Episodes
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Y Soft is a multinational software and hardware company founded in 2000 and operating in 21 countries. The company is headquartered in Brno, Czech Republic, with offices in NALA, EMEA, and APAC regions. Y Soft is the provider of SAFEQ6, SAFEQ Managed, and SAFEQ Cloud. Beyond print, Y Soft provides offices with robotic solutions, digital learning, and hardware.
In this episode, we sit down with Vaclav Muchna, co-founder and CEO of Y Soft. Vaclav and Adam discuss the evolving IT landscape, Y Soft's long-term commitment to 'No Print Management', and the future of print solutions. -
Episodes manquant?
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Ambiq runs a treatment centre for clients with mild disabilities across the Netherlands. In this episode, you'll learn how to build a business case for cloud printing with more than just savings on printers and print servers – but actually retiring the corporate network itself. Tom dives into how he and the Ambiq IT department were able to save up to €60K per year by getting rid of their VPNs. He also shares his tips for IT teams on keeping print simple and secure.
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In this episode, John walks us through the challenge of delivering print when IT isn’t in control of the user devices. How do you keep your network clean, get your users connected, and keep your helpdesk calls down? We’ll delve into the importance of IT security – within the context of perhaps the biggest economic and emotional decision that any of us will face – buying your home.
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File and Print are typically the last services that move to the cloud. How do you get it to be unified, so that you have a consistent user experience everywhere, and then manage and support that globally? Joe Saccente, IT Services Analyst from Mars Inc., shares his story on how he's migrating over their massive network.
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In this episode, Keith talks about how to plan the transformation of a print environment at a scale that most of us can barely imagine - the UK government has over 5 million employees. Find out how to break something super complicated down into pieces. How are an organization as large as the UK government thinking about doing this?