News


IBM Rolls Out New Workstations

IBM this week unveiled two new Intel-based workstations that feature reliability and availability technologies borrowed from its xSeries server line. Analysts say better price-performing Intel-based workstations, such as the new IBM Intellistations, are elbowing out RISC-based systems in a workstation market that is collapsing in terms of overall revenues.

HP Runs .NET Datacenter on 64-processor Superdome

Hewlett-Packard is running Windows .NET Server 2003 64-bit Datacenter Edition on a massive Superdome server with 64 processors and 512 GB of RAM, HP and Microsoft announced on Monday.

Intel Opens Floodgates on Xeon-Related Products

Intel launched four Intel Xeon processors and three chipsets on Monday in what the company called its "largest enterprise processor product launch" since first delivering multiprocessor-capable chips in 1995.

Windows .NET Server 2003 to Ship in April

Bill Gates told a Comdex keynote crowd Sunday night that Windows .NET Server 2003 will ship in April 2003. Release Candidate 2 for the server will be available in a few weeks, Gates said. The feature differences between the four versions of Windows .NET Server 2003 are also final now, with the biggest surprises in the Datacenter Edition.

Final Beta Available for Visual Studio .NET 2003

The final beta of Microsoft's Visual Studio .NET 2003 is available, and the development toolset, formerly code-named "Everett," will ship in April along with Windows .NET Server 2003.

Mundie Plugs Trustworthy Computing

Microsoft's chief ambassador Craig Mundie gave a major speech on Trustworthy Computing last week. He detailed Microsoft's moves relating to the initiative so far and outlined the future of Microsoft's security, privacy and integrity efforts moving forward. "We didn't fall off the turnip truck just a year ago and decide we should think about these things," Mundie quipped.

Oracle Fires Another Shot in Messaging Battle

Oracle used its conference this week in San Francisco to promote its Oracle Collaboration Suite as an alternative to established collaboration offerings from Microsoft Corp. and IBM Corp.

Ballmer Describes Effects of Antitrust on Microsoft

Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer sent an e-mail to customers Wednesday night describing how Microsoft has matured during the antitrust case and how lessons from the legal quagmire are making Microsoft into a more responsible industry leader moving forward.

Intel Brings Hyper-Threading to the Desktop

Intel on Thursday introduced a faster Pentium 4 processor that is the first desktop chip to include Hyper-Threading technology. The 3.06 GHz Pentium 4 is available immediately at a cost of $637 in 1,000-unit quantities.

Citrix Building Real-time Collaboration Environment

Citrix Systems recently previewed a real-time collaboration product -- code-named Project Pearl -- that will allow MetaFrame end users to share any published application, file or document. The product is scheduled to ship in the first half of 2003 as an add-on to the next feature release of MetaFrame XP.

Buffer Overflow Flaw in Oracle9i Component

Security researcher David Litchfield found a high risk problem in the form of a buffer overflow vulnerability occurring in a software component that ships with the Oracle 9i database on all platforms.

Configuresoft Security Patch Management Software Updated

Configuresoft released the second generation of a product for one of the biggest problems facing Windows administrators right now -- security patch management.

Capellas Leaves HP

HP president Michael Capellas is leaving HP and quitting the board of directors "to pursue other career opportunities," the company announced in a statement on Monday.

Tablet PC Devices Launch

Microsoft gathered partners, analysts, customers and reporters in New York last week to launch the first generation of Tablet PCs built on Windows XP Tablet PC Edition.

Windows "Longhorn" Server Cancelled

Microsoft abandoned its plans to ship client and server versions of Windows simultaneously in the "Longhorn" release, a company spokeswoman confirmed Monday. Instead, "Longhorn" will be a client-only release, with the successor to Windows .NET Server 2003 coming later under the code-name "Blackcomb."

Microsoft Board Creates Antitrust Compliance Committee

Microsoft's board of directors moved quickly to comply with the first deadline U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly placed in the antitrust settlement agreement that she approved Nov. 1.

Business Intelligence Tools Available for SQL Customers

Microsoft this week posted two free tools to its Web site to help financial services customers and manufacturing customers build business intelligence solutions on SQL Server 2000 Enterprise Edition.

IBM Pushes x440 Benchmark Results Higher

IBM Corp. published an OLTP benchmark this week that demonstrates again the surging capabilities of Windows Datacenter Server on Xeon MP chips in eight-processor systems.

Microsoft Memo: Some Anti-Linux Messages Backfire

Some of Microsoft's more aggressive public arguments against Linux and Open Source Software backfired with key customer groups, according to an internal Microsoft memo leaked to an open source advocacy site.

Unisys Ratchets Up 32-bit Wintel Benchmark Performance

Unisys made its first run against the the Transaction Processing Performance Council's closely watched OLTP benchmark using Intel's Xeon MP processors in the 32-processor Unisys ES7000 server this week.