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Intranet: Definition; What is an Intranet?
An intranet is an internal information system that works much the same way as the
Internet. With one very important difference -- only the people in your organization can
access or post information. Because an intranet requires private identifications and
passwords, it's closed to the rest of the world. Often, intranets are used to share calendars,
documents and to provide a forum for discussion and commentary. You can install and maintain
intranet software on your own computers, or use an ASP intranet, a hosted intranet solution.
Extranet definition: intranet - extranet differences
If you ask one person "what is an intranet?" and another "what is an extranet?", you
might get exactly the same answer. An extranet is really just an intranet that
allows selected outside people in. You decide who can provide and access information.
Extranets can connect your organization to your clients, customers, and partners. All within
a private, secure network. As with an intranet, you can develop and maintain extranet software
on your own computers, or leverage extranet technology hosted by an
extranet ASP.
Intranets and extranets are becoming standard business communication tools. Soon,
intranets and extranets will be as common as telephones and e-mail. Why?
Because intranets and extranets help organizations communicate faster in a more organized way,
resulting in lower costs and a competitive edge. And unlike traditional
software, intranets and extranets work on the web.
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