Tuesday, December 16, 2003

Host Integration Server 2004 beta arrives

Microsoft yesterday released the beta version of its Host Integration Server (HIS) 2004 legacy integration product.


The company claimed that the addition of support for XML web services is a "significant advance" for customers seeking secure cross-platform access to IBM mainframes and midrange systems.


Scheduled for commercial release in the summer, HIS 2004 includes support for industry-standard high-performance routing over IP, and includes an IP-DLC link to provide IP connectivity for mainframe systems network architecture applications.


A Transaction Integrator, delivered through .Net Framework and Visual Studio .Net, is included to run IBM mainframes and midrange AS/400 line-of-business applications on Windows-based computers.


HIS 2004 will also ship with improved tools to integrate data from line-of-business sources using ODBC, COM-based OLE DB, or .Net Framework-enabled Data Providers for DB2, as well as an OLE DB Provider for AS/400 and mainframe file systems.


The new version will support secure socket layer and transport layer security to improve network security for customers accessing mainframe terminal and printer resources through HIS 2004.

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Microsoft releases management software beta

Microsoft on Tuesday said it released an updated test version of one of its main management software products.


The company said Beta 2 of Microsoft Operations Manager (MOM) 2004 became available Monday to testers. The upgrade to MOM offers new tools Microsoft said will help system administrators more easily track and resolve problems, as well as an improved user interface for the software's main console. The software is part of Microsoft's broader program to make Windows networks more manageable, an effort known as the Dynamic Systems Initiative.


The company has two main management software programs: MOM and Systems Management Server (SMS). SMS is aimed at allowing large companies to distribute software updates and patches automatically to PCs over corporate networks. MOM, meanwhile, is for monitoring the ongoing status of a network to avoid problems such as an overloaded server or a dropped network connection.


Microsoft said the test version is available to all of the company's customers, whether or not they use a current version of Operations Manager.


The final version of MOM 2004 is slated for release next summer, Microsoft said.

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Thursday, December 11, 2003

Microsoft readies Windows XP Service Pack 2 beta


Microsoft Corp. is gearing up for the first beta test of a set of updates for Windows XP designed to bolster the operating system's security and add features such as support for version 1.1 of Bluetooth and a new wireless LAN client.


The beta of Windows XP Service Pack 2, or SP2, will be made available via Microsoft's Developer Network to several hundred thousand testers before the end of the year, Matt Pilla, senior product manager for Windows at Microsoft said Thursday. Targeted testers are software developers and IT professionals, he said.

"SP2 is a fundamentally different service pack," Pilla said. "Much of what we are delivering is the typical set of updates and roll ups, but we are doing a lot more to make the operating system more resilient to attacks."


Microsoft has previously talked about many of the security enhancements it intends to deliver in SP2. The plans were first announce by Chief Executive Office Steve Ballmer in October. A final version of SP2 is due out in the first half of 2004.


Among the security improvements are an updated version of the Internet Connection Firewall, which has been renamed Windows Firewall and will be turned on by default, as well as changes to some Windows parts that have proven attack prone.


The RPC (remote procedure calls) service will run with reduced privileges and the distributed component object model (DCOM) gets more access control restrictions, Microsoft said. Vulnerabilities in RPC and DCOM were exploited by the Blaster worm which wreaked havoc earlier this year.


SP2 will also turn off the Windows Messenger Service, a network administration tool that has been exploited by spammers to barrage Windows users with pop-up messages. The service, not the same as the Windows Messenger instant messaging client, also contains a serious security vulnerability for which Microsoft provided a patch in October.


In addition to reducing the attack surface of Windows XP, SP2 also provides updates to Internet Explorer (IE) and Outlook Express that are meant to make browsing the Web and receiving e-mail safer. IE will also get a pop-up and pop-under blocker, bound to make surfing the Web more enjoyable, Microsoft said.


IE will offer explicit download links to protect users from accidentally downloading and installing potentially malicious programs, while Outlook Express will no longer download external content by default and better handle attachments, according to Microsoft.


Furthermore, as part of Microsoft's efforts to make it simpler to download and apply software fixes, SP2 will install Microsoft's Software Update Services (SUS) 2.0 client. This should help solve problems with the Windows Update service, which has proven to be unreliable. SUS also allows users to interrupt downloading software updates and resume later, Microsoft said.


Finally, new features include support for the Bluetooth 1.1 standard and a new wireless LAN client to simplify connecting to hotspots.


The beta version of SP2 includes a subset of the technologies planned for the final version of the update that is due in the first half of next year. It is "very likely" the final version will have more features, Pilla said. However, there might also be things that don't ship in the final version that are part of the beta, he said.

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