Microsoft late last week released an 
out-of-cycle 
  patch for IE
 that fixes a hole in Vector Markup Language (VML) that could 
  let a hacker control your machine. Microsoft last month sent out the original 
  IE patch, but tweaked it to deal with the VML problem. So I guess it's a patch 
  for a patch.
 
	
Posted by Doug Barney on September 02, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Redmond Report readers have probably heard about my sons Nick and David and 
  their love for Mac laptops. Their older sister Lauren, on the other hand, has 
  been a real holdout. 
Her first machine was a PC laptop -- I never even thought to suggest a Mac. 
  After that one started to die, I suggested a Mac; it would save me some headaches 
  and her some heartache. Nothing doing. Another laptop, a Toshiba I think, was 
  acquired. The screen on this baby died, and once again I pitched Apple, pointing 
  to her brothers' experience. Nope -- this time, an HP fit the bill. Now it's 
  two years later, and the HP is getting slower and less trustworthy. Another 
  PC? No, sir. This time Lauren demanded a Mac.
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I rarely use Internet Explorer. Sometimes (almost never), a site doesn't work 
  under Firefox, so I fire up IE, view the page and shut 'er right back down. 
Microsoft is trying to entice people like me back into the fold with IE 8, 
  now in its 
  second beta. The new browser steals one cool feature of Firefox: When your 
  browser dies, it will restore your old session, including all the tabs. 
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Doug 
recently 
  asked
 for a show of hands to determine who uses Mac servers for virtual 
  Vista and XP desktops. Here are your responses: 
 
   We don't use Mac servers, and I don't know anyone that uses Mac servers 
    in an enterprise environment. And using them to drive VM Vista or XP desktops 
    is even more out there. I'm sure there are a few people out there, but I very 
    much doubt that it is close to 23 percent, or even 3 percent. They may be 
    counting non-Windows as a whole as Mac servers (Unix, Linux, BSD, Mac).
    -Dustin
  I have not seen a single Mac server in an enterprise IT computer room. 
    Who are these virtual people?
    -Anonymous
  Well, we sort of use Mac servers. Being that we are a large university, 
    there is not much control over what the faculty or even tech workers for individual 
    departments do. I'm guessing that there are about 10 or so, but none in the 
    datacenter. I don't know of any that are being used to run virtual Windows 
    machines.
    -Charlie
  Yes, I use Macs for Hyper-V. I run Win 2003 images on a Dell with Win 
    2008. However, I have some Win XP and Win NT images that were virtualized 
    on MS VS 2005. When I migrated them over to the Hyper-V on Win 2008, I discovered 
    that Hyper-V only supports Vista, Win 2003, and Win 2008 and above. I also 
    saw that Hyper-V will only support two cores per image on Win 2003 images, 
    and I can only assign cores in multiples of two.
   On my Mac Pro, I run Parallels Hyper-V server for Mac. It runs my Win 
    XP images just fine. Also, I can assign up to eight cores to any image including 
    Win 2003 and in multiples of 1. I have a Win 2003 Enterprise image as a TS 
    assigned with three cores, not possible with Hyper-V. Performance seems to 
    by equitable between images running on the Mac and the Dell. However, I have 
    not been able to add Win 2003 images running on Mac to a server farm that 
    has images running on the Dell.
    -Stephen
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Vista has more features, and is far newer than XP. And it actually costs money 
  to remove the new Vista and install the seven-year-old XP. 
So why would over 
  a third of new PC customers go through the trouble and expense of downgrading 
  to XP? Because XP works!
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 28, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    At the risk of sounding like a broken record (or a skipping CD), there's good 
  news about IT spending. I've written about several reports pointing to higher 
  IT budgets. Research powerhouse Gartner is weighing in, reporting that overall 
  spending is 
up 
  around 8 percent
. 
What are you spending money on? Security? Services? New apps? Or just keeping 
  things running? Details may be sent to 
 More
	
Posted by Doug Barney on August 27, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A week or two ago, Forrester Research raised a stink with a report saying that 
  enterprise uptake of Vista was 
more 
  anemic
 than a German POW. Microsoft spat back that other Forrester analysts 
  have a more upbeat view of Vista. Funny thing was, a Microsoft exec blogged 
  about the company's misgivings and got 
 
More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 27, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    I've been meaning to write about this for a while, but kept putting it off. 
  It's not easy or fun to write about a loss. An old boss of mine passed away. 
You may ask what that means to you. Well, that 
  boss was Ed Foster, creator of InfoWorld's Gripe Line, a column that 
  took vendors to task for rampant rip-offs, poor products and shoddy support. 
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 27, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Readers share their thoughts on open source security in general, and the recent 
  
Red 
  Hat hack
 in particular:
   I think that Red Hat getting hacked was a good thing. I am a die-hard 
    Linux user, but I do not go with the crowd that thinks that if you are using 
    any non-Microsoft OS, then you are safe from bad ware. Humans make mistakes; 
    the software that we create will have bugs, and bugs lead to holes, and holes 
    are how the bad boys get in. The sooner everyone starts thinking about security, 
    the better. 
   I have to admit that I do feel safer using Linux and Firefox while I 
    am surfing the Web, just as the people in the Twin Towers felt safe on Sept. 
    11, 2001, just before the planes hit.
    -Raymond 
  I have countered for years that Mac and open source operating systems 
    are not targets -- not because they are so secure, but because there were 
    so few of them. The more that are out there, the more they will be hacked. 
    The hackers want quantity. It only makes sense that they will concentrate 
    their efforts where they will get the most results for the least amount of 
    work.
    -Bernie
  It is Microsoft's licensing that really burns me up, not so much whether 
    it has a better product than others. I'm not sure why those who clamor around 
    Microsoft don't get that. While there have been some who have made silly claims 
    about open source and its security, at least a company that uses FOSS or OSS 
    can hire someone (if they don't possess in-house talent) to review code to 
    ensure that everything is up to snuff. I have a few clients who have done 
    just that with Internet-facing Linux systems -- and it is one thing you cannot 
    do with closed source, no matter who it is. And that is the difference and 
    is why I will always look for an open source alternative for anything I use 
    and recommend.
    -Anonymous
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 27, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Readers share their methods for dodging Vista:
   As long as I was being forced to buy a new system to upgrade the OS, 
    I went and bought a iMac. Parallels gets me the few XP Windows apps I need 
    to use; for the rest I use Mac-based programs. Love the new Mac. It's a lot 
    easier to use and maintain than Windows. For supporting Mac users, iChat is 
    great and the built-in mike is live during screen-sharing sessions so we can 
    hang up the phone. XP is still in use in the corporate environs I haunt, no 
    change expected there.
    -Eddie
  For any of you who want to see what is involved in removing Vista, see 
    this 
    thread at CR4.
    -Ari 
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 26, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    A 
recent report
 from 
  the Yankee Group about virtualization has some reasonable findings, such as 
  the fact that 75 percent of companies plan to use virtual wares in their datacenters, 
  and that 40 percent of current virtualization customers mix and match technologies 
  from different vendors. That all makes perfect sense. 
 
More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 26, 20080 comments
          
	
 
            
                
                
 
    
    
	
    Kidnappers in Mexico might soon find the 
federales
 breaking down their 
  door. It seems that more and more affluent Mexicans are taking drastic steps 
  to be recovered in the event of a kidnapping -- like having transmitter chips 
  
planted 
  in their bodies
 More
	Posted by Doug Barney on August 26, 20080 comments