Following is a list of pre-screened San Jose network wiring & cabling and fiber optic contractors and installers serving San Jose and surrounding areas who are ready to provide you with free site surveys and estimates.
| Exel Communications | |
| Exel Communications is a voice and data network cabling company specializing in the sale, service, and installation of business telephone systems and structured cabling installations. | |
Rodda Electric Inc | |
| Rodda Electric Inc. is a full service Electrical and Data Communications company Specializing in Copper and Fiber Optic networks installation and maintenance. -Cat5e/Cat6 cable networks -Singlemode and Multimode Fiber networks -Coax -Data center and Communications room rack Installation -Ladder rack and wireway installation -Testing and documentation | |
ADS Communications | |
| We sell products and do wiring data and phones and fiber as well we are an authorized iwatsu dealer. | |
Neobits, Inc. | |
| Phone systems and installation nationwide. We offer over 20 brands of phone systems to fit nearly every requirement and a wide array of accessories. | |
» Millenials hold market gold
Why is the Millennial Generation in the driver's seat? There are 75 million reasons why. That's how many were born between 1982 and 2003 in the United States alone--the largest generation--and the largest market--in U.S. history.» How One CIO Escaped E-Mail Attachment Hell
The CIO at an insurance company found a network appliance to help sift through chunky attachments before they reach end-users.» Adder launches CATx KVM switch
May 7, 2008 -- The compact, multi-platform KVM switch with audio support provides control of up to 16 computers connected to the company's CATx switch via Cat 5 cable, either locally at the switch or remotely up to 1,000 feet away.» The XBRL mandate is here: Is IT ready?
Given all the pressures IT is under, another compliance initiative may seem to be one too many. There is such a mandate: to submit financial reports using XBRL (Extensible Business Reporting Language) tags. How much will the XBRL mandate add to IT's burden? At first, the burden will be small, but it will increase over time -- as will the opportunity to use XBRL for better internal operations, not just for reporting compliance.
The purpose of the XBRL mandate is to make corporate financial information more easily available to stockholders -- and to make sure companies are really reporting the same things, the federal government has mandated the use of XBRL (Extensible Business Reporting Language).
[ See how XBRL adoption can help save money and how XBRL's benefits will create more work for IT. ]
The first SEC deadline for public companies with a market cap of $5 billion or more to submit financial reports in interactive data, aka XBRL format, is set for Dec. 15, 2008. A year later, most Fortune 1500 companies must provide interactive XBRL data, and a year after that, all public companies will be required to submit the annual 10-K and quarterly 10-Q financial reports as interactive data.
After that, companies should expect the SEC to require more financial documents to be published in XBRL format and for other government agencies to begin mandating its use as well, says Diane Mueller, vice president of XBRL Development for JustSystems, an XML tools provider. John Stantial, assistant comptroller at the conglomerate United Technologies Corp. (UTC), expects to see the Department of Labor, the Internal Revenue Service, and the Bureau of Economic Analysis adopt XBRL as a requirement.
So what must IT do to make its company's financial reporting XBRL-compliant?
Initially, XBRL requires just a minimal role for IT
Under the SEC's initial reporting requirements, there is not much case for IT involvement, says Mike Willis, a partner at auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers and the founding chairman of XBRL International, a supply-chain consortium representing more than 600 companies.Most of the initial XBRL effort is to tag the financial statements with the correct taxonomy, using XBRL markup terms, to describe a particular financial concept or fact in, say, a profit-and-loss statement. That effort is entirely a financial reporting activity, notes David Blaszkowsky, director of the SEC's Office of Interactive Disclosure. The work can be done in-house or outsourced to a financial publisher.
IT's role in tagging is simply to assist the finance team with the software, an effort akin to helping a user figure out how to get a business card scanner to import the information into Outlook.
UTC, a large conglomerate with almost 250,000 employees, decided to do the tagging in-house when it became one of the first companies to participate in the SEC's voluntary filing program for interactive tagging three years ago. "We did it ourselves. Just a bunch of finance guys, no IT," says UTC's Stantial.
Three years ago, there were just three tools available to help with the tagging, so the self-supporting approach to tagging was a riskier prospect than it is today. Stantial's team chose Rivet Software's Dragon Tag, since its name kept popping up in searches. "At a cost of $300, if we couldn't figure it out, we could just throw it away," he says.
Today, there are plenty of software tools to help do the tagging, notes the SEC's Blaszkowsky, and it makes sense for the financial management and technology management teams to work together to discuss software options.
Although UTC has a large, first-class IT department that could have done the work, Stantial's team decided it should figure out XBRL for itself, especially since they didn't understand how to work in XML, which forms the foundation of XBRL. After all, the tagging needed financial expertise, and the accuracy of the results ultimately belonged to Stantial's group.
IT'srole will increase as XBRL usage, complexity grow
The initial tagging can be done with minimal IT involvement, but at some point, IT needs to get deeply involved in XBRL efforts. For example, as the SEC XBRL requirements grow more complex over time, it will be critical to understand how the XBRL-compliant reporting software might operate with the company's existing processes and platforms. By then, the decision is no longer a simple one of buying the easiest package to use and being able to "throw it away" if it's not suitable.In fact, Stantial points out UTC later switched to Fujitsu's XWand, which he says has stellar editing tools for making changes after the document has been converted to XBRL. Of course, the price is much higher: An XWand software license starts at $10,000.?
The IT role will grow further as ERP and other financial applications begin to integrate XBRL into their platforms. While it is a financial decision as to how to tag the data and reports, it will be up to IT to understand the implications of the how the software works with data and other applications -- especially when a company has multiple ERP and financial systems due to mergers and acquisitions, notes Blaszkowsky. "XBRL is a powerful tool to apply, and it is in part a financial team and a technology team decision," he says.
IT has a role to help automate processes using XBRL
Beyond reporting, enterprises can use XBRL to enforce consistent financial processes through its ERP and financial systems. UTC has been exploring this in its quest to achieve a "zero-day" financial close, in which it can issue accurate, up-to-the-minute financial reporting at any time.Such an effort begins when companies start looking at all of the manual processes used during the "last mile" of financial reporting so that they can understand what might be automated, says PricewaterhouseCoopers' Willis.
The automated assembly of reports and collaborative review of documents, along with the aggregation of all notes and MD&A (management discussion and analysis) disclosures are just a few of the areas where XBRL implementations, with the help of IT, can make a huge difference in accessing financial data, increasing collaboration during the report-making process, and reducing the final time to complete a report, Willis says.
It also gives all those involved the ability to drill down to lower-level systems to access information needed to explain changes in the business. For example, rather than doing the traditional linear review in which case documents are e-mailed to a review committee and "some poor sucker has to aggregate all the responses," Willis says, XBRL will allow IT to create a Wikipedia-like structure.
![]()
» JDSU intros fiber optic inspection, cleaning and testing kits
July 15, 2008 -- JDSU has released fiber optic test kits for applications including FTTX, LAN/WAN and data centers found in both cable and telecommunications networks.» NetXen's quad-to-10-GbE intelligent NICs boost server connectivity
August 18, 2008 -- Comprising an upgradeable quad-to-10 Gigabit LAN on motherboard (LOM) architecture for volume blade and rack server platforms, the company says its patented FlexLOM technology equips the NIC silicon to be a catalyst for the volume server industry's migration to 10 Gigabit Ethernet.» Milestone releases XProtect Enterprise 6.5
February 20, 2008 -- The company says the latest version of its open platform IP video management software features 2-way audio, integration options, a multi-language interface, minimized bandwidth, and reduced storage needs.» Anritsu unveils micro-OTDR
December 5, 2007 -- The company's Network Master MT9090A Fault Locator series of "micro" OTDRs ease the installation and maintenance of FTTx and short-range optical networks.
Our list of San Jose data cabling & San Jose network cabling companies offer structured cabling for solutions for voice / data network wiring services in San Jose and surrounding areas, including network wiring & voice/data cable installation services for Alviso, Aptos, Atherton, Ben Lomond, Boulder Creek, Brookdale, Campbell, Capitola, Castro Valley, Coyote, Cupertino, Dublin, Felton, Freedom, Fremont, Gilroy, Hayward, Holy City, La Honda, Livermore, Loma Mar, Los Altos, Los Gatos, Menlo Park, Milpitas, Morgan Hill, Mount Hamilton, Mount Hermon, Mountain View, New Almaden, Newark, Palo Alto, Pleasanton, Portola Valley, Redwood City, Redwood Estates, San Carlos, San Gregorio, San Jose, San Lorenzo, San Martin, and surrounding areas.
Services offered include, but are not limited to: