Resources

On-Demand Webinar

VTL Save Strategies on IBM i

Tape-only backups are not secure. Think about it. Your organization allows third-parties to take tapes off-site for storage. Once the tapes are off-site, they’re out of your control. But there is good news.
On-Demand Webinar

Introduction to FlashCopy

Watch this webinar where IBM i expert Chuck Stupca explains how FlashCopy works and discusses the ways that it helps you build a better backup strategy for your IBM i environment.
On-Demand Webinar

Go Paperless with Webdocs

Find out how to use Webdocs to easily capture, manage, and store paper and electronic documents, IBM i spooled files, emails, and even content generated from back-end business systems.
On-Demand Webinar

Document Management in the Mobile World

Does your company rely on mobile devices to perform key business operations? If you’d like to be able to find and import essential documents, forms, signatures, and more from mobile devices, then watch this webinar to learn how you can dramatically streamline your document management.
On-Demand Webinar

Speed Up Your Manufacturing and Distribution with Paperless Processes

Your ERP system —whether it’s JDE World, Enterprise One, Infor, Epicor, Microsoft Dynamics, VAI, or anything else—is essential to maintaining your company’s key business information and processes. But you’re constantly generating and receiving paper and electronic documents, too, and it’s hard to keep everything straight. So, you wind up chasing documents and data around—and...
Article

4 Reasons to Add VTLs

Backup and recovery processes are among the unsung heroes of data center operations. Though end results may not be readily apparent on an everyday basis, natural and digital disasters have a way of humbling companies that do not take this risk management discipline seriously.
Blog

Concerns in Creating a Paperless Office

Identified as a key trend of the future and a way to improve business efficiency, the idea of a “paperless” office (or more realistically, a “less paper” office) is spreading relatively slowly. Why is that?