Using External Organization Directories With Lotus Workflow 3.0 This improves performance by skipping many lookups and keeping the database If you re using a Domino Directory as an external Organization Directory, http://www-128.ibm.com/developerworks/lotus/library/ls-extdirWF/
Extractions: var title = "Using external organization directories with Lotus Workflow 3.0"; var forumURL = ""; var contentAreaList = "lotus, "; var emailAbstract = "Lotus Workflow 3.0 provides enhanced processing of person information external to the Organization Directory. This article covers the steps necessary to utilize a Domino or LDAP directory, or a custom external database format. "; Country/region select All of dW eServer Lotus Rational Tivoli WebSphere Autonomic computing Grid computing Java technology Linux Open source Power Architecture Web architecture Wireless XML dW forums dW Subscription alphaWorks All of IBM Home Products My account developerWorks ... Rate this page 01 Jul 2002 Lotus Workflow 3.0 provides enhanced processing of person information external to the Organization Directory. This article covers the steps necessary to utilize a Domino or LDAP directory, or a custom external database format. Lotus Workflow 3.0 gives you increased flexibility in defining your Organization Directory. In previous releases, you were required to store all your person, group, and related information in the Organization Directory database. Workflow 3.0 offers enhanced processing of external resources such as a Domino Directory or an LDAP directory, and you can now define an external custom directory as your Organization Directory. This lets you leverage existing information, maintaining your organization's data with much less effort.
MacDevCenter.com: Panther And Active Directory The applications continue to dispatch their lookups to Open Directory. This is an important option for organizations that manage a medium to large http://www.macdevcenter.com/pub/a/mac/2003/12/09/active_directory.html
Extractions: Editor's note This is an update (April 2004) to the original article that Michael Bartosh published on Dec. 9, 2003. Mac OS X 10.3 Panther- in both its client and server personalities- brings signifigant progress to Apple's place in Windows-centric organizations. Unlike the LDAPv3-based Jaguar strategies we examined in my earlier articles, Panther's capabilities have been specifically engineered by Apple to work in much the same way that a Windows client would when joining and participating in an Active Directory. This allows us to spend much less time on the basics of directory integration, and a lot more time on more advanced scenarios and deeper integration techniques. However- it should be noted that Panther is in general a very different animal from Jaguar. Support infrastructures are expensive to build and maintain- updating those infrastructures for a new major OS revision shouldn't be undertaken hastily. This is especially the case for Panther's Active Directory Plug-in, which has never before seen widespread deployment. A better understanding of this phenominon can be seen by examining Apple's LDAPv3 Plug-In- Jaguar's primary method for interaction with Active Directory. Throughout the 10.2 development cycle it made tremendous gains not only in stability and robustness, but also in its feature set. As more and more Apple customers test and deploy the Active Directory Plug-In, it will likely follow a similar path.
Extractions: Bob Morgan Motivation For the following reasons, it is increasingly important that identifiers be made coherent and consistent throughout the enterprise. Identifiers are the foundation of the campus middleware infrastructure. If you don't know what to call an entity, you can't find it, and if you can't find it, you can't provide it with services like authentication or directories. Taking a look at the policies associated with the creation and assignment of IDs will illuminate many of the gray areas that institutions have about who can access particular IT resources. Separate systems are no longer islands; increasingly, applications and situations require the use of more than one system.
Massachusetts City Directories Massachusetts City and Town Residential Street directories. Unfortunately, we do not provide individual lookups or requests at this time. http://www.mass-doc.com/city_directory_research.htm
Extractions: Unrelated But Frequently Asked Massachusetts Genealogy Questions: How do I obtain a birth, marriage or death record or certificate from 1916 - 2005? What about birth, marriage and or death records or registers from 1841 - 1915? Massachusetts Genealogy : How do you locate vital records before 1841? ... Learn how to obtain a Massachusetts divorce record or file from 1922 - 2004. Massachusetts city and town directories offer an abundance of terrific clues and research tips about finding people from the past. Most of this information cannot be found elsewhere. The older city directories are much like today's telephone books except they offer a better panorama or "birds eye view" into the makeup of a community at a particular time period. For example, do you need to know the names of all Boston Methodist church organizations in the year 1900? Do you need to find the names of all cemeteries that were in existence in Lowell in 1870? Do you need a list of all civic and social organizations in 1880 Worcester?
Lookups English Lutheran Directory Lookup in the subject line of your message} FRATERNAL organizations. History of Mansfield Lodge No. 35, F. AM, 18141951 http://www.rootsweb.com/~ohrichla/Lookups.htm
Extractions: Richland Co., Ohio Lookups To sign up to be a lookup volunteer, please contact Amy CEMETERY RECORDS - no lookups available at this time - You may try checking some of our on-line cemetery resources ... or ... post a message to the Richland Co. Mailing List CENSUS 1830 Richland Co. Census 1840 Richland Co. Census 1850 Richland Co. Census 1860 Richland Co. Census 1870 Richland Co. Census Index. 1880 Richland Co. Census Index 1900 Richland Co. Census Index 1910 Richland Co. Census Index 1920 Richland Co. Census Index 1930 Richland Co. Census Index CHURCH RECORDS The First English Lutheran Church Directory, 1987
Extractions: Search Tool Guide for Effective Internet Search Search by Topic TOOL GUIDE HOME ABOUT THIS GUIDE Guide organization Detailed guide contents SEARCH BY TOPIC Academic references Business, investment, jobs Computers, Internet Education: teacher, student resources ... Shopping: other SEARCH OTHER THAN BY TOPIC Country, language, audience, Internet application File format Search tool abilities Locating people, organizations, places Meta and all-in-one search tools Information Source Description Web Address Argali White and Yellow pages www.argali.com Copernic E-mail Addresses: on specialized sites Business Directories: Search for enterprises (location, phone, website address, direction, etc.) on business directories sites: Search Tool Guide: Business, investment, jobs
California GenWeb Archives Index Page No lookups can be done, and all requests for such will be deleted. Thank you. organizations (medical, dental, fraternal, NDGW, NSGW, etc.) http://www.cagenweb.com/archives/
Extractions: The CAGenWeb Archives Project T he CAGenWeb Archives were begun June 28, 2004 and managed by Kathy Sedler until Spring 2005. In that time, Kathy and her team including Nancy Pratt Melton coordinated the transcription and publishing of over 10,000 pages of information useful to genealogists. We owe them all a great debt of gratitude for being willing to get this going and the momentum of the CAGenWeb Archives continues. We have an ongoing team of transcribers working hard to bring you whatever data seems genealogically relevant. The intention of this site is to provide the researcher with as much information as possible through the collection of many databases. All information on the site is free - to remain free - and will not be used for any profit or gain whatsoever. T his huge undertaking is a cooperative project, based solely on volunteers. Whether you have something already transcribed, or would like to help with any future projects, your input and assistance is greatly appreciated - and necessary. The more participation there is, the greater the benefit to all. These archives are based on many many hours of volunteered time, and need your help to grow. My goal for these pages is that it become a place where researchers look to - and can expect to find - information to help them learn more about their California ancestors. A Jana Black , acting Archives Manager.
Extractions: Select a State 'All States' Alabama Alaska American Samoa Arizona Arkansas Military Military Americas Military Pacific California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Dist Of Columbia Florida Georgia Guam Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Puerto Rico Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virgin Islands Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Alberta British Columbia Manitoba Labrador New Brunswick Newfoundland NW Territories Nova Scotia Ontario Prince Edward Is Quebec Saskatchewan Yukon Terr Back to
What's New In Domino 6 Server? A Multiple Organization Domino Directory allows a Service Provider to store These new statistics related to directory lookups are available Database. http://www.uwindsor.ca/units/its/helpdesk/itshd_faq.nsf/0/813d3d1ab97fa19b85256e
Extractions: If you're using Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) to store additional address books for Lotus Notes, you can now leverage Novell Directory Services to access the LDAP information quickly and seamlessly. Lotus Notes can be configured to use Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP) directories as an additional address book store. This provides an excellent way to leverage NDS directories in environments where Lotus Notes is installed. Lotus recommends that LDAP lookups be secured using the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL), which will be a focus of this AppNote. This AppNote covers: This section talks about two Notes features that integrate with the directory: Notes Client LDAP account lookups and Domino Server Directory Assistance LDAP lookups.
ASU Libraries Telephone E-Mail Directories US Directory First Choice These free directories are not as up to date as the database we of nearby businesses, and reverse lookup by phone number. http://www.asu.edu/lib/hayden/ref/faq/phbks.html
Extractions: x42.com rfc-index text only 1. Introduction Over time, there have been several RFCs [2, 3, 4] about approaches for providing Internet Directories. Many of the earlier documents discussed white pages directories that supply mappings from a person's name to their telephone number, email address, etc. More recently, there has been discussion of directories that map from a company name to a domain name or web site. Many people are using DNS as a directory today to find this type of information about a given company. Typically when DNS is used, users guess the domain name of the company they are looking for and then prepend "www.". This makes it highly desirable for a company to have an easily 2. Directory Population 2.1 What to do? There are two issues in populating a directory: finding all the domain names (building the skeleton) and associating those domains with entities (adding the meat). These two issues are discussed below. 2.2 Building the skeleton In "building the skeleton", it is popular to suggest using a variant of a "tree walk" to determine the domains that need to be added to the directory. Our experience is that this is neither a reasonable nor an efficient proposal for maintaining such a directory. Except for some infrequent and long-standing DNS surveys [5], DNS "tree walks" tend to be discouraged by the Internet community, especially given that the frequency of DNS changes would require a new tree walk monthly (if not more often). Instead, our experience has shown that data on allocated DNS domains can usually be retrieved in bulk fashion with FTP, HTTP, or Gopher (we have used each of these for particular TLDs). This has the added advantage of both "building the skeleton" and "adding the meat" at the same time. Our favorite method for finding a server that has allocated DNS domain information is to start with the list maintained at
LDAP In Jive Knowledge Base It serves as a powerful tool for large organizations (or those organizations integrating Load and store user profile information in a LDAP directory. http://www.jivesoftware.com/builds/docs/kb/latest/documentation/ldap.html
Extractions: LDAP in Jive Knowledge Base Enterprise Overview LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol) has emerged as a dominant standard for user authentication and for storage of user profile data. It serves as a powerful tool for large organizations (or those organizations integrating many applications) to simplify user management issues. By default, Jive Knowledge Base stores all user data in a database and performs authentication using database lookups. This LDAP module replaces that functionality and allows Jive Knowledge Base to: This document will guide you through preparing your LDAP server and provide details about how to install the LDAP module on Jive Knowledge Base. These instructions assume that you're a competent LDAP user, and that you're familiar with Jive Knowledge Base setup issues. The iPlanet Directory Server 5.0 LDAP server was used for development and testing, but any LDAP compliant server should also work. Choosing an LDAP storage mode Two modes for storing user data in an LDAP directory are supported: Mixed Mode (LDAP and User Database) Username, name and email are stored in LDAP. All Jive-specific data is stored in the Jive user database. This mode requires no changes to your LDAP directory.
Reverse Phone Directory :: Phone Directory Search.com Reverse Phone Directory provides access to several reverse lookup services. Larger companies and organizations often employ a PABX (Private Automatic http://www.phonedirectorysearch.com/reverse_directory.html
Extractions: Phone Directory Search is the premier cross reference phone, cell phone and reverse telephone directory to quickly and easily perform people searches from global, international and world wide telephone number resources. Reverse phone directory searches can quickly and easily be performed from your desktop in the comfort of you home using the plentiful phonedirectorysearch.com website people searching lookups and directory services. Many additional reverse phone directory based people information resources are included to lookup people and find out more about them as individuals, in groups or countries world wide in the international global community. Internet based people finder information and people search sources are offered from phonedirectorysearch.com that specialize in locating the person, phone number or reverse address data you seek. This includes reverse phone and reverse cell phone number directory searches located in internet telephone book, white pages and yellow pages directory assistance services such as
BCK2SKOL Lesson 6: EMAIL, PART 3: LOCATORS directories usually include phone numbers, email addresses, WHOIS Person/ Organization lookup service provides unified access to three official Internet http://www.sc.edu/bck2skol/fall/lesson6.html
Extractions: A Class on the Net for Librarians with Little or No Net Experience "Is this the party to whom I am speaking?" Lily Tomlin, as Ernestine the operator Having obtained your email address, you're now ready to send a message to a friend. You know the friend has an address, but you don't know what it is. How do you find out? The best and most foolproof way is to contact your friend by telephone or letter and ask. I say this because NO Internet-wide email white pages (people lookup) service exists that can list every email address out there. Unfortunately, calling and asking outright is usually the LAST thing most of us actually do. Chalk it up to one of those quirks of human nature! No matter how many times we are told not to bother, most of us will continue to waste lots of costly online connectivity time searching for an address that has not been registered in the first place. Let's say, however, that you are certain the address you seek is registered somewhere. Is there a way to discover what that address is? Yes, there is. How do you search? Here are a few options (if you do not understand references to gopher, telnet and the world wide web, do not despair; we'll be talking about them soon, and you can come back to these instructions later.)
Chapter 2 Planning And Accessing Directory Data (This makes your organization administrators your directory content managers. The LDAP protocol supports anonymous access, and allows easy lookups for http://docs.sun.com/source/817-7607/data.html
Extractions: Planning and Accessing Directory Data The data stored in your directory may include user names, e-mail addresses, telephone numbers, and information about groups users belong to, or it may contain other types of information. The type of data in your directory determines how you structure the directory, to whom you allow access to the data, and how this access is requested and granted. Directory Server enables you to access directory data either via LDAP or DSML, extending the types of applications that can interact directly with the data. This chapter describes the issues and strategies behind planning and accessing directory data. It includes the following sections: Some types of data are better suited to a directory than others. Ideal data for a directory has the following characteristics: It is read more often than written.
Extractions: The data stored in your directory may include user names, email addresses, telephone numbers, and information about groups users are in, or it may contain other types of information. The type of data in your directory determines how you structure the directory, to whom you allow access to the data, and how this access is requested and granted. This chapter describes the issues and strategies behind planning your directory's data. It includes the following sections: Introduction to Directory Data Some types of data are better suited to your directory than others. Ideal data for a directory has some of the following characteristics: It is read more often than written. Because directory are tuned for read operations, write operations slow your server's performance down.