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Den
(redirected from directory enabled networks)

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DEN
(Directory Enabled Networks) The management of a network from a central depository of information about users, applications and network resources. Originally an initiative from Microsoft and Cisco, DEN was turned over to the DMTF in 1998, and its extensions were made part of the CIM specification in 1999. See WBEM, CIM and DMTF.
den
1. the habitat or retreat of a lion or similar wild animal; lair
2. Scot a small wooded valley; dingle
3. Scot and northern English dialect a place of sanctuary in certain catching games; home or base

den
An indoor retreat, usually small, for work or leisure. also see chamber, 1.

Den’ 

(Day), a bourgeois, left-liberal daily newspaper published in Petrograd from 1912 to 1918. Among its contributors were bourgeois radicals (A. V. Amfiteatrov and N. P. Asheshov), Narodniks (Populists) and Socialist Revolutionaries (V. Bogucharskii, R. V. Ivanov-Razumnik, and S. D. Mstislavskii), and Menshevik-liquidators (D. I. Zaslavskii, St. Ivanovich, N. I. Iordanskii, and P. S. Iushkevich). The newspaper criticized tsarism and the bourgeois-pome shchik (landlord) parties from the liberal Menshevik position. During World War I it occupied a defensist position. After May 30 (June 12), 1917, Den’ became an organ of the Mensheviks. It supported the bourgeois Provisional Government and opposed the Bolsheviks. The newspaper reacted with hostility to the October Socialist Revolution. It was closed on Oct. 26 (Nov. 8), 1917, by the Petrograd Military Revolutionary Committee but for some time continued to publish under different names. It was finally closed in May 1918 for anti-Soviet propaganda.


Den 

the place where some mammals rest for a long time, hibernate, or raise their cubs. A den, unlike a burrow, is on the surface and usually in a secluded spot: in thick underbrush, among reeds, in a gully, beneath a cliff, or in a cave. Jackals, foxes, wolves, hyenas, tigers, lions, and wild boars build dens. A bear’s den is called berloga in Russian; a den occupied briefly is called lezhka. The latter is built by hares, rodents, and most ungulates.



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Intelliden's framework, built around Directory Enabled Networks New Generation (DEN-ng), solves it is claimed, the tight integration of network and IT resources with business priorities.
Founded on the standards-based Directory Enabled Networks New Generation (DEN-ng) object model, the Intelliden Resource Manager is the latest milestone in Intelliden's commitment to delivering on the DEN-ng vision for device and service management.
One model in particular, Directory Enabled Networks New Generation (DEN-ng), was specifically constructed to bind information and data models to management architectures.
 
 
 
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