Posts Tagged e-mail

Could you correct this curriculum vitae please?

Curriculum Vitae

Gian Cus
Birth in Trieste, 26th of may 1962
Resident in: Italy Prospect, 1 Yerevan – Armenia (member of AIRE)
Drivers license: type D
Mobile Italy: e-mail:
Course of study
2006 Doctorate Degree in Mechanical Engineering at the Belford University
1981 Technique degree for the heat gained at the ‘Istituto Tecnico Industriale Statale A. Volta" of Trieste
Training courses
Heating plants conductor in the second degree to a potential greater more than 230 kW. – Regional Training Institute ENAIP of Trieste – over 100 hours
Maintenance of condensing boilers of various potential – at the factory boiler Remeha in Holland – course of 32 hours
Solar panels for hot water and heating – at the headquarters of “Paradigma” of Modena Italy – course of 12 hours

Professional experiences

1998-2006 Owner of a company for the construction and design of thermo hydraulic, air conditioning, gas and electric plants, construction of thermal and cooling power stations. I have gained experience of heat conduction of large installations buildings, design construction of heating and electrical equipment housing, industrial and commercial buildings, I have specialized in high-technology and alternative energy sources. My responsibilities were to coordinate the implementation of the various stages of construction, from the design stage, then to manage relationships with customers and suppliers and direct the workforce needed to finish the work.
2007 – 05/2011 Employed at the company Renco spa as a construction engineer for electro mechanical and HVAC (heating, ventilation, air conditioning plants) equipment, construction of thermal and cooling power stations, as well as like a site manager in some sites and technical supervisor in a field camp in Karabatan (Kazakhstan). My responsibilities were enforcing, coordinating the various teams of local workers, the directives of the project manager overseeing the work in the site for the electro-mechanical parts and, sometime the civil works, and eventually proposing the necessary modify to the details of the job, moving in various foreign countries as required. I am also responsible for the maintenance of all electric and mechanical systems of these plants. In these last years I have cooperated to built:
I worked like an electro mechanical and HVAC construction engineer in the extension of the River Palace Hotel in Atyrau, Kazakhstan.
I supervised the electro-mechanical works at the Training Center of ‘AGIP’ in Atyrau.
At the field extraction Karabatan I planned and follow, in compliance with the safety guidelines in the field, some technical jobs.
Site manager for civil works, electro-mechanical and HVAC construction for the American Company Synopsys in Yerevan, Armenia.
Site manager for the construction of two branches of HSBC Bank, in Yerevan, for both the civil works, electro-mechanics and HVAC plants.
Technical manager for the electro-mechanical, water, gas and HVAC construction of the Yerevan Palace, a building of 8 floors of offices.
Technical manager for the electro-mechanical and HVAC construction for the processing center of the HSBC Bank in Yerevan.
I was transferred to Zanzibar in Tanzania as a technical manager for the electro-mechanical and HVAC construction of one of the largest conference center on East Africa.
I returned to Yerevan for the completion an commissioning of the Yerevan Plaza building and for the commissioning of the electro mechanical plants in the Computing Center for the HSBC Bank.
I moved to Yuzhno Sakhalin, in Russia, like site manager and technical director for the electro-mechanical, water, gas and HVAC construction of the Mira Hotel.
I were temporarily transferred to Yerevan for overseeing the electro-mechanical and HVAC construction of a branch of Ameria Bank.
I went back to work in Yuzhno Sakhalin to finish the electro mechanical construction in the Mira Hotel.
Returned to Yerevan to overseeing the partial renovation of two hotels, both with regard to the electro-mechanical systems and the civil works.
Site manager for the construction of the another branch of Ameria Bank for both civil, electro-mechanical and HVAC works.
Technical manager, with other colleagues, for the construction of the electro mechanical plants in the residential and commercial complex “Piazza Grande” in Yerevan.
Technical manager for the construction for the electro mechanical plants for the cableway Halizor-Tatev in Armenia.
Technical manager for the electro-mechanical construction of the Pan Armenia Bank.
Languages
English: fluent spoken and written
Russian: good knowledge spoken and written
Italian: mother tongue

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How do I delete all content on Windows Fax and Picture Viewer?

It seems when I send myself a picture through a file in an E-mail, it always loads by Windows fax and picture viewer. But, besides the main picture being sent, if I hit the little arrows at the bottom, it seems like every image ever viewed on my computer for all time is also there! Whats up with THAT? Any way to delete? I HAVE hit the X delete button, but the next time I send a pic its right there again.

e-mail, little arrows, windows fax

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The benefits and drawbacks of communication in IT?

I need to know what you think of communication because of IT, such as e-mail and facebook, twitter, whatever really and why. I also need to know if things are better now or worse because of IT

thankssss

e-mail, Facebook, twitter

3 Comments

Can you recommend a book for my Networks and Communication Module?

Hi everyone!

I am currently in my second year of a Computer Science degree taking a module in Networks and Communication. I have no provious knowledge of this area so would like a book that explains everything easily with examples. I was recommended Computer Networks by Andrew S. Tanenbaum but have heard mixed reviews and many students have found it hard to understand.

Learning outcomes of the module

To introduce the concepts, data types, hardware, software, technologies and issues involved with networks and data communications. The student should develop: good knowledge of the use of data communication networks for e-mail; file transfer and hypertext transfer; understanding of ISO OSI 7-layer model for data communications and how this relates to TCP/IP suite of communication protocols; appreciation of data formats used in data communucations; understanding of modus operandi of clients & servers connected to internet and of the types of communication software they use.
Also the course contents are:

E-mail; the client/server concept; coding schemes for data; Hamming code; Huffman code; encryption, local area networks; Ethernet; TCP/IP. The ISO OSI 7-layer model – the physical layer, the data link layer, the medium access layer, the network layer, the transport, the session layer, the presentation layer, the application layer; protocols using Java.net.
My lecturer recommended the book I mentioned above but talking to previous students of this module they wouldnt recommend it.

andrew s tanenbaum, application layer protocols, code huffman, communication protocols, communication software, computer science degree, course contents, data communication networks, e-mail, hamming code, huffman code, learning outcomes, local area networks, medium access, osi 7 layer, osi 7 layer model, presentation layer, session layer, software technologies, types of communication

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How do you get reservation without a telephone?

I guess this is one of the problems while travelling in Japan (at least this has been the major problem I have). When you make resevation, you have to give some tel for contact. I have only Cell phone and certainly hate giving it to people I don’t know, but often I’ve been on the verge of refusal ( Soreha ne…E, doushimashou…If you don’t have telephone, chotto…). But I live in Japan. I was wondering what happens with the tourists who come and rely mostly on tel cards.Pls share your experienses and advises how to get reservation without giving your personal tel.
JB gave good answer and I really don’t understand the trolls who gave him 6 TD. I’d like to encourage him to ignore the trolls and to keep the spirit of this answer for further. Thanks everyone who answered so far. I was wondering if the hotel would accept the e-mail of the MP- this I can change anytime later, and still I’ll get the message immediately.

cards, cell phone, chotto, e-mail, good answer, jb, mp, spirit, tourists, travelling in japan, trolls, verge

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help i have no idea wat this means some body explain in short text 10 points best answer in plain explantion?

Overview
Instant messaging (IM) and chat are technologies that facilitate near real-time text based communication between two or more participants over a network. It is important to understand that what separates chat and instant messaging from technologies such as e-mail is the perceived synchronicity of the communication by the user – Chat happens in real-time before your eyes. For this reason, some people consider communication via instant messaging to be less intrusive than communication via phone. However, some systems allow the sending of messages to people not currently logged on (offline messages), thus removing much of the difference between Instant Messaging and e-mail.

Instant Messaging allows instantaneous communication between a number of parties simultaneously, by transmitting information quickly. Some IM systems allow users to use webcams and Microphone which made them more popular than others. Due to this feature users can have a real-time conversation. In addition IM has additional features such as: the immediate receipt of acknowledgment or reply, group chatting, conference services (including voice and video), conversation logging and file transfer.

IM allows effective and efficient communication, featuring immediate receipt of acknowledgment or reply. In certain cases Instant Messaging involves additional features, which make it even more popular, i.e. to see the other party, e.g. by using web-cams, or to talk directly for free over the Internet.

It is possible to save a conversation for later reference. Instant messages are typically logged in a local message history which closes the gap to the persistent nature of e-mails and facilitates quick exchange of information like URLs or document snippets (which can be unwieldy when communicated via telephone).

[edit] History

In early instant messaging programs each character appeared when it was typed. The UNIX "talk" command shown in these screenshots was popular in the 1980s and early 1990s.Instant messaging actually predates the Internet, first appearing on multi-user operating systems like CTSS and Multics[1] in the mid-1960s. Initially, many of these systems, such as CTSS’.SAVED, were used as notification systems for services like printing, but quickly were used to facilitate communication with other users logged in to the same machine. As networks developed, the protocols spread with the networks. Some of these used a peer-to-peer protocol (eg talk, ntalk and ytalk), while others required peers to connect to a server (see talker and IRC). During the Bulletin board system (BBS) phenomenon that peaked during the 1980s, some systems incorporated chat features which were similar to instant messaging; Freelancin’_Roundtable was one prime example.

In the last half of the 1980s and into the early 1990s, the Quantum Link online service for Commodore 64 computers offered user-to-user messages between currently connected customers which they called "On-Line Messages" (or OLM for short). Quantum Link’s better known later incarnation, America Online, offers a similar product under the name "AOL Instant Messages" (AIM). While the Quantum Link service ran on a Commodore 64, using only the Commodore’s PETSCII text-graphics, the screen was visually divided up into sections and OLMs would appear as a yellow bar saying "Message From:" and the name of the sender along with the message across the top of whatever the user was already doing, and presented a list of options for responding.[2] As such, it could be considered a sort of GUI, albeit much more primitive than the later Unix, Windows and Macintosh based GUI IM programs. OLMs were what Q-Link called "Plus Services" meaning they charged an extra per-minute fee on top of the monthly Q-Link access costs.

Modern, Internet-wide, GUI-based messaging clients, as they are known today, began to take off in the mid 1990s with ICQ (1996) being the first, followed by AOL Instant Messenger (AOL Instant Messenger, 1997). AOL later acquired Mirabilis, the creators of ICQ. A few years later ICQ (by now owned by AOL) was awarded two patents for instant messaging by the U.S. patent office. Meanwhile, other companies developed their own applications (Excite, MSN, Ubique, and Yahoo), each with its own proprietary protocol and client; users therefore had to run multiple client applications if they wished to use more than one of these networks. In 1998 IBM released IBM Lotus Sametime, a product based on technology acquired when IBM bought Haifa-based Ubique and Lexington-based Databeam.

In 2000, an open source application and open standards-based protocol called Jabber was launched. Jabber servers could act as gateways to other IM protocols, reducing the need to run multiple clients. Multi-protocol clients such as Digsby,Pidgin, Trillian, Adium and Miranda can use any of the popular IM protocols by using additional local libraries for each protocol. IBM Lotus Sametime’s November 2007 release added IBM Lotus Sametime Gateway support for XMPP.

Recently, many instant messaging services have begun to offer video conferencing features, Voice Over IP (VoIP) and web conferencing services. Web conferencing services integrate both video conferencing and instant messaging capabilities. Some newer instant messaging companies are offering desktop sharing, IP radio, and IPTV to the voice and video features.

The term "instant messenger" is a service mark of Time Warner[3] and may not be used in software not affiliated with AOL in the United States. For this reason, the instant messaging client formerly known as Gaim or gaim announced in April 2007 that they would be renamed "Pidgin"[4].

[edit] Cooperation
Standard free instant messaging applications offer functions like file transfer, contact lists, the ability to have similtaneous converstations etc. These may be all the functions that a small business needs but larger organisations will require more sophisticated applications that can work together. The solution to finding applications capable of this is to use enterprise versions of instant messaging applications. These include titles like Jabber, Lotus Sametime, Microsoft Office Communicator, etc., which are often integrated with other enterprise applications such as workflow systems. These enterprise applications, or Enterprise Application Integration (EAI), are built to certain constraints, namely storing data in a common format.

There have been several attempts to create a unified standard for instant messaging: IETF’s SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) and SIMPLE (SIP for Instant Messaging and Presence Leveraging Extensions), APEX (Application Exchange), Prim (Presence and Instant Messaging Protocol), the open XML-based XMPP (Extensible Messaging and Presence Protocol), more commonly known as Jabber and OMA’s (Open Mobile Alliance) IMPS (Instant Messaging and Presence Service) created specifically for mobile devices.

Most attempts at creating a unified standard for the major IM providers (AOL, Yahoo! and Microsoft) have failed and each continues to use its own proprietary protocol.

However, while discussions at IETF were stalled, Reuters head of collaboration services, David Gurle (the founder of Microsoft’s Real Time Communication and Collaboration business), signed the first inter-service provider connectivity agreement on September 2003. This agreement enabled AIM, ICQ and MSN Messenger users to talk with Reuters Messaging counterparts and vice-versa against an access fee. Following this, Microsoft, Yahoo! and AOL came to a deal where Microsoft’s Live Communication Server 2005 users would also have the possibility to talk to public instant messaging users. This deal established SIP/SIMPLE as a standard for protocol interoperability and established a connectivity fee for accessing public instant messaging clouds. Separately, on October 13, 2005 Microsoft and Yahoo! announced that by (the Northern Hemisphere) summer of 2006 they would interoperate using SIP/SIMPLE which is followed on December 2005 by the AOL and Google strategic partnership deal where Google Talk users would be able to talk with AIM and ICQ users provided they have an identity at AOL.

There are two ways to combine the many disparate protocols:

One way is to combine the many disparate protocols inside the IM client application.
The other way is to combine the many disparate protocols inside the IM server application. This approach moves the task of communicating to the other services to the server. Clients need not know or care about other IM protocols. For example, LCS 2005 Public IM Connectivity. This approach is popular in Jabber/XMPP servers however the so-called transport projects suffer the same reverse engineering difficulties as any other project involved with closed protocols or formats.
Some approaches, such as that adopted by the Sonork enterprise IM software or the Jabber/XMPP network or Winpopup LAN Messenger, allow organizations to create their own private instant messaging network by enabling them to limit access to the server (often with the IM network entirely behind their firewall) and administer user permissions. Other corporate messaging systems allow registered users to also connect from outside the corporation LAN, by using a secure firewall-friendly HTTPS based protocol. Typically, a dedicated corporate IM server has several advantages such as pre-populated contact lists, integrated authentication, and better security and privacy.

Some networks have made changes to prevent them from being utilized by such multi-network IM clients. For example, Trillian had to release several revisions and patches to allow its users to access the MSN, AOL, and Yahoo! networks, after changes were made to these networks. The major IM providers typically cite the need for formal agreements as well as security concerns as reasons for making these changes.

[edit] Mobile Instant Messaging
Mobile Instant Messaging (MIM) is a presence enabled messaging service that aims to transpose the desktop messaging experience to the usage scenario of being on the move. While several of the core ideas of the desktop experience on one hand apply to a connected mobile device, others do not: Users usually only look at their phone’s screen — presence status changes might occur under different circumstances as happens at the desktop, and several functional limits exist based on the fact that the vast majority of mobile communication devices are chosen by their users to fit into the palm of their hand. Some of the form factor and mobility related differences need to be taken into account in order to create a really adequate, powerful and yet convenient mobile experience: radio bandwidth, memory size, availability of media formats, keypad based input, screen output, CPU performance and battery power are core issues that desktop device users and even nomadic users with connected network.

[edit] Friend-to-friend networks
Instant Messaging may be done in a Friend-to-friend network, in which each node connects to the friends on the friendslist. This allows for communication with friends of friends and for the building of chatrooms for instant messages with all friends on that network.

Emotions are often expressed in shorthand. For example; lol. But a movement is currently underway to be more accurate with the emotional expression. Real time reactions such as (chortle) (snort) (guffaw) or (eye-roll) are rapidly taking the place of acronyms.[citation needed]

[edit] Business application
Instant messaging has proven to be similar to personal computers, e-mail, and the WWW, in that its adoption for use as a business communications medium was driven primarily by individual employees using consumer software at work, rather than by formal mandate or provisioning by corporate information technology departments. Tens of millions of the consumer IM accounts in use are being used for business purposes by employees of companies and other organizations.

In response to the demand for business-grade IM and the need to ensure security and legal compliance, a new type of instant messaging, called "Enterprise Instant Messaging" ("EIM") was created when Lotus Software launched IBM Lotus Sametime in 1998. Microsoft followed suit shortly thereafter with Microsoft Exchange Instant Messaging, later created a new platform called Microsoft Office Live Communications Server, and released Office Communications Server 2007 in October 2007. Both IBM Lotus and Microsoft have introduced federation between their EIM systems and some of the public IM networks so that employees may use a single interface to both their internal EIM system and their contacts on AOL, MSN, and Yahoo!. Current leading EIM platforms include IBM Lotus Sametime, Microsoft Office Communications Server, and Jabber XCP. In addition, industry-focused EIM platforms such as IMtrader from Pivot Incorporated, Reuters Messaging, and Bloomberg Messaging provide enhanced IM capabilities to financial services companies.

The adoption of IM across corporate networks outside of the control of IT organizations creates risks and liabilities for companies who do not effectively manage and support IM use. Companies implement specialized IM archiving and security products and services like those from Secure Computing, Akonix, SurfControl, and ScanSafe to mitigate these risks and provide safe, secure, productive instant messaging capabilities to their employees.

[edit] Practical Use in Enterprise
The popular embrace of IM technology for sharing information has quickly led to organizations adopting IM solutions for the perceived advantages that can be brought by it. As organizations are becoming more information based (McNurlin & Sprague, 2006, p.499) the need for effective knowledge sharing, team working and collaborative environments amongst employees has become vital, especially within more geographically dispersed teams.

Typically IM conversations tend to have a certain "character", they are often short and only cover one topic. Media-switching and multitasking are common throughout, however IM might also be used between established coworkers and friends for longer, more intermittent conversation. In their report of IM use at the workplace Nardi et al. (2000) identifies the four primary functions of IM which are often cited in other reports, These primary functions are:

Quick Questions and Clarifications
Coordinating and scheduling tasks
Coordinating impromptu social meetings
Keeping in touch with friends and family
IM is perhaps best suited to "Quick Questions and Clarifications" as this is the most often mentioned attribute in other reports. A user can "respond rapidly without the overhead of telephone or FTF interaction. For example, IDC reports, "Users see IM as a medium for quick, semi-permanent ‘flashes’ that beg a near-immediate response" (Isaacs et al., 2002). Nardi’s second and third observations are enabled in part due to the "Presence Awareness" feature of IM clients in which the user knows who is "available". This is the most relevant for colleagues who share the same physical space as each other and even paves the way for other mediums to take up the task of communication e.g. F2F or Phone. The implication is that viable communication of any sort can in someway be encouraged through IM’s "Presence Awareness" feature. (Issacs et al, 2002) supports this view, "IM in business might not be the main tool for of communication, it could just be the meeting point for another type of media e.g. conference calls.

Nardi’s third and fourth observations focus on the social use of IM, which have also been widely publicized in other report. That IM is used for keeping in touch with friends and arranging social events has led some employers to believe that it is used primarily for this purpose. According to (Issacs et al, 2002) a market study found that "’Fear of losing employee productivity’ was the greatest concern of businesses in regards to instant messaging".

The study by (Issacs et al, 2002) goes on to suggest this fear is unfounded as it was found that on average "only 13% of conversations contained personal topics", and "only 6.4% were exclusively personal".

[edit] Review of Products
"IM solutions can typically be catagorised into two types: Enterprise Instant Messaging (EIM) and Consumer Instant Mesaging (CIM). Enterprise solutions use an internal IM server, however this isn’t always feasible, particularly for smaller businesses with limited budgets. The second option, using a (CIM) provides the advantage of being inexpensive to implement and has little need for investing in new hardware or server software. However, in recent years open source IM clients such as Jabber have emerged that provide free EIM grade solutions. (Wikipedia,. 2008)

For corporate use encryption and conversation archiving are usually regarded as important features due to security concerns. Sometimes the use of different operating systems in organizations calls for the use of software that supports more than one platform. For example many software companies use Windows XP in administration departments but have software developers who use Linux.

Most people have had experience of using online chat and messaging over the internet whether it is with Microsoft’s Windows Live Messenger, Skype or e-mail. One form of chat and messaging currently popular is Bebo. It is a non-corporate form of messaging which allows its user to create and maintain a social network. Libraries use chat applications and Morris Messenger is an application commonly used by them. This is a power based instant messenger, which uses Perl, SQL, and small Java. It accepts input from both staff and regular customers and saves important information in an SQL database built for the system.

[edit] Risks and liabilities
Although instant messaging delivers many benefits, it also carries with it certain risks and liabilities, particularly when used in workplaces. Among these risks and liabilities are:

Security risks (e.g. IM used to infect computers with spyware, viruses, trojans, worms)
Compliance risks
Inappropriate use
Intellectual property leakage
Crackers (malicious "hacker" or black hat hacker) have consistently used IM networks as vectors for delivering phishing attempts, "poison URL’s", and virus-laden file attachments from 2004 to the present, with over 1100 discrete attacks listed by the IM Security Center[5] in 2004-2007. Hackers use two methods of delivering malicious code through IM: delivery of virus, trojan, or spyware within an infected file, and the use of "socially engineered" text with a web address that entices the recipient to click on a URL that connects him or her to a website that then downloads malicious code. Viruses, worms, and trojans typically propagate by sending themselves rapidly through the infected user’s buddy list. An effective attack using a poison URL may reach tens of thousands of people in minutes when each person’s buddy list receives messages appearing to be from a trusted friend. The recipients click on the web address, and the entire cycle starts again. Infections may range from nuisance to criminal, and are becoming more sophisticated each year.

In addition to the malicious code threat, the use of instant messaging at work also creates a risk of non-compliance to laws and regulations governing the use of electronic communications in businesses. In the United States alone there are over 10,000 laws and regulations related to electronic messaging and records retention.[6] The more well-known of these include the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, HIPAA, and SEC 17a-3. Clarification from the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority ("FINRA") was issued to member firms in the financial services industry in December, 2007, noting that "electronic communications", "email", and "electronic correspondence" may be used interchangeably and can include such forms of electronic messaging as instant messaging and text messaging.[7] Changes to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, effective December 1, 2006, created a new category for electronic records which may be requested during discovery (law) in legal proceedings. Most countries around the world also regulate the use of electronic messaging and electronic records retention in similar fashion to the United States. The most common regulations related to IM at work involve the need to produce archived business communications to satisfy government or judicial requests under law. Many instant messaging communications fall into the category of business communications that must be archived and retrievable.

Organizations of all types must protect themselves from the liability of their employees’ inappropriate use of IM. The informal, immediate, and ostensibly anonymous nature of instant messaging makes it a candidate for abuse in the workplace. The topic of inappropriate IM use became front page news in October 2006 when Congressman Mark Foley resigned his seat after admitting sending offensive instant messages of a sexual nature to underage former House pages from his Congressional office PC. The Mark Foley Scandal led to media coverage and mainstream newspaper articles warning of the risks of inappropriate IM use in workplaces. In most countries, corporations have a legal responsibility to ensure harassment-free work environment for employees. The use of corporate-owned computers, networks, and software to harass an individual or spread inappropriate jokes or language creates a liability for not only the offender but also the employer. A survey by IM archiving and security provider Akonix Systems, Inc. in March 2007 showed that 31% of respondents had been harassed over IM at work.[8] Companies now include instant messaging as an integral component of their policies on appropriate use of the World Wide Web, e-mail, and other corporate assets.

Within the company there is also the risk of employees using instant messaging to release confidential information and project details to an outside source. This issue is best controlled by a combination of written policy and technology. An organization’s policies on use of IM in the workplace should be an integral part of the overall computing and network use policies, and should be published and communicated at least annually. In addition to written policy, organizations should implement "gateways" or IM security products to monitor content of inbound and outbound messages. Products from IM security providers (See section on IM security) typically allow administrators to set alerts and enforce policy (i.e. allow or block messages) based on keywords and regular expressions within instant messages.

Employees may also misuse IM to communicate on a personal level with friends and family. This is poor use of a business’s time and resources, as the employee’s effectiveness will most certainly decrease due to the added distractions. (Licari, J., May 2005). Businesses often use IM security products to monitor and archive IM conversations for the purpose of minimizing this type of productivity drain.

[edit] Security and archiving
In the early 2000s, a new class of IT security provider emerged to provide remedies for the risks and liabilities faced by corporations who chose to use IM for business communications. The IM security providers created new products to be installed in corporate networks for the purpose of archiving, content-scanning, and security-scanning IM traffic moving in and out of the corporation. Similar to the e-mail filtering vendors, the IM security providers focus on the risks and liabilities described above.

With rapid adoption of IM in the workplace, demand for IM security products began to grow in the mid-2000s. By 2007, the preferred platform for the purchase of security software had become the "appliance", according to IDC, who estimate that by 2008, 80% of network security products will be delivered via an appliance.[9]

[edit] User base
Note that many of the numbers listed in this section are not directly comparable, and some are speculative. Some instant messaging systems are distributed among many different instances and thus difficult to measure in total (e.g. Jabber). While some numbers are given by the owners of a complete instant messaging system, others are provided by commercial vendors of a part of a distributed system. Some companies may be motivated to inflate their numbers in order to increase advertisement earnings or to attract partners, clients, or customers. Importantly, some numbers are reported as the number of "active" users (without a shared standard of that activity), others indicate total user accounts, while others indicate only the users logged in during an instance of peak usage.

Service User count Date/source
AIM 53 million active September 2006
>100 million total January 2006
Jabber 40-50 million total January 2007, based on calculations of Jabber Inc
90 million total Based on calculations of Process-One: Process-One uses ejabberd as Jabber server software. If it is assumed that ejabberd has a 40% market share amongst public and private open source server deployments, there are 50 million users using open source servers. With Jabber Inc’s numbers, this adds up to the 90 million number stated here.
eBuddy 35 million total October 2006, including 4 million mobile users
Windows Live Messenger 294 million active worldwide November 2007
Yahoo! Messenger 22 million total September 2006
QQ 20 million peak online (majority in China) 3 June 2006
221 million "active" (majority in China) 3 June 2006
IBM Lotus Sametime 17 million total (private, in enterprises) November 2007
ICQ 15 million active July 2006
Skype 12 million peak online February 2008
309 million total April 2008
Xfire 10 million total May 2008
MXit 7 million total (>560,000 outside of South Africa) 10 August 2007. Note that these users are part of the Jabber user base as MXit federates with the Jabber network.
Gadu-Gadu 5.6 million total June 2006
Paltalk 3.3 million unique visitors per month August 2006
IMVU 1 million total June 2007
Mail.ru Agent 1 million active (daily) September 2006
Meebo 1 million total October 2006
PSYC 1 million active (daily) (majority in Brazil) February 2007. Total count cannot be accurately estimated due to the decentralized nature of the protocol.
VZOchat >200,000 October 2007

[edit] IM Language
Users sometimes make use of internet slang or text speak to abbreviate common words or expressions in order to quicken conversations or to reduce keystrokes.

[edit] See also
Comparison of instant messaging clients
Comparison of instant messaging protocols
Instant messaging manager
LAN messenger
Text messaging
it is a question

1980s, acknowledgment, e-mail, efficient communication, file transfer, gap, ins, instant messages, instant messaging, instantaneous communication, message history, messaging programs, offline messages, persistent nature, snippets, synchronicity, time conversation, time text, video conversation, web cams

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Using the Internet : How to Fax Something Online

Fax something online using a commercial website by entering a local area code and selecting a phone number. Learn about using a online fax service that offers a free trial before paying with these tips from anInternet business consultant in this free video on using the Internet. Expert: Tod Amazeen Bio: Tod Amazeen has been an Internet business consultant for more than 15 years. Filmmaker: N Stock

Blockbuster, e-mail, Fax, Internet, Netflix, online, online games, rent movies, web, Yahoo!

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