Japan s largest carrier said it will begin using the new femtocells commercially from December to expand its networ <a href=https://www.stanley-cups.com.de>stanley de</a> k indoors NTT DoCoMo, Japanrsquo largest mobile provider, said Friday it will soon launch the worldrsquo first femtocells to support both 3G and LTE networks.The company said it will begin using the new femtocells commercially from next month on its Japanese network. Femtocells are small cell transmitters that are commonly used indoors, to provide network coverage over enclosed spaces where signal reception is weak.We plan to provide these to our network customers for now, said company spokesm <a href=https://www.stanleycup.at>stanley isolierkanne</a> an Eijun Tanaka. We havenrsquo;t decided about outside sales yet. DoCoMo said its new femtocells can provide coverage at a scale of tens of meters, depending on where and how they are deployed. The units are about the size of a household router, 18.5 centimeters by 17.5cm wide by 4.5cm, and weigh 700 grams.Like most femtocells, they need only be connected to a broadband fixed line to begin offering service. They can provide voice and data services on DoCoMorsquo Xi LTE and FOMA 3G networks. The company uses the W-CDMA standard for 3G services.Providing access to both services is also important because of monthly data restrictions DoCoMo places on its LTE network. Users that exceed their data quota can either purchase extra capacity or use the com <a href=https://www.polenes.ca>polene bag</a> panyrsquo slower network for the rest of the month. All Nbwl Motorola finds new counter for shrinking pile of beans
Look beyond patching to keep network secure, experts advise The speed at which hackers were <a href=https://www.polenes.us>polene handbag</a> able to take advantage of newly disclosed software flaws makes it vital for companies to look beyond patching to broader and more holistic measures for controlling vulnerabilities, security experts said.The advice comes in the wake of a wave of worms this week that targeted a flaw in a Plug and Play component of Microsoft Corp.rsquo Windows 2000 software see Exploits on the loose for latest Microsoft bugs . The worms hit several companies, including The New York Times, CNN, ABC News, Caterpillar Inc. and General Electric Co., an <a href=https://www.stanley-canada.ca>stanley canada</a> d came less than a week after the hole they exploited was disclosed by Microsoft Corp. as part of its monthly patch-release cycle see Microsoft patches three lsquo;criticalrsquo; Windows flaws . The worms, which had names such as W32/Zotob A, W32/Zobot D, W32/Rbot.CBQ and W32/Esbot-A, caused infected systems to repeatedly restart and potentially allowed remote attackers to take cont <a href=https://www.owalas.com.de>owala wasserflasche</a> rol of compromised systems. But the fact that the malware targeted only older Windows 2000 systems meant that the number of infected systems was fairly low, according to estimates by some antivirus vendors.Even so, the 11 or so worms that were unleashed this week served as a sobering illustration of the ability of hackers to take advantage of new flaws before many companies have a chance to patch them, said John Pironti, principal security consulta