Server Agents

February 3, 2005 Posted by admin

Server Agents


Cisco Security Server Agent License 100 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB100SRVR


Cisco Security Server Agent License 100 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB100SRVR


$52926


Cisco Security Server Agent License 100 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB100SRVR

Cisco Security Server Agent License 10 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB10SRVR


Cisco Security Server Agent License 10 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB10SRVR


$7062


Cisco Security Server Agent License 10 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB10SRVR

Cisco Security Server Agent License 500 Agents Linux Win Solaris CSAB500SRVRK9


Cisco Security Server Agent License 500 Agents Linux Win Solaris CSAB500SRVRK9


$204630


Cisco Security Server Agent License 500 Agents Linux Win Solaris CSAB500SRVRK9

Cisco Security Server Agent License 250 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB250SRVR


Cisco Security Server Agent License 250 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB250SRVR


$114666


Cisco Security Server Agent License 250 Agents Linux Win Solaris LCSAB250SRVR

Cisco Security Server Agent License 250 Agents Linux Win Solaris CSAB250SRVRK9


Cisco Security Server Agent License 250 Agents Linux Win Solaris CSAB250SRVRK9


$114666


Cisco Security Server Agent License 250 Agents Linux Win Solaris CSAB250SRVRK9


Ballistic - Ecks vs. Sever


Ballistic – Ecks vs. Sever


$3.29


If you have a hearty appetite for fiery explosions, heavy ordnance, and nonsensical mayhem, Ballistic: Ecks vs. Sever is just for you. This mindless action flick is so wrong-headed that even its ungainly title is inaccurate: as expert assassins on the fringes of government intelligence, FBI agent Ecks (Antonio Banderas) and Defense Intelligence agent Sever (Lucy Liu) aren’t battling each other at …

Tripp Lite SMART1000LCD Digital LCD 1000VA Line-Interactive UPS (8 Outlets)


Tripp Lite SMART1000LCD Digital LCD 1000VA Line-Interactive UPS (8 Outlets)


$229.00


Tripp Lite’s SMART1000LCD line interactive UPS system offers voltage regulation surge suppression and long lasting battery support for personal puters home entertainment systems and media centers. Internal UPS circuits support entry level PCs for up to 60 minutes or individual VCR/DVR ponent for as long as 3 hours during power failures. Prevents data loss viewing interruptions lost recordings and …

Backup Exec2010 Quickstart OEM


Backup Exec2010 Quickstart OEM



Symantec Backup Exec 2010 Server QuickStart OEM Single User . 1 CD in a sleeve. Symantec Backup Exec 2010 for Windows Small Business Server is the perfect data protection solution for Microsoft Windows Small Business Server Standard and Premium Editions. This robust solution provides granular restore features open file protection disaster recovery and backup protection for Microsoft Exchange S…


Football Manager 2011


Football Manager 2011


$16.85


FOOTBALL MANAGER 2011 (WIN XPVISTA/MAC 10.0 OR LATER)…



Leveling the Playing Field for Small IT Groups Using SQL VMware

In a world of increasing competition and demands from customers, IT organizations are under more pressure to succeed than ever before. The rest of the company focuses on innovative products and services, while they struggle to compete with IT organizations with much more money and man power. Your IT staff must be able to meet those demands or you simply won’t succeed. You will always be one step behind the competition.

Get more details about SQL VMware.

How can your small company and its smaller IT staff compete against the larger players in your market?

Introducing SQL Server VMware
Consider virtualization. By using SQL Server on VMware you can forget about the time and expense of managing your own hardware and datacenters. The savings will enable you to spend less time thinking about, and paying for, technology support and more time concentrating on your core business.

SQL Server on VMware not only streamlines your business by managing many of your IT headaches; it also enables you to compete more readily with established industry players. Their market share and big budgets afford them the luxury of multiple datacenters and teams of DBAs that you simply can’t afford … yet. You will have a nimble IT infrastructure that will enable you to react to changes in your business with much more speed and efficiency than your larger competitors.

Smart Growth with SQL Server on VMware
Let your cloud services host manage your server environments and monitor performance. No matter where you are in your companies growth cycle, SQL Server on VMware lets you start as big or as small as you require. Growth then becomes an opportunity instead of a challenge. Without the high associated costs of hardware upgrades your company can easily grow and establish your market presence.



 A comprehensive study of the regulation and behavior of web crawlers.


A comprehensive study of the regulation and behavior of web crawlers.


$49.99


Search engines and many web applications such as online marketing agents, intelligent shopping agents, and web data mining agents rely on web crawlers to collect information from the web, which has led to an enormous amount of web traffic generated by crawlers alone. Due to the unregulated open-access nature of the web, crawler activities are extremely diverse. Such crawling activities can be regulated from the server side by deploying the Robots Exclusion Protocol in a file called robots.txt. Ethical crawlers (and many commercial) will follow the rules specified in robots.txt files. Since the Robots Exclusion Protocol has become a de facto standard for crawler regulation, a thorough study of the regulation and behavior of crawlers with respect to the Robots Exclusion Protocol allows us to understand the impact of search engines and the current situation of privacy and security issues related to web crawlers.;The Robots Exclusion Protocol allows websites to explicitly specify an access preference for each crawler by name. Such biases may lead to a "rich get richer" situation, in which a few popular search engines ultimately dominate the web because they have preferred access to resources that are inaccessible to others. We propose a metric to evaluate the degree of bias to which specific crawlers are subjected. We have investigated 7,593 websites covering education, government, news, and business domains, and collected 2,925 distinct robots.txt files. Results of content and statistical analysis of the data confirm that the crawlers of popular search engines and information portals, such as Google, Yahoo, and MSN, are generally favored by most of the websites we have sampled. The biases toward popular search engines are verified by applying the bias metric to 4.6 million robots.txt files from the web. These results also show a strong correlation between the search engine market share and the bias toward particular search engine crawlers.;Since the Robots Exclusion

 A comprehensive study of the regulation and behavior of web crawlers.


A comprehensive study of the regulation and behavior of web crawlers.


$49.99


Search engines and many web applications such as online marketing agents, intelligent shopping agents, and web data mining agents rely on web crawlers to collect information from the web, which has led to an enormous amount of web traffic generated by crawlers alone. Due to the unregulated open-access nature of the web, crawler activities are extremely diverse. Such crawling activities can be regulated from the server side by deploying the Robots Exclusion Protocol in a file called robots.txt. Ethical crawlers (and many commercial) will follow the rules specified in robots.txt files. Since the Robots Exclusion Protocol has become a de facto standard for crawler regulation, a thorough study of the regulation and behavior of crawlers with respect to the Robots Exclusion Protocol allows us to understand the impact of search engines and the current situation of privacy and security issues related to web crawlers.;The Robots Exclusion Protocol allows websites to explicitly specify an access preference for each crawler by name. Such biases may lead to a "rich get richer" situation, in which a few popular search engines ultimately dominate the web because they have preferred access to resources that are inaccessible to others. We propose a metric to evaluate the degree of bias to which specific crawlers are subjected. We have investigated 7,593 websites covering education, government, news, and business domains, and collected 2,925 distinct robots.txt files. Results of content and statistical analysis of the data confirm that the crawlers of popular search engines and information portals, such as Google, Yahoo, and MSN, are generally favored by most of the websites we have sampled. The biases toward popular search engines are verified by applying the bias metric to 4.6 million robots.txt files from the web. These results also show a strong correlation between the search engine market share and the bias toward particular search engine crawlers.;Since the Robots Exclusion