A Document Management System (DMS) is a computer system (or set of computer programs) used to track and store electronic documents and/or images of paper documents. Document management systems commonly provide storage, versioning, metadata, security, as well as indexing and retrieval capabilities. The term has some overlap with the concepts of Content Management Systems and is often viewed as a component of Enterprise Content Management Systems and related to Digital Asset Management.
White Paper Published By: Adobe
Published Date: May 16, 2012
This paper explores the impact that digital communication skills, using processes associated with digital storytelling, is having on disciplines including liberal arts, humanities, and cross-curricular humanities/technology collaboratories.
White Paper Published By: AtTask
Published Date: Feb 11, 2012
Regardless the structure of your projects and work, the right work management approach can be the formula for success in your organization. This easy to read, 3 page guide, will introduce you to this formula.
Case Study Published By: Absolute Software
Published Date: Feb 10, 2012
The story of val Verde will help schools innovate better, streamline purchasing, increase cost-efficiencies, and ultimately, provide staff and students with a fleet of optimally running devices.
White Paper Published By: Gartner
Published Date: Dec 21, 2011
Planning and preparation are essential to ensure the success of an enterprise content management (ECM) initiative, now more so than ever given the challenging economic times. Project activities in the first 100 days provide the foundation for the follow-on vendor selection and implementation. Read this guide for key findings and recommendations on implementing ECM systems.
White Paper Published By: Adobe
Published Date: Jun 02, 2011
This whitepaper highlights next steps for IT to collaborate beyond office walls and enable IT's infrastructure to better support the increase of rich-media documents.
Over the last two decades, IT organizations have spent billions of dollars implementing fault management tools and processes to maximize network availability. While availability management is critical, infrastructure reliability has improved to the point at which 99.9 percent availability is commonplace. Given these improvements in infrastructure availability, companies are focusing more attention on performance management. By measuring how networked applications and services perform under normal circumstances, understanding how infrastructure and application changes impact performance, and isolating the sources of above-normal latency, IT organizations can ensure problems are resolved quickly, mitigate risk from planned and unplanned changes, and take measured steps to optimize application performance. In this paper, you will learn why this shift is taking place and how a new management model, what CA Technologies calls Performance First, can empower you to advance to the next level in managing your network for application performance.
White Paper Published By: Cisco
Published Date: Dec 15, 2010
Adding automation can provide consistent best practice-based execution of procedures, improve business continuity, increase IT productivity, and reduce the risk of business disruption.
White Paper Published By: IBM
Published Date: Dec 06, 2010
Although great strides have been made to automate most services, government agencies remain burdened with processes that require high levels of manual intervention that, in turn, can lead to operational inefficiencies.
White Paper Published By: Iron Mountain
Published Date: Sep 24, 2010
Increasingly firms are adopting data protection and recovery for enterprise laptops and desktops. Read this IDC Report to find out if your PCs and Laptops are Recovery and Discovery Ready.
Case Study Published By: Cotendo
Published Date: Sep 01, 2010
The company needed a different CDN and website acceleration solution to provide its users with the level of responsiveness to changing stock market conditions that they depend on - and that Seeking Alpha demanded of itself.