Recent Articles
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Apple Makes a Play for NT Orphans
Microsoft’s competitors smell blood in the enterprise waters. They are swarming around NT 4.0 like sharks. And Apple is among the school of circling predators. Like Red Hat Inc., Novell Inc., Sun Microsystems Inc. and other vendors, Apple Computer Inc. sees a silver lining in Microsoft’s decision to phase out support for NT Server 4.0…
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Antispam Tools: Can They Keep Up?
The deluge of spam just keeps increasing, and spammers are getting sneakier every day. That means antispam products have to get tougher to stay ahead of the game. So we tested the latest versions of five spam blockers to see if they can hold back the flood. We configured each product according to the vendor’s…
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Accenture’s Consulting Rebound Could Help Integrators
If Accenture’s recent financial results prove an accurate barometer, integrators may be in for a shifting business climate. Global management consulting, technology services and outsourcing giant Accenture released results Wednesday for its fiscal third quarter, which ended May 31. During a teleconference discussion of the company’s financials, executives pointed to a couple of interesting trends.…
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Do Small Devices Equal Big Threat?
Is that cell phone a Trojan horse? It might be, according to a recently released report, “How to Tackle the Threat From Portable Storage Devices,” by The Gartner Group discussing the security risks associated with the proliferation of small USB- and Firewire-enabled electronics and peripherals. As as the cost of RAM chips and hard drives…
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Analysts: Ballmer’s Pep Talk Underrates Linux
Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer’s annual e-mail update to the Microsoft troops revealed much about the Redmond, Wash., giant’s views on Linux and its other operating-system competition. In turn, we asked analysts and Linux leaders what they thought of Ballmer’s latest Linux comments. In the memo, Ballmer wrote, “We are effectively using independent studies by Forrester…
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Microsoft Short on Specifics to IE Questions
Internet Explorer users continued to hammer Microsoft with questions about the Web browser’s security during an online discussion Thursday, but they also sought answers about IE’s future support for Web standards and new features. The Redmond, Wash., software maker hosted a public chat with IE’s product and development team on its Windows XP Expert Zone…