
July 7, 2004 How Gary Bloom pilots Veritas past utility titans : Can this Switzerland of clustering solutions continue to prosper in an increasingly homogeneous IT environment? ...
July 7, 2004 Veritas CEO Gary Bloom Unplugged Veritas CEO Gary Bloom has two pieces of advice for CIOs: One, make utility computing your top priority. Two, make Veritas -- a company with virtually no hardware or application software agenda -- your unbiased go-to company for computing infrastructure requirements. Bloom talked with ZDNet executive editor David Berlind just prior to announcing that his company would miss its quarterly earnings mark....
July 2, 2004 Why Microsoft's patch process needs patching : In a bid to prevent more exploitations of the Windows vulnerability that enabled last month's Download.Ject attack, Microsoft has
released a "configuration change" it wants Windows users to apply
immediately. However, timing flaws and user interface issues with Microsoft's patch process reveal that the company's Trustworthy Computing Initiative needs a lot more attention to detail than it's getting. ...
July 1, 2004 Why Microsoft must fix flawed firewall Neither Internet Explorer nor the
best anti-virus defenses were well-prepared to do a thing about one of the
keystroke loggers that dominated this week's tech headlines.
Microsoft will be making a critical mistake if its new personal
firewall included with Service Pack 2 to Windows doesn't have a
facility for outbound blocking. Here's why your security could
depend on it. ...
June 30, 2004 Dell to buyers: 'Beware the blade myth--at least until November' Dell's message to corporate buyers: Based
on current offerings, blades' promise of density and cost benefit--
when compared with 1U rack mountable servers--isn't all it's cracked
up to be. If Dell enters the market with an offering that meets or beats its benchmark,
it will send the entire blade market back to the drawing board....
June 29, 2004 RLX's Erwin: 'Why we'll stay a big blade player' ZDNet Executive Editor David Berlind recently sat down with Doug Erwin, chairman and CEO of RLX. ...
June 27, 2004 Sun execs at lovefest: 'Java's got game' Faced with losses, layoffs, resignations, and unbelievably intense
competition, Sun this year tapped its shrinking war chest, its
brightest stars, even its soul to restore the luster that once
graced this company. Sun's key theme at JavaOne, which starts
today, is momentum. And the company's efforts do indeed appear to be
paying off--from Java's progress on the handheld front to détente with superpowers IBM and Microsoft, Sun's back in the game. ...
June 24, 2004 Life in disorder? InfoSelect hits the right note After years of battling chronic personal information disorganization disorder, David Berlind started to play with the TabletPC operating system--and even began to think that Microsoft's OneNote might be the cure I was so desperately seeking. But then he turned my organizational reins over to Micro Logic's InfoSelect. ...
June 23, 2004 Why click-and-drag IT may elude us If David Berlind's project to mobilize and
webify some data is any example, it looks to be quite a
while before non-IT types can click and drag their way to
the sort of IT that delivers serious competitive advantage. ...
June 16, 2004 Blade innovation slows but differentiators still exist The blade server market has matured so quickly that the major
vendors--IBM, HP, Dell, RLX--are finding little room for
differentiation. In fact, so nuanced are innovations in the
blade space that you have to read the fine print to understand
where the innovations lie, who's ahead, and who's behind. Be
on the lookout for how a little innovation can force a big
change to your systems. ...
June 8, 2004 Cingular systems open door to fraudulent credit card transactions A ZDNet reader alerts David Berlind to a rather astonishing flaw in
Cingular's online account management system that allowed anyone
supplied with a customer's cell phone number and zip code to look
up that customer's basic account information. It gets worse. Until Cingular
hurriedly tweaked its Web site, anyone could pay a customer's bill for
them--with funds from that customer's own account....
June 8, 2004 Sun, Red Hat gird for traditional OS battle With the GPL playing a much lesser role in the delivery of
enterprise benefits, Red Hat Linux vs. Sun Solaris has all
the makings of a fiercely fought battle of the operating systems.
And now that criteria like price, performance, features and
functionality have been added to the level playing field checklist,
each company is claiming more timely response to customer
needs....
June 6, 2004 Beehive politics flush out J2EE handicap vs. .Net Open source contributions can just as easily disrupt the Java
community as they can harmonize it, making it difficult for promising technologies to rise above the noise and FUD. With
that sort of divisiveness, Microsoft doesn't have to worry
about dividing and conquering. The Java community appears to
be doing that to itself.
...
May 31, 2004 Spyware following spam into the enterprise : Unwanted and surreptitiously installed software is no longer simply a consumer's headache. In addition to capturing sensitive information, spyware can reduce user productivity and slow corporate systems to a crawl. Freely downloadable anti-spyware utilities help, although paid versions offer the proactive protection most businesses ought to have. Think your business is already covered by anti-virus and firewall solutions and can afford to skip this expense? Think again.
...
May 21, 2004 One small step against spam. One giant step for Yahoo and Microsoft : Yahoo and Microsoft each
have put the interests of all Internet e-mail users ahead of their own by
not only inventing techniques that could lay the necessary foundation
for ending spam, but by making those techniques freely available
to competitors. ...
May 17, 2004 Senforce puts 'Tupperware-like' seal on mobile data One of the thorniest problems facing enterprises with
increasingly mobile workforces is how to keep the sensitive
data on their notebook computers from getting into the wrong
hands. Senforce Technologies calls its Enterprise Mobile
Security Manager a one-of-a-kind solution that uses centrally
controlled group policies to manage notebook users' access to
the various conduits through which sensitive data can be siphoned...
May 11, 2004 Firetide's wireless mesh goes where backhauls can't In these days of Wi-Fi, the phrase "wireless" generally conjures up images of untethered client connectivity. However, wireless mesh is really nothing of the sort--this is primarily a new enabler for Ethernet deployments....
May 9, 2004 Put your apps to the test--or someone else will Mercury Interactive's business technology optimization can test your systems and let you spot a catastrophe before it happens. This brand of BTO doesn't come cheap. But could these BTO systems be as mission critical as the systems
driving your business? ...
May 5, 2004 Is Microsoft ready for the SP2 tightrope? Nearly everyone concerned with IT security seems to agree that
Microsoft's forthcoming Service Pack 2 for Windows XP may be the
most significant component yet in the company's Trustworthy
Computing initiative. Everyone but Microsoft, that is.
...
April 27, 2004 Why your personal firewall could be obsolete With Microsoft poised to transform Windows XP's built-in personal
firewall into a more serious security technology, now's a good
time for enterprises to think more strategically before buying
any more third-party personal firewall technology. But where's the outbound filtering?
...
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