Microsoft Office 365 ProPlus Non-Profit – Pläne und Preise
Archive for September, 2016
Microsoft Office 365 ProPlus Non-Profit – für 2,10 Euro pro Monat und Benutzer können gemeinnützige Organisationen mit einer unbegrenzte Anzahl von Benutzern hier „einsteigen“
Freitag, September 30th, 2016Bundesgesundheitsminister Hermann Gröhe (CDU) – der Medikationsplan ist ein großer Schritt nach vorn
Freitag, September 30th, 2016Volkswagen e-mobility – enjoy the silence without any air pollution
Freitag, September 30th, 2016Bochumer Universitätsklinikum Bergmannsheil – Löscheinsatz am Krankenhaus
Freitag, September 30th, 2016Microsoft Office 2016 Deployment Tool – allows the administrator to customize and manage Office 2016 Click-to-Run deployments
Donnerstag, September 29th, 2016Microsoft Active Directory Federation Services (AD FS) – is a standards-based service that allows the secure sharing of identity information between trusted business partners (known as a federation) across an extranet
Donnerstag, September 29th, 2016Microsoft Assessment and Planning Toolkit (MAP) – makes it easy to assess your current IT infrastructure for a variety of technology migration
Donnerstag, September 29th, 2016Microsoft Office 2013 Telemetry – a new way to Assess Office Compatibility
Donnerstag, September 29th, 2016BlackBerry – gibt auf und produziert keine Smartphones mehr
Donnerstag, September 29th, 2016
Österreich Zillertal Schlegeis Stausee – online webcam
Mittwoch, September 28th, 2016The Grey Elephant From Denmark – I’m going to read your mind
Mittwoch, September 28th, 2016Blockchain – addresses the legitimate previous concerns of security, scalability and privacy of electronic medical records
Mittwoch, September 28th, 20161.Patient – the patient is provided a code (private key or hash) and an address that provides the codes to unlock their patient data. While the patient data is not stored in the blockchain, the blockchain provides the authentication or required hashes (multi-signatures, also referred to as multi-sigs) to be used to enable access to the data (identification and authentication)
2. Provider – contributors to patient’s medical records (e.g. providers) are provided a separate universal signature (codes or hashes or multi-sigs). These hashes when combined with the patient’s hash establishes the required authentication to unlock the patient’s data
3. Profile – then the patient defines in their profile, the access rules required to unlock their medical record
4. Access – if the patient defines 2-of-2 codes, then two separate computer machines (the hashes) would have to be compromised to gain unauthorized access to the data – in this case, establishing unauthorized privileged access becomes very difficult when the machines types differ, operating systems differ and are hosted with different Providers