Following a familiar pattern of chasing heavy patching months with light months, the Microsoft Security Response Center on Thursday said that its monthly security patch release day next Tuesday will bring three new security bulletins.
- By Scott Bekker
- July 07, 2005
- By Scott Bekker
- July 06, 2005
Some Citrix users are running into problems after installing Microsoft's Update Rollup 1 for Windows 2000 Service Pack 4.
- By Scott Bekker
- July 06, 2005
Microsoft's recently acquired Sybari Software subsidiary took a first public step toward fitting in on Wednesday with the release of a Sybari Antigen management pack for Microsoft Operations Manager 2005.
- By Scott Bekker
- July 06, 2005
Microsoft solidified its plans to launch SQL Server 2005, Visual Studio 2005 and BizTalk Server 2006 in November.
- By Scott Bekker
- July 06, 2005
Microsoft posted an update this week that fixes a memory leak in Windows XP Tablet PC Edition 2005.
- By Scott Bekker
- July 06, 2005
Security expert Russ Cooper surveys the field of Microsoft security bulletins for June, assessing which matter the most.
- By Russ Cooper
- July 06, 2005
The new title will recognize “the practice” of designing and delivering custom learning solutions for organizations.
Unitrends is shipping new software for its disk-to-disk backup and restore appliances that enables administrators to back up the entire system all the way down to the bare metal without having to take down the server.
- By Stuart J. Johnston
- July 06, 2005
The 2.0 version of Microsoft Baseline Security Analyzer (MBSA), the free tool for scanning the security of networks at small and medium organizations and recommending improvements, is available on the Web this month.
- By Scott Bekker
- July 06, 2005
- By Becky Nagel
- July 05, 2005
- By Becky Nagel
- July 05, 2005
Gateway is shipping three new lines of 64-bit business desktops built around Intel’s BTX cooling technology, two of which can be ordered with Pentium D dual-core CPUs.
- By Stuart J. Johnston
- July 05, 2005
- By Becky Nagel
- July 05, 2005
Microsoft has agreed to pay IBM $775 million and to extend $75 million in software deployment credits in order to settle outstanding antitrust claims regarding the Redmond software giant’s competitive practices in desktop software markets during the 1990s.
- By Stuart J. Johnston
- July 05, 2005
- By Paul Desmond
- July 01, 2005
From the business wires this week: an authentication software that restricts access to a computer's apps, a logon script processor, and a developer's ActiveX component for .PDF files.
Microsoft to announce pricing, availability for Systems Center Data Protection Manager at Partner confab in early July.
- By Paul Desmond
- July 01, 2005
- By Stuart J. Johnston
- July 01, 2005