NCS Partners With Aruba For Wireless Solutions
NCS Recommends Aruba For Government WiFi Networks
Posted by Katie Callahan on Oct 14, 2019 10:26:20 AM
Topics: WiFi, U.S. Government, hpenterprise, HPE
NCS Partners With Aruba For Wireless Solutions
Topics: WiFi, U.S. Government, hpenterprise, HPE
Government IT Managers Need Strong, Secure Networks
Posted by Mike Turicchi on Oct 3, 2018 2:41:25 PM
NCS Partners With Aruba For Network Switching & Wireless
Topics: WiFi, U.S. Government, hpenterprise, HPE
Partner on Wireless Networking for Government
Topics: Financial Sector, WiFi, hpenterprise, HPE
Wireless Networking
Targeting opportunities with the federal government, NCS Technologies is partnering with Aruba Networks to deliver wireless access points, switches, network management and mobile security. Providing a unique set of solutions in the industry, Aruba Federal is the leader in mobility in the federal space and systems integrator community.
With wide deployments of wireless networking (Wi-Fi) for unclassified and classified environments, wired networking and cyber solutions for profiling, posturing and access control, NCS and Aruba can solve complex challenges unique to the Department of Defense, Department of Homeland Security, the intelligence community and civilian agencies. If you have questions about doing business with NCS related to Aruba networking solutions, please call Jeff Lodes at (703) 743-4642.
On this website, NCS lists the wide range of products and solutions from Aruba that we are trained provide. These solutions include access points, switches, network management and security. These solutions can be found at: https://www.ncst.com/products/categories/networking
Topics: Financial Sector, WiFi, hpenterprise, HPE
Putting the Virtual Desktop on the Move In Hospitals
The annual HIMSS17 healthcare IT conference begins in Orlando in two weeks. NCS will be at Booth #5644. Virtualization will be one of the prime IT topics at HIMSS17. Many healthcare institutions are turning to virtualization to improve IT manageability, reduce complexity, reduce costs and dramatically improve data security.
VDI is a broad subject, and more and more administrators are looking for payoffs outside servers in the data center. As administrators look to the endpoint or desktop level, there is still some confusing over labeling. Endpoints may be called thin clients or zero clients. In fact, a Google search for zero clients will return mostly thin client desktops. So a legitimate question may be, what's the difference?
Topics: VDI, Healthcare, virtualization, zeroclients, WiFi, desktop