News
Panacya Releases Cure-All for E-Mail Problems
- By Kathleen Ohlson
- July 13, 2005
Panacya recently released BoxTone 2.0, which features end-to-end visibility
into several e-mail environments, including Microsoft Outlook and Exchange,
and BlackBerry, the company says. It builds models of complex e-mail flows,
including SMTP, Outlook and Exchange, Exchange-to-Exchange and BlackBerry, within
an enterprise and across external service providers. It also provides a console
view of the multiple layers of an enterprise’s e-mail environment, including
mail servers, firewalls, BlackBerry devices and wireless systems worldwide.
Features include organization, location and end-user views of e-mail performance,
early-warning monitoring, remote data collection without agent deployment and
management, and alerts via voice, images, pagers and e-mail.
The software calculates e-mail delivery by time of day and day of the week
in BlackBerry, Outlook and other systems, as well as with more than 150 metrics
underlying the e-mail flow, including Mobile Data Service and Attachment Service,
Microsoft Exchange and Active Directory application metrics; server, network
and firewall metrics; and RIM SRP and wireless provider performance.
If e-mail performances change from the learned normal range or exceed predefined
SLAs on delivery time or availability, BoxTone issues alerts so IT staffers
can drill down to find the problem, determine the root cause and correct it.
Performance alerts and the health of the overall system are displayed in radar,
mail-flow, events and analysis consoles.
BoxTone monitors BlackBerry performance and accessibility for specific users
and user groups. For example, it can be configured to ensure users at off-site
locations continually receive e-mail from their BlackBerry devices.
The software supports Sarbanes-Oxley, HIPAA, NASD Investment Advisors Act and
other compliance and regulatory requirements.
BoxTone 2.0 is available as a software license or as pre-packaged service appliance,
in both standard availability and high availability. Pricing starts at $30,000.
About the Author
Kathleen Ohlson is senior editor at Application Development Trends magazine.