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Partner
Megadata SA was founded in 1996 to provide solutions and specialized services. During these years we have provided our customers:
Storage solutions.
Maintenance of equipment Unisys and open platforms.
Application Migration Services.
Studies of performance and capacity planning.
Software application monitoring and capacity planning.
Training.
Development of specialized applications.
Technical Support at Unisys platforms and open platforms.
Security Solutions
Press
Eliminates the Impact of Password Proliferation on Patient Care
Lexington, MA – February 21, 2008 – Imprivata®, Inc., the converged identity and access management appliance company, today announced Melbourne Internal Medicine Associates (MIMA), the largest multi-specialty group practice in central Florida, has rolled out OneSign® Single Sign-On (SSO
Customer
Memorial Healthcare System's privacy and security comeback: discover how the organization went from a record-setting breach settlement to a purveyor of patient privacy excellence.
Press
Imprivata OneSign® serves as clinical authentication cornerstone as roaming and access technologies evolve - PR
Blog
Memorial Healthcare System (MHS) is a longtime leader in high-quality healthcare services for South Florida residents. With over 13,000 employees, 1,800 beds, and 2,500 physicians, MHS is one of...
Customer
Read this customer success story to learn how Mercy Health System reduced password headaches and IT helpdesk calls, increased physician satisfaction through improved workflows and improved HIPPA compliance with fast, No Click Access to applications.INTRODUCTION
Video
Methodist Health System (Omaha, Neb.) leverages fingerprint biometric authentication from Imprivata to enable e-Prescribing of controlled substances to improve patient satisfaction, eliminate dual-prescribing workflows and address drug diversion.
Blog
I was reading the recent security breach news about Lesmany Nunez, a former IT administrator who was recently sentenced to a year and one day in federal prison for computer fraud. Mr. Nunez was an employee at Miami-based Quantum Technology Partners (QTP) and three months after his employment ended, he was still able to access the company’s network with an administrator password. What he did then was break into QTP’s servers, shut them down, change the system administrators’ passwords and erase files, all of which ended up costing QTP more than $30,000.