News


DOJ Wants Fast Track; New Mexico Settles

The Department of Justice won't appeal the U.S. Court of Appeals decision in the Microsoft antitrust case. Instead prosecutors want the case fast tracked in the District Court. Meanwhile, New Mexico settles with Microsoft.

IIS Web servers Hacked over the Weekend

Over the weekend, Web sites running Microsoft Corp.’s IIS Web server platform became the targets of widespread Denial-of-Service (DoS) attacks.

Securing Redmond: Microsoft Turns to Lumeta for Network Map

In order to improve its network security, Microsoft turned to Lumeta Corp., a security startup headed by Bill Cheswick, former Bell Labs security researcher. Lumeta had created a process for comprehensive mapping of an intranet.

Microsoft Preps New Tracks for Systems Admins, Developers

Redmond examining exam matrices for new tracks, which candidates may attain as early as first quarter 2002.

Windows XP Exam to Debut in Q4 2001

Windows XP/.NET Server exams outlined at Microsoft Fusion.

Cert Group May Add New Titles

Microsoft's Certification and Skills Assessment group plans to announce new tracks for systems administrators and developers.

Unisys Takes Home Still Another Benchmark Trophy

Unisys Corp. used its ES7000 platform to notch yet another benchmark record today, registering the world’s best results in the Transaction Processing Performance Council’s (TPC) TPC-W benchmark.

Microsoft Bows to Pressure, Revises OEM Licensing Agreements

Microsoft Corp. today changed its Windows XP licensing agreements to give OEM manufacturers the freedom to remove some icons and other shortcuts from Windows XP’s desktop and “Start” menu.

Magistr Remains Atop Virus List

The Magistr-A virus is still hitting the enterprise hard. Sophos recently released its top 10 virus list for June, based on customer reports to its antivirus center.

EMC, Avanade Enter Consulting Alliance

EMC entered a global alliance this week with Avanade, the joint venture consulting organization between Microsoft and Accenture.

Gartner: Vacationers Addicted to E-mail

A Gartner survey finds 42 percent of users check business e-mail on vacation.

Meta Puts a Rule of Thumb on Enterprise Vendors' Sales Claims

Anyone who has been responsible for purchasing enterprise software doesn't need to be told that salespeople understate the costs for installing and customizing that software. Analyst firm Meta Group has come up with a rule-of-thumb multiplier for those claims.

W3C Releases SOAP Draft

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) yesterday released a public working draft of version 1.2 of the Simple Object Access Protocol (SOAP). Although it features several new enhancements to the SOAP 1.1 draft that preceded it, SOAP 1.2 is for the most part a maintenance release.

Meta: Users Should Expect Business as Usual from Microsoft

In the wake of the U.S. Appeals Court decision in the Microsoft antitrust case, users should expect business as usual from Redmond, according to a recent analysis from Meta Group.

Reader Survey: Web Services Taking Off

Cautious about the hype but hopeful for the model, ENT readers indicate a growing support for XML-based Web services.

Does .NET Equal Web Services or Not?

Industry observers disagree about whether the Web services model needs to succeed for .NET to have an impact.

Enterprise Customers to Get First Crack at 64-bit Advanced Server

Microsoft Corp. plans to market a pre-release version of its forthcoming Windows .NET Advanced Server - dubbed, appropriately enough, Windows Advanced Server Limited Edition - as part of an overall effort to ratchet-up Advanced Server adoption rates among its customers.

2003: The Year of .NET?

Microsoft's roadmap for .NET calls for much .NET integration to be done by early 2002. Redmond, and others, expect the technology to really take off in terms of widespread adoption around 2003.

Column: Deja-vu All Over Again

DEC veteran Greg Scott draws parallels from the OpenVMS-Unix days to the current Windows-Linux wars.

Default Vulnerability Discovered in W2K SMTP Service

Problem allows user-level access, giving spammers a chance to use other organizations' systems for bulk mailings. Microsoft issued a patch.

Most   Popular