Cloud-based security patching, software deployment, remote desktop and management, real-time reporting to enable IT support for remote and home-based workers.Action1 service is free, without any functionality limitations, for up to 10 endpoints. The Cloud service allows to implement remote support of at-home employees and enforce the same IT security standards as in office-based environments.
Fully functional free edition for up to 10 endpoints with no expiration date. More details >
As Good as a Paid Version
What is the name of the speaker and the utility company that our speaker represented? Our speakers' name was Allen Freeman and he worked for Cobb EMC. What resources provide energy to the utility? Resources like coal, nuclear, renewable, and biomass all provide energy for the utility. Hint DIG IT YOUR WAY! Description of the level There's a lot of dirt and a Starite behind a steel door blue. Possible solutions You must dig in this no matter what, so if you want to beat it three times in a row you will need a shovel, hoe, or pickaxe. And you will need a mount, such as roc, reindeer, or pterodactyl. Grab a digging tool and hop on your mount and activate the switch near the. Action1 is a cloud-based endpoint security management platform for software deployment, patch management, IT asset inventory and endpoint configuration management. Try free edition now.
Unlike most vendors that reserve access to advanced features to paid users, Action1`s motto is to provide the same functionality to everyone. It does not matter if you are a big company with thousands of employees or a small business with just a dozen of computers. Running a free version, you will have access to all functionality available in Action1, including remote patch and software distribution, Action1 App Store, reporting, alerting, and many more. No restrictions. Period.
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No Expiration Date
Access to Action1 features is not limited in time. You can use the Free Edition as long as you want. There is no expiration date, nor will we pressure you to convert to a paid subscription. What is more, the time you spend browsing the Action1 web console is not limited either. You can run numerous reports, configure alerts, export data, and orchestrate patch and software deployments without any extra charges.
Customer Support Included
All clients matter. Don’t worry, we won’t have to face problems all alone. In Action1 we care about all our customers and won’t ever leave you with unanswered questions. You can always contact our friendly Customer Support team by submiting a ticket. We will do our best to help you resolve issues and fix them. There are no limitations on how many tickets you can submit per year, we’ll address them in a timely matter depending on our current workload.
Ready to Scale When You Are
Action1 licensing is plain and simple. Businesses with 10 or fewer endpoints can enjoy fully-functional Action1 services for free. Forever. Since there is no commitment when signing up for a free version, organizations with more than 10 endpoints can also give Action1 a try and start small. If it’s time to scale up, we are here for you. Our pricing is transparent — we charge per endpoint and the cost is one of the lowest in the industry thanks to our Cloud-based multitennant architecture. Until then, please enjoy Free Edition with no limits or restrictions.
Trusted by Thousands of Customers Worldwide:
Fully functional free edition for up to 10 endpoints with no expiration date. More details >
Action1 endpoint management platform gives us close-to-instant ability to understand what is happening across our entire network of endpoints and provide us with management tools so we can respond in real-time.
Credit Union in Ohio
Deploying patch management software like Action1 in order to understand which software needs to be updated and where is critical for our network of several thousand employee workstations. Cloud-based patching is must-have for any organization.
Major Regional Hospital on the East Coast
Before we started using Action1, our fleet of vehicles and distributed network of regional offices were practically unmanageable. Action1 manages patching, helps us to install software remotely and allows us to perform vulnerability assessment on our endpoints.
Nationwide Transportation Company
My original motivation for learning how to code wasn’t because developers were in high demand career-wise, or because there was a lot of support for women interested in tech.
My original motivation for learning was because I really, really wanted to create a mini social network for students working on civic engagement and social impact causes in their community, so that different student organizations working on similar non-profit-driven missions could connect and share resources and ultimately become *better* at what they were doing.
Incredibly, I signed up my first 300 users and created my first prototype of that site — a WordPress site with a Buddypress plugin — without knowing an ounce of code. I’d somehow convinced my freshman-year economics professor, Dr. Leachman, to be my advisor for a self-crafted independent study course on social networks and civic engagement, which in my mind validated the 8 hours a day I was spending working on the site. I was literally treating it like a full-time job, which was hilarious because in addition to balancing it with four other econ courses and a part-time job, I was also — again — in the unenviable position of not really knowing how to code.
What I mostly did, instead, was look at my WordPress files and guess at their functions. I’d change up CSS values, and google CSS snippets, but I didn’t know that it would’ve been incredibly helpful to master CSS *selectors*. I’d move around text, and accidentally break PHP, and then hilariously call up my hosting company to ask them to reverse my changes by loading an older version of the database.
Ultimately, I probably spent much more time than I needed working on development features with a hammer instead of a scalpel, but reflecting back, I don’t regret it, because it was so much fun — because:
A) In addition to installing an atrocious number of WordPress and Buddypress plugins, I was scheduling interviews with students, professors, and university staff, and learning about their goals and motivations, and trying to find buy-in where I could, and demo-ing my site.
B) People were truly excited about the potential for the social network to shine a light on student civic initiatives and local non-profits, and had lots of questions about why people would want to visit my site instead of Facebook, and loved the gamification features (which I installed using a Buddypress plugin). I got lots of buy-in from people who weren’t sure where this social network was going, but were interested in getting aboard the ride.
C) I wasn’t always able to figure out how to implement the suggestions people gave me, but I remember that it was thrilling — always — to make some small change and see it come live on the site.
Fast forward: I finally pick up a legit CSS and jQuery and WordPress book, and find it helpful for when I’m thinking up prototypes to A/B test at my job, where I’m having tons of fun trying to increase the rate of action-taking and sharing of meaningful progressive content.
Ibeesoft data recovery professional 3 6 amp. Fast forward: I enroll in a 12-week Mon./Wed. evening front-end development course, have an incredible amount of fun learning with my fellow part-timer classmates, learn *that’s* how HTML/CSS/JS files can work together to *run in one’s localhost*, learn about how *filepaths* in HTML files work for the first time, and start taking the Chrome web console seriously as a debugger tool, and learn about how media queries are used for responsive design.
Fast forward: I pick up Bootstrap and Git (convenient because I end up using both for my job, where I’ve transitioned into doing front-end web development full-time), and discover that I *love* going to hackathons and learning from/working with/teaching other people.
Fast forward: I realize that I suck at javascript. I read Eloquent Javascript for the first time, but read it incorrectly — i.e. glancing at the solutions, skipping over the exercises, and not often fully comprehending the concepts I’m reading about: things like closure and hoisting and the unique treatment of the javascript “this.” I take a class on Javascript, which introduces me to a whole new world of thinking in terms of objects and classes, and I severely regret the fact that I had zero interest in taking an introductory Computer Science course (“I don’t want to have a career where I stare at a computer screen all day!” “I don’t want to follow in my dad’s footsteps!” “I probably won’t be very good at it!”) for the majority of my time in school.
Fast forward: I lose my initial, irrational fear of working with APIs.
Actionify 1 1 6 Equals
Fast forward: I self-study Learn Python the Hard Way and Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming with Python course on Udacity, which — funnily enough — helps accelerate my understanding of javascript. From going through Django tutorials as well, I suddenly realize how little I know of regular expressions and creating models/databases and — in general — full-stack, back-end web development. Sqlpro studio 1 0 172 – powerful database manager training.
I am lucky enough to have a wonderful significant other and family and friends who support me, though, and who have helped me discover that learning programming together — i.e. reading a tutorial together and pair programming through exercises and projects — can be an incredibly helpful part of the learning process.
Current time: I feel the pressure of learning ALL THE THINGS.
Current time: I feel the pressure of learning ALL THE THINGS, but what I do have to show for it?
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Damn.
You know, this post was supposed to be about actionifying the news — i.e. using a website, in some way, to help people digest the terrible things happening in the news, and turn that outrage into positive action that can be tracked — step-by-step — and historically — through time. A timeline of real-time advocacy, if you will. That was my idea.
Somewhere, I think, my motivations got bogged down by the technicalities. And maybe that’s okay. I’ve found that the more I learn, the more I see different languages and technologies tying together, and the more competent I’ll be if I ever want to product manage and build out an incipient fleeting idea.
But I *am* starting to realize that maybe — just maybe — I need to take a deep breath, and not lose sight of the ultimate goal of mastering models-views-controllers or python or a particular javascript framework… the ultimate goal being, of course, the creation itself.
In this current world — where we have the option of choosing between Django vs. Rails and WordPress vs. Drupal and SASS vs. LESS and Twitter Boostrap vs. Zurb Foundation and Flask vs. Sinatra and MySQL vs. Postgres vs. MongoDB and AngularJS vs. NodeJS and Jekyll vs. Tumblr vs. WordPress vs. Blogspot vs. Ghost and etc. vs. etc. — let’s not lose sight of the end users and the ultimate value added of our products.
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After all, no one questions that Watsi runs on X technology stack when it raises enough money to cover the medical fees of thousands of people, or that Upworthy runs on Rails when it’s able to shine million of views on formerly unknown inspiring people and projects, or that Nicholas Kristof’s writings (no code!) on his New York Times blog raises thousands of dollars for out-of-sight causes, or that Everytown runs on Y technology stack when it raises enough donations to deliver over 2 million postcards against gun violence to policy decision makers, or that the technologies behind Avaaz, Change, and MoveOn.org for their petition tools and advocacy platforms are Q, R, and S.
What matters is the user experience, the use case, and the outcome. The technology is only a tool.
So without further ado:
Dear Self:
Don’t stress out.
With reflection,
LP