Seguridad Mania.com - España y América Latina
Portal sobre tecnologías para la seguridad física
- Destacamos »
- software Anti Blanqueo
SEATTLE, WA -- (Marketwired) -- 12/17/13 -- Adaptiva, the award-winning provider of IT efficiency and systems management solutions, today announced the unveiling of its 2014 predictions for the enterprise IT and systems management industries. Over the last year, IT budgets saw modest growth following a very lean 2012, with managers becoming more resourceful and extensively leveraging emerging technologies to reduce expenses and increase efficiencies. Businesses are placing more demands on enterprise IT than ever before, and technologies need to evolve to satisfy these needs.
"New technologies are providing dramatic efficiency gains in many areas," said Deepak Kumar, Chief Technology Officer and founder of Adaptiva. "However, some innovations have raised unrealistic expectations. IT is now finding the limits of those technologies, causing managers to scale back overarching plans. They will leverage new trends strategically, complementing traditional tools and methodologies instead of uprooting them."
Adaptiva predicts the following three trends will shape the enterprise IT landscape in 2014:
BYOD will Fail to Live up to the Hype
Companies will increasingly provide limited access to select corporate resources for employee mobile devices such as tablets and smartphones. However, the idea that BYOD will replace corporate endpoint devices, such as desktops and laptops, is far-fetched. The mobile device form factor is suited for consuming simple content, but is inadequate for consuming complex content or for creating content. Securing these devices is nearly impossible because even in a tightly controlled environment, the devices themselves cannot be locked down. Users can install any application, visit any web site, and transfer any data outside the company's network. In regulated industries such as health care and finance, BYOD can result in audit failure, lawsuits, and fines. BYOD will improve productivity and employee morale, but it will increase the burden on IT rather than reducing it.
Limited WAN Bandwidth will Stifle IT Infrastructure Convergence
According to the InformationWeek 2014 Next-Generation WAN Survey, 68% of respondents say demand for WAN bandwidth will increase over the next year, but only 15% are expanding capacity. The gap between required bandwidth and available bandwidth is growing rapidly. As globalization accelerates, rolling out high-speed global networks to distant sites will be expensive and not possible in many parts of the world. Companies want to realize efficiency gains by consolidating disparate assets into converged data centers, but this architecture is not viable for supporting locations with low-speed connections. For many global organizations, convergence will only succeed between high-bandwidth offices -- it will be DOA everywhere else. Instead, these companies will adopt infrastructure and systems management software that operates efficiently at multiple sites with narrow WAN connections.
XP Will Cause Significant Security Issues
Windows XP is still the second most popular desktop OS in the world, and a significant number of enterprises will still be running it after Microsoft ends support in April 2014. Rolling out Windows 7/8 takes time and money, requiring infrastructure, bandwidth, and systems management resources. Development resources are needed to update, test, and certify critical line of business applications for Windows 7/8. Microsoft estimates it can take a company 18 to 32 months to plan and execute a Windows XP migration. With Microsoft no longer publicly distributing patches to the software's vulnerabilities, cyber attackers will have an easier time victimizing organizations running Windows XP. Many antivirus software providers have said they plan to stop providing security for the product after April 8, 2014. Although the risks would appear to justify the costs, many companies will be exposed. The coming year will see a plethora of unfortunate headlines about data theft and other cyber attacks on companies who left the front door open in the form of Windows XP.
About Adaptiva
Founded in 2004 by the lead architect of Microsoft SMS 2003, Adaptiva has grown into a leading global provider of IT systems management solutions for Microsoft System Center Configuration Manager (SCCM). Adaptiva extends SCCM to run with no infrastructure and provide faster worldwide content delivery -- without impacting WAN traffic or end-user systems. Adaptiva's suite of SCCM add-ins automatically diagnoses and repairs problems with clients and servers, and intelligently reduces IT power consumption. Adaptiva software is deployed on millions of devices in over 60 countries, and is sold directly and through a network of partners and channel resellers. Learn more at www.adaptiva.com, email info@adaptiva.com or call 425.823.4500.
Add to Digg Bookmark with del.icio.us Add to Newsvine
Media Contact:
Nick McDonald
Barokas Public Relations for Adaptiva
206.264.8220
nick@barokas.com
Publicamos interesante Informe de más de 48 págs y varios videos demostrativos sobre los posibles ataques a los robots de montaje de las fábricas. ... Leer más ►
Publicado el 22-Jun-2017 • 10.48hs
Publicado el 20-Jun-2017 • 20.22hs
Dirigido tanto a los principiantes, como a los expertos en seguridad informática y sistemas de control industrial (ICS), este libro ayudará a los lectores a comprender mejor la protección de normas de control interno de las amenazas electrónicas. ... Leer más ►
Publicado el 3-Ene-2012 • 20.16hs
Publicado el 25-Set-2009 • 01.26hs
Publicado el 17-Dic-2008 • 08.32hs
Publicado el 11-Oct-2016 • 12.48hs
Publicado el 15-Mar-2016 • 11.59hs
Publicado el 2-Feb-2017 • 11.38hs
Publicado el 20-Jun-2014 • 17.17hs
Publicado el 31-May-2011 • 05.13hs
Publicado el 25-Set-2008 • 17.54hs
Publicado el 1-Set-2016 • 16.11hs
Publicado el 31-Ago-2016 • 18.53hs
Publicado el 19-Ene-2017 • 15.47hs
Publicado el 4-Jul-2016 • 18.51hs