Encuentra de forma automática horarios semanales para centros educativos de cualquier tipo y complejidad. Orientado a colegios, institutos de enseñanza secundaria, bachillerato, centros de formación profesional, educación superior, universidades, facultades, escuelas de arte, conservatorios de música, etc.
Ofrecemos servicio a cada usuario a través de un software de calidad. Nuestro equipo te acompañará hasta la obtención de la solución para tu horario, con la experiencia de más de 25 años ayudando a miles de centros de enseñanza de todo el mundo.
Organiza el horario para que cumpla tus requisitos y se optimice con tus criterios. Busca y encuentra un compromiso que permita (1) incrementar el rendimiento de los alumnos, (2) mejorar el aprovechamiento de las aulas, y (3) ofrecer mayor satisfacción al profesorado en su trabajo.
Utiliza nuestra aplicación web y móvil para colaborar en la elaboración y la gestión del día a día del horario. Publica y visualiza los horarios sobre el calendario con GHC App, gestiona las ausencias y suplencias del profesorado y genera informes de desempeño laboral.
2013
Arjun hesitated. Rule number one of café life: never insert an unknown USB . But Mr. Iyer was kind, tipped well, and the drive looked ordinary.
He plugged it into — the one running Windows 7, protected only by a trial version of Kaspersky Antivirus 2013 that had expired weeks ago. Or so he thought.
He never told Mr. Iyer the full story. But from that day on, every USB got scanned before insertion. And Booth 4 kept its ancient, unsung hero: — the last safe PC in an unsafe world. Would you like a different angle — like a sci-fi twist or a corporate espionage version?
But Kaspersky had caught it at the exact millisecond of execution. It didn’t just quarantine the file. It performed a rollback — reversing registry changes, killing injected threads, even restoring the shortcut icons DarkUSB.A had tried to hide.
The folder opened. Three JPEGs. Harmless.
That night, Arjun renewed his Kaspersky license. Not because of the features — but because a piece of software from 2013 had just saved his business, acting like a stubborn old watchman who refuses to retire, even when no one’s paying him.
2013
Arjun hesitated. Rule number one of café life: never insert an unknown USB . But Mr. Iyer was kind, tipped well, and the drive looked ordinary.
He plugged it into — the one running Windows 7, protected only by a trial version of Kaspersky Antivirus 2013 that had expired weeks ago. Or so he thought.
He never told Mr. Iyer the full story. But from that day on, every USB got scanned before insertion. And Booth 4 kept its ancient, unsung hero: — the last safe PC in an unsafe world. Would you like a different angle — like a sci-fi twist or a corporate espionage version?
But Kaspersky had caught it at the exact millisecond of execution. It didn’t just quarantine the file. It performed a rollback — reversing registry changes, killing injected threads, even restoring the shortcut icons DarkUSB.A had tried to hide.
The folder opened. Three JPEGs. Harmless.
That night, Arjun renewed his Kaspersky license. Not because of the features — but because a piece of software from 2013 had just saved his business, acting like a stubborn old watchman who refuses to retire, even when no one’s paying him.
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