Security for virtual environments is a problem many shops haven't fully addressed. 
  But when you think about it, one hack can bring down a host of VMs -- not pretty. 
McAfee has a new 
  program -- actually more of a service -- that audits the security of your 
  virtual infrastructure, including people and processes. Afterward, McAfee recommends 
  technology to protect your shop.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on March 03, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I am not a fan of Microsoft buying Yahoo. Yahoo has nothing that Microsoft hasn't 
  already built or bought, and is, in fact, a legacy Internet company. 
Now, a New York Times wonk has what he calls a better idea: Redmond 
  should buy SAP. 
I'm not entirely sure this guy's neural connections are working properly. Look 
  up "legacy" in the IT dictionary and SAP is the first definition. 
  SAP does have great technology and, after a long process of installation, has 
  helped many companies operate more efficiently, rationalize supply chains and 
  tie in partners. But is it the future? No.
That said, I'm not sure if NYT author Randall Stross realizes that Microsoft 
  currently owns four separate ERP platforms: Great Plains, Axapta, Navision and 
  Solomon. Not only that, but Microsoft is currently re-architecting these ERP 
  tools so they'll be more modern than anything SAP has. 
I'm actually pretty darn comfortable with Redmond's ERP plans, and believe 
  buying SAP would be a move backward.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 25, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Ask entrepreneurs and IT pros what's hot, and you won't hear much about browsers, 
  fat client OSes and Cat 5 cable. You 
will hear a lot about virtualization. 
  In fact, the vast majority of IT pros have 
"a 
  strong interest in virtualization." Still, only a minority in IT are 
  currently doing virtualization.
Redmond readers are different. Many (if not most) of you are virtualizing, 
  according to our own research.
Fortunately, there's a brand-new resource that will tell you all you need to 
  know. VirtualizationReview.com 
  is now up and running, and it comes with a new 
  newsletter with weekly analysis. 
Let me know what you think of the site and what you need to know about virtualization 
  by writing [email protected]. 
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 25, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    When Microsoft is wrong, I'm not shy about telling the world. When it's right, 
  I'm the first to pat 'em on the back. In the case of the 
new 
  class-action lawsuit over Vista Ready logos for PCs, I'm patting and complaining 
  all at once. 
Here's the rub. Dell, HP, IBM et al have been selling millions of PCs with 
  Vista Ready logos. Consumers complain that many of these units can't handle 
  higher-end revs of Vista, especially the Aero interface. 
Here's where I defend Redmond. Vista comes in many forms and the lower-end 
  versions do run on these machines. On the other hand, Aero is graphics-intensive, 
  and requires the kind of GPU processing that used to be the domain of top engineers, 
  scientists, videographers and pimply faced teenage gamers. And, to be legally 
  precise, the logos don't say "Vista Aero Ready." 
On the other hand, Vista does not play nearly as nice with hardware as I'd 
  like. I've upgraded three or four older machines to XP, and in each case it 
  was surprisingly flawless. Vista is a lot more demanding, making it tough to 
  upgrade our current machines. And -- let's face it -- many of the units sold 
  by Best Buy and Circuit City may run Vista, but they move slower than 
  an Oscar acceptance speech.
Have you bought a Vista machine that wasn't up to snuff? Share your stories 
  by writing me at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 25, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    When I was a kid, I owned a wall hanging made by my grandfather that was inscribed 
  with an old English evening prayer -- including "If I should die before 
  I wake, I pray Thee, Lord, my Soul to take."
I treasured it, but it also scared the bejeepers out of me. I wanted to wake 
  up.
Now, we have to worry about our computers either never waking up or waking 
  up hacked. 
The Electronic Frontier Foundation claims that encrypted disks can be, er, 
  decrypted while the 
  computer sleeps. BitLocker from Microsoft was cracked by EFF and Princeton 
  University experts by finding passwords in RAM, which isn't flushed during sleep 
  or hibernation. 
Microsoft isn't the only vendor with this the problem; Apple has it, too!
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 25, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Last 
  month's Patch Tuesday had less action than a Kate Hudson romantic comedy. 
  Tomorrow's, though, will be a 
little 
  more intense, with a dozen fixes expected for everything from Visual Basic 
  to IE and Office. Microsoft's most-loved client OS, XP, gets some tweaks, as 
  does the New Coke of software, Vista. 
A lot of the exploits concern that old bugaboo, the remote execution of code. 
  And seven are deemed critical.
I have to hand it to Microsoft. While other vendors quietly release fixes, 
  Microsoft sticks its neck out each and every month and boldly proclaims where 
  its faults lie. And that takes guts. Agree? Let me know by writing [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 11, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    How many Web sites or services have you signed up for, only to forget your user 
  name or password? Here's the problem: You try to register, but the user name 
  you want is taken, so you add a bunch of random numbers to the end of your name 
  (say, dbarney8256). And even though nothing special is happening on the site, 
  the security gods who run it demand a complex password (say dBarn&y8256H20). 
Got those committed to memory? I thought not. Use the Web long enough, and 
  you end up with dozens of these non-intuitive user names and unintelligible 
  passwords. 
Single sign-on is one answer, and within high-end corporate environments, single 
  sign-on often gets you access to wide range of corporate info. But it does nothing 
  to help you remember the sign-on to your (my) favorite motorcycle forums.
A bunch of companies that don't particularly like each other have 
  agreed to help. Google, IBM, Microsoft, VeriSign and Yahoo are all members 
  of the OpenID Foundation, which hopes to offer one user name and one password 
  that gets you onto all of your favorite registered sites. Just make sure you 
  keep that info very, very safe!
Microsoft had a decent approach to this. It was called Passport. Unfortunately, 
  not enough sites backed it and Passport is now largely used to access Microsoft-only 
  content.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 11, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Yahoo's board of directors this weekend 
formally 
  rejected Microsoft's takeover offer. The board apparently wants either more 
  dough or to hook up with a different partner, such as Google (which would raise 
  antitrust concerns) or AOL. 
I'm no stock market whiz (and have the losses to prove it!), but as I understand 
  it, the Microsoft bid was a huge premium over Yahoo's existing share price. 
  And Microsoft offers the ailing Yahoo resources, market share and commitment 
  -- things Yahoo needs. 
On the flip side, I still don't think this deal is in Microsoft's best interest, 
  especially if it spends far more than the $44.5 
  billion it already has on the table. 
Instead of trying to out-Google Google, imagine what could be done if all that 
  money were placed in the hands of a bunch of young, smart programmers and visionaries.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 11, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Do you remember the PowerPC processor? This little beauty drove everything from 
  late-model Amigas to Macs. After Apple ditched Power for Intel, it looked like 
  Power lost all its muscle. 
But IBM is keeping the processor family very much alive, and uses it to drive 
  the world's fastest PCs to what IBM last year claimed was the world's fastest 
  server. 
While IBM pushes its x86 Blade and traditional server lines, the company's 
  most interesting family just might be the Power-powered System p. Mostly aimed 
  at the high-end, there are two new System p's: the 520 and 550 Express. Added 
  to that is a new virtualization technology, PowerVM, that lets the System p 
  run a wider variety of software, including Linux apps built for x86 systems.
Unfortunately, the System p still doesn't run Windows, even though years ago 
  NT ran just fine on the PowerPC.
Meanwhile, Sun is now shipping Sun MD. This data system is like a military 
  field hospital. You can drop Sun MD into a new location, and have processing, 
  storage, networking and pre-canned data processing all set to go. Not sure if 
  it comes in Army green. 
Get all the details here.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 11, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    If you listen to Wall Street, 
paying 
  $44 billion for Yahoo is the smartest idea since E=mc2. Google's stock is 
  down, and Yahoo is on the rise after Steve Ballmer's public pitch for the No. 
  2 search engine concern.
Let me toss some cold water on this little love-fest. 
I don't see anything in the Yahoo portfolio that Microsoft doesn't already 
  have. It's kinda like Time magazine buying Newsweek, Coke buying 
  Pepsi or BP merging with Exxon -- just more of the same. Even worse, Yahoo 
  is on the decline (its market share and financials are more like Boo-Hoo 
  than Yahoo!). 
Yahoo is, to a large degree, a legacy company. All its core offerings -- search, 
  e-mail, forums, news and IM -- have been around for years. Why spend $44 billion 
  to buy the past when you could invest that money in inventing the future? 
This deal seems like a knee-jerk reaction to the Google threat. Instead of 
  building technologies that can outpace Google, Microsoft is hoping to buy a 
  company that has proven it can't keep pace. From a purely business standpoint, 
  maybe the Yahoo audience is worth that kind of cash -- but this isn't a deal 
  based on technical innovation. What do you think? Write me at [email protected].
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 04, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Vista gets far more criticism for what it has than for what it doesn't. The 
  big complaints have to do with too many functions running up against too little 
  processing. 
If you want Vista but not the overhead of Media Player and other features aimed 
  largely at consumers, then vLite 
  is for you. This free tool strips Vista of all the features you never wanted 
  in the first place. 
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 04, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Every so often, a cartoonist sends me samples of IT humor hoping to get published. 
  In all cases, the work has been lamer than Barbaro's right leg. 
There's a new contender for the IT cartoon Hall of Fame, this time sponsored 
  by Microsoft. The strip is called "HEROES 
  happen {here}." Not sure what that name is supposed to mean, but it 
  sure ain't funny.
The strip is also designed to show off Silverlight. In fact, you have to download 
  Silverlight before you can start laughing your IT butt off. I went through the 
  process, wanting to give the strip a full whirl. The result? Less laughter than 
  a Bill Belichick press conference. 
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on February 04, 20080 comments