Boston, MA – January 25, 2011 – Cumulus Global and 4th Bin jointly announced a new partnership designed to offer businesses, non-profits, schools, and local governments fully integrated e-waste solutions. Through the partnership, Cumulus Global will offer its cloud-bound customers discounted, ecologically sound, e-waste recycling services for their retiring hardware and electronics. Cumulus Global will help 4th Bin clients avoid e-Waste hazards by helping them move to cloud computing solutions, such as Google Apps and online backup services.
“Many organizations hesitate to dispose of e-waste out of concern for the legal and ecological issues and the cost,” noted Allen Falcon, CEO of Cumulus Global. “Partnering with 4th Bin lets us help our customers solve their e-waste dilemma.”
Based on New York City, 4th Bin provides door-to-door collection and recycling services in the metropolitan New York area and can arrange e-waste collection and recycling services throughout North America.
“4th Bin is committed to reducing e-waste throughout the technology life cycle,” added John Kirsch, Partner at 4th Bin. “Our joint effort with Cumulus Global will help companies dispose of their current e-waste and avoid creating more in the future.”
As a cloud solutions provider, Cumulus Global does more than replace servers with cloud-based solutions. A sound cloud computing strategy reduces the need for support servers, backup equipment, and networking gear. Moving to cloud computing has a ripple effect that includes less equipment, reduced HVAC requirements, and reduced power consumption.
Cloud computing providers, like Google, are significantly more efficient than most in-house computer rooms and data centers.
About Cumulus Global
Cumulus Global (http://www.cumulusglobal.com) helps small and mid-size businesses, non-profits, governments, and educational institutions thrive by delivering cloud computing solutions. Serving clients from 1 to more than 1000 employees across numerous industries, we align technology with our clients’ goals, objectives, and bottom lines. We leverage our expertise, vendor relationships, and a diversified range of best-of-breed cloud services to create custom solutions with tangible value.
About 4th Bin
After seeing how much electronic waste (e-waste) is irresponsibly discarded, and knowing the City of New York will institute mandatory responsible disposal of e-waste, a team of IT professionals found a solution to this mounting problem and launched 4th Bin (http://www.4thbin.com). The company specializes in e-waste collection and recycling and is the only service in the city to do so. Since the company began in fall of 2010, it has collected, recycled, or environmentally and ethically disposed of over 900,000lbs of e-waste from offices, schools, hospitals, factories, and residences in New York City. For the processing of e-waste, 4th Bin works exclusively with e-Stewards Certified recyclers (http://www.e-stewards.org) who have been qualified as upholding the highest standard of environmental and social responsibility. The 4th Bin is the only company in New York City picking up electronic waste from local businesses and residents. The 4th Bin’s door-to-door e-waste recycling solution is convenient, simple and inexpensive. Dedicated to educating businesses and consumers about the hazards of electronic waste and providing a simple and inexpensive means of rescue and disposal, the 4th Bin believes in the reduce, reuse, recycle philosophy. Not only do we ethically and responsibly recycle or reuse all equipment we collect, the 4th Bin is also dedicated to giving back to our local community through partnerships and events.
As more of our current and future customers move to the cloud, they have greater interest in moving beyond email, calendars, and chat. More organizations see cloud file services as a way to improve access to information while simplifying IT infrastructure and lowering costs. These organizations are right on the mark!
For those running Google Apps for Business, Education, or Government, the Google Docs service is a great foundation from which to build an integrated file service. Here are some considerations and strategies.
Central Ownership
Every user has the ability to use Google Docs to store and share information, and to create a hierarchy of collections (just like folders) to organize and manage files. When building a file service using Google Docs, you may want to consider central ownership of data that would normally be housed on shared space on a file server.
Central Ownership …
To setup central ownership of your file service, you will need to purchase or dedicate one account as the “file service” account.
Desktop Integration
While Google Docs is pretty good as a productivity suite, many of your users may want or need to continue using legacy desktop solutions. The good news: you can store any file type in Google Docs; the bad news: opening up a browser to upload files is an intrusive extra step.
Fortunately, you can choose from several inexpensive third party solutions that provide desktop access to Google Docs. When working with clients to pick the solution, we look to see if they need drive letter access (DLA) service and/or access via Network Places from Windows desktops and/or desktop drive access from Macs. The solution we recommend will result from these needs and from the amount of local drive space available to cache online data.
Local Cache / Offline Access
By building a solution with a local cache, you can provide users with robust offline access to documents. Additionally, a local cache lets desktop applications save locally, as they are designed to do, with the files synchronizing to Google Docs in the background.
Learn More
If you want to learn more about building a file server around Google Docs, please contact us directly, visit our web site, or join us for one of our upcoming events.
We have all hear the proverb about roads paved with good intentions. With all of the media attention on SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) and PIPA (Protect IP Act) this week, it appears that we may have a well-needed detour.
While the media is portraying the SOPA/PIPA battle and the site blackout protests as a battle between big Hollywood and big Silicon Valley. The reality is that SOPA and PIPA are bad for businesses and for small businesses in particular.
The intention behind SOPA and PIPA is good — stop online piracy of copywrited materials. And one could argue that the current process of requesting the removal of individual items is not sufficient. But SOPA and PIPA go too far in the other direction.
SOPA and PIPA give content holders, and the US Government, the right to shutdown entire sites and domains if they feel the site is improperly using intellectual property. The act also forces sites that provide hosting and storage for others to monitor content and prevent illegal use. Sounds like a good idea, but …
Beyond some of the big issues, both SOPA and PIPA present unnecessary risks to small and mid-size businesses. Join us in opposing bad legislation, even if the intention is good.
Posted in General, Uncategorized | Tagged Cumulus Global, Google, Google Apps, PIPA, SOPA | Leave a comment
One of the common criticisms of cloud solutions and Google Apps is the lack of administrative capabilities. For the most part, this criticism is unfounded as many of these capabilities are no longer needed when you are free from managing the hardware and network resources behind your applications.
Beyond the so-called “paradigm-shift”, Google is aggressively adding administrative capabilities. Some of the new features include:
“We understand that libraries are struggling with limited budgets at the same time they are looking to benefit from new technologies”, stated Allen Falcon, CEO of Cumulus Global. “We offer libraries options that simplify their IT infrastructure, enhance capabilities, and lower both direct and indirect costs.”
With the CumuluSuite for Libraries Basic package Libraries get the email, calendar, document collaboration, intranet, and video services of Google Apps bundled with unlimited support for their IT team. For libraries required to retain emails under public records laws or policies other packages provide for compliant archiving and e-discovery services, as well as backup services for content in Google Apps and social media sites. Tier 2 end user support is optional with all bundles.
“The options help libraries pick a solution that meets their needs and budget”, added Falcon. “Libraries can select the services they need and deploy them without investing in capital equipment and software. Libraries can also decide if they need the Business or Government editions of Google Apps.”
The window for libraries to apply for fiscal year 2012 E-Rate funding through the Universal Service Administration Company Schools and Libraries program (www.usac.org/sl) opened on January 9th and closes in March. Through the program, libraries may be eligible for discounts and reimbursements of 40% or more. Information about CumuluSuite for Libraries and package options is available at www.cumulusglobal.com/libraries.
About Cumulus Global
Cumulus Global, formerly Horizon Info Services, helps small and mid-size businesses, non-profits, governments, and educational institutions thrive by delivering cloud computing solutions. Serving clients from 1 to more than 1000 employees across numerous industries, we align technology with our clients’ goals, objectives, and bottom lines. We leverage our expertise, vendor relationships, and a diversified range of best-of-breed cloud services to create custom solutions with tangible value.
Cumulus Global is a member of the American Library Association.
Here are links to some of our recent webinars that you may find helpful. You will be asked to “register”, so that we may track who is interested in these topics.
“Small and mid-size businesses drive the economy and job creation, yet the big IT vendors treat small business like unwanted pets”, notes Allen Falcon, CEO of Cumulus Global and support of the Occupy Google Apps movement. “These vendors punish SMBs with unnecessary complexity and costs.”
Some of the gripes among Occupy Google Apps members include: Complex and expensive licensing options; forced hardware upgrades to run updated software; expensive upgrades without relevant new features; time-consuming patches an updates; and misrepresentation of hosted services as cloud computing.
“It is absurd that small businesses are paying consultants to figure out the best licensing option when buying basic software like operating systems and office productivity suites”, stated Falcon. “Occupy Google Apps is about easy to use, secure, and reliable services, and only paying for what you need.”
Cumulus Global, in support of the Occupy Google Apps movement, is actively helping businesses evaluate their IT services and plan their move to Google Apps and cloud computing. Information is available at www.occupygoogleapps.com or from Cumulus Global at www.cumulusglobal.com.
About Cumulus Global
Cumulus Global, formerly Horizon Info Services, helps small and mid-size businesses, non-profits, governments, and educational institutions thrive by delivering cloud computing solutions. Serving clients from 1 to more than 1000 employees across numerous industries, we align technology with our clients’ goals, objectives, and bottom lines. We leverage our expertise, vendor relationships, and a diversified range of best-of-breed cloud services to create custom solutions with tangible value.
One of the challenges many of our customers face is managing contacts and distribution lists. Organizations want to share contact information to avoid duplicate and incorrect information, but need to control who manages the data. Similarly, many organizations want to build distribution lists for communicating with contacts, but want each contact to only have one record.
For Google Apps, we work with several tools (i.e. Floreysoft and DMS) that help you build and share contact information and groups.
For Distribution Lists, Google Apps for Business (Government, and Education) includes Groups. Originally built to provide secure discussion forums with optional moderation, Groups has evolved into a robust communication and collaboration tool. Some of the key features in Groups that create smart distribution lists include:
With these features, organizations have the ability to place contacts in distribution lists and maintain a single source for managing contact records.
Posted in General | Tagged contacts, Distribution Lists, DMS, Domain Management Studio, Floreysoft, Google Apps, Google Apps for Business, Google Apps for Education, Google Apps for Government, Groups | Leave a comment
It is pretty clear from the industry press that a consensus is building that the time for netbooks may have passed. And when Dell, one of the big 3 PC makers, decides to end all netbook products, the industry takes note.
But when a technophile friend of mine lumped Chromebooks into this category, I had to disagree. His argument that netbooks came out too early, before the customer was ready for the cloud. And now, with tablets, smartphones, and other devices, the need is no longer there — you can get more for less elsewhere.
Chromebooks, however, are not netbooks.
Netbooks from Dell, HP, Acer, and others still carry the burden of traditional operating systems, albeit “customized” for a purpose. So while the cost to buy the device was lower, businesses still needed to carry the full burden of supporting any PC-class device. And users still expected to run ‘heavy’ apps like MS Office on these devices. Less capable, less expensive to buy, just as expensive to run and support is not a formula for long term success.
Chromebooks are entirely different … here’s how:
Most importantly, when you purchase Chromebooks, you are not buying hardware, you are buying a service.
Yes, you own your Chromebook devices, but they are one component of the service. The service includes a management console that empowers organizations to manage user profiles, services, access, and add-ins. The service also includes a replacement warranty of up to three years. Chromebooks are as close to a “zero maintenance; zero administration” solution as you can get.
Netbooks give users a familiar, less capable (some might say ‘crappy’) system that still requires all of the administration and maintenance of a full blown PC.
Chromebooks give users a new platform with expanded capabilities, but without much of the expensive and burdensome overhead.
Netbooks may be on the way out; Chromebooks and the service model they bring to the market should be here for the long haul.
Posted in General, Uncategorized | Tagged Chromebooks, Cloud Computing, Google Apps, netbooks | 7 Comments
As more people migrate to Google Apps and begin using the Gmail interface, they are often impressed with the scope and speed of the Gmail search bar. Not surprising, since Google is sort of known for search.
But, did you know that just like on google.com, you can use advanced search operators in your Gmail search bar? These operators let you focus your search with greater precision, without sacrificing speed.
Some of the advanced search operators we find most useful are:
| Operator | Definition | Example(s) |
| from: | Used to specify the sender | Example: from:amy Meaning: Messages from Amy |
| to: | Used to specify a recipient | Example: to:david Meaning: All messages that were sent to David (by you or someone else) |
| label: | Search for messages by label* *There isn’t a search operator for unlabeled messages |
Example: from:amy label:friends Meaning: Messages from Amy that have the label “friends” Example: from:david label:my-family |
| has:attachment | Search for messages with an attachment | Example: from:david has:attachment Meaning: Messages from David that have an attachment |
| is:starred is:unread is:read |
Search for messages that are starred, unread or read | Example: is:read is:starred from:David Meaning: Messages from David that have been read and are marked with a star |
| after: before: |
Search for messages sent during a certain period of time* *Dates must be in yyyy/mm/dd format. |
Example: after:2004/04/16 before:2004/04/18 Meaning: Messages sent between April 16, 2004 and April 18, 2004.* *More precisely: Messages sent after 12:00 AM (or 00:00) April 16, 2004 and before April 18, 2004. |
You can review a full list of advanced search operators here. You can also use these operators to create filters and manage email as message arrive.
Posted in General, Uncategorized | Tagged Efficiency, Gmail, Google Apps, Search | Leave a comment← Older posts Newer posts →