Monday, November 12, 2012

Disable USB's on Workstations With third party recommended tool




Posted by Santhosh.Jellipelli

NetWrixIt's hard to imagine an organization that couldn't benefit from using this They have many type of freeware tools.


For Exaple:

NetWrix Active Directory Change Reporter - Reports the changes made to Active Directory and delivers detailed information on a daily basis.
NetWrix Active Directory Object Restore Wizard - Restores deleted and modified objects in Windows 2003 or 2008 Active Directory without rebooting a domain controller.
NetWrix Bulk Password Reset - Simple tool that quickly changes multiple local account passwords in bulk and across multiple computers.
NetWrix Change Reporter for System Center Virtual Machine Manager - Reports on changes made to VMM configuration and delivers detailed information on a daily basis.
NetWrix Disk Space Monitor - Keeps track of server disk space on domain controllers, file servers, SharePoint servers, Exchange servers, database servers and others.
NetWrix Event Log Manager - Event log consolidation, archiving, reporting, and real-time alerting tool, that allows you to collect event logs from multiple computers across multiple networks. The tool sends customizable alerts of important events, and centrally stores them in a compressed format and SQL database that enables fast access to event log data.
NetWrix Exchange Change Reporter - Reports changes made to all Exchange Server configurations and permissions and generates daily reports with a full list of created, deleted, and modified objects.
NetWrix File Server Change Reporter - Sends daily reports about all changes to the file servers for your review, including changes made to files, folders, shares, and permissions with previous and new values of certain configuration values.
NetWrix Group Policy Change Reporter - Reports the changes made to Group Policy and delivers detailed information on a daily basis.
NetWrix Inactive Users Tracker - Automates the management of inactive user accounts.
NetWrix Logon Reporter - Reports about successful and failed logons.
NetWrix Network Infrastructure Change Reporter - Free tool for automated auditing of network devices, such as switches and routers, discovery and network asset management.
NetWrix Non-owner Mailbox Access Reporter for Exchange - Detects all situations when administrators and other users have gained access to another user's mailbox.
NetWrix Password Expiration Notifier - Notifies users whose passwords will expire soon by sending customizable notification e-mails.
NetWrix Password Manager - Allows users to reset forgotten passwords, troubleshoot account lockouts and unlock their accounts in a self-service fashion without involvement of helpdesk personnel.
NetWrix Privileged Account Manager - Provides a secure web-based portal for accessing and automatic maintenance of administrative user accounts to enable centralized management and auditing of all privileged identities.
NetWrix Server Configuration Change Reporter - Automates auditing and reporting of all changes made to server configurations: hardware devices, drivers, software, services, networking settings, etc.
NetWrix Service Monitor - Monitors critical Windows services and optionally restarts them after failure.
NetWrix SharePoint Change Reporter - Automates auditing and reporting of all SharePoint administrative modifications, including those made to SharePoint farms, servers and sites as well as their settings and permissions.
NetWrix SQL Server Change Reporter - Auditing solution that reports changes made to your SQL Server's configurations and databases.
NetWrix USB Blocker - Delivers USB device restriction enforcement that helps organizations to control the use of confidential information, secure their network and comply with regulatory requirements.
NetWrix VMware Change Reporter - Reports on changes made to VMware Infrastructure 3 inventory and delivers detailed information on a daily basis.
NetWrix VMware Reporter - Collects and reports information about your VMware environment.
NetWrix Web-based Password Change for Active Directory - Provides a simple web form to change domain passwords remotely for users who don't have access to the normal logon or Ctrl-Alt-Del screen because they are not connected to the domain, use a Linux, Mac or PDA device.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012



Call Center Solution

Wednesday, Oct17, 2012


We are provides communications solutions for call centers and enterprises of different types and sizes.
Perfect, didicate, passion, and friendly….in time

If need a support please call/mail us

+91 9666 5050 28

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Friday, July 27, 2012




Dell Power Edge Servers
http://www.servermonkey.com/servers/dell-servers/2u-rackmount/dell-poweredge-2950

http://itadminhyd.blogspot.in/2009/01/hyderabad-based-hp-reseller-list.html

Tower servers

http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/x/hardware/tower/index.html

Rack servers

http://www-03.ibm.com/systems/x/hardware/rack/

System x3550 M4




What is DMZ


What is DMZ ?



 DMZ (demilitarized zone) is a computer host or small network inserted as a "neutral zone" between a company's private network and the outside public network. It prevents outside users from getting direct access to a server that has company data. A DMZ is an optional and more secure approach to a firewall and effectively acts as a proxy server as well. it is a separate zone port in a fire wall  

In a typical DMZ configuration for a small company, a separate computer (or host in network terms) receives requests from users within the private network for access to Web sites or other companies accessible on the public network. The DMZ host then initiates sessions for these requests on the public network. However, the DMZ host is not able to initiate a session back into the private network. It can only forward packets that have already been requested.

Users of the public network outside the company can access only the DMZ host. The DMZ may typically also have the company's Web pages so these could be served to the outside world. However, the DMZ provides access to no other company data. In the event that an outside user penetrated the DMZ host's security, the Web pages might be corrupted but no other company information would be exposed. Cisco, the leading maker of Router s, is one company that sells products designed for setting up a DMZ.


Different Types of severs


Tower Servers:
This is the normal boxes (in appearance) you would have seen in Visio Diagrams. Of course they are very powerful & have bundled software tools to manage them. The problem with Tower Severs is the space they occupy, management personnel they require, and cost of operating them (power, network, etc.).
Rack Servers:
This is servers mounted inside a Rack (something like we normally use to manage our letters, office files, etc.) Major Racks available out there adhere to an IEEE standard and are measured in rack units or “U’s” (each U is 19” wide and 1.75” tall). So a rack server size is typically in multiplication of these “U’s”. Motivation here is to scale vertically than horizontally with more compact physical servers. In addition to this, there are many other electronic devices which adhere to this IEEE standard for instance – Rack Consoles, SAN devices, Power Backup devices, etc. Advantage being that you can fix them into rack as well along with your servers. Not to mention that the hardware vendors (Dell, HP, IBM, etc.) provide additional software tools that help you effectively manage these servers and in some case the supported devices also.
Blade Servers:
This is an additional level of innovation on top of Rack Servers. Blade Servers are typically placed inside a blade enclosure, and together they form a blade system. A Blade system normally meets the IEEE standard of Rack Units, which means that the entire Blade system can be placed inside the rack along with other electronic equipments. The benefits of blade enclosure includes hot plugging (normally blade servers have a handle attached to them, for transferring them in and out of the blade enclosure – it’s an easy way of identifying them) and stripped modular design (e.g. shared network ports, power connections, switches, etc.). For instance the hardware we ordered allows us to pack 16 blade servers inside a 10U space. blade system and SAN storage. All these boils down to further space reduction, cost savings (power, administration staff) & easy management. Bundle this with Virtualization and you have a very powerful infrastructure at your disposal.