Mantralogix Inc. supplies Tier 1 personal computers. We work closely with the brand name manufacturers to bring you the latest in technology, the best value, and the most reliable solutions. Our system support technicians are fully trained and certified by each manufacturer to ensure the highest level of service. Our experience with enterprise wide, government, and large business technology environments will help you make the right decisions.
workstations
Mantralogix Inc. provides powerful workstations to those customers that require ultimate performance from their desktop computers. Graphics, speed, power, compatibility, maximum uptime, and expandability are some of the features our workstations offer to high-end power users
notebook computers
Demand in the Notebook PC market is for power, high performance, light weight and affordability. Technological advances in 2001 means you can take your files with you wherever you go. Our product experts can advise on the newest PC technologies and security devices/techniques for mobile computing.
Today, notebook computers are standard issue for sales professionals, consultants, and other road warriors who routinely spend several days a week away from the office. Increasingly, however, companies view notebooks as viable organization-wide replacements for desktop PCs. Notebooks attached to a separate monitor and keyboard can function as a desktop processor. Unplugged, the notebook becomes a portable office PC full of work-related files and emails that employees can take on the road or home for the evening or weekend.
display technology
All our monitors are optimized to work in graphic-intensive environments or in any application requiring superb image quality. We supply a full range of both traditional CRT monitors and flat panel displays using the newest energy-saving LCD or LED technologies.
A new generation of digital, flat panel displays is poised to enter the PC mainstream, thanks to ongoing cost reduction and performance enhancements to LCD technology. This presents an enticing opportunity to upgrade the desktop PC video environment to purely digital interconnect and display technologies. As with any new PC peripheral however, the transition to digital LCD displays presents a complex set of technical and business challenges for the industry.
handheld computing
Handheld computers and mobile phones entering into the corporate sector has grown exponentially over the past year. According to market research, this number is only going to increase. The entrance of key players such as IBM, Compaq, NEC, Hewlett-Packard, Nokia, Ericsson and Microsoft signals that the handheld has potential for much more than just personal use. Indeed, corporations can realize key objectives by providing mobile devices to their workers - such as streamlining business processes and increasing productivity. The challenge now facing organizations is how to leverage all the benefits of mobile devices into the corporate environment - without losing functionality or control.
Millions of people work in non-traditional office environments. Such an environment might be a series of temporary workplaces, as in the case of traveling sales representatives or executives; or, it may be that the nature of a job requires the worker to move from place to place, as in factory work, package delivery, field service or health care professions. In the last three years, a number of portable information appliances, from handheld PCs to pocket PCs, have become available to assist this mobile work force. These devices not only assist in managing appointments and contacts, but also provide a tool for replacing paper-based business processes with forms-based applications. The increased efficiency and accuracy of capturing data quickly into a computing device can result in higher employee productivity, faster business reporting for decision-making, and reduced operational costs.
thin client
In an ideal world, it would be easy to deploy and manage the robust client/server applications that tap today's abundant PC power. But if you support a distributed computing environment built around the Wintel computing architecture, you know better. To a large extent, the culprit is a Microsoft OS design that's not quite at home in the enterprise.
While hundreds of add-on products promise to reduce cost of ownership through centralized desktop management, few deliver benefits that justify costs. Most managers simply resign themselves to the fact that supporting large numbers of PC workstations will be incredibly expensive and inefficient, and chalk it up to a cost of doing business. But thin-client computing now offers real hope for progress. The state of affairs described above is like a fat pitch down the middle of home plate, just begging for thin-client computing proponents to smack it out of the park
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