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In business, an intranet strategy is the use of an intranet and associated hardware and software to obtain one or more organizational objectives. An intranet is an access-restricted network used internally in an organization. An intranet uses the same concepts and technologies as the World Wide Web and Internet.
An extranet is an extension of an intranet that allows secure communications to users outside of the intranet (e.g. business partners, customers). [ 84 ] Unofficially, the Internet is the set of users, enterprises, and content providers that are interconnected by Internet Service Providers (ISP).
OpenID-based SSO for Launchpad and Ubuntu services Univention Corporate Server: Univention: Free & Open Source: Enterprise IAM with single sign-on using SAML: WSO2 Identity Server: WSO2: Free & Open Source : Yes: SAML 2.0, OpenID, OpenID Connect, OAuth 2.0, SCIM, XACML, Passive Federation ZXID: ZXID: Free Software: Yes
An extranet is a controlled private computer network that allows communication with business partners, vendors and suppliers or an authorized set of customers. It extends intranet to trusted outsiders. It provides access to needed services for authorized parties, without granting access to an organization's entire network.
The term is used in contrast to public networks, such as the Internet, but uses the same technology based on the Internet protocol suite. [2] An organization-wide intranet can constitute an important focal point of internal communication and collaboration, and provide a single starting point to access internal and external resources.
Intranet Extranet Personal Sites Team Sites Developer; IBM Connections: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes IBM Lotus Domino: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes IBM Lotus QuickPlace: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Microsoft Exchange Server: Yes Yes Yes No No No Microsoft Office Live Communications Server: No Yes Yes Yes Yes No Microsoft Sharepoint: Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
The Netscape Enterprise Server web server was developed originally by Netscape Communications Corporation in 1996, based on its 1994 release of Netsite.The product was renamed Sun Java System Web Server, reflecting the product's acquisition by Sun Microsystems, and then, when Oracle acquired Sun in 2010, [2] to Oracle iPlanet Web Server.
There are three types of services. The type is INTERNAL if the service is provided by xinetd, RPC when it based on Remote procedure call (commonly listed in the /etc/rpc file), or it can be UNLISTED when the service is neither in the /etc/services nor in the /etc/rpc files. The id is the unique identifier of the service.