Feb
18
2009
Comments Off on RIM Adds 2.6-Million Subscribers on BlackBerry Bold/Storm Release – Teleclick.ca | tags: google, mobile, news, Phone, sql | posted in technical news
Feb
17
2009
Comments Off on Zmanda launches third version of Amanda Enterprise – eChannelLine | tags: google, news, open source, postgresql, sql | posted in technical news
Feb
14
2009
Comments Off on Facebook makes partners jealous, researchers say – CBC.ca | tags: facebook, google, network, networking, news, sql | posted in technical news
Feb
12
2009
RazvanM writes “Do the OSes really shrink? Perhaps the user space (MySQL, CUPS) is getting slimmer, but how about the internals? Using as a metric the number of external calls between the filesystem modules and the rest of the Linux kernel I argue that this is not the case. The evidence is a graph that shows the evolution of 15 filesystems from 2.6.11 to 2.6.28 along with the current state (2.6.28) for 24 filesystems. Some filesystems that stand out are: nfs for leading in both number of calls and speed of growth; ext4 and fuse for their above-average speed of growth and 9p for its roller coaster path.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on The Hairy State of Linux Filesystems | tags: google, linux, mysql, sql | posted in technical news
Feb
12
2009
nandemoari writes “A hole allowing hackers to take control of Microsoft Exchange was just one ‘critical’ issue the Redmond-based company promises it has fixed with a patch correcting a total of eight vulnerabilities in its programs, including the Internet Explorer browser, Office, and its SQL Server. Three of the eight vulnerabilities patched yesterday were marked ‘critical.’ The most concerning is an issue with Exchange that would allow attackers to take over an Exchange server by simply forwarding a carefully crafted message to a corporate mail server. Microsoft has admitted that the vulnerability can be exploited when a user opens or previews an email in the Transport Neutral Encapsulation Format (TNEF).”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on MS Critical Patch Fixes 8 Vulnerabilities | tags: cap, email, google, microsoft, program, redmond, sql | posted in technical news
Feb
12
2009
Comments Off on Canadians Should Submit to Net Neutrality Hearings – mediacaster | tags: google, news, sql | posted in technical news
Feb
11
2009
RazvanM writes “Do the OSes really shrink? Perhaps the user space (MySQL, CUPS) is getting slimmer, but how about the internals? Using as a metric the number of external calls between the filesystem modules and the rest of the Linux kernel I argue that this is not the case. The evidence is a graph that shows the evolution of 15 filesystems from 2.6.11 to 2.6.28 along with the current state (2.6.28) for 24 filesystems. Some filesystems that stand out are: nfs for leading in both number of calls and speed of growth; ext4 and fuse for their above-average speed of growth and 9p for its roller coaster path.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on The Hairy State of Linux Filesystems | tags: google, linux, mysql, sql | posted in technical news
Feb
11
2009
nandemoari writes “A hole allowing hackers to take control of Microsoft Exchange was just one ‘critical’ issue the Redmond-based company promises it has fixed with a patch correcting a total of eight vulnerabilities in its programs, including the Internet Explorer browser, Office, and its SQL Server. Three of the eight vulnerabilities patched yesterday were marked ‘critical.’ The most concerning is an issue with Exchange that would allow attackers to take over an Exchange server by simply forwarding a carefully crafted message to a corporate mail server. Microsoft has admitted that the vulnerability can be exploited when a user opens or previews an email in the Transport Neutral Encapsulation Format (TNEF).”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on MS Critical Patch Fixes 8 Vulnerabilities | tags: cap, email, google, microsoft, program, redmond, sql | posted in technical news
Feb
10
2009
An anonymous reader writes “I do my own Web design and have a few websites — MySQL, PHP, CSS, HTML, that kind of thing. It’s simple, amateur stuff, but I would love to have some reasonable ways to assess their security myself and patch the big holes, or possibly enlist someone to do ‘white hat’ work to assist me. I have absolutely no idea how to proceed. I don’t want to get mired in a never-ending paranoia-fueled race to patch holes before the hackers find them, but on the other hand, I don’t want my websites to look like Swiss cheese. Right now, I wouldn’t know what kind of cheese they look like: Swiss, Havarti, or hard as Parmesan. How can I take reasonable steps to protect these websites myself? What books has the community found useful? What groups (if any) can offer me inexpensive white-hat hacking that won’t end up costing me a first-born child? Or am I better off just waiting until a problem arises and then fixing it?”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Website Security Without Breaking the Bank? | tags: google, mysql, security, sql, web | posted in technical news
Feb
9
2009
volume4 writes “With two MySQL execs leaving Sun in the last week, the internet is buzzing about what is going on at Sun, what is the future of MySQL and what lies ahead for Michael Widenius. Over at Open Source Release Feed, Widenius spoke candidly regarding his split from Sun, the future of MySQL, Monty Program AB and the open source ecosystem in general.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Five Questions With Michael Widenius | tags: developer, google, mysql, open source, program, sql | posted in technical news