Trio resold sharply discounted educational versions of software to nonacademic customers.
- By The Associated Press
- 12/07/2006
Microsoft issued an Advance Bulletin today stating it will release six fixes for various flaws next Tuesday as part of its regularly scheduled "Patch Tuesday" update.
Here’s a script that enumerates all shared folders on all computers in your domain.
GUIs are for whimps; try DSMOD on the command line.
- By Greg Shields
- 12/04/2006
Plus: Yahoo! e-mail addresses getting rejected by U.K. site, and yet another Microsoft exploit -- this time for PowerPoint.
Gates deposition from 1998 tobe used in case in lieu of appearance that would "cause disruption."
- By The Associated Press
- 12/04/2006
There have been big changes in the way we build applications for the Microsoft platform and more are the way. How should developers react.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- 12/01/2006
While Microsoft is busy celebrating the release of Windows Vista and Office 2007, a posse of partners also lined up to announce support for the new products. Unfortunately, many of those third-party announcements are long on promises and short on details, including specifics as to when those new and updated products will actually reach market.
- By Stuart J. Johnston
- 11/30/2006
Calling it the biggest launch in the company's history, Microsoft on Thursday formally launched the business versions of its long-awaited Vista operating system and Office 2007 desktop applications suite at the Nasdaq market site in New York.
A nifty batch file trick to compress those ever-expanding log files.
- By Jeffery Hicks
- 11/29/2006
Businesses get first crack at buying Microsoft's long-anticipated Windows upgrade.
- By The Associated Press
- 11/29/2006
Here are some appliances that are ready to run on Virtual Server.
Microsoft has announced it will license third-party developers to build applications that have the look and feel of Office 2007 on a royalty-free basis.
- By Stuart J. Johnston
- 11/28/2006
Bill Hartnett got accustomed to the screaming. As Microsoft Corp.'s manager of software sales to financial services companies, Hartnett used to get pelted with complaints about the security and reliability of Microsoft's products.
- By The Associated Press
- 11/27/2006
Also: Checking your DNS settings; bots and FUD; more.