| 1. |
Bootcamp for the Pros; Why Ernst & Young Will Lead Security Auditing Standards (6 Pages)
by L. Taylor
Jan 19, 2002 Abstract : Original News & Educational Review Course Summary Ernst & Young, has put together the quintessential course for security engineers looking to improve their ability to protect their organization's website, systems, and network. Dubbed eXtreme Hacking, and carrying a price tag of $5,000 a slot, this course is for anyone but hacks. With an impressive course book that fills a two-inch thick binder, leading Ernst & Young security engineers take you step-by-step through all the ways that bad guys try to subvert your mission critical servers and network configurations. Using dual-bootable NT-Linux laptops, and an accompanying network setup for practicing subversive attacks and exploits, attendees will leave the course with an entire new bag of tools and tricks that help them understand how bad guys identify target IP addresses, collect information about the systems they plan on compromising, and exploit weaknesses without being noticed. The idea is to learn how to figure out what the weaknesses are in your organization's network before the bad guys do.
Type: Article
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| 2. |
E-learning Course Design (6 Pages)
by Don McIntosh, Ph.D
Feb 23, 2006 Abstract : This article provides hints for the design of e-learning courses with regard to target audience, navigation, objectives, motivation, media, interactivity, assessment, aesthetics, tool selection, and evaluation.
Type: Article
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| 3. |
Time Keepers Or Clock Makers (3 Pages)
by Rene Jones
Jul 9, 2003 Abstract : Right now, you probably have someone hiring and firing warehouse personnel who has never attended a course on interviewing techniques or labor laws. You have someone controlling millions of dollars of inventory that could not tell you the last time they attended a course or read a book about inventory control. And we wonder why our inventory is so inaccurate.
Type: Article
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| 4. |
E-learning and Learning Management (3 Pages)
by Don McIntosh, Ph.D
Jan 13, 2006 Abstract : Learning management systems help organizations provide employees or students with access to classroom and on-line learning and also facilitate the planning and tracking of user development. They may include tools for course authoring, content management, virtual classrooms and collaboration.
Type: Article
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| 5. |
Remedy Plots A Course To Travel And Expense Capabilities (3 Pages)
by D. Geller
Jun 14, 2000 Abstract : Remedy further extends the capabilities of its self-service e-procurement application with Necho’s travel and entertainment expense product.
Type: Article
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| 6. |
Descartes Plots A Record Course In New Millennium (3 Pages)
by Steve McVey
Jun 28, 2000 Abstract : Waterloo, Ontario based Descartes Systems Group reported record revenue for the first quarter of fiscal 2001 ended April 30, 2000. Focused on building its transaction-based revenue model, Descartes still finds profits out of reach.
Type: Article
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| 7. |
Business Process Management: A Crash Course on What It Entails and Why to Use It (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Dec 8, 2005 Abstract : Business process management (BPM) has to integrate existing enterprise applications, Web services, and people in such a way that it can also quickly change, destruct, or construct processes. This is far beyond the realm of traditional enterprise application integration (EAI).
Type: Article
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| 8. |
Financial Fusion ~ E-Finance Wireless Leader? (3 Pages)
by P. Hayes
Apr 6, 2000 Abstract : Financial Fusion’s expands e-finance possibilities. From this point forward a client can bank anytime, anywhere, without limitation. (Of course your cell phone will not suddenly start spurting out cash….)
Type: Article
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| 9. |
The 'S' in SAP Doesn't Stand for Security (that goes for PeopleSoft too) (3 Pages)
by M. Reed
Dec 8, 1999 Abstract : During the course of product evaluations for a customer, the Technology Evaluation Center has uncovered a potential security hole in SAP R/3's three-tier architecture. SAP has revealed that they expect the database or third party products to handle security between the application server and the database server. If the client does not take these extra measures, the master password for the SAP database instance travels over the network in the clear, and can be captured. PeopleSoft has the same issue.
Type: Article
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