A new interview, tech news, and insight from the podcast for IT pros at CSTechcast.com. This week we talk about smartphone and mobile device security with Dan Dearing, Vice President of marketing at Trust Digital. Find out more about Trust Digital at trustdigital.com. In the news, we discuss a kaleidoscope of a patch from Microsoft, social networking for G Men, Dell shutting down factories of their once high-flying made-to-order operations, a six-core server chip from Intel, and a recall of overheating Sony Vaio laptops. Comcast's FCC countersuit gets "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", Chrome, Firefox, and IE8 start up the browser wars once again when we take "A Closer Look", and "The Weekly Tech Tip" delves into the NETSH command.
Links to stories and sites discussed during the show: Upcoming Microsoft patch lineup could be 'massive,' says researcher (ComputerWorld) CIA, FBI push 'Facebook for spies' (CNN) Dell Plans to Sell Factories In Effort to Cut Costs (Wall Street Journal) Intel ready to announce six-core chip (CNet) Sony recalls 440,000 Vaio laptops (ZDNet)
Thanks for listening and remember to give us feedback at the blog, at the voicemail box, and at our email. All of these are available at our home page: CSTechcast.com. Keep coming back and bring your friends too. If you'd like to support our show, post a review on iTunes or on your favorite podcast directory.
Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=41
- Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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A new podcast for IT pros at CSTechcast.com is ready for you to download. Anil Desai, respected author, Microsoft MVP, and consultant, talks about the journey of being an independent technology consultant and the lessons learned. Find more on his web site anildesai.net. In the news, we talk the IT disaster recovery efforts in effect prompted by Hurricane Gustav, what jobs are more at risk to being outsourced, Google Apps are not getting much adoption in the enterprise, we discuss the new Cellular Seizure Investigation Stick, and the latest beta of Internet Explorer 8. Comcast's bit cap gets "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", hit the buzzer for our less than 5 minute game show "Know Your Tech", and check out SharePoint wiki permissions in "The Weekly Tech Tip". Links to stories and sites discussed during the show: New Orleans IT departments brace for Gustav (ComputerWorld) IT workers hit hardest by offshore outsourcing, survey finds (ComputerWorld) Google's tough sell to Corporate America (Fortune) CSI Stick grabs data from cell phones (CNet) Internet Explorer 8 beta 2 (ZDNet) Keep up with CS Techcast on the social nets at twitter.com/cstechcast and friendfeed.com/cstechcast. Help us out by writing a review where you subscribe to our podcast, either on iTunes or your favorite podcast directory. We look forward to brining you more great podcasts at CSTechcast.com. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=40 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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CSTechcast.com has a great show available for subscription and download this week. We interview Ken Ledeen, author of Blown to Bits: Your Life, Liberty, and Happiness After the Digital Explosion , about the current status of privacy in the digital domain and how you can steer your IT organization around these new privacy pitfalls. The news brings stats of Vista service pack 1 adoption, a new massive Microsoft data center, a lawsuit for Apple and their 3G iPhone, DNS continues to be exposed, and Apache Tomcat faces a new security vulnerability. ISPs who haven't patched their DNS servers get "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", we argue the confusion around SSL certificates in "Point/Counterpoint", and Active Directory logon problems give fodder for "The Weekly Tech Tip". Links to stories and sites discussed during the show: Vista users rush for SP1; XP owners dawdle on SP3 (ComputerWorld) Microsoft's $500M Iowa data center to use shipping containers (ComputerWorld) iPhone 3G owner sues Apple over dropped calls, slow speeds (ComputerWorld) Security expert: DNS attacks are happening (CNet) Exploit code published for Apache Tomcat flaw (ZDNet) We have awarded our prize for feedback, but don't let that stop you. Submit feedback at our web site CSTechcast.com, at our blog ConsortioServices.com/blog, or at our Twitter.com/cstechcast and Friendfeed.com/cstechcast social networking locations. Let us know what you think and thanks for listening to CS Techcast. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=39 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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We just signed on to write a new book about Microsoft's offering for medium-sized business, Essential Business Server 2008. The title is Microsoft Essential Business Server 2008 Unleashed and we are excited to get started. We have already put a blog up to help document our progress and various musings that wouldn't be appropriate for the text of this book. In addition, we hope to contribute to the overall tech community with our postings. Visit EBSUnleashed.com to keep up with the topic.
- Eric Beehler
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 CSTechcast.com brings you another episode of the podcast for IT professionals. Today, we talk about the future of IPv6 for business with Fred Wettling, author of Global IPv6 Strategies from Cisco Press. In the news, solid state drives are looking to replace spinning disks for enterprise applications, AMD is introducing new processors, a court ruling on model trains impacts free software, Windows 7 starts to get real, and iPhone gets Gartner's nod for use in business. VMWare's servers have fallen and they can't get up in "The Worst tech Move of the Week", greening servers gets "A Closer Look", and a quick FTP server setup is "The Weekly Tech Tip". Links to stories and sites discussed during the show: IT managers opting for solid-state drives over hard disks (ComputerWorld) AMD targets business with new desktop chips (ComputerWorld) Legal milestone for open source (BBC) Engineering Windows 7 (MSDN Blogs) Windows 7 Details In October, Microsoft Says (InformationWeek) iPhone 3G Available Online For Business Customers (InformationWeek) VMware bug causes worldwide disruption (ZDNet)
This is the last week to get your feedback in for a chance to win a $25 Amazon.com gift certificate. Tell us what you think. Links to all the ways to give your opinion on the home page. Thanks for listening and, as always, get the latest podcasts at CSTechcast.com.
Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=38 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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Let's do it again, another IT pro podcast posted at CSTechcast.com. This week we talk phishing threats and how to keep your users safe with Rohyt Belani, CEO of Intrepidus Group. See their new technology online at phishme.com. The news brings twelve new Microsoft updates for patch Tuesday, but Microsoft also tries harder with three new security programs, security concerns around the march towards virtualization, cloud entries from AT&T, others bring forth virtualization for small business, and economic woes hit IT jobs hard. Apple's iPhone kill switch gets "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", we take "A Closer Look" at the forthcoming Microsoft Essential Business Server 2008, and a strange hibernation feature in Windows Server 2008 brings us "The Weekly Tech Tip". Links to stories discussed during the show: Microsoft Patch Tuesday for August 2008: 12 bulletins (ArsTechnica) Microsoft further commits to security, unveils 3 programs (Arstechnica) Black Hat conference spotlights virtualization, DNS issues (InfoWorld) AT&T Jumps Into Cloud Computing With Synaptic Hosting (InformationWeek) Warily, Small Businesses Look To Cloud Computing (InformationWeek) No Answers From Apple On iPhone 'Kill Switch' (InformationWeek) We still want to give you a $25 Amazon.com gift certificate. All you have to do is submit some feedback. Drop by our home page, CSTechcast.com, for multiple ways to drop us a line. Keep your podcatcher pointed at CSTechcast.com for the best independent podcast for IT professionals. Thanks to everyone for listening. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=37 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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Welcome to the podcast for IT pros at CSTechcast.com. This week we look at the coming trends for the SQL Server database platform with our friend Paul Nielsen, author of SQL Server 2005 Bible . Find Paul and his books at sqlserverbible.com. In the news; Apple's DNS patch fails to randomize ports plus other DNS patches show new flaws, IBM commits to the cloud with a heavy investment in data centers, Microsoft is set to deliver Small Business Server 2008 for mom and pops and Essential Business Server 2008 for the mid-market this year, the Storm worm pops back onto the radar with an FBI spoof, and Sun debuts JavaFX to compete with Adobe. Plus, Apple's culture of secrecy gets "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", and we put mobile security in our crosshairs for "A Closer Look".
Links to stories discussed during the show: Apple's patch fails to fix DNS flaw, researchers claim (ComputerWorld) DNS patches cause problems, developers admit (InfoWorld) IBM Brings Cloud Computing To Earth With Massive New Data Centers (InformationWeek) Windows Small/Essential Business Server RC1s arrive (Ars Technica) FBI warns of new Storm worm attacks (ComputerWorld) Jobs entrusts a NYT columnist with the truth about his health, even before he tells Apple shareholders (VentureBeat) Travelers' Laptops May Be Detained At Border (Washington Post)
We apologize for the late post of our podcast, but system problems prevented a timely post. This is the first time we have missed the release mark. Anyway, we hope everything is back on track hardware wise. The drawing for an Amazon.com gift certificate is just a few weeks away, so visit CSTechcast.com to submit your feedback to enter. We'd like to thank those who have submitted the wonderful, constructive feedback so far and look forward to more from our listeners. Please subscribe and write a review on iTunes or your favorite podcast site. Thanks for listening.
Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=36
- Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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Sorry folks, but our studio workstation has gone to bed and won't wake up. It's unfortunate, since we have never missed a release and this one was nearly in the bag. We'll get back on it tomorrow, when we can go out and buy some things to help us work the problem. We're hoping all the data is still there and its just some other problem that's easily fixed. I'll keep Twitter updated at www.twitter.com/cstechcast. If we can get the issue resolved, you'll see it here with a new podcast. Thanks for understanding. - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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CSTechcast.com, your weekly source for tech, trends, news, and reviews for IT pros presents the latest episode of our podcast. Rhonda Layfield joins the fray to update us on the extensive deployment tools available for the Microsoft Windows platform. Find Rhonda contributing to the web site Minasi.com. Tech news brings everyone early exposure to the DNS flaw, VMWare decides to give away the ESXi hypervisor, Drizzle aims to slim down MySQL, the Brocade-Foundry marriage merges Fibre-SAN switching with 10G Ethernet expertise, and Terry Childs finally gives up the goods. Quick selling VC's are investing in "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", we take "A Closer Look" at virtualization sprawl, and we look at SharePoint disaster recovery in "The Weekly Tech Tip".
Links to stories discussed during the show: New DNS exploit now in the wild and having a blast (ArsTechnica) VMware Counters Microsoft, Will Make ESXi Hypervisor Free (InformationWeek) Drizzle project plans a stripped-down MySQL (InfoWorld) Dissecting the Brocade-Foundry Merger (eWeek) SF mayor gets codes to hijacked city network (CNet News.com) VCs Reap What They Sow (Gigaom) The Silicon Valley VC Disease (Scobleizer)
Give us some feedback and win a $25 Amazon.com gift certificate. We really want to know what you think. Contact us from the feedback button, e-mail us, and post to the blog all at CSTechcast.com. Also find us micro-blogging at twitter.com/cstechcast and friendfeed.com/cstechcast. Subscribe so you never miss an episode.
Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=35
- Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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I just started working on a LiveLesson DVD for Addison-Wesley tentatively titled "SQL Server Fundamentals for the Accidental DBA". The DVD will focus on the essential skills required to work with SQL Server for people that are not full-time DBAs. I will keep you posted as I have more details. For more information about the LiveLesson videos, check out http://www.informit.com/promotions/promotion.aspx?promo=135366. Eric Co-Host CS Techcast http://www.cstechcast.com
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If you haven't already heard, Microsoft is upping the ante in the
certification arena by introducing a new line of certs called the Microsoft Certified Master Program.
The gist of it is that these are certifications (currently only for SQL
Server 2008, Exchange Server 2007, and Windows Server 2008) that
represent the highest skill level in building solutions based on the
specific product. A much more detailed blog post from the program owner
HERE.It's a lengthy post, be sure you have a minute to digest all of that information. Here's
the rub: many people already feel that certifications, particularly MS
certs, aren't all that valuable in the real world, because the certs
can be obtained by anyone patient enough to read the study materials
and take the test, without having any actual, useable, real world
experience. And on top of that, with the changes in recent
certifications from MS, many managers and HR reps don't even know what
the certs represent. So, how can adding a higher level cert be helpful
in any way? Well, personally speaking, I think they've got a good
deal with this one, with one caveat I'll speak to in a minute. This
particular certification, much like the Microsoft Certified Architect,
requires (as in MANDATORY) classroom training. For the SQL Server
Masters Cert, they are going to require that you already hold the
MCTS:2005 cert, as well as both the MCITP (Microsoft Certified IT Pro)
SQL Server certs for DBA and Developer. And, they will need an
application, as well as a resume to see if they will accept you into
the program in the first place. All of which seems to, in my opinion,
make the cert a little more "weighty" than it's predecessors. Primarily
because this will make it hard for the cert to become watered-down by
literally hundreds of thousands of people holding it. Plus,once
accepted to the program, you have to pass 3 written exams AND a lab
based exam (similar to the Cisco CCIE).Again, I think that's a huge
plus. The idea behind all of this is that if you encounter someone that
holds the MCM for a given product, you should be able to reasonably
assume that they know, very well, what they are talking about. This
increases their value to a company, as well as value in their career. However. The
blog post says (and it may be an early report, but I don't imagine it's
too far off), that the program fee, IF you are accepted, will be in the
neighborhood of $18,500USD. This includes the mandatory 3 WEEK course
and ONE round of exams. If you fail any exam, retakes are extra: $250
for written tests and $1500 for the lab exam. In other words, this is
not likely to be a cert you can afford on your own. In fact, just to
meet the pre-requisites, you or your company has already forked over at
least $225-$250 in exam fees for the earlier exams, not to mention
training. Not only would an individual find this expensive, even a
small or medium business might find this to be too much to fork over.
The argument, of course, is that a business that employs someone that
holds a cert of this level has not only a strong technical resource,
but a good marketing tool (particularly those companies that are MS
Partners). So the question is not only "Am I good enough?", but "Who's
going to pay for this?". I would love to acheive this cert. I
currently have the MCITP:DBA, but never pushed on for the Dev MCITP (or
any others) because I felt like it was pointless. I really felt that if
you've spent more than 6 months with SQL Server, you could probably
pass the test(s). And if you've already built up a healthy resume of
experience, the MCITP cert doesn't really impress anyone as much as
your background and references will. However, I think the MCM would be
a much more difficult certification to earn, not only requiring you to
demonstrate expertise but probably deepen it during the training
courses. If nothing else, think of it this way: Many experts in
our field (think Kalen Delaney, Kimberly Tripp, Itzik Ben-Gan) have
made careers out of sharing their deep knowledge, and don't generally
advertise or glorify certifications (I don't know if they do or don't
hold any MS certs, but they certainly don't advertise it if they do).
Their body of work shows what they know. But, for those of use
somewhere in between "Senior DBA at XYZ Corp." and "SQL Server
Community Guru", a cert like this might help us get that slightly
higher paying job or even help us branch out on our own as consultants,
authors, and trainers. I'm curious to hear if anyone else out there has any thoughts. Please feel free to respond, thanks for stopping by!
--Josh
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No need to wait in line for our newest podcast; all the week's tech news and insight for IT Pros is here at CSTechcast.com. We explore the latest in delivering applications to remote and global networks with Zach Seils, author of Deploying Cisco Wide Area Application Services . This week, Microsoft lobs another offer at Yahoo, DNS gets patched across all vendors, NVidia slowly reveals more about their overheating laptop chips, cloud apps have downtime woes, SQL Server will be out in August, and a new Microsoft push for software plus services. Overreacting tech bloggers make "The Worst tech Move of the Week", we take "A Closer Look" at the new Microsoft Certified Master program, and "The Weekly Tech Tip" covers WSUS troubleshooting. Links to stories discussed during the show: Yahoo Rejects Joint Microsoft/Icahn Deal But Open To $33 Per Share All-Microsoft Sale (Search Engine Land) Patch domain name servers now (ComputerWorld) Report: NVIDIA issues cover all G84 and G86 GPUs (ZDNet) Rackspace Downtime: A Reminder That All Are Vulnerable (TechCrunchIT) Microsoft SQL Server 2008 Due in August (eWeek) Oracle, Salesforce.com Jump on iPhone Bandwagon (eWeek) Microsoft still pushing Vista compatibility story (CNet) iPhone 3G disaster (Scobleizer's Recent Qik Videos) Microsoft Certified Master Program (Microsoft) More on the Certified Master programs from me, Per, the program owner... (Technet Blogs) Troubleshooting WSUS downloads (Technet Blogs) Thanks for listening and give Dana a warm welcome. She will be helping us out with the news and shaking up the format a bit. We hope you like her as much as we do. Don't forget our give away. Enter at CSTechcast.com for your chance to win and take our money in the form of an Amazon.com gift certificate. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=33 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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The new SQL Server installation is so different, I thought I would take a second to write about it. For starters, the whole thing is now called the SQL Server Installation Center. This tool is broken down into seven sections which include the following: - Planning - This section gives you access to documentation and allows you to run the upgrade advisor.
- Installation - This is where the rubber meets the road. You can install stand-alone instances, clusters, add-nodes to existing clusters, and even start upgrades from 2000 or 2005.
- Maintenance - Here you can change your edition of SQL Server (that's right - change - did you install developer edition on production by accident, here you can change to to enterprise), repair an installation, or remove a node from a cluster.
- Tools - Access to a few handy tools such as the System Configuration Checker, a report to tell you what SQL Server features are installed, and an SSIS upgrade wizard.
- Resources - Links to helpful documentation on SQL Server
- Advanced - This section lets you install SQL Server based on a configuration file, perform advanced cluster prep, or complete a cluster from already cluster-prepared SQL Servers.
- Options - Allows you to specify the architecture (x86, x64, or ia64) and the location of the install media.
Enough about the Installation Center, let's take a look at the stand alone installation. I am not going to walk through step-by-step, I just want to highlight some of the new features that I think are pretty cool. This is the face of the new instillation wizard. The first few screens are just some checks and then the installation of the prerequisites. After that's done we get to the meat of the installation. Even here, the first few screens are pretty straight forward asking if you are installing a new instance or changing an existing instance and another screen allowing you to enter you product key. The first screen that grabbed my attention was the Instance Configuration. Here you not only specify and instance name, but you an also specify the instance ID. The instance ID is used in folder naming instead of random numbers. By default the ID will be the name of your instance. The next few screens are your standard drive space overview and service account set up, nothing really new here. Ah, but then we get to the Database Engine Configuration screen which abounds with new options for security, file locations, and the new FILESTREAM type. The first tab, shown below, lets you set the authentication mode and set up accounts that will be administrators of SQL Server. Gone are the days of BUILTIN\Administrators and here are the days of telling SQL Server who you want to be administrators. The second tab, Data Directories, allows you to set up the default locations of some common files used by SQL Server. This really gives you a level of control that was previous a registry hack, done manually, or done after the installation was complete. You can set up individual locations for the following: - Data Root
- User Database Files
- User Database Log Files
- Temp DB Data
- Temp DB Log
- Backup Files
Last but not least, the third tab allows you to enabled FILESTREAM for T-SQL access. I won't get into FILESTREAM here, but it is a feature of SQL Server 2008 worth your further investigation. That's the bulk of the installation....one more check to look for problems that might cause the installation to fail and your off and running. I know the installation wizard isn't the sexiest new thing in SQL Server 2008, but there are some neat new things that made me happy so I wanted to share my rather geeky bliss.
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Come and get it, CSTechcast.com has the latest podcast for IT professionals posted for download. This week we get an IT compliance education with Don Jones. Find Don's vast expertise at his website concentratedtech.com. The news brings enhanced search for Adobe Flash on the web, no critical Microsoft patches this Tuesday, the VLC Player has buffer overflow security problem, Google gives away Rat Proxy to check for security on your websites, the Coreflood Trojan is waiting for an admin to logon, NVidia has heat problems with laptop chips, and Microsoft gets serious with a new yearly subscription model for Office. Twitter downtime gets "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", we take "A Closer Look" at cloud computing security, and "The Weekly Tech Tip" is all about SQL auditing.
Links to stories discussed during the show: Adobe, Google, Yahoo Team for Flash Search (eWeek) Four Microsoft Patches Due Tuesday; Not Rated Critical (PC World) Critical vulnerability found in VLC Media Player (InfoWorld) Google gives away free Web app security scanner (InfoWorld) Trojan lurks, waiting to steal admin passwords (InfoWorld) Nvidia reports problem with laptop chips (InfoWorld) Microsoft Hopes Office Subscription Plan Will Counter Free Software (InformationWeek)
Get on the bandwagon, tweet us on Twitter @cstechcast or friend us at FriendFeed, friendfeed.com/cstechcast. As always, give us a call, post on the blog, or send us some feedback on the main website cstechcast.com. Stay tuned for some changes and enhancements coming soon to CS Techcast. If you like us, post a review on your favorite podcast directory or blog about it. Thanks for listening.
Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=32
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The latest CSTechcast.com podcast is up. This week we discuss social networking and how we take it into business and gain personally with Patrice-Anne Rutledge, author of The Truth About Profiting from Social Networking . Be social and visit patricerutledge.com. In the news; Microsoft stops selling Windows XP, but keeps a loophole for business and extends support, Hyper-V goes RTM, Cisco updates its edge network solution with VMWare support, new tools are released to deal with recent SQL injection attacks, database market share shows Oracle in the clear lead, and IT spending is not reducing security threats. Suing web sites over negative comments gets "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", we take "A Look Back" at Bill Gates' time at Microsoft, and we give SQL Server admins plenty of detail to avoid worst practices in "The Weekly Tech Tip". Links to stories discussed during the show: Microsoft Pledges Windows XP Support Through 2014 (InformationWeek) Hyper-V: It’s here (ZDNet) Virtualization Key Enhancement To Cisco Data Center 3.0 (InformationWeek) Microsoft Puts Bull's-Eye on SQL Injection Attacks (eWeek) IDC: Oracle Maintains Lead in Database Market (PC World) 2008 Security Survey: We're Spending More, But Data's No Safer Than Last Year (InfomationWeek) Car dealership sues consumer site over bad feedback, loses (ArsTechnica) Look for a not so hidden blooper in this episode. Support us by sending in your comments and posting a review on iTunes or your favorite podcast directory. See you next week and thanks everyone for listening. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=31 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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 We even podcast on vacation, bringing you the latest tech information for IT professionals at CStechcast.com from fabulous Las Vegas. This week, we delve into Vista with the authors of Using Microsoft Windows Vista Robert Cowart and Brian Knittel. In the news, Firefox gets it's 3.0 on while Microsoft previews more IE8 features, the new iPhone gets some enterprise functionality while hopefully not tarnishing its cool factor, Oracle adds social networking to CRM, Microhoo finally break up (could Bradgalena be next?) while Yahoo gets on the rebound with Google, and PC shipments stay healthy in Asia. Short sighted middle management gets our "Worst Tech Move of the Week" and "The Weekly Tech Tip" presents the incredible, shrinking partition. Links to stories discussed during the show: Mozilla to release Firefox 3 on June 17 (InfoWorld) Next Internet Explorer 8 beta targets IT pros (PC Advisor) Coming To The iPhone: Enterprise Apps (Information Week) Oracle Touts Social Networks For Salespeople (Information Week) Yahoo `Damaged Goods' After Yang Fails to Revive Deal (Bloomberg) IDC Calls for PC Market to Grow 15 Percent (eWeek) We bring you CS Techcast even when on vacation, and we will keep bringing you more shows you can use to stay informed every week. Help us out by putting your review of our show on your preferred podcast directory and especially on iTunes. Help us grow the show and keep in contact with us, all our contact information is on the web site CStechcast.com. Thanks for listening. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=29 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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Info for IT pros, get ready to download the latest audio at CStechcast.com. Crimeware is the focus this week, as we interview expert Markus Jakobsson, author of Crimeware: Understanding New Attacks and Defenses . In the news; Adobe gives a preview of the new Acrobat 9 integrated with the new acrobat.com web site, Microsoft warns on the monthly round of patches, spear phishing catches 15,000 big fish, AMD starts to make a serious notebook push with Puma, Opera one ups the browser competition in the fight against malware, and we review the latest rumor mill around the next generation Apple iPhone. Spying end users for targeted ads is first place in "The Worst Tech Move of the Week" and "The Weekly Tech Tip" gives the accidental SQL DBA some great pointers. Links to stories discussed during the show: Adobe offers Acrobat 9 (InfoWorld) Microsoft Patch Tuesday: 7 Security Bulletins (eWeek) Spear-phishing Attacks Have Hooked 15,000, Says Verisign (PC World) AMD's Puma pounces; misses red-hot netbook market (ArsTechnica) Opera Bolsters Web Browser with New Malware Protection (eWeek) Next-Gen iPhone Preview: Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference '08 (Information Week) Breaking: Exclusive leaked pics of the iPhone 2! (CrunchGear) Keep the love coming with reviews on your preferred podcast site, especially iTunes. Give us your comments and feedback on the blog, via e-mail, or by voicemail. All details are available at CStechcast.com. Thanks to everyone for listening. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=28 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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While remote access solutions have given us a unique way to access our networks and applications -- and provide a new level of worker productivity -- these solutions can inadvertently provide hackers a portal to your entire network if the security features are compromised.
This is especially true now that the mobile workforce has become a reality for organizations across all industries, and the ubiquitousness of the Internet is fueling more cost effective remote solutions, the security perimeter is anywhere your employees can hang their hats.
The latest white paper, "Like Stealing Candy: Recent Security Threats Leave Passwords in the Open", from authors Eric Beehler and Eric Johnson is now posted at Redmond Magazine's Tech Library: www.redmondmag.com/techlibrary. There is also a companion web cast recorded that we finished last week. Get the latest on threats to remote access and solutions available to neutralize those threats.
Link to white paper: http://redmondmag.com/techlibrary/resources.asp?id=667
Link to webcast: http://w.on24.com/r.htm?e=109811&s=1&k=228FC12DBA871955999704159BAD33EA&partnerref=library
- Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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Another podcast is up and available at CStechcast.com, the podcast for IT professionals. This week we talk about the history and the future of networks with John Day, author of Patterns in Network Architecture . The news brings cloud computing to your data center with a new product from HP, easier Web 2.0 APIs from Google, details on Windows 7 and Ruby on .NET, and a warning on Apple Safari on Windows. Lack of data breach disclosure "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", getting Vista's search to work right in the "Weekly Tech Tip", and we take "A Closer Look" at smartphone security in your network. Links to stories discussed during the show: HP Building Out Web 2.0 Infrastructures (eWeek) Google Delivers New AJAX APIs (eWeek) Google's Gears Gains Ground (eWeek) Google Shows Off Android (eWeek) Microsoft linking Silverlight, Ruby on Rails (InfoWorld) Windows 7 to have touch-screen interface (InfoWorld) Court finds Dell guilty of fraud (InfoWorld) Dell shares jump after solid 1Q results (Business Week) Microsoft Warns Of Security Vulnerability Arising From Apple's Safari (Information Week) Microsoft Security Advisory (953818) (Microsoft.com) Check out the review of our podcast at That Podcast Show: http://www.imaginatepro.com/thatpodcastshow/?p=78 As always, show your appreciation for CS Techcast by dropping us an e-mail, voicemail, or blog post. You can also write a review in your favorite podcast directory and in iTunes. This will help get the word out and help us continue to bring you a great podcast every week. Thanks to everyone for listening. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=27 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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 Six months of weekly podcasts all for the IT professional and we continue our march forward at CStechcast.com. This week we explore VMware ESX virtualization with Edward L. Haletky, author of VMware ESX Server in the Enterprise . Find information from the author at http://astroarch.com/wiki/index.php/Virtualization. In the news; Microsoft announces support for ODF and PDF in an upcoming Office service pack, Citrix debuts its Branch Repeater for remote office support over the WAN, Google gives us the Safe Browsing Diagnostic Tool to check web sites for malware, jobs openings involving virtualization skills are up 40 percent, and some companies look to allow employees to use their own laptops on the corporate network. Microsoft gets rid of their academic search tools for the "Worst Tech Move of the Week", we take "A Closer Look" at how to get started with virtualization, and a quick "Weekly Tech Tip" on how to make a shortcut in Vista with admin privs to help save you some time. Links to stories discussed during the show: All eyes on how Microsoft pulls off ODF support (InfoWorld) Google's Safe Browsing Diagnostic Tool (Search Engine Land) Microsoft, Citrix Unveil 'Swiss Army Knife' Remote System (Information Week) Virtualization Job Openings Jump 40% (eWeek) Microsoft embraces 'Bring Your Own Laptop' model (CNet News.com) Microsoft Shuts Down Book Search (PC World) For those looking for the Google Browsing Diagnostic Tool, just use the following URL and put the URL for your web site at the end: http://www.google.com/safebrowsing/diagnostic?site= As I mentioned above, CS Techcast is celebrating six months of expert interviews, news for IT pros, segments that can help you out and give you more insight, and having fun just by having an outlet to express our personalities. We've brought you technical leaders and industry expertise such as Bill Inmon, John C. Dvorak, Kalen Delaney, and Greg Shields just to name a few. We've also brought you extras such as our special video episode from SQL PASS Camp. We would love for you, a member of our loyal audience, to spread the word about our show so we can continue to bring you everything we have and more. You can help us by writing a review in your favorite podcast directory, filling out our listener survey, blogging about us, and telling your friends to subscribe. Thanks for listening and we will continue to bring you more at CStechcast.com. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=26 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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 IT pros get another podcast chock full of information and irreverence, at CStechcast.com. This week we put the focus back onto the brand new Windows Server 2008 operating system with Rand Morimoto, author of Windows Server 2008 Unleashed . Tech news sees the demise of the MicroHoo merger, Windows XP Service Pack 3 gets PCs to go on endless reboots, a new security bulletin on a new Trojan infecting half a million PCs, patch Tuesday sees 4 new patches, Office 2007 SP1 is coming to automatic updates, Google sets up a new enterprise hosted security service, and we take a peek at the 10 worst workplaces in tech. A continuing trend of knocking a good app developed with Microsoft tools gets "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", fanboys get a freestyle rant in the "IT Pet Peeve", and the "Weekly Tech Tip" helps you hack the Vista experience index. Links to stories discussed during the show: The MicroHoo Fallout (eWeek) Trojan Infects More Than 500,000 PCs (eWeek) Continuous Reboots Plague Windows XP SP3 Users (PC Magazine) Four Patches Coming in May (ENT News) Google gains on Microsoft with hosted security offering (C|Net News.com) The 10 Worst Workspaces in Tech (ValleyWag) Building a web app the Microsoft way (ThinkVitamin.com) Maybe Microsoft isn't completely useless on the web, after all (C|Net Blogs) Thanks everyone for downloading and listening to the CS Techcast. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=24 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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Our latest weekly podcast for IT Pros, available at CStechcast.com, is released to the world. This week we try to tap our inner CSI with Keith J. Jones, author of Real Digital Forensics , available alone or in the Computer Forensics Library Boxed Set . Find more info at realdigitalforensics.com. The news finds Windows XP Service Pack 3 and Vista Service Pack 1 pulled back from Windows Updates, the BlueHat conference exposes easy antivirus hacks, third party solutions aim to help Ruby on Rails scale, SharePoint gets a new administration toolkit, and dirty secrets of the security industry are revealed. Eric Schmidt's obsession with Microsoft gets "The Worst Tech Move of the Week", we take "A Closer Look" at the recent SQL injection attacks and what you can do about it, and joining a domain from afar using Vista is our "Weekly Tech Tip". Links to stories discussed during the show: XP update delayed over glitch (C|Net News.com) Vista SP1 auto updates also halted (C|Net News.com) Antivirus holes, browser spies are highlights at Microsoft's BlueHat hacker sessions (C|Net News.com) Making Ruby on Rails Scale (eWeek) Twitter Said To Be Abandoning Ruby on Rails (TechCrunch) Announcing the First Release of the Microsoft SharePoint Administration Toolkit (Microsoft SharePoint Products and Technologies Team Blog) 7 dirty secrets of the security industry (InfoWorld) Schmidt in CNBC interview: We're concerned about Microhoo (C|Net News.com) SQL Injection Attacks on IIS Web Servers (BillS IIS Blog) We love bringing you the show and hope everyone who listens appreciates the effort. Let us know what you think; post to the blog, send us an e-mail, or call us. Details for contacting us can be found at CStechcast.com. Review our show at your favorite podcast directory, including iTunes, and let everyone know how you like CS Techcast. Thanks everyone for listening. Link to the episode: http://www.cstechcast.com/home.aspx?Episode=23 - Eric Beehler (consortioservices.com/blog)
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