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About Communications Infrastructure


Communications infrastructure, in the context of the enterprise information technology environment, is the backbone of the communications system upon which various voice, video and data transmission services operate. It may consist of any combination of copper cabling, fibre and wireless technologies, and includes hardware such as routers, switches, etc. and the software necessary to manage and secure transmission.

Articles Tagged - communications infrastructure

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A different kind of IT trade show
Tuesday, December 06, 2011
A different kind of IT trade show
Canada’s own IT and telecom trade show lands in a bigger downtown Toronto venue in its second year. Why one attendee is returning
Nortel says study it funded proves its point
Monday, May 12, 2008
Nortel says study it funded proves its point
For about a year Nortel has been saying we live in a world of so-called hyperconnectivity. An IDC study it funded may prove the point, but Nortel also acknowledges that the study also helps CIOs persuade their companies to fatten their budgets
The power of paradox in Prague
Tuesday, February 27, 2007
The power of paradox in Prague
Vanco plc is holding its 7th International Media Conference at the ancient city of Prague in the Czech Republic. To my mind, the London, U.K.-based virtual network operator (VNO) epitomizes the word "paradox."
Unified presence gives firms
Monday, January 08, 2007
Unified presence gives firms "competitive edge"
In the enterprise world, implementing a unified messaging (UM) presence isn't a matter of "if" but "when", according to one industry observer.
Tsunami shows communications gap
Thursday, January 20, 2005
Tsunami shows communications gap
When the recent tsunami decimated South East Asia there was little or no warning for millions. Yet those with access to technology were aware of its existence within minutes.
Local application power
Monday, April 22, 2002
Local application power
A recent report by analyst firm Yankee Group predicts that the next swing of the pendulum between centralized and decentralized applications will soon align with a new concept called client services.
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