Promansys

Promansys An IT sales and Support Services Company that offers reliable, affordable and professional IT Support services for Small to medium sized Organizations.

Promansys was founded by Michael Mndau While working as an IT manager for the Don group in the year 2011 in Johannesburg. He first operated as a field technician tending to many branches of the Don Group; He was then promoted to IT systems supervisor for the group where he headed the technical division of the group in 2008. Promansys is a wholly owned subsidiary of Origize 182 cc. Promansys Provid

es IT systems support and consumer sales services to small and medium level enterprises throughout South Africa and many neighboring countries. Our international clients range from Lesotho to Malawi in Eastern Central Africa

Today Promansys provides services to JSE listed organizations and many other prestigious organizations. Promansys operates in the local retail, wholesale and IT support services channels.

A private branch exchange (PBX) is a telephone system within an enterprise that switches calls between users on local li...
09/02/2024

A private branch exchange (PBX) is a telephone system within an enterprise that switches calls between users on local lines, while enabling all users to share a certain number of external phone lines. In contrast to a public switched telephone network, the main purpose of a PBX is to save the cost of requiring a line for each user to the telephone company's central office.

Used as a business telephone system or private telephone network, a PBX is owned and operated by the enterprise rather than the telephone company. However, the telephone company may be considered a supplier or service provider. Originally, private branch exchanges used analog technology. Today, PBXs use digital technology -- digital signals are converted to analog for outside calls on the local loop using Plain Old Telephone Service. Nonetheless, PBXs can include network switching systems that accommodate analog phones into the enterprise's digital PBX system.

Closed-circuit television (CCTV), also known as video surveillance,[1][2] is the use of video cameras to transmit a sign...
09/02/2024

Closed-circuit television (CCTV), also known as video surveillance,[1][2] is the use of video cameras to transmit a signal to a specific place, on a limited set of monitors. It differs from broadcast television in that the signal is not openly transmitted, though it may employ point-to-point (P2P), point-to-multipoint (P2MP), or mesh wired or wireless links. Even though almost all video cameras fit this definition, the term is most often applied to those used for surveillance in areas that require additional security or ongoing monitoring (Videotelephony is seldom called "CCTV"[3][4]).

Surveillance of the public using CCTV is common in many areas around the world. Video surveillance has generated significant debate about balancing its use with individuals' right to privacy even when in public.[5][6][7]

In industrial plants, CCTV equipment may be used to observe parts of a process from a central control room, especially if the environments observed are dangerous or inaccessible to humans. CCTV systems may operate continuously or only as required to monitor a particular event. A more advanced form of CCTV, using digital video recorders (DVRs), provides recording for possibly many years, with a variety of quality and performance options and extra features (such as motion detection and email alerts). More recently, decentralized IP cameras, perhaps equipped with megapixel sensors, support recording directly to network-attached storage devices, or internal flash for completely stand-alone operation.

By one estimate, there will be approximately 1 billion surveillance cameras in use worldwide by 2021.[8][needs update] About 65% of these cameras are installed in Asia. The growth of CCTV has been slowing in recent years.[9][unreliable source?] The deployment of this technology has facilitated significant growth in state surveillance, a substantial rise in the methods of advanced social monitoring and control, and a host of crime prevention measures throughout the world.[10]

Solar power, also known as solar electricity, is the conversion of energy from sunlight into electricity, either directl...
09/02/2024

Solar power, also known as solar electricity, is the conversion of energy from sunlight into electricity, either directly using photovoltaics (PV) or indirectly using concentrated solar power. Photovoltaic cells convert light into an electric current using the photovoltaic effect.[2] Concentrated solar power systems use lenses or mirrors and solar tracking systems to focus a large area of sunlight to a hot spot, often to drive a steam turbine.

Photovoltaics were initially solely used as a source of electricity for small and medium-sized applications, from the calculator powered by a single solar cell to remote homes powered by an off-grid rooftop PV system. Commercial concentrated solar power plants were first developed in the 1980s. Since then, as the cost of solar electricity has fallen, grid-connected solar PV systems' capacity and production have grown more or less exponentially, doubling about every three years. Millions of installations and gigawatt-scale photovoltaic power stations continue to be built, with half of the new generation capacity being solar in 2021.[3]

In 2023, solar generated 5% of the world's electricity,[4] compared to 1% in 2015, when the Paris Agreement to limit climate change was signed.[5] Along with onshore wind, in most countries, the cheapest levelised cost of electricity for new installations is utility-scale solar.[6][7]

Almost half the solar power installed in 2022 was rooftop.[8] Low-carbon power has been recommended as part of a plan to limit climate change. The International Energy Agency said in 2022 that more effort was needed for grid integration and the mitigation of policy, regulation and financing challenges.[9]

For millennia, the structure of the mechanical lock has been incorporated into different aspects of society. Some locks ...
09/02/2024

For millennia, the structure of the mechanical lock has been incorporated into different aspects of society. Some locks are in place to keep our possessions safe, others to protect us from dangerous people or objects. However, the design, complexity and strength of locks and keys have altered significantly over time.

The first known locks in history were created over 6000 years ago in Ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. These simple yet effective mechanisms were called pin-tumbler locks and were made entirely from wood. The lock consisted of a wooden post fixed to the door and a large wooden bolt, which secured the door in place, with a set of holes in its upper surface. Attached to the door would have been an assembly of wooden pins, specially positioned to drop into the holes on the bolt. The key was a large wooden bar, shaped like a toothbrush, with upright pegs that corresponded to the holes and pins in the lock. When inserted into the large keyhole below the vertical pins, the key was simply lifted, raising the pins clear and allowing the bolt to be moved. One of the oldest examples of a pin-tumbler lock was found in the ruins of the palace of Khorsabad near Mosul in Iraq.

During the first millennium bc the Greeks introduced better designs for their locks. The bolt for these locks was moved by a sickle-shaped key made of iron. The key was passed through a hole in the door and turned so that the point of the sickle engaged the bolt and drew it back. However, these locks were very insecure, so the Romans, trying to improve upon Greek and Egyptian locks, introduced metals for their locks, making them mainly from iron. They also invented wards – projections around the keyhole, inside the lock – which ensured that only the correct key with slots on it corresponding to the projections could rotate and move the bolt. These keys were also much smaller than that of the pin-tumbler locks and could be worn in pockets, or as a pendant or ring. For centuries, locks depended on these wards to make them secure. However, they were relatively easy to pick compared with more modern locks.

After the fall of the Roman Empire in the first century ad, innovation of locks halted. Locksmiths in the European Dark Ages had neither the technology nor the funds to invent new locks, but instead used their time to create new ways to confuse lock pickers by designing multiple key mechanisms, increasingly complicated key designs and fake and obscured keyholes.

In the Middle Ages, a large number of workmen were employed in making metal locks: the German metalworkers of Nuremberg are prominent examples. The moving parts of the locks they made were closely fitted and the exteriors were lavishly decorated. Despite their improved appearance, the security of the locks was still dependent on elaborate warding as the mechanism of the lock had hardly been developed at all. The first major improvement on the ancient Roman warded lock was made in 1778 when Robert Barron created a double-acting tumbler lock. Tumbler locks use a lever that falls into a slot in the bolt of the lock, which prevents it from being moved until the lever is raised by the key to exactly the right height out of the slot, so you can then slide the bolt out. The Barron lock had two tumblers and the key had to raise each of the tumblers by a different amount before the bolt could be moved. From this and the ground-breaking developments of Joseph Bramah, Jeremiah Chubb, Linus Yale Sr., James Sargant, Samuel Segal and Harry Soref, the modern locks that we use to date were designed and manufactured.

Two of the names from that list of locksmiths are well known around the world today as the majority of houses in the developed world will have Chubb or Yale locks, named after Jeremiah Chubb and Linus Yale Sr., securing their doors. Not only did Linus Yale Sr. invent the modern Yale pin-tumbler lock in 1848, he and his son also introduced the modern flat key to the public in 1861. Today the majority of the world uses these flat keys to activate their modernised pin-tumbler locks.

If we were not currently in the midst of the pandemic and could go about our daily lives as normal, we would still be using locks to lock up our shops, lock up our possessions and lock our doors. However, these are not normal times. Currently, we are in a national lockdown, locked in our houses and separated from the rest

of society. The symbolism of the lockdown could be interpreted in two ways: either the government trying to protect citizens by locking us up to keep us safe; or locking us up to keep the dangerous people, possibly the infected, away from the rest of society. Depending on how you interpret it, we are either prized possessions or prisoners trapped behind the locks.

Cybercrime encompasses a wide range of criminal activities that are carried out using digital devices and/or networks. T...
09/02/2024

Cybercrime encompasses a wide range of criminal activities that are carried out using digital devices and/or networks. These crimes involve the use of technology to commit fraud, identity theft, data breaches, computer viruses, scams, and expanded upon in other malicious acts. Cybercriminals exploit vulnerabilities in computer systems and networks to gain unauthorized access, steal sensitive information, disrupt services, and cause financial or reputational harm to individuals, organizations, and governments.[1]

In the year 2000, The Tenth United Nations Congress on the Prevention of Crime and the Treatment of Offenders placed cyber crimes into five categories: unauthorized access, damage to computer data or programs, sabotage to hinder the functioning of a computer system or network, unauthorized interception of data within a system or network, and computer espionage. [2]

Internationally, both state and non-state actors engage in cybercrimes, including espionage, financial theft, and other cross-border crimes. Cybercrimes crossing international borders and involving the actions of at least one nation-state are sometimes referred to as cyberwarfare. Warren Buffett has said that cybercrime is the "number one problem with mankind"[3] and that it "poses real risks to humanity".[4]

The World Economic Forum’s 2023 Global Risk report ranks cybercrime as one of the top 10 risks facing the world today and for the next 10 years.[5] If cybercrime were viewed as a nation state, cybercrime would count as the third largest economy in the world.[6] In numbers, cybercrime is predicted to cause over 9 trillion in damages worldwide in 2024.[6]

The World Economic Forum 2020 Global Risk Report confirmed that organized cybercrime groups are joining forces to commit criminal activities online, while estimating the likelihood of their detection and prosecution to be less than 1 percent in the US.[7] There are also many privacy concerns surrounding cybercrime when confidential information is intercepted or disclosed, legally or otherwise.

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Bitcoin is the latest tech boom

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Welcome our most valued clients Nomadic tents, Nora foods, MKP Holdings, Lanifen business investments, we look forward to s bright future together.

14/05/2015

Buy Computers and IT accessories here

05/02/2014
love the outdoors ? take your work with you
08/01/2013

love the outdoors ? take your work with you

Don't want a big screen? then a projector might do the trick
08/01/2013

Don't want a big screen? then a projector might do the trick

Address

57 Kyalami Boulevard, Kyalami Business Park
Kyalami
1684

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00

Telephone

0114660080

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