Home
Why Choose a Nitix based Net Integrator?

As a small business owner you might be concerned about the lack of support for your existing Microsoft Windows server. You might resent the amount of time you or your staff (who have other jobs) spend tending, patching, and upgrading a system that you're thinking will never be secure.  You might worry that your data is not being backed up regularly or, if it is, that those backups might be useless in the event they are needed.  Maybe you've heard about Linux but wonder where you'd get support - you don't have any geeks on site!  Perhaps you're one of the majority of small businesses that have not yet installed a server.  Whatever your reason, you've come to realize that a secure, stable, cost-effective server platform is the key to a hassle free office computing infrastructure.  In just a few minutes we can show you why Nitix is that platform.

Nitix is a Linux-based server operating system that provides file storage, backup and recovery, connectivity and security, email and application services.  Nitix is managed through a simple browser interface.  Nitix can be customized to meet your company's unique requirements.  Please take a few minutes to view our flash presentation and see for yourself why a Nitix based Net Integrator is simply the best small business server on the market.

 

 

 

 

 

Visit our Cisco Solutions Showcase - JC Kelly Microsolutions, a Cisco Select Partner
 

"I have travelled the length and breadth of this country and talked with the best people, and I can assure you that data processing is a fad that won't last out the year." -- The editor in charge of business books for Prentice Hall, 1957.

I'm no fan of the Business Software Alliance (BSA) or their predecessor CAAST (Canadian Alliance Against Software Theft), regular visitors to our website will know that.  I don't disagree with their position that their member companies should be paid for their products -- that would be silly.   Read more...

A study by the A. James Clark School of Engineering at the University of Maryland found that an Internet connected PC will be attacked at a "near-constant rate" -- every 39 seconds on average. Read more...

© Copyright 1995-2008 JC Kelly Microsolutions. All rights reserved.  sitemap