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I as well have found Malwarebytes to be effective at both detection and removal of that family of malware. However it it doesn't always restore all of the registry settings (such as the disabled taskmgr) so I follow-up with Spybot as well. FWIW, my regularly maintained clients never get infected with these things. They might see the initial pop
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10-14-2009 IDG News Service - " Google Docs users are having problems printing, exporting and uploading certain files, the company acknowledged, as it rolls out a set of upgrades to their hosted office productivity suite. "In two separate postings on the official Google Docs Help discussion forum, a Google representative identified as Marie
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missaugustina, What were the costs and benefits that you experienced when you switched your organization to Linux as its primary desktop platform? -ENO
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This has turned into a pretty good thread despite the added complication of moving from "green" to thin-client to cloud computing. I tend to side more with Chris and agree that pkerness' approach is one of promoting rather than presenting, but I'm impressed with the quality of argument on both sides. In a face-to-face discussion, free
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I didn't provide specifics because they didn't match the "carrot and stick" criteria, but I'll give an example from one of the places I worked before I went independent: It was a financial institution and each user had about 5 custom-written applications along with their usual office suites. Every now and then, one of the apps
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I disagree. His assessment seems contrived and unrealistic. -ENO
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Hi Jane, FWIW, I seldom see a reason to employ carrot/stick strategies. I see my role as one of solving problems and improving workplace effectiveness, never of pushing technology. And I try to spend enough time at client locations to find out what the users want and need, as well as what management wants. I don't use carrots (in the sense of artificial
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lcommodore, Since you're using a SonicWall appliance, have you considered its companion Viewpoint utility for monitoring activity? It allows you to see who visited where on what day. I seem to remember it being a relatively low-cost, one-time fee, as opposed to the SonicWall content filtering, which was a subscription. -ENO
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krishnan said, "SPAM is unsolicited. In the case of SAFENTRIX, client chooses to do it, so it is not unsolicited. It is advertising and not SPAM. And also SAFENTRIX makes the business model very clear and clients choose after full knowledge..." SPAM is in the eye of the beholder. And with all due respect to you and your marketing rhetoric
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From the Safentrix Terms of Service: "SAFENTRIX Standard Edition adds text and/or Web links to every email received by the user, including text and links pointing to third parties. By using SAFENTRIX Standard Edition, you agree to such modification of emails." So let's see if I understand your free service. You filter out the random SPAM