'Agentless' offering comes thanks to VMware's acquisition of Thinstall earlier this year.
Telco joins organization advocating the use of Mobile Linux.
Critical patches focus on IE, DirectX and Bluetooth.
Microsoft's Tech-Ed North America event for IT professionals kicked off today with a keynote address on enabling "dynamic IT."
Company's E-mail Security SaaS product also gets an update.
MSDN and TechNet Plus subscribers can now test a full-featured version of the relational database management system.
Next version will focus primarily on performance. QuickTime X, Safari update also announced.
A National Nuclear Security Administration supercomputer reaches an operational rate of 1 petaflop, making it the world's fastest computer.
IBM looks to deliver enterprise-level mashups for everything from end-user creation to adding value to SOA deployments.
The company's Sandcastle project omitted the source code, and thus failed to meet open source licensing requirements.
During his keynote address at Apple's annual Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) Monday, CEO Steve Jobs debuted the company's new iPhone 3G, an update to the popular mobile phone and computing device set for delivery July 11. Developers also took the stage during the keynote to show off new technologies arriving for the platform.
In a bid to modernize the embedded version of its Windows software, Microsoft this week has released the community technology preview (CTP) of a newly revamped version set to ship by year's end.
Redmond projects a rollout of seven fixes, with three rated critical, three important and one moderate.
Bill Gates Tuesday kicked off the annual Tech-Ed Conference with a keynote that took an opportunity to look back, as well as provided a glimpse into the future.
Security research firm finds multiple flaws in Sun Java System Active Server Pages.
Visual modeling tools will first appear as Visual Studio add-ons.
Microsoft Corp. is now selling its wares directly to consumers.
Shareholders accuse Yahoo of "poison pills" in form of secret severance plan, Google deal.
Microsoft's founder and chairman kicked off Tech-Ed with a keynote that took an opportunity to look back, as well as provided a glimpse into the future.
Paying for word processing software may soon be a thing of past if Microsoft competitors Adobe, Google and IBM have any say.