Under the partnership, the two companies will integrate their products and pitch the joint offering to each other's customers. G-Log's software is used to plan and execute multimodal, multilegged shipments. NextLinx's products ensure that the exports and imports of more than 19,000 product categories are properly licensed and that taxes and other government charges are calculated correctly. The NextLinx software also screens shipments against a U.S. government list of banned people and countries, and it creates required export, import, and commercial documentation. NextLinx uses costs such as shipping and tariffs to determine the final "landed cost" for shipments.
ARC Advisory Group analyst Adrian Gonzalez says the joint offering lets G-Log position its software as a technology platform for global real-time logistics and pits the joint offering against much more expensive custom integrations of logistics and import-export management software products. "The NextLinx software is the piece of the global-logistics puzzle that was missing from G-Log's software products," Gonzalez says. "NextLinx lets you see, 'Yes, I can ship this product this from this place. Here is the kind of paperwork I need for customs,' and G-Log optimizes the move." The joint offering, which will be available in October, is available as a hosted service by G-Log or can be installed internally on a company's own Unix hardware. --Steve Konicki
Application Security’s Role in FISMA Compliance
The Federal Information Security Management Act of 2002 provides a comprehensive framework for ensuring effective information security controls for all federal information and assets. The Act aims to bolster computer and network security within the Federal Government by mandating periodic audits. Based on this...

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