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  • Oracle to Patch on Monthly Schedule

    Oracle has broken the silence surrounding its failure to release patches for multiple security flaws, confirming to eWEEK.com that the release delay is caused by the fact that the company is heading to a monthly patch rollup model, as many had suspected. “Oracle [Corp.] is moving to a monthly patch rollup model because we believe…

  • Oracle Opens the Door for Partners to Sell to Top Accounts

    Oracle Corp. is cracking open its top North American accounts to allow partners to get their share of the very lucrative pie. Rauline Ochs, group vice president of Oracle’s North America Alliances and Channels, on Tuesday briefed the media about the program, which Oracle has dubbed the “Cover the Subsidiaries” program. The new program will…

  • IBM Adds New Power5 iSeries Server

    IBM is extending the reach of its Power5-based i5 server family by rolling out a midrange server and expanding the management and operating system support for all i5 systems. IBM next month will start shipping the i5 550, a four-way system targeted at midsize businesses that will include such features as IBM’s On/Off Capacity on…

  • Oracle Still Sitting on Database-Security Patches

    Oracle Corp. is in public-relations hot water after weeks of stony silence on its delay in releasing 34 security vulnerabilities patches for flaws it has known about since January or February. “Clearly, it’s a good thing that they’re getting the patches ready, but it seems to me that Microsoft [Corp.] has gotten a lot of…

  • Microsoft Updates Its Mainframe Connectivity Server

    Microsoft on Tuesday unveiled the 2004 version of its Host Integration Server (HIS) product, which is designed to integrate IBM mainframes and servers with Windows systems. The 2004 edition is the first update Microsoft has made to its mainframe-gateway product in four years. “The goal with HIS is to help customers get the data that’s…

  • Maxtor’s New 300GB Drives Designed For Speed

    Maxtor Corp. on Monday announced a pair of Serial ATA hard drives, increasing capacities to 300MB while offering native command queuing and a significantly larger 16MB buffer. The new 7,200-rpm drives point to a new axis for improvement in hard drives: throughput. Both the additional buffer size and the NCQ technologies are designed to move…

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