While Security Essentials is aimed at consumers, Forefront  is geared towards a group with somewhat deeper pockets -- enterprises.
There is a new Forefront client tool coming in the form of  Forefront Endpoint Protection 2010, which will replace Forefront Client  Security (was this name change really necessary?). 
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 28, 20105 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		
Microsoft Security Essentials is a free replacement for the  ill-fated, fee-based OneCare. Microsoft is aiming the software at consumers and  netbook users who may not need or can't afford a full security suite but prefer  not to have their computer fully exposed.
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 28, 20106 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    		
Here are some reader comments on Doug's article on which  company keeps it cool:
		
		
   "...and Bing -- if you haven't tried it -- is  pretty slick."
  This seems to imply that if you have tried it, it's  not slick.
     - Clay
  I liked your editorial. Mentioning Andrew Carnegie and Bill  Gates in the same piece was somewhat ironic. Both spent their careers building huge  fortunes and both ended up giving away much of those fortunes (Carnegie to  build libraries across America,  Gates to help the poorest of the poor in Africa). Steve  Jobs is of the same generation as Bill Gates (and has built himself a similar  empire) but we don't hear much about Steve's philanthropic activities. I wonder  why? 
  Equally ironic is that using the term "cool" these  days is not very cool! 
  You asked what I think about Microsoft: Well, Microsoft is  destined to follow in the footsteps of most big monolithic corporations. (The phone  company, the cable company and IBM all come to mind.) These entities have lots  and lots of customers. Lots of people hate them and lots of people love them. Most  people really don't care. While they might introduce a "cool" product  now and then, they are never really considered "cool." These kinds of  companies never really die but they often just fade away. (Don't be confused. IBM  never really faded away. They are still the largest computer firm in the world.  They have just returned to their roots as a service firm.)
  Apple is chock full of "cool," but what happens  when Steve is gone? I wonder if he will leave a lasting legacy (either personal  or corporate). Steve comes across as supremely competent -- and equally  arrogant. Bill comes across as somewhat of a geek -- and somewhat less  arrogant. Yet, in some ways, these guys are cut from the same cloth. 
  Apple is probably a lot more typical of a computer company  than Microsoft. These companies usually spring up overnight, have a few big "cool"  products and find themselves displaced just as quickly as they had arrived. In  my view, Apple is still a player in very large part because Steve Jobs is a  marketing genius. He sells "cool" looking (Dare I say "sexy?")  products to well-healed customers. Few people have Steve's vision and sense of  style. Who will replace him? 
  In the spirit of full disclosure, I moved from PC-DOS to  Windows in 1987 and never looked back. I did a stint along the way as a Unix  specialist before coming back to Windows. I had piddled with Macintosh from  time-to-time but never quite "got it." I have never owned one! I have  owned more than one iPod and I am listening to iTunes as I write this. (I never  tried Zune, and Windows Media player offers me nothing of interest.) I also own  a Kindle and have been a BlackBerry guy since 2004.
  I got an iPad as a belated Father's Day gift and, so far, I  am unimpressed. 
    -Marc
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 28, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
Is it any wonder that as the Adobe/Apple relationship  disintegrates, the Adobe/Microsoft one gets stronger? As Apple spurned Adobe over  claimed Flash performance and stability problems, Microsoft was waiting with  open arms, ready to help anyway it could.
First up was an agreement to make Adobe patches part of  Patch Tuesday. And last week we learned that Adobe has been given Microsoft-built  sandbox software that will be used first with Adobe Reader.
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 28, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
Hackers are a sneaky lot. Not content with infecting our  machines with common viruses downloaded from the Web or e-mail, some like the  challenge of actually infecting components sold by major computer  manufacturers.
The latest example is that some clever dirtbag managed to  install the W32.Spybot worm on a number of replacement motherboards for Dell  servers.
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 26, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
In 1968 IBM invented virtualization with the release of the  IBM System/360 Model 67 mainframe. IBM never gave up on the concept and last  week released the zEnterprise mainframe, a beast that can handle some 100,000  virtual machines, or what Big Blue refers to as a "datacenter in a box."  (I think I've heard Sun use the same nomenclature.)
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 26, 20106 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
Here are some reader comments on how much personal  information Microsoft actually knows about customers:
  I'll guarantee you  that Microsoft knows LESS about you than your local grocer does. (And the  grocer doesn't even pretend to protect your privacy.) All over America, people  sign up for "discount" cards in exchange for personal information  (essentially, buying habits). We give out our snail-mail addresses as quickly  as we give out our e-mail addresses and our cell phone numbers. 
  Microsoft knows  exactly what we allow them to know when we agree to share system performance  information. When we sign up for newsletters. When we connect ourselves  perpetually to the Internet. When we don't use AV software, spyware detectors,  firewalls or routers to isolate our computers from the Internet. We don't even  use common sense when using e-mail or the Web.
  The federal government  created the HPPA laws to protect our privacy, and the first thing our doctors  do is ask us to sign a waiver to release them from these privacy restrictions.
  Our kids put every  aspect of their lives on Facebook and then get upset when their parents,  teachers or (prospective) employers look them up. 
  If you don't want to  share information, then don't. But, don't demonize those entities with which  you DO share personal information. 
  That's my two cents.
    -Marc
  Interesting idea, Doug. We will let the  people who are gathering the information about us tell us what they have. They  would never lie would they? As if any manager at Microsoft or Google knows what  his people are doing every minute. The reality is, we should all be actively  engaged in lying to the data gatherers so they do not know what to believe.  Since you have surrendered your life to people  you do not know, you should simply quit worrying about it. It is already too  late.
    -Anonymous
  Am I becoming a Redmond fanboy and,  therefore, missing what Microsoft is up to? Or is it really concerned about  your privacy? 
  Maybe a little of  both...
    -Vicke
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 26, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
So Microsoft is done, and Apple and Google are kings. How then  can you explain the fact that in this dormant economy Redmond set another record with $16 billion  in revenue and $4.5 billion in profit in its latest quarter?
While one could credit the Xbox and Windows 7, Microsoft  says all its businesses saw growth in the double digits. 
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 26, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
Here are some reader's thoughts on the acquisition  of Sunbelt by GFI:
  I was saddened to hear about the sale of  Sunbelt to GFI -- I immediately e-mailed the CEO of Sunbelt with my concerns  for a possible degradation of customer service and the great products they  carry, and said that I hoped they did not lose the name Sunbelt. I have used  their products for many years. In typical Sunbelt  fashion, the CEO responded personally to my e-mail message the same day. He  assured me there would be no degradation in customer service or product, but the  name Sunbelt was history. What a great  company!
  I truly hope that it stays as great as it  has been.
    -Shon
  It seems like GFI is  most successful in Europe, while Sunbelt is best known here in the U.S. This  might be a great opportunity for each company's products to expand more  globally. IMO, one of the best things about this is the lack of overlap between  product lines -- hopefully no jobs will be lost as a result of this  acquisition.
    -Dave
  I switched to Sunbelt's CounterSpy about three years ago after I got  tired of paying Symantec big bucks just to eat up my system resources. I upgraded  to VIPRE when it came out and I love it! It absolutely works and is very  reasonably priced! You only notice it's there when it finds something fishy!
  The merger has me  worried, though, as GFI has much more of a business focus that a home focus. While  that might finally help me convince my system guys here at work to give up  McAfee, I'm worried the price for my home license may start being priced like a  business license at the cost of Symantec (or McAfee) renewal prices. My VIPRE  renewal is next month; we'll see what happens to the cost!
  However, if GFI  absorbs Sunbelt's home use philosophy, this  will be a fantastic merger. Time will tell.
    -Ron 
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	Posted by Doug Barney on July 23, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
If you want to add an extra  layer of security protection between your network and the Internet, you may  want to check out the Dell Kace "Secure Browser."
Security is enhanced by  using a "virtualized instance" of the Firefox browser, keeping any  malware that may be encountered contained from the user's PC. Dell explains  that "when using the Secure Browser, any changes or malicious files  inadvertently downloaded from the Internet are contained within the secure  browser, keeping the underlying OS and computer secure from hostile changes." 
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	Posted by Becky Nagel on July 21, 20100 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
We're working on a series of  articles regarding the best mobile apps for IT managers and admins, and we want  to hear from you! What mobile apps have you found to be the most useful in your  day-to-day job? Let us know by e-mailing our associate editor Chris Paoli at  [email protected], use "Mobile Apps" in the subject line, and be  sure to give us not only the app name but the platform you use it on (iPhone,  Android, Windows Mobile, etc.). Thanks!
 
	Posted by Becky Nagel on July 21, 20101 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    
		
On Friday, Microsoft issued  a zero-day (a.k.a. "It's here!") warning about a security flaw that  can allow malicious code to get through to Windows desktops and servers  (including Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2) via "specially  crafted" shortcut icons on attached devices such as USB drives.
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	Posted by Becky Nagel on July 21, 20101 comments