Despite Cooling Economy, No MS Hiring Freeze

Yesterday wasn't a great day for stockholders, workers, politicians or taxpayers. In fact, the only folks who made money on Monday are the ones who sell red ink.

So far, Microsoft hasn't been clobbered by the Wall Street fiasco, meltdown, mess, debacle, scandal or disgrace. In fact, Microsoft went on the record denying that it was freezing its hiring. As many companies are laying off thousands, not freezing hiring sounds pretty dang good.

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 07, 20080 comments


Mailbag: .NET vs. Java, More Thoughts on Scareware

Last week, Doug wrote about a survey that showed .NET's popularity is on the rise , after lagging behind Java's for some time. David explains what may be behind the change:

I am not a developer, but from a system admin point of view, I do not care for Java. With .NET, you have 1.0, 1.1, 2.0, 3.0 and soon 4.0. With Java, you have 10 or 12 JRE releases per 1.6.xx release. This becomes very cumbersome because most apps are tested against a certain Java release so each time that changes you have to deploy the new JRE (I called it the 'JRE chase'). I had this issue with a company that developed health care software. As a company, they did not seem to care much.

With .NET, you only have a handful of releases and they can be easily deployed with WSUS.
-David

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 07, 20080 comments


Red-Hot HPC

There's a pretty big battle in the world of high-performance computing (HPC) and hopefully this will soon affect those of you in IT.

HPC has long been the purview of designers, engineers, 3-D renderers and data miners. These high-performance boxes cluster massive arrays of processors, often x86 (and GPUs for the graphics-inclined), and aim it all at a small set of specialized applications. It's very cool, but unfortunately a bit of a niche.

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 07, 20080 comments


Killer Mac

Users of recent model Mac Pro desktops have apparently had to live with a strange smell (the computer smells, not the user). A French scientist believes the odor is actually benzene and could give you cancer. Apple says not to worry, but is looking into it anyway.

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 06, 20080 comments


Amazon Seeds Windows Cloud

Amazon wasn't satisfied with just selling books online, so it started hocking everything from music to clothes to bike parts. Then it looked around and realized it had a rather massive datacenter(s)...so why not sell computing power, as well?

Many of Amazon's cloud services have apparently been Linux-based. But Linux isn't enough for many customers who want to run Windows Server and SQL Server remotely. Amazon is more than happy to oblige, and is now beta testing these two platforms.

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 06, 20080 comments


LeftHanded Complement

HP is a major player in virtualization. It has a couple of lines of servers it virtualizes, a thin client strategy, plenty of management tools and a whole bunch of storage. It has so much in the virtualization space, it took me about a month to figure it all out and write this feature More

Posted by Doug Barney on October 06, 20080 comments


Mailbag: Cautionary Scareware Tales

Have you been hit by scareware? These readers share your pain. As pomised, here are their stories about how they got hit, and how they dealt with the problem:

We're a non-profit providing low-cost computers to low-income disabled and low-income seniors. The majority of our clientele are new to computers, and when presented with a big warning in large letters, they will click "Fix it!" This is a real problem, since our people have no clue as to how to remove the infection (and I've done it and it isn't easy or quick). What a pain!
-Paul

I just finished a full factory restore on a friend's laptop because he clicked on a pop-up for Antivirus 2008. This "free" virus checker completely trashed his machine. Luckily, I was able to save most of his documents prior to the machine becoming completely unusable.
-Ron

I am an IT pro, have been for 30 years. There is a lot to be said for the old dumb terminals that did not have Internet! Since Aug. 1, we have had 15-plus machines get the Antivirus 2008 or some variant thereof at work, and at least that many employees' personal home machines, which has earned me some additional pocket money.

But my own personal machines at home (two) also got it -- the first thanks to one of my daughters, and the second I have to take the blame for. And before I found a great tool for removal, I spent days trying to clean them up. In fact, for the one my daughter did, I accidentally deleted some files in the Windows folder that from that point prevented me from logging back into the machine, period. I had to change hard drives and make the original C drive D to be able to back up the 75GB of stuff she had on it. Another week of restoring and re-installing, and she was back up. Lawsuit is not punishment enough -- theses companies should be tarred and feathered!
-Harry

One of our office machines was playing music from the Internet through Media Player and a window popped up declaring, "You have been infected with horrible Trojans, you need to download this now." Thankfully, I was there and they asked me what was going on. I found out that this was that bogus Antivirus 2009 that has been showing up in various places. What really surprised me was that this site not only showed up as an advertisement on the site Media Player was pointed to, but was a sponsored site on Google and Yahoo and probably other search engines. I am truly amazed that these search sites don't screen their advertisers better than this. Apparently, these scammers are willing to pay to appear on search engines because we are gullible and will fall into their trap.

The other thing that surprised me was that even while I was telling the user that this was bogus, they kept saying, "It looks so official, so genuine." I pointed out that they would hardly make it look fake if they really want to fool people, and they still kept saying, "It looks so real." Yes, it does.

-Anonymous

I'm there right now with a PC hit by scareware. Our HR manager brought in his home laptop and he swears he only visited the GA Bulldog Web site. The laptop has been taken over by one of those "Your PC is infected" scams. It's infected, all right! I'm at the point now where the only recourse is to erase the hard drive. I hope there will be teeth in whatever is done to go after these companies!
-Buz

XP anti-spam, or something similar, got onto my daughter's computer. I used Symantec's eradication instructions, but it took days of effort, and I learned more about registry than I wanted to know.
-Bill

I had a situation recently where my son got attacted by one of these programs. I did eventually fix it, but it took three days, a lot of investigation and a copy of bootable Linux to get to the root of the problem. It was almost as bad as a rootkit to get rid of. Normally, I would probably have just reformatted the hard drive and reinstalled, but I was bound and determined that some punk was not going to get the best of me. Since then, I have heard of a number of other people infected with this crap, and I just wish I would have documented what I had to do to fix it and post the fix on the Web. Maybe next time.
-Rusty

One of our employees approached me and said his home computer had gotten some type of virus and had become unusable. Being the compassionate IT manager that I am, I told him to bring it in. When I turned it on and booted it up, I could not do anything but stare in disbelief, and then laugh. Basically, his background wallpaper was red with a virus symbol and the words "You have a virus" or something to that effect. A pop-up box with a bogus scan started running and messages started popping up everywhere saying all types of virus and spyware were detected. I watched amused as Norton AntiVirus helplessly tried to get things under controll, but it was way out of its league and was probably making things worse. I could not click or open anything except a dialog box that popped up saying that I needed to buy the full version of Vista Antivirus 2008 to fix the problem.

Apparently, while he was surfing the Web he came upon a site that popped up a dialog box that would "scan his computer for free" for viruses and spyware. My solution for him? Boot from the XP CD, stay away from questionable Web sites and do not click on links that promise to clean your PC. Well, you can guess...the rest is history.
-Asif

I am a division chief with a south Chicago suburb fire department and also the IT manager for the same municipality. I have had about 30 PCs that have been infected by these seemingly legitimate pop-ups. I advise my users to just pull the power plug when one appears, no matter what they're doing. For the unfortunate ones that didn't, or just clicked the "X" in the top-right corner, they paid the ultimate data processing price. Their hard drives went to alphabet heaven. A few were recovered by purchasing other anti-virus software and these actually did clean up the mess. Most weren't so lucky. The impact of this is that a lot of these firefighters have had to use their personal PCs for training. Hours and hours of PowerPoint presentations, movies and lessons that firefighters and paramedics use went up in smoke.

The problem with this latest round of "You're infected" pop-ups is that they have the look and feel of a real Microsoft window. When a virus takes on the look and feel of an operating system, the average user is not going to have the tools to decide between "Oh, this one is real" and "Uh-oh...yank the plug." Microsoft and the DAs of the states -- if not at the federal and international level -- should hunt these authors down and prosecute them fully with felony charges.
-Tom

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 06, 20080 comments


Mailbag: Much Ado About the Cloud, .NET vs. Java, More

Yesterday , Doug wrote about Larry Ellison's criticisms of cloud computing. Here are some of your own thoughts:

Cloud, shmoud. Yes, the cloud is way overhyped. I'm already tired of hearing about it. Isn't this just another name for client/server computing? Ho-hum. Been there, way past that.

Oh, and the day I would trust our company's data and/or applications to the cloud is the day the entire Internet decides to take a dump and I would be shown the door. No thanks.
-Phil

I think that anyone dismissing cloud computing as hype doesn't know what's going on around them. We're going through another swing toward "mainframe" computing, but this time instead of using thin clients to access user sessions on beefier servers, individual servers are being virtualized on large servers, and the new thin client is the browser.

I would recommend that people look into hosted cloud offerings such as Mosso.com, Amazon's EC2 and others to get an idea of what utility cloud computing really is. You pay for what you use, and your environment scales dynamically to meet your usage needs. You no longer need to spec out individual pieces of hardware for hosting certain applications. You just put your applications online and go. You pay for the disk space, bandwidth and CPU time that you use. Cloud computing is service on-demand. Many SaaS providers are hosting on these types of platforms to dynamically scale their application as they add subscribers. The mainframe is getting much smarter. We apologize if it has a catchy name.
-Jeremy

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 02, 20080 comments


Unified Communication Still More Hype than Reality

Over a decade ago, I covered unified communications; back then, everyone from Microsoft to Novell was talking about not just blending voicemail and e-mail, but tying all your devices -- like cell phones, pagers and Palms (remember those things?) -- together.

The emergence of VoIP should've made all this much, much easier, but when it comes to UC, we aren't really any closer than we were 12 years ago.

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 02, 20080 comments


Chuck Going Back in Space

Charles Simonyi is famous in a few largely unrelated circles. PC vets know him as the man behind Word and Excel. Celebrity stalkers know him as the boy-toy who picked up Martha Stewart from jail. And space junkies know him as the man who spent millions to go into space as a private citizen.

Simonyi either liked space so much, or has so much cash to burn that he's heading back up More

Posted by Doug Barney on October 02, 20080 comments


Scaring Scareware

I know you've been there. Your computer is happily chugging along, and all of a sudden a pop-up warns of a virus, critical performance problem or some other such catastrophe. Being the IT guru that you are, you ignore it, knowing it's all a scam.

Not everyone is so smart. Plenty click on the pop-ups and buy the unnecessary -- and often bogus -- security software offered. I had a whole machine destroyed this way, and I never even clicked the link! I swear!

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Posted by Doug Barney on October 02, 20080 comments


.NET on the Rise

Yesterday , I brought you news about Visual Studio 2010, and also argued that Microsoft treats developers particularly well. There are a few complaints that some tools are overpriced and don't support enough non-Microsoft technologies, but overall the programmers I talk to are pretty happy. More

Posted by Doug Barney on October 01, 20080 comments