Wednesday, August 06, 2014

How to troubleshoot Mac Wi-Fi problems

  How to troubleshoot Mac Wi-Fi problems | Mobile management: Making sense of your options

 
  Network World Network/Systems Management

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Cisco patches traffic snooping flaw in operating systems used by its networking gear
Cisco Systems said attackers could disrupt or intercept traffic in many of its networking products unless a new security update is applied to the software they run.The issue affects the implementation of the Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) routing protocol and its Link State Advertisement (LSA) database in particular. Read More
 




WHITE PAPER: Dell

Achieve Deeper Network Security and Application Control
Next-generation firewalls (NGFWs) have emerged to revolutionize network security as we once knew it. Yet to safeguard an organization from today's ever-evolving threats, NGFWs must be able to deliver an even deeper level of network security. View Now

How to troubleshoot Mac Wi-Fi problems
For most of us, Wi-Fi has become our preferred way to connect our Macs to other networked devices and the Internet. However, most of us also have times when those connections slow down or fail altogether. When that happens, however, there are several things you can do to diagnose and (ideally) fix the problem. Read More
 


WHITE PAPER: RES Software
 
Automation for a Better Tomorrow

Check out the five most common annoyances facing enterprise IT service desks today, and how automation can resolve all of them. Download the white paper Learn more


 

INSIDER

Mobile management: Making sense of your options

There are known, proven approaches to reduce those risks without disabling the benefit of consumerization Read More

 


WHITE PAPER: Red Hat

Flying High on the Use of Red Hat Enterprise Linux
Flybe was one of the 21 companies that were interviewed for quantitative results on their operations as part of an IDC ROI analysis. This case study presents the qualitative side of the company's success story. Read Now

Why TCP/IP is on the way out
If there's one protocol that networkers are saturated with on a daily, if not minute-by-minute basis, it's TCP/IP. Well guess what? The now-aging TCP/IP might not be around for much longer. Researchers at Aalborg University in Denmark, in association with MIT and Caltech, reckon that the Internet can be made faster, and more secure, by abandoning the whole concept of packets and error correction. Read More
 

 

SLIDESHOWS

Black Hat 2014: How to crack just about everything

From cell phones and cars to IPv6 security researchers have turned their skills against a world of technology.

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MOST-READ STORIES of 2014

1. iPhone 6 rumor rollup for the week ending Aug. 1

2. 10 things you need to know about Microsoft's Surface Pro 3

3. Why TCP/IP is on the way out

4. Black Hat 2014: How to steal security codes from home alarm systems

5. PayPal's two-factor authentication is easily beaten, researcher says

6. 10 disturbing attacks at Black Hat USA 2014

7. 11 Big Data Certifications That Will Pay Off

8. Top 20 colleges for computer science majors, based on earning potential

9. The Linux desktop-a-week review: MATE

10. New products of the week 08.04.2014


 
 

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