NPC
1-800-563-9233
homeAboutProductsPurchaseNewsSupportContact
spacer




arrow Testimonials

arrow FAQ

arrow Partners

arrow Executive Bios

arrow Employment Opportunities

arrow Privacy Policy

arrow NPC in the News

arrow Press Releases

arrow Contact

arrow Resources

spacer



 

 

 

“An idea whose time has come”
- Canadian Business magazine

The ultimate business notebook solution

If you are like most professionals, you've tried to tackle the hassles and hazards of mobile computing yourself, or through a friend, or through part-time IT help. Why Bother? And are you sure your information on your business laptop is secure and backed up, 100% of the time? Would you bet your business on it?

Let's face it: the complexity, threats and pitfalls of operating a small business laptop are more severe and more frequent than they once were, and it is becoming increasingly difficult to keep a laptop running smoothly and safely.

With a No Panic Computing Managed Notebook computer, you have outsourced the setup and management of your notebook to professionals, so that your computer works the way that you expect it to.

The No Panic Computing™ Notebook is an HP professional class notebook that is supported, monitored, secured, and automatically backed up to provide a hassle-free, hazard-free computing experience:


NPC HP-8530p > No Panic Computing Managed Notebooks...

 

Company background

No Panic Computing is based in Markham (North-East Toronto), Ontario, Canada and is part of the Keating Group of Companies.  The Keating Group of Companies includes Keating Technologies - Canada’s leading branch-outsourcing service to the high-technology industry with:

  • more than 21 years of award-winning sales
  • over five million support calls
  • $1.3 billion in product and service revenue


divider

 

“(No Panic Computing) seems to align pretty nicely with the whole idea of software as a service and 'cloud' computing where the onus for managing your data and choosing and buying applications shifts from the client and the business to the 'cloud' or the service. And that's kind of taking the weight or the pressure off the small businesses and even larger companies. This idea that everything can be a service right down to the hardware that you use is pretty compelling to people."

Lance Ulanoff, editor-in-chief of the PC Magazine Network.
Monday , September 6th, 2008

border
footer

Privacy Policy | Terms of Use


Bookmark and Share