This scenario has happened hundreds of times:
A distribution center just received a shipment of wireless computers. They’ll be used for inventory control. The access points are in place, the host applications are running, and the guns are ready to use.
After a while, though, problems start to pop up. The guns freeze up, so that workers have to wait while their IT guy gets a problem resolved. When a battery dies unexpectedly, a warehouse worker’s scanned data is lost…but nobody knows just when the data stopped getting through. Complicated proxy server software needs to be set and re-set; controllers need to be tweaked. Questions arise: is this a network problem, a device problem, or a software problem?
Eventually, the head of IT calls the sales rep who sold the equipment. The pain has become unbearable, the loss of productivity has become too great. What, Mr. Sales Rep, are you going to do to eliminate our pain? Now the sales rep feels pain, too—the pain of losing a customer.
Then someone remembers Stay-Linked. Stay-Linked terminal emulation software is quickly downloaded and installed—the 30-day trial is free, so it’s worth a shot. Suddenly, the pain goes away. Productivity is restored.
Don’t install terminal emulation software that’s going to cause pain. Don’t just check the box and get the default emulator—because sometimes free isn’t really free.
Stay-Linked works where others don’t. Move up to Stay-Linked.
