KUALA LUMPUR, June 29 -- Toshiba Electronic Devices & Storage Corporation (Toshiba) has released the industry’s first photocouplers for high-speed communications, operating with as low as 2.2V power supply. According to Toshiba in a statement, the two devices are ‘TLP2312’ and ‘TLP2372’. With shipment beginning today, TLP2312 delivers a typical data transfer rate of 5Mbps and TLP2372, at 20Mbps. The products are designed to operate at low voltage, starting at 2.2V, so as to work with the lower voltages of the peripheral circuits, even when used in such low level voltage circuits as 2.5V LVCMOS. This approach eliminates the need for a separate power supply to drive the photocouplers, reducing the component count. With a low threshold input current of 1.6mA (max), and low supply current of 0.5mA (max) in their -40℃ and +125℃ operating temperature range, the new photocouplers can be directly driven by microcontrollers, reducing power consumption. The devices can be used in high-speed digital interfaces including programmable logic controllers, general purpose inverters, measuring equipment and control equipment. -- BERNAMA KUALA LUMPUR, June 26 -- Pulse Secure, a software-defined Secure Access solutions provider has announced successful integration and joint compatibility testing between Gigamon and Pulse Secure.
This is to ensure customers that Pulse Secure’s Network Access Control (NAC) solution, Pulse Policy Secure, can fully leverage the endpoint contextual information received from Gigamon as remote workers return to their office. The combination of Gigamon and Pulse provides organisations real-time visibility of network-connected devices and Zero Trust control leveraging adaptive authentication and User and Entity Behavior Analytics (UEBA) to detect anomalies and mitigate unauthorised and malicious access to network applications and resources. Pulse Policy Secure is a top-selling, full-featured NAC solution that is easy to deploy, manage, integrate and scale. Gigamon sends consolidated traffic information with dynamic filtering to Pulse Policy Secure to enhance endpoint visibility across distributed networks and more automated endpoint security compliance. Leveraging Pulse Secure UEBA features, Pulse Policy Secure can identify and respond to anomalous activity such as suspicious IoT activity, DGA attacks and MAC spoofing as part of the solution’s adaptive authentication capabilities aligning to Zero Trust control. Pulse Policy Secure integrates with the Gigamon Visibility and Analytics Fabric, which is used to monitor all network traffic, whereby all traffic can be analysed together in order to reduce blind spots and increase the likelihood of spotting suspicious behaviour. The enhanced integration capability is freely available as part of the standard licensing model for both platforms, as part of Pulse Policy Secure and Gigamon Visibility and Analytics Fabric. More details at www.pulsesecure.net. -- BERNAMA FLYWIRE'S NEW INTERNATIONAL PAYMENT PLAN OPTIONS HELP IMPROVE TUITION AFFORDABILITY DURING COVID-1928/6/2020
Enable institutions to meet international students’ needs for flexible payment options
Make tuition costs more manageable for students and families facing financial hardship Available to institutions worldwide with large populations of international students BOSTON, June 26 (Bernama-GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Flywire, a high-growth vertical payments company, announced new enhancements to its market-leading digital education platform that help improve tuition affordability. Flywire’s new international payment plan options empower institutions worldwide to provide students more flexible funding options to help them better manage their education expenses during a period of unique financial constraint. As part of Flywire’s comprehensive receivables solution, this functionality builds on Flywire’s existing offerings and is customized to meet the needs of institutions around the world with a high ratio of foreign students.[1] International students are significant cultural, academic and financial contributors to the global knowledge economy. The U.S. alone hosted more than one million international students during the 2018/2019 academic year, and they contributed nearly $41 billion to the economy, according to IEE and NAFSA. As the middle class grows in emerging regions like Asia and Latin America, universities are attracting international students from broad socio-economic profiles who face the same financial pressures that so many domestic students do when it comes to paying for higher education. mrem.bernama.com/viewsm.php?idm=37626 |
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