BlackBerry for the BIG Guy but GooseBerry for Small Businesses in Cambodia

June 26, 2010 by រិទ្ធីនៃកម្ពុជរដ្ឋ (Ben)   Comments (0)

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business, computers, lifestyle

Why you need e-mail on Phone?

On Sleepless Nights
Away from Computer
When You Hit the Road
No Internet Connection

Here are what GooseBerry can offer:

Get your Emails delivered to your SMS Inbox in real time (Compression algorithm applied to optimize content delivery over SMS)
Specify keywords to receive only important Emails
Reply to your emails Via SMS
For long unending mails, get subsequent parts of mails by sending requests through SMS

How it works?

Register with your email ID and your email Password
Enjoy free credits to your account!
Start receiving email messages on SMS
Contact us to recharge your account and continue getting emails on SMS

Contact us now to get GooseBerry by Email us at: [email protected]
or call +855.98.222888



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Asia America Gateway Submarine Cable Completed

November 13, 2009 by រិទ្ធីនៃកម្ពុជរដ្ឋ (Ben)   Comments (0)

The Malaysia Star reports that the Asia America Gateway, a 20,000-kilometre submarine cable connecting South-East Asia with the United States, is ready to be activated. The link has an initial equipped capacity of 500 gigabits per second and a total capacity of up to two terabits per second. It is connected to 10 locations in eight countries: Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, Brunei, Hong Kong, and the Philippines with landing points in Guam, Hawaii, and California. It also connects directly with links to Australia, India, Africa, and Europe. The route has been designed to avoid earthquake-prone regions that commonly cause network breaks.

Significance: 
Constructed by a 17-member consortium led by Telekom Malaysia (TM) along with AT&T in the United States, Australia's Telstra, India's Bharti Airtel, and Telkom Indonesia, the cable was reported in July to be due to launch by August 2009. The Vietnam Posts and Telecommunication Group (VNPT) will also gain two 2.5 Gbps connections to the United States over the network while the Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT) will also connect to the network.

 

Source: https://communicationsdirectnews.com/do.php/140/37897?13596



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Understanding Denial-of-Service Attacks

November 4, 2009 by រិទ្ធីនៃកម្ពុជរដ្ឋ (Ben)   Comments (0)

You may have heard of denial-of-service attacks launched against websites,
  but you can also be a victim of these attacks. Denial-of-service attacks can
  be difficult to distinguish from common network activity, but there are some
  indications that an attack is in progress.

What is a denial-of-service (DoS) attack?

  In  a  denial-of-service (DoS) attack, an attacker attempts to prevent
  legitimate users from accessing information or services. By targeting your
  computer and its network connection, or the computers and network of the
  sites you are trying to use, an attacker may be able to prevent you from
  accessing  email,  websites, online accounts (banking, etc.), or other
  services that rely on the affected computer.

  The most common and obvious type of DoS attack occurs when an attacker
  "floods" a network with information. When you type a URL for a particular
  website into your browser, you are sending a request to that site's computer
  server to view the page. The server can only process a certain number of
  requests at once, so if an attacker overloads the server with requests, it
  can't process your request. This is a "denial of service" because you can't
  access that site.

  An attacker can use spam email messages to launch a similar attack on your
  email account. Whether you have an email account supplied by your employer
  or one available through a free service such as Yahoo or Hotmail, you are
  assigned a specific quota, which limits the amount of data you can have in
  your account at any given time. By sending many, or large, email messages to
  the  account,  an attacker can consume your quota, preventing you from
  receiving legitimate messages.

What is a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack?

  In a distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack, an attacker may use your
  computer  to  attack another computer. By taking advantage of security
  vulnerabilities  or weaknesses, an attacker could take control of your
  computer. He or she could then force your computer to send huge amounts of
  data to a website or send spam to particular email addresses. The attack is
  "distributed" because the attacker is using multiple computers, including
  yours, to launch the denial-of-service attack.

How do you avoid being part of the problem?

  Unfortunately, there are no effective ways to prevent being the victim of a
  DoS  or  DDoS  attack,  but there are steps you can take to reduce the
  likelihood  that  an  attacker  will use your computer to attack other
  computers:
    * Install and maintain anti-virus software 
    * Install a firewall, and configure it to restrict traffic coming into and
      leaving  your  computer 
    * Follow good security practices for distributing your email address. Applying email filters may help you
      manage unwanted traffic.

How do you know if an attack is happening?

  Not all disruptions to service are the result of a denial-of-service attack.
  There  may  be technical problems with a particular network, or system
  administrators  may  be performing maintenance. However, the following
  symptoms could indicate a DoS or DDoS attack:
    * unusually slow network performance (opening files or accessing websites)
    * unavailability of a particular website
    * inability to access any website
    * dramatic increase in the amount of spam you receive in your account

What do you do if you think you are experiencing an attack?

  Even if you do correctly identify a DoS or DDoS attack, it is unlikely that
  you will be able to determine the actual target or source of the attack.
  Contact the appropriate technical professionals for assistance.
    * If  you  notice that you cannot access your own files or reach any
      external  websites  from  your work computer, contact your network
      administrators.  This  may  indicate  that  your  computer or your
      organization's network is being attacked.
    * If you are having a similar experience on your home computer, consider
      contacting your internet service provider (ISP). If there is a problem,
      the ISP might be able to advise you of an appropriate course of action.



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Everyone need Everyone

September 27, 2009 by រិទ្ធីនៃកម្ពុជរដ្ឋ (Ben)   Comments (0)

lifestyle, technology, educational, business

barackobama.com using Apache/1.3.37 registered at godaddy.com and godaddy.com hosted on Microsoft-IIS/6.0 and IIS6 powered

whitehouse.gov use content delivery service of Akamai and www.Akamai.com hosted on Apache/2.2.3 (Linux/SUSE)

and SUSE aquired by Novell and www.novell.com hosted on Apache and Apache authored by Robert M. McCool and McCool used to work for

Netscape founded by Dr. James H. Clark founded Silicon Graphics, Inc. later build supercomputer (Columbia) for NASA Ames Research Center

NASA Takes Google on Journey into Space and space cover earth and earth live everyone, some of us use twitter, twitter employee uses Macintosh

produced by Apple lead by Steve Jobs wear Levi 501, Levi Strauss employees use Microsoft Windows, Microsoft employee use Linkedin use MySQL

acquired by Sun Microsystems to be acquired by Oracle lead by Larry Ellison was a director of Apple Computer and Steve Jobs served as 

the official photographer at the wedding where Larry Ellison married his fourth wife in 2003.

 

Help me arrange this please...



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Bringing Web 2.0 into the Enterprise with 5 basics

September 27, 2009 by រិទ្ធីនៃកម្ពុជរដ្ឋ (Ben)   Comments (1)

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technology, business

People are talking about you. Here's how to get involved

 Do after office hours things. Who is your Web 2.0 customer? Are they employees, consumers or marketers? Find others that are targeting similar kind of customers and goals. It's great to be in a room with people facing similar challenges. Web 2.0 tools targeting external customers can have quite different hurdles than those facing internal customers—for example, security settings or methods of generating participation.

Start small. Both in terms of getting buy-in and seeing what issues Web 2.0 may bring on, it's important to start small. Often sees just the opposite when people do take on Web 2.0, People start too big. Instead, be intelligent and selective, see what's out there." For example, if you're not comfortable with a wiki, you might have a corporate blog instead.

Initiate clear directions and select tools accordingly.  Customers should have is a "clean well-lit place" to come together and discuss the ins and outs of product/service buying, as well as product/service ownership. Customers can always log on to Web 2.0 and say, I just test such and such product or service offering who else did and what did you think

It's also important to consider how you will deal with the intelligence that comes from Web 2.0. How will you get information to marketing, sales, various sectors, and so on "If you're going to ask customers for ideas and feedback, you need a process in place to funnel information.

Always open to criticism. The big benefit of Web 2.0 for you and others is taking advantage of the wisdom of crowds while also getting close to your customers.

You may ask, but what if community says bad things about our products? Remember that the water cooler conversations are going to happen whether you listen or not and the only choice you have is whether you will participate. Through listening and participating in conversations comes value, the more participation the better. Even if what you hear hurts.

Start with Reasonable Limits. That's not to say that no parameters whatsoever should be set. The others point out that rules of reason still apply—no lawbreaking, confidentiality breaches, and so on—but they believe most risks tend to resolve themselves. You need moderators, policies and rules, but start with a limited set of policies rather than try to anticipate every risk.

Still, there are ways to encourage civility. Experts recommend having a clear code of conduct to set the tone. When signing up, members must acknowledge that they will abide by the Web 2.0 Member Agreement or Terms of Use or Privacy Policy, part of which clearly outlines expected member conduct.

Security is absolutely critical, and you have to have a clearly defined set of principles.



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