Home Communication Press Room Press Releases Back New search Date Min Max Aeronautics Automotive Corporate Cybersecurity Defense and Security Financial Healthcare Industry Intelligent Transportation Systems Digital Public Services Services Space GMV upgrades Hispasat’s email platform 18/02/2013 Print Share GMV has designed a top-quality email architecture for Hispasat, ensuring service continuity, security and maximum harnessing of its infrastructure Hispasat is one of Europe’s benchmark communication satellite operators, offering satellite coverage and quality services in Europe, the Americas and North Africa. Faced with the need of developing its email system, Hispasat turned to the multinational GMV for the answer. GMV decided to set up a new system based on Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 technology, migrating from its former Novell Groupwise system. This new architecture has been especially designed to meet Hispasat’s needs. One of GMV’s prime concerns was to design a new architecture that could easily be grafted onto the rest of Hispasat’s systems and infrastructure, harnessing to the utmost the current capacity of its systems and the other available infrastructure. GMV proposed a distributed architecture based on Microsoft Exchange Server technology, allowing secure access from anywhere to the email and filing system and continually monitoring the state of the infrastructure. Using only cutting-edge products, it has been dimensioned as a flexible, virtualized and easily scalable system, affording high modularity and longevity. GMV boasts a wealth of experience and recognized prestige in designing, defining, implementing and migrating email architectures. It has carried out many large-scale, far-reaching projects, adapting each solution to meet the particular needs of each client. In this case GMV has supplied Hispasat with all the necessary resources, policies and experience for a successful and top-quality migration of its email architecture, seamlessly knitted onto current infrastructure to ensure service continuity and security. Print Share