clientless

clientless

(ˈklaɪəntləs)
adj
having no clients
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
The global clientless remote support software market is expected to represent a value of over US$ 2,000 Mn by the end of 2026.
Summary: The global clientless remote support software market is expected to represent a value of over US$ 2,000 Mn by the end of 2026.
The flexible, plugin-free solution is designed to simplify essential tasks for today's mobile workforces, including retail, warehouse, and office employees, while clientless deployment works to reduce overhead and support costs.
RevTwo is an entrant in the market for customer services applications and clientless remote support.
California, June 19 -- Aryaka(R), the leading global SD-WAN provider, announced today the launch of SmartACCESS, the first-to-market clientless SD-WAN solution with built-in dynamic CDN to deliver:
These include a global device reputation database, device and environmental analysis, behavioral analysis and biometrics, and clientless malware detection.
105, 151 (2010) ("Clientless lawyers depend entirely on judges' largesse.
Clientless, cloud-based and incorporating technology received as part of Akamai's recent acquisition of Soha Systems, a provider of cloud-based secure remote access solutions, Enterprise Application Access addresses the limitations of traditional remote access.
The clientless version of Detect Safe Browsing can detect changes in the bank's website, such as code injections, offering 100 percent coverage of the user population.
It also has "an intuitive user experience" through enhanced browser based clientless access and native apps provides an updated and modernised user interface for both the administrative console and user workplace portals.
Business and defense interests see class actions as "judicial blackmail" waged largely by clientless plaintiff's attorneys seeking leverage for settlement of weak claims; (110) the larger the class, the larger the pressure on defendants.