to take these simple steps to protect
it.
DON'T
let your computer out of your sight, even for a moment.
Wi-Fi hotspots like coffee shops can be distracting and
are prime hangouts for laptop thieves. Don't leave it on
a table to get a refill and don't put it on the floor
behind your chair.
DON'T
leave it on the seat of your car. Hide it under the seat
or in the trunk or you could end up with a stolen laptop
AND a broken car window.
DON'T
leave it in your hotel room unless you've secured it
with a laptop cable lock ($30 to $50 at most stores). If
you don't have a laptop cable lock, take it with you or
ask hotel management to lock it up.
Read More |
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4 Ways Small Business
Server Empowers Mobile Workers
By Christopher Elliott
Reprinted with permission from the Microsoft Small Business Center
You
probably know what a server can do for your office. But do you know
what it can do when you're out of the office?
A 2003 survey of Small
Business Server users conducted by Lawrence Associates LLC offers a
clue. It found that employees were able to perform an average of 20%
more revenue-producing tasks, thanks in no small part to functions
that allowed them to stay connected to their office computers while
they were away.
Ann Westerheim knows
about these productivity gains firsthand. As the president of Ekaru,
a Westford, Mass., small-business technology adviser, she's seen the
benefits in client after client.
Read more |
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IT Services Firm
Resolves Its Remote Access Needs, Boosts Server Performance 30%
eMazzanti Technologies has a rapidly growing team of field
engineers. The ability to emulate the desktop experience over a
wide area network (WAN) connection anytime and anywhere is
critical to the company’s success. An upgrade to Windows Server®
2008 provided the advanced Terminal Services features and remote
access capabilities that eMazzanti needed.
Read the Case Study
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Opportunities
at {e}Mazzanti
eMazzanti seeks bright
minds to join the team.
Refer a
Network
Engineer to
www.emazzanti.net/jobs
and be eligible for a
shopping spree at
eMazzanti's online
store,
www.emazzanti.net/store.
Qualifying applicants
must receive full time
employment and have
referenced the referring
friend on the original
application in
order for the
referrer to be eligible for
the annual drawing.
Shopping spree is limited
to $1,000 in merchandise.
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When Mobile
Systems Fail

The
deployment of mobile technologies has transformed today's small
businesses, fueling tremendous productivity gains. Even so, many
of these organizations are at a loss when their mobile systems
fail. This article looks at how to speed the recovery of the
mobile client.
For
most of today's small businesses, "going mobile" is a given.
According to research from International Data Corp., two-thirds
of the U.S. workforce will be considered mobile by the end of
this year.
Read More |

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