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The new feature means administrators don t have to set up a separate directory in the Google suit <a href=www.cup-stanley.it>borraccia stanley</a> e Google Apps has gained a directory tool designed to simplify and accelerate the setup of this hosted collaboration and communication suite.With the new Directory Sync, Apps can tap into existing LDAP Lightweight Directory Access Protocol -based user directories, such as the ones in IBMrsquo Lotus Domino and Microsoftrsquo Active Directory, so that administrators donrsquo;t have to set up a separate directory in the Google suite.<>Discover whatrsquo new in business applications with InfoWorldrsquo Technolo <a href=www.cup-stanley.es>stanley botella</a> gy: Applications newsletter. ] This functionality will likely appeal in particular to a segment of the collaboration market that Google is very interested in attracting: enterprise IT departments.Google Apps has mostly been adopted in small and medium-size companies, and groups within large org <a href=www.cup-stanley-cup.de>stanley cup</a> anizations, although the suite has nabbed large deployments in universities and government settings.The new tool, which comes from technology Google acquired when it bought Postini, runs behind customersrsquo; firewalls and offers a one-way delivery of directory information to Google Apps. The utility offers many of the customization settings, tests and simulations originally developed and refined for the Postini directory sync tool, wrote Navneet Goel, Google enterprise product manager, in a blog posting Thursday.The LDAP component is available at no add Pkqg Rush hour chaos for London commuters as Storm Imogen as high winds close Charing Cross and cause delays at Victoria station, London Bridge station, Waterloo East station and Cannon Street station
Friday 13 February 2015 12:04 pmFrom HSB <a href=www.stanleycup.com.es>stanley es</a> C and Greece to Opec and the Bank of England: What got us talking this weekBy: Catherine NeilanShareFacebookShare on FacebookXShare on TwitterLinkedInShare on LinkedInWhatsAppShare on WhatsAppEmailShare on EmailThere was really only one story this week.HSBC was at the centre of a scandal that only progressed along with the week. By Friday it was facing a grilling from one select committee and an investigation by another, while the possibility of police involvement was also hanging in the air. There was even the threat that the US Department of Justice could get involved. By the end of the week, even chief executive Stuart Gulliver had admitted the bank had fallen short.The other story that kept us busy was Greece, specifically the imp <a href=www.cups-stanley-cups.co.uk>stanley uk</a> asse reached with German Chancellor Angela Merkel not giving an inch. That means further meetings next week, although it s difficult to see where the compromise could be reached. In case you ve forgotten what all the fuss is about, this piece explains the issues in seven charts. But there was, at least on Twitter, some hope that love could blossom with a great selection of Greekvalentines poetry. Apple made another record by smashing the $700bn valuation this week. Here are three charts that put that figure into perspective.Ba <a href=www.stanleycups.com.de>stanley deutschland</a> nk of England governor Mark Carney revealed his outlook for the UK s economyand to paraphrase one analyst, the report was two thirds goods, one third bad.Also this week