17 Sep
Posted by jj as Development, Network
An application domain that makes use of wireless sensor network technology can be found in the area of medical monitoring. This field ranges from monitoring patients in the hospital using wireless sensors in order to remove the constraints of tethering patients to big bulky, wired monitoring devices to monitoring people in their everyday lives to provide early detection and intervention for various types of disease. This paper discusses scenarios where these sensors which vary fromminiature, body-worn sensors to external sensors such as video camera or positioning devices are applicable and presents a report of ongoing research on telemedicine at FUTA Akure.
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Information and communication technologies continue to pervade our lives in various aspects which include health, education, entertainment and ecommerce. People need to be able to trust computer systems as the dependence on them increases. The Trustworthy Computing vision (CRA, 2003) refers to computer systems that are intuitive, controllable, reliable and predictable and that ensure availability and security. Secure cod- ing is not trivial and poor code security management may leave the developed web application vulnerable to attack or turn the application into a launch pad for serious attacks.
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Imagine an Internet-scale Knowledge System where people and intelligent agents can collaborate on solving complex problems in business, engineering, science, medicine, and other endeavors. Its resources include semantically tagged Web sites, wikis, and blogs, as well as social networks, vertical search engines and a vast array of Web services from business processes to AI planners and domain models. Research prototypes of decentralized knowledge systems have been demonstrated for years, but now, thanks to the Web and Moore’s Law, they appear ready for prime time. Architectural concepts for incrementally growing an Internet-scale knowledge system are introduced, with descriptions of early commercial deployments in manufacturing and healthcare.
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Napera delivers a straightforward solution to the network health challenge that is easy to use and manage. The Napera N24 enforces network health and identity without the cost and complexity of large enterprise products.
This guide will walk you through installation and some of the key features of the Napera N24. This evaluation guide follows a stepwise method, building from gigabit switching functionality to full health and authentication requirements for enforced ports.
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Your SMCNAS04/SMCNAS24 is a storage solution for small and medium business and home network environments. With its high-speed networked storage, network users can easily access and share music, pictures, and video files. Also, it has a program for discovering the storage system automatic assigned IP address.
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The most significant differences between Microsoft’s Network Access Protection architecture and other NAC architectures you see in the iLabs come because Microsoft does not make switches or routers. Therefore, the path for handling enforcement is different, focusing on server enforcement and standards-based switch enforcement. The original intent of MS-NAP was not security, but to find and quarantine non-compliant clients in the enterprise LAN. As the interest in NAC has increased, Microsoft has adjusted their architecture to include more enforcement mechanisms. In early 2007, the Trusted Computing Group (TCG) and Microsoft announced interoperability between TNC and NAP thus opening the door for a single unified Network Access Control client
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24 Sep
Posted by jj as Network
Two leading network access control standards — TCG’s Trusted Network Connect (TNC) and Microsoft’s Network Access Protection (NAP) — will now interoperate, providing enterprises with simpler, more cost-effective, scalable, and interoperable endpoint integrity and network access control.
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This Power Macintosh user guide ncludes setup, troubleshooting, and important health-related i n f o rmation for Power Macintosh 7100 series computers Communications regulation information vi Preface Welcome to Power Macintosh ix 1 Getting Started 1 Plugging in the computer 1 Installing an expansion card 3 Connecting a monitor 4 Connecting the mouse and keyboard 8 Connecting other equipment 9 Turning the computer on 10 Problems turning your computer on? 13 What s next? 14 Learning the basics 15 Reviewing the basics 16 Turning the computer off 17 Where to find answers 18 2 Getting Help 19 Getting answers to your questions 20 Identifying objects on the screen 28 Learning useful shortcuts
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