Network Design & Integration
APSI helps enterprises get more from their networks by providing
comprehensive network assessment, design and implementation services.
APSI's team of certified network engineers analyze the current operation of a
customer’s network and quickly identify performance issues. Our expert
consultants also recommend ways to create more efficient networks capable of
supporting advanced applications. Major areas of focus include:
 | Network Surveys, Design and Management |
 | Advanced Network Security Services |
 | Voice and/or Data over Networks |
 | Directory Solutions |
From design to implementation, American Professional Services, Inc. can help you
implement new enterprise network services or extend and enhance your existing
ones. We can also help you to ensure that your network is operating at peak
efficiency, and regularly probe your network for Internet security holes.
Key Benefits
The right network integration partner can help you:
 | Meet and exceed strategic business objectives |
 | Increase network efficiency |
 | Successfully deploy new technologies and applications |
 | Grow your business by revolutionizing how you serve your customers
and interact with partners. |
 | Reduce support costs through a single, universal network |
 | Increase employee productivity |
Capabilities
- File Sharing
- File sharing is the most common function provided by networks and
consists of grouping all data files together on a server or servers. When all data files in an organization are concentrated in one
place, it is much easier for staff to share documents and other
data. It is also an excellent way for the entire office to keep
files organized according to a consistent scheme. Network operating
systems such as Windows 2000 allow the administrator to grant or
deny groups of users access to certain files.
- Print Sharing
- When printers are made available over the network, multiple users
can print to the same printer. This can reduce the number of
printers your organization must purchase, maintain and supply. Network printers are often faster and more capable than those
connected directly to individual workstations, and often have
accessories such as envelope feeders or multiple paper trays.
- E-Mail
- E-mail has become an indispensable part of today's business world.
Internal or "group" email enables staff in your office to
communicate with each other quickly and effectively. Group email
applications also provide capabilities for contact management,
scheduling and task assignment. Designated contact lists can be
shared by the whole organization instead of duplicated on each
person's own rolodex; group events can be scheduled on shared
calendars accessible by the entire staff or appropriate groups.
Equally important is a network's ability to provide a simple
organization-wide conduit for Internet email, so that your staff can
send and receive email with recipients outside of your organization
as easily as they do with fellow staff members. Where appropriate,
attaching documents to Internet email is dramatically faster,
cheaper and easier than faxing them.
- Fax Sharing
- Through the use of a shared modem(s) connected directly to the
network server, fax sharing permits users to fax documents directly
from their computers without ever having to print them out on paper. This reduces paper consumption and printer usage and is more
convenient for staff. Network faxing applications can be integrated
with email contact lists, and faxes can be sent to groups of
recipients. Specialized hardware is available for high-volume faxing
to large groups. Incoming faxes can also be handled by the network
and forwarded directly to users' computers via email, again
eliminating the need to print a hard copy of every fax - and leaving
the fax machine free for jobs that require it.
- Remote Access
- In our increasingly mobile world, staffs often require access to
their email, documents or other data from locations outside of the
office. A highly desirable network function, remote access allows
users to dial in to your organization's network via telephone and
access all of the same network resources they can access when
they're in the office. Through the use of Virtual Private Networking
(VPN), which uses the Internet to provide remote access to your
network, even the cost of long-distance telephone calls can be
avoided.
- Shared Databases
- Shared databases are an important subset of file sharing. If your
organization maintains an extensive database - for example, a
membership, client, grants or financial accounting database - a
network is the only effective way to make the database available to
multiple users at the same time. Sophisticated database server
software ensures the integrity of the data while multiple users
access it at the same time.
- Fault Tolerance
- Establishing Fault Tolerance is the process of making sure that
you have several lines of defense against accidental data loss. An
example of accidental data loss might be a hard drive failing, or
someone deleting a file by mistake. Usually, the first line of
defense is having redundant hardware, especially hard drives, so
that if one fails, another can take its place without losing data. Tape backup should always be a secondary line of defense (never
primary). While today's backup systems are good, they are not
fail-safe. Additional measures include having your server attached
to an uninterruptible power supply, so that power problems and
blackouts do not unnecessarily harm your equipment.
- Internet Access and Security
- When computers are connected via a network, they can share a
common, network connection to the Internet. This facilitates email,
document transfer and access to the resources available on the World
Wide Web. Various levels of Internet service are available,
depending on your organization's requirements. These range from a
single dial-up connection (as you might have from your home
computer) to 128K ISDN to 768K DSL or up to high-volume T-1 service.
APSI strongly recommends the use of a firewall to any
organization with any type of broadband Internet connection.

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