by Anthony Charlton | Jun 18, 2015 | Business Productivity, Cloud Computing, IT Security, Office 365
Justice ministers at the European Commission (EC) have at last provisionally approved a finalised version of the laws, meaning that they can now move on to the next stage of the ratification process – final discussions between the European Parliament, the EC and the...
by Anthony Charlton | Jan 14, 2015 | Cloud Computing, Managed Services, MSP
Supporting your IT in-house can be expensive, aggravating, and time-consuming. It’s challenging and costly for small businesses to maintain an IT department and stay current with the latest technology. Companies are seeing IT expenses continually increasing on a month...
by Anthony Charlton | Jan 12, 2015 | Cloud Computing, Education
Find the right apps for your classroom Apps are now an integral part of our everyday lives. We use them to check the weather and check into a flight, to see when the next bus is coming, record notes, read books, play games and much more. But one of the great outcomes...
by Anthony Charlton | Jan 8, 2015 | Business Productivity, Cloud Computing, Education, Office 365
One of the best sources of advice and tuition on a product are the end users who can speak from a position of experience and impartiality. The Grant Wood Area Education Agency have put together an excellent guide for schools using Office 365. In their guide you’ll...
by Anthony Charlton | Oct 30, 2014 | Cloud Computing, Education, Uncategorized
Storage limits just became a thing of the past with Office 365. Moving forward, all Office 365 customers will get unlimited OneDrive storage at no additional cost. Microsoft have started rolling this out to Office 365 Home, Personal, and University customers. The roll...
by Anthony Charlton | Oct 15, 2014 | Business Productivity, Cloud Computing, Data Backup, Disaster Recovery, IT Security
Popular online locker service Dropbox appears to have been hacked. A series of posts have been made to Pastebin allegedly containing login credentials for hundreds of Dropbox accounts. The poster claims that 6,937,081 account credentials in total have been...