Cloud computing seems to be all the rage these days. It’s not just a passing fad of course, it’s actually a very real business and a state of the art. The problem is that cloud computing means many things to many people, whether it’s public cloud, private cloud, software, infrastructure or platform as a service, etc.
Hi folks,
What is the difference between cloud computing, private cloud, and remote access.
What I am trying to do is quite complex, so I figured I'd throw it out to a wider audience to see if anyone can find a flaw. What I am trying to do (as an MSP/VAR) is design a solution that will give multiple companies a session based remote desktop (companies that need to be kept completely seperate), using only a handful of servers.
Xvand Technology Corp. the provider of IsUtility. This corporation is providing Computer Services, Dedicated Hosting, Hosting Services, Remote PC access Services Hosting, Managed Hosting, Managed Servers, Remote data backup, Computer Hosting, Hosting Computer, Utility computing, Secure remote…
As clouds continue to grow, so does the need for cloud ready backup solutions. In a reflection of the potential importance of this rapidly evolving offshoot of the cloud computing revolution, data protection vendors Asigra and RestorePoint have announced a partnership to deliver disaster recovery solutions for real estate businesses.
Cloud computing is now firmly embedded within the IT mainstream, with companies like Amazon, Google and Microsoft offering a range of cloud services. And now you can too: in this tutorial we're going to create a cloud server using a piece of software called Tonido.
I have a situation here. I have an intrusion detection system and it constantly alerts me that a remote host is accessing our AD's registry remotely.
Our remote hosts are mainly Windows XP and our ADs are W2K8. The remote hosts access them over SMB port 445
Is it normal for Windows hosts to access AD's remote registry?
I've got an SBS 2011 Essentials server which runs fine. However, after I configured VPN on it - something rather strange happened.
The server's IP is 192.168.16.2, and it is set up to hand out IP addresses in the range from 192.168.16.246 - 192.168.16.255. This also works well, but the weird thing is that I am now only able to connect remotely (RDP) against 192.168.16.246.