It took about three-and-a-half years and close to $4 million to create, but one Mississauga, Ont.-based company has developed a security solution that it believes will help protect information.
There was no Y2K bug to keep IT staff in the office on the eve of this new year, but there are some things that network administrators should be on the look out for in 2001.
Enterprises should try to move to a new approach with their LANs and build a digital utility to power Information Technology in much of the same way that the traditional power grid does that job today, suggests a consultant.