News (267)

  • Suit seeks US$1 billion in damages from Google

    LimitNone, a small software development company, is seeking nearly US$1 billion in damages in a lawsuit that accuses Google of reneging on a partnership with the small company and misappropriating its trade secrets for its Google Apps online service.

  • Daylight saving change causes IT chaos

    The NSW government's decision to delay the daylight saving time change by a week has caused widespread IT chaos, with Telstra, the RTA, Qantas, and radio station 2GB all reporting problems.

  • Service links Gmail and Outlook, bypassing Exchange

    If you like Microsoft's Outlook e-mail client software but hate the expense of licensing and running Exchange Server, there is another alternative: a subscription service that effectively lets people dump Exchange in favour of Google's cloud-computing infrastructure.

  • Dell denies 30 percent SSD return rate

    Dell has crunched its numbers and says there isn't a problem with solid-state drives but it's still early days for the costly technology.

  • One in four SSD-based laptops fail

    Notebooks with solid state drives (flash-based) cost more than traditional hard drives, are "an order of magnitude" less reliable and do not perform as well when using Microsoft Outlook.

  • Microsoft puts out critical Office updates

    Microsoft has released its March 2008 security bulletin, which includes four bulletins, all deemed critical by Microsoft.

  • Open source fans offer differing views of MS move

    Open source developers and users have always been a sceptical group, but their opinions can shift for example, their loathing of Sun Microsystems diminished as Sun stopped attacking Linux and started moving towards open source software.

  • Windows Explorer identified as malware

    Windows Explorer, one of the most crucial components of Microsoft's operating system, was quarantined last week after being falsely identified as malicious code by an antivirus company.

  • First OpenSocial app hacked in 45 minutes

    The first app launched under Google's OpenSocial API program has been taken down, shortly after it was discovered a hacker could use it to change user profiles.

  • New Lotus Notes can't fight Outlook

    Despite the release of a new and improved Lotus Notes 8, it is unlikely that IBM's e-mail software can make any dent in the market dominance of Microsoft Outlook.

  • Thunderbird gets Mozilla US$3m to 'do a Firefox'

    Mozilla wants to reproduce the Firefox Web browser's success with Thunderbird, its open-source e-mail software.

  • Mozilla releases beta of open-source Eudora

    The Mozilla Foundation has released the first beta version, 8.0.0b1, of the revised Eudora e-mail application since Qualcomm stopped developing it commercially and turned it over to the open-source community in 2006.

  • Microsoft considers Office pre-pay vouchers

    Microsoft is exploring new ways to try and convert the remaining people who don't use its Office productivity suite, which includes Word, Excel and PowerPoint.

  • UK health service switches 260,000 users to Outlook

    The National Health Service (NHS) plans to ditch its current e-mail system for Microsoft Outlook and Exchange 2007.

  • Adobe Acrobat adds Vista flexibility, remote printing

    Adobe Acrobat 8, which shipped two months before the January release of Windows Vista, can now run on Vista and Citrix 64-bit systems.

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