Monitoring Devices Help Protect Princeton Computer Science Facilities Against Intrusion - Networking White Papers: Windows 2008 / Vista / 2003 / XP
Search the Library
 
 
Home>

Monitoring Devices Help Protect Princeton Computer Science Facilities Against Intrusion

By : Asentria Corporation Asentria Corporation

INFORMATION

   
  Published : Aug 30, 2007 
  Length :
  Type : Case Study 
   
 
Download Now
Save for Later
Email this page
  Overview :
  More than ever before, IT managers need to secure equipment and facilities against a variety of intrusive conditions that could cripple critical operations, resulting in system malfunctions, loss of data or intellectual property, damage to mission critical hardware or even theft of valuable physical assets. Such conditions often include environmental events, failure of air conditioning systems, power outages, and untoward human actions.

The proliferation of increasingly strategic and sensitive networked equipment at remotely managed sites, including those where managers or supervisory personnel are occasionally offsite, has intensified the need to assure protection against such seen and unseen “intruders.” One of the solutions to covering this exposure is to provide comprehensive remote monitoring and protection using a network peripheral device that can provide the right combination of monitoring and management capabilities; a device that can integrate multiple existing inputs into an SNMP “trap” alarm system that delivers immediate notification via the network’s native protocol.

View All Items By This Company           
Browse Related Categories :
Business Continuity , High Availability , Infrastructure , Intrusion Prevention , Monitoring , Network Management , Remote Network Management
Search the Library
This Weeks Most Popular Reports   |   Most Popular Topics   |   Vendor Directory
Windows Networking Research
   Learn about lead generation opportunities and list your white papers

Community Area

Log in | Register