Some people believe that you may not always need to remove spyware because Spyware is not always malicious. There are many kinds of Spyware that can infect your PC. Most of them are, thankfully, not uploaded with malicious intent. But why take chances. First of all let us analyze how Spyware comes to get onto the system in the first place. People who browse the Internet come across many sites that offer free download. Clicking on these downloads may bring with it some program in the background or hidden from the user. This may be in the form of ActiveX controls or components. When we download certain programs the download program flashes a message requiring the user to allow the download of an ActiveX control without which the download will not work. This ActiveX control is registered in the CLSID files of the registry. Once the download is complete the ActiveX control stored as a .OCX file begins its stealthy work. Best Spyware removal programs are especially weary of ActiveX controls and remove any malicious looking .OCX files.
Not All Spyware Cause Damage Spyware is not always illegal. You may have inadvertently agreed to the use of the Spyware by clicking on the agree button without reading the agreement. This kind of Spyware, however, does not carry out any malicious activity. It just collects data off all the Internet sites you visit and mails the information to the host where it came from. This does not mean that you cannot remove it when you want. You can do so with certain free Spyware Virus removal programs that search and remove adware and Spyware as well. There are malicious and downright criminal Spyware as well. This type of Spyware locates personal information such as that pertaining to your credit card or online bank information and is used for criminal activities usually causing a lot of damage to you. The system must be regularly scanned with free Spyware Adware removal utilities and then the registry cleaned with a registry cleaner to make sure the system is always secure.
Run Anti Spyware Every Time You Think Of It Spyware can be removed from the system by using anti Spyware programs. However the anti Spyware software does not remove the entries of the ware from the registry. Special free anti Spyware removal software is required to do just that. Free anti Spyware removal software such as Microsoft Spyware removal tool, Yahoo Spyware removal utility or any of the free Spyware removal tools can scan the registry for broken links and useless entries that are no longer linked to programs. These free Spyware removal tools will then remove these entries from the registry freeing up disk space and compacting the registry for efficient use.
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Author is admin and technical expert associated with development of security and performance enhancing software like Registry Cleaner, Anti Spyware, Window Cleaner, Anti Spam Filter. Learn how to use Anti Spyware software to clean and protect Pc. Visit our Home page or Resource Center to read more.
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Sunday, April 20, 2008
Friday, April 18, 2008
Increased Revenue and Optimized Routes
The Cost of Business Many service companies (e.g. plumbing, air conditioning) compete in very competitive markets. These companies focus on maximizing revenues while controlling costs. However, the nature scheduling work orders is chaotic and presents hurdles for companies when controlling costs.
Call centers schedule work orders as they come in. These work orders are not in a specific order or a specific location. Organizing these schedules becomes overwhelming and requires knowledge of the areas being scheduled.
Costs are associated with this responsibility and errors can cost the company money. The call center needs to schedule work orders quickly in an organized fashion. The efficiency of the routes the call center maintains can cost the company as well.
Translucent Scheduler 2007 provides sophisticated route optimization features using geographical data. Through GPS technologies Translucent Scheduler 2007 calculates driving distance, allowing the software to recommend and optimize your schedules quickly and efficiently.
The Impact of Mileage Many service companies are realizing the impact that mileage has on their revenues. Companies are spending a fortune on gasoline and loose revenue to unproductive time.
Unproductive time should be minimized because it does not generate revenue. A technician that travel a hundred and twenty miles spends at least a hour more driving than a technician that drive sixty miles. This hour spent driving does not generate revenue and is unproductive.
Gasoline expenses should be minimized as well. In the same example a vehicle gets twenty miles to a gallon and gallon of regular unleaded is two dollars and twenty five cents, and then the sixty mile difference in the previous example would save the company six dollars and seventy five cents for one vehicle for a single day.
Translucent Scheduler 2007 has been designed considering impact of mileage on company s revenue. Our software identifies openings which meets the requirements of a work order (e.g. time availability) and ranks the results base on distance. The system calculates the distance from the previous work order and to the following work order. This allows the user to quickly identify openings which require the least amount of mileage.
Return on Investment Companies that control costs associated with scheduling work orders and the routes required to service locations can increase revenues by decreasing expenses. Translucent Scheduler 2007 can help your company realize this through our scheduling and dispatching features. Optimized routes minimize unproductive time and maximize revenue generating time. Routes which require less driving distance have a direct effect on gasoline costs and vehicle maintenance as well.
About the Author Translucent Consulting is a software development and consulting firm focused on technologies and products that will assist companies through innovation. We are proud to announce the release of Translucent Scheduler 2007, our approach to appointment scheduling software & dispatch software solutions.
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Call centers schedule work orders as they come in. These work orders are not in a specific order or a specific location. Organizing these schedules becomes overwhelming and requires knowledge of the areas being scheduled.
Costs are associated with this responsibility and errors can cost the company money. The call center needs to schedule work orders quickly in an organized fashion. The efficiency of the routes the call center maintains can cost the company as well.
Translucent Scheduler 2007 provides sophisticated route optimization features using geographical data. Through GPS technologies Translucent Scheduler 2007 calculates driving distance, allowing the software to recommend and optimize your schedules quickly and efficiently.
The Impact of Mileage Many service companies are realizing the impact that mileage has on their revenues. Companies are spending a fortune on gasoline and loose revenue to unproductive time.
Unproductive time should be minimized because it does not generate revenue. A technician that travel a hundred and twenty miles spends at least a hour more driving than a technician that drive sixty miles. This hour spent driving does not generate revenue and is unproductive.
Gasoline expenses should be minimized as well. In the same example a vehicle gets twenty miles to a gallon and gallon of regular unleaded is two dollars and twenty five cents, and then the sixty mile difference in the previous example would save the company six dollars and seventy five cents for one vehicle for a single day.
Translucent Scheduler 2007 has been designed considering impact of mileage on company s revenue. Our software identifies openings which meets the requirements of a work order (e.g. time availability) and ranks the results base on distance. The system calculates the distance from the previous work order and to the following work order. This allows the user to quickly identify openings which require the least amount of mileage.
Return on Investment Companies that control costs associated with scheduling work orders and the routes required to service locations can increase revenues by decreasing expenses. Translucent Scheduler 2007 can help your company realize this through our scheduling and dispatching features. Optimized routes minimize unproductive time and maximize revenue generating time. Routes which require less driving distance have a direct effect on gasoline costs and vehicle maintenance as well.
About the Author Translucent Consulting is a software development and consulting firm focused on technologies and products that will assist companies through innovation. We are proud to announce the release of Translucent Scheduler 2007, our approach to appointment scheduling software & dispatch software solutions.
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Thursday, April 10, 2008
Lean Manufacturing Software Alone is Not the Answer to What Ails Manufacturing Performance
For years, manufacturers have searched for ways to boost ailing production performance. From the promise of ERP, to Lean initiatives, Six Sigma and a plethora of other tips and techniques, manufacturers have become the experts at sizing up what works and, just as importantly, what doesn t.
A couple of months ago, Invistics circulated a survey to some 1,500 pharmaceutical manufacturers about production performance and the techniques and technologies they ve used to break down barriers and achieve sustained results. Some of their responses were predictable; others surprising.
For instance, you d be hard-pressed to find a pharmaceutical manufacturer who doesn t have an ERP system with millions sunk into license fees, implementation and maintenance, yet just a little over a third of these manufacturers feel their ERPs have produced the ROI they expected. There are a variety of reasons, not the least of which is the fact that most of these systems are trapped in silos with little or no integration among them and no real-time visibility into plant floor dynamics. If you can t see what s happening on a minute-by-minute basis on the floor, you re already behind the performance eight-ball.
ERP systems are also designed for perfect world scenarios and static parameters, while pharmaceutical manufacturers are awash in variability and constantly changing dynamics. Survey respondents said variability in products, processes and customer demand is a huge performance challenge and that a lack of tools to manage variability is a major impediment to success.
Variability Kills Manufacturing Performance Variability is directly responsible for creating customer service issues and over 70% said it makes scheduling difficult. SKU volatility and shared equipment add to the complexity that ERP systems can t account for these systems simply expect you to have the answers. Consequently, your performance is only as good as the estimates you input, which in reality are not based on what s actually happening on the plant floor. Add-on products can help, but many require you to break out your PhDs to operate them and take months to compile adequate data.
While ERP has its problems, inventory optimization, advanced planning and scheduling (APS) solutions, and manufacturing execution systems (MES) were rated even lower. Less than 20% of our survey respondents felt their MES and inventory optimization solutions had delivered satisfactory results, while less than 10% felt their APS had produced improvements in manufacturing performance. Again, variability seems to be the biggest culprit. That makes sense when you consider that most technologies anticipate what s in front of them by looking back at what s happened in the past and don t consider the variability ahead. In order to effectively optimize in highly variable environments, manufacturers have to have simulation tools that can help them compile what-if scenarios that take variability into account.
Of course, variability isn t the only factor limiting performance optimization. Manufacturers in our survey also laid blame on functional silos within the organization, a lack of focus on manufacturing agility, limited skills and training in the workforce, limited visibility into plant performance and a lack of metrics to motivate change. Interestingly enough, in an Operational Excellence survey Invistics recently sponsored with Pharmaceutical Manufacturing, some of the same organizational issues were cited as obstacles to improvement.
That survey also pointed out an overwhelming concern about a lack of manufacturing agility again, the inability to quickly adjust to changing customer demands creates significant performance problems.
Getting Lean Gets Mixed Results The manufacturers surveyed by Invistics haven t shied away from performance improvement techniques either. Well over 50% have implemented Lean, Six Sigma or Operational Excellence and results have been somewhat better. Almost half said their Lean initiatives have produced satisfactory results, while around a third felt Six Sigma or Operational Excellence have helped. Manufacturers are still plagued by variability and other limiting factors when attempting to implement these initiatives, particularly Lean.
New Methodologies Combined with Simulation and Analytics Software Better Address Performance Problems Since almost all the survey respondents said that performance optimization was important or critically important to their success, a solution beyond what s already been tried seems to be in order. Invistics suggests a flow manufacturing methodology combined with simulation and optimization software to attack all the barriers to performance improvement.
Flow manufacturing methodologies break down organizational silos and help manufacturers be more agile while also blunting the impact of limited skills and training. Decisions are made based on product flow through the factory, not departmental metrics. Employees have more control and KPIs, including capacity utilization, inventory and cycle times, improve almost immediately.
Combined with advanced analytics and optimization software, these innovative methodologies help manufacturers utilize real-time data from the plant floor to set metrics and better control inventory levels and cycle times to improve customer service levels. And, since that same updated plant floor data is fed back into ERP and MES systems, all systems works better and delivers more consistent results.
Finally, simulation software lets manufacturers model a variety of scenarios to determine their impact on inventory, cycle times and customer service levels. Need to reduce costs? Dial in lower inventory levels and see how customer service is impacted. Want to raise customer service levels? Change cycle times and add inventory to balance acceptable levels of cost while achieving customer service goals. Advanced analytics software helps manufacturers make better decisions and also overcome their chief nemesis: variability.
Utilizing this kind of methodology combined with analytics and simulation software lets manufacturers fully leverage investments in ERP and other technologies. Lean, Six Sigma and Operational Excellence implementations are more successful and managers can respond better to fluctuations in customer demand. All it takes is a little extra software, a more effective flow-based manufacturing methodology and a view of what s in front of you, not behind.
Author Bio
Tom Knight co-founded Invistics, a lean manufacturing software company, in 1999 and serves as Chief Strategy Officer. Prior to founding Invistics, Tom spent 10 years improving supply chains as a manufacturing executive at Alcoa and Siemens. Tom has a B.S. M.S. and MBA from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where Tom conducted research on software to improve manufacturing planning and scheduling, receiving the Goodyear Prize in Manufacturing Management.
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A couple of months ago, Invistics circulated a survey to some 1,500 pharmaceutical manufacturers about production performance and the techniques and technologies they ve used to break down barriers and achieve sustained results. Some of their responses were predictable; others surprising.
For instance, you d be hard-pressed to find a pharmaceutical manufacturer who doesn t have an ERP system with millions sunk into license fees, implementation and maintenance, yet just a little over a third of these manufacturers feel their ERPs have produced the ROI they expected. There are a variety of reasons, not the least of which is the fact that most of these systems are trapped in silos with little or no integration among them and no real-time visibility into plant floor dynamics. If you can t see what s happening on a minute-by-minute basis on the floor, you re already behind the performance eight-ball.
ERP systems are also designed for perfect world scenarios and static parameters, while pharmaceutical manufacturers are awash in variability and constantly changing dynamics. Survey respondents said variability in products, processes and customer demand is a huge performance challenge and that a lack of tools to manage variability is a major impediment to success.
Variability Kills Manufacturing Performance Variability is directly responsible for creating customer service issues and over 70% said it makes scheduling difficult. SKU volatility and shared equipment add to the complexity that ERP systems can t account for these systems simply expect you to have the answers. Consequently, your performance is only as good as the estimates you input, which in reality are not based on what s actually happening on the plant floor. Add-on products can help, but many require you to break out your PhDs to operate them and take months to compile adequate data.
While ERP has its problems, inventory optimization, advanced planning and scheduling (APS) solutions, and manufacturing execution systems (MES) were rated even lower. Less than 20% of our survey respondents felt their MES and inventory optimization solutions had delivered satisfactory results, while less than 10% felt their APS had produced improvements in manufacturing performance. Again, variability seems to be the biggest culprit. That makes sense when you consider that most technologies anticipate what s in front of them by looking back at what s happened in the past and don t consider the variability ahead. In order to effectively optimize in highly variable environments, manufacturers have to have simulation tools that can help them compile what-if scenarios that take variability into account.
Of course, variability isn t the only factor limiting performance optimization. Manufacturers in our survey also laid blame on functional silos within the organization, a lack of focus on manufacturing agility, limited skills and training in the workforce, limited visibility into plant performance and a lack of metrics to motivate change. Interestingly enough, in an Operational Excellence survey Invistics recently sponsored with Pharmaceutical Manufacturing, some of the same organizational issues were cited as obstacles to improvement.
That survey also pointed out an overwhelming concern about a lack of manufacturing agility again, the inability to quickly adjust to changing customer demands creates significant performance problems.
Getting Lean Gets Mixed Results The manufacturers surveyed by Invistics haven t shied away from performance improvement techniques either. Well over 50% have implemented Lean, Six Sigma or Operational Excellence and results have been somewhat better. Almost half said their Lean initiatives have produced satisfactory results, while around a third felt Six Sigma or Operational Excellence have helped. Manufacturers are still plagued by variability and other limiting factors when attempting to implement these initiatives, particularly Lean.
New Methodologies Combined with Simulation and Analytics Software Better Address Performance Problems Since almost all the survey respondents said that performance optimization was important or critically important to their success, a solution beyond what s already been tried seems to be in order. Invistics suggests a flow manufacturing methodology combined with simulation and optimization software to attack all the barriers to performance improvement.
Flow manufacturing methodologies break down organizational silos and help manufacturers be more agile while also blunting the impact of limited skills and training. Decisions are made based on product flow through the factory, not departmental metrics. Employees have more control and KPIs, including capacity utilization, inventory and cycle times, improve almost immediately.
Combined with advanced analytics and optimization software, these innovative methodologies help manufacturers utilize real-time data from the plant floor to set metrics and better control inventory levels and cycle times to improve customer service levels. And, since that same updated plant floor data is fed back into ERP and MES systems, all systems works better and delivers more consistent results.
Finally, simulation software lets manufacturers model a variety of scenarios to determine their impact on inventory, cycle times and customer service levels. Need to reduce costs? Dial in lower inventory levels and see how customer service is impacted. Want to raise customer service levels? Change cycle times and add inventory to balance acceptable levels of cost while achieving customer service goals. Advanced analytics software helps manufacturers make better decisions and also overcome their chief nemesis: variability.
Utilizing this kind of methodology combined with analytics and simulation software lets manufacturers fully leverage investments in ERP and other technologies. Lean, Six Sigma and Operational Excellence implementations are more successful and managers can respond better to fluctuations in customer demand. All it takes is a little extra software, a more effective flow-based manufacturing methodology and a view of what s in front of you, not behind.
Author Bio
Tom Knight co-founded Invistics, a lean manufacturing software company, in 1999 and serves as Chief Strategy Officer. Prior to founding Invistics, Tom spent 10 years improving supply chains as a manufacturing executive at Alcoa and Siemens. Tom has a B.S. M.S. and MBA from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where Tom conducted research on software to improve manufacturing planning and scheduling, receiving the Goodyear Prize in Manufacturing Management.
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