WHITE PAPER:
The Solaris OS is the strategic platform for today's demanding enterprise and is the only open operating system that has delivered proven results, running everything from mission-critical enterprise databases to high performance Web farms.
WHITE PAPER:
IBM Tivoli Netcool network management solutions enable better control of networks through automation, reliable information, and a critical view into the real-time state of the tens of thousands of devices that a multisite, multivendor provider of voice services can have.
EGUIDE:
This e-guide from SearchUnifiedCommunications.com lays out the truth about session border controllers (SBC) – the good, the bad, and the ugly. View now to learn why you need SBC, potential obstacles, and how to overcome them.
WHITE PAPER:
This paper focuses on how to integrate VoIP solutions with thin client computing. It covers why telephony is not only supported on a virtual PC but also why virtual PCs can perform better than a traditional PC desktop solution for telephony support.
EGUIDE:
If businesses are to implement a VoIP, then they must consider how it fits into a larger communications framework. If they can do this successfully, then they’ll be able to reap the benefits of VoIP. Read our expert guide to learn what VoIP is, how it works and key features enterprises should consider when choosing a VoIP solution.
WHITE PAPER:
The multi-service, mission-critical, business-enabling campus LAN needs consistent features and service reliability from edge to core. Talk to Brocade and find out how to deploy an extraordinary network for the entire enterprise-converged campus to consolidated data center.
WHITE PAPER:
Previously, putting up with the gap between CRM and OSS worlds has been a viable - though not
optimal - strategy for most operators. But now that the telecommunications industry is undergoing the "communications and content over IP" transformation, service providers are starting to redesign their business models and to rethink the infrastructure.
WHITE PAPER:
As IPAM evolves from a simple marriage between DNS and DHCP services, its definition cannot be limited to simply the benefits derived from dynamically linking DNS and DHCP functionality together. IPAM transcends this marriage to include features and functions shaped by this new requirement in an age of dynamic IP address data.