TechKnowledgey Inc. of Goshen, is pleased to announce the relocation of their offices to a larger facility and showroom in Goshen. On August 1, Techknowledgey moved to 1840 W Lincoln Ave, Goshen. The new location gives the growing computer networking business more space to showcase their Information Technology and Xerox products and services.
As well, the IT computer networking services arm of Techknowledgey is pleased to announce that they have become an official Google Apps Reseller. This allows Techknowledgely to deploy SaaS (Software as a Service) tools including: Google email, calendar, IM, and collaboration tools to businesses and organizations.
Techknowledgey, Inc. serves the broader Michiana region from their offices in Goshen with complete IT Services including networking computers, computer repair, server installation and maintenance, software installation, and other Information Technology capabilities.
Verizon Wireless customers, pay attention to your mail. You recently received a notice about "Important Information Regarding Your Privacy". If you do not read the letter and opt out, Verizon is going to share your account information with "our parent companies, affiliates, agents, and parent companies in order to develop better products and services and offer you the full range of communications-related products and services offered by them." In other words if you do not call be prepared for a lot of people to call you.
It has been a very busy week for IT administrators and security professionals. Microsoft issued ten security bulletins addressing 34 vulnerabilities in its June Patch Tuesday, then followed with a security advisory for a newly unveiled zero-day flaw. Apple pushed out an update for the Safari Web browser that fixes 48 separate security vulnerabilities. And now, Adobe joins the party with its own huge security update.
"Adobe's Flash update today contains a staggering 32 bug fixes, eerily reminiscent of Apple's massive update. It's been a busy couple of weeks for overworked security teams everywhere," agrees Andrew Storms, director of security operations for nCircle, adding "It sure looks like Adobe is the new Microsoft--the place where security researchers love to find new bugs."
To Read the full article by PC World please click on the link below.