About a year ago we look at a couple of SSO options.
At work we have over 30 applications that require usernames and passwords. It is 
painful. 

one vendor was www.truesystems.com they had a simple elegant interface that allows 
fast user switching and thin client and PC support. Supported windows/novell/unix, web 
based applications, terminal emulation programs and such. It was very nice. They came 
out to our site and within a half a day had the 15 systems working with their SSO. No 
expensive, painful TCL scripts to write. Very simple.

We also looked at http://www.protocom.com/. They have about the same features and 
supported all of our applications. What was cool about this vendor was that they 
leveraged Active Directory and they didn't require a different "password database" 
server. They stored all systems usernames and passwords as attributed of the user in 
AD. It was very cool. Lots of flexibility. Could store the 100 web usernames and 
passwords that I use as well. Had same functionality as the vendor above and also did 
an on-site demo.

We haven't implemented anything yet but they are options to give you ideas. If you 
have lots of apps and platforms to support these actually work but they are on the 
spendy side. Not as spendy as the 200 daily passwords resets by the help desk. 

HTH
Drew

-----Original Message-----
From: Trevor Cushen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, March 10, 2003 9:19 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Single Sign On

Has anyone successfully implemented a single sigh on solution in a Unix
/ Windows environment?

If so could you send on product details or a URL to a guide please.

NOT Web based, I know there are a few web based solutions but I need it
in an enterprise with Windows NT and up, Linux servers and MS-SQL.
Client has one logon only or single sign on.

I am looking at kerberos so if I am going down the wrong track please
let me know.

Many thanks
Trevor Cushen 

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