Arrow S3 announced today it has been named the 2011 Avaya Connect Services Partner of the Year in the U.S.
Arrow Electronics, Inc. (NYSE:ARW) announced that the company has acquired Cross Telecom ("Cross"), a leading North American service provider of converged and internet protocol technologies and unified communications.
Shared Technologies and Cross Telecom have collectively merged our brands to Arrow Enterprise Computing Solutions S3 (Arrow S3).
When participants stream onto Minnesota’s Xcel Energy Center floor tonight for the NHL Draft to name their picks for the future of the sport, it’s unlikely that the finely tuned technology supporting the event will get a second thought.
Are you five years out? Most people live in the present, you know, the world of now.
Shared Technologies and Cross Telecom have collectively merged our brands to Arrow Enterprise Computing Solutions S3 (Arrow S3).
Arrow Electronics, Inc. (NYSE:ARW) announced that the company has acquired Cross Telecom ("Cross"), a leading North American service provider of converged and internet protocol technologies and unified communications.
Today’s Information and communications technology offers a very real opportunity for businesses to gain competitive advantage.
Enterprises of all types are increasingly looking at cloud-based delivery models for their unified communications solutions, thereby taking advantage of a more flexible, “pay-as-you go” value proposition.
At the core of SIP is its ability to support media of all different types.
Because there is no single solution to the challenge of network resiliency, efficiency and scalability, Avaya addresses each characteristic uniquely.
Dynamic Communication Processing is our unique strategy for enabling the acquisition, transport, and delivery of information using the device(s) and media determined by the user to be most convenient at any point in time.
A sea change is taking place in enterprise networks.
Avaya solutions have been built with the future in mind, providing maximum flexibility and access for users while keeping IT managers firmly in control of who is on the network and how that network is administered.