Thursday, January 10, 2013

Comparison: VMware, Microsoft and Citrix virtualization Matrix

http://www.virtualizationmatrix.com/matrix.php

Wednesday, January 9, 2013


Availability percentages and yearly downtime

Availability percentage
24-hour day
8-hour day
90%
876 hours (36.5 days)
291.2 hours (12.13 days)
95%
438 hours (18.25 days)
145.6 hours (6.07 days)
99%
87.6 hours (3.65 days)
29.12 hours (1.21 days)
99.9%
8.76 hours
2.91 hours
99.99%
52.56 minutes
17.47 minutes
99.999% ("five nines")
5.256 minutes
1.747 minutes
99.9999%
31.536 seconds
10.483 seconds

Friday, September 21, 2012

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Before Buy Stocks , Please have following details


1.     Face value:

2.     Book value

3.     Promoter holding

4.     Debt/equity ratio

5.     Price history

 
1.     Face value-

Whenever a company is registered with the Registrar of Companies, in the official documents like Memorundum of Association etc, the promoters mention how much authorised capital it will have, how much paid up capital it will have and in how many shares this capital will be raised, It also mentions the initial value of the shares to be issued as face value. It could be Rs.100/- , Rs.10/-, Rs.5/-, Rs.2/- or Rs.1/-. E.g. Authorised capital of Rs.100000/- to be divided into 10000 shares of fave value of Rs.10/-.

The price band when these shares are offered to the public depends on various factors. Like how strong the company is financially, who are the promoters, how many shares to be issued etc. This price will vary significantly from the face value. The price finding is worked out by the merchant bankers and the promoters of the company depending on these and other parameters.

2.     Book value

The book value of a company tells us what the each share of a company is worth. Means if you bought a share at Rs10, and its book value is Rs11, means you must buy that share. Also, assume that a company in its IPO offered shares at par of Rs 10 per share, and the present book value is Rs 24 per share, it means that the investment by the shareholders has appreciated by Rs 14 per share.

3.     Promoter holding

An individual or company that, for a fee, helps raise money for some type of investment activity. Most often, promoters raise money for a company through offering investment vehicles other than traditional stocks and bonds, such as limited partnerships and direct investment activities. Often times, these promoters are paid in company stock or free entrance into the investment activity as compensation for their work in raising funds from others.

Investopedia explains Promoter

While there are plenty of legitimate investment promoters out there, one should always do their homework before investing in the activities they represent. Due to the fact that many of the investments promoted by these individuals are not formally registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission, an investment area plagued with fraud, professional promoters have been linked to an inordinately high number of investment scams and litigation.


4.     Debt/equity ratio

A measure of a company's financial leverage. Debt/equity ratio is equal to long-term debt divided by common shareholders' equity. Typically the data from the prior fiscal year is used in the calculation. Investing in a company with a higher debt/equity ratio may be riskier, especially in times of rising interest rates, due to the additional interest that has to be paid out for the debt.

For example, if a company has long-term debt of $3,000 and shareholder's equity of $12,000, then the debt/equity ratio would be 3000 divided by 12000 = 0.25. It is important to realize that if the ratio is greater than 1, the majority of assets are financed through debt. If it is smaller than 1, assets are primarily financed through equity.

5.     Price history

 

Trading Thoughts


Friday, December 16, 2011

Visit Microsoft TechNet to find technical resources and information for IT Professionals.

The TechCenter is a source of product or solution specific technical information for IT professionals.


The Library contains technical documentation for IT professionals using Microsoft products, tools, and technologies.
Solution Accelerators are tools and guidance that help you to solve your deployment, planning, and operational IT problems. They are free and fully supported.
TechNet Edge provides, screencasts, podcasts, and articles to help IT Professionals stay up to date on the latest Microsoft technologies.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Java Require Username and password in ISA Server 2004 Envirment



Hi

I faced the Problem when Internet Explorer use JAVA platform then java show popup message for user name and password because java only support Basic authentication .
So what i did i only used two type of authentication first Windows Integrated and second Basic. on my internal Network > Web Proxy > Authentication.

& Also Uncheck "Require all users to authenticate"

Through this i found solution of this problem.