08/01/2005
August 2005 - Mr. Windows
Jim Allchin on Longhorn, WinFS, 64-bit and beyond; Plus: Make room for Linux Apps, Active Directory design disasters and much more.
In-Depth
Need to go deep and seize control of your Windows systems? One of these tools can help you perfect the art of scripting.
Learn how to do Active Directory design right from these real-world case studies of those who have done it wrong.
As Linux applications grow in popularity, Windows admins will need to start incorporating them into their networks. Here are five ways to do that.
Don Jones takes a look at the new features that will be included in the new Windows operating system, slated for release in late 2006.
Jim Allchin, considered by many as the father of NT and the brains behind Longhorn, talks about the future of rich clients and why you should trust Microsoft to power your next PC.
Microsoft's IM environment has matured into an enterprise-class tool, but it packs in more features than most users really need.
News
From the business wires this week: management systems for Group Policy-based patching and user access control, a backup and recovery program for Novell NetWare servers, and more.
This year’s winners in Microsoft Excel and Word Specialist exams hail from Switzerland and England.
Microsoft outsources its global training program to Certiport, based on its success with Microsoft Office Specialist.
From the business wires this week: a database development suite for Windows XP, an enterprise defragmentation solution, a Windows Server security appliance and more.
The second coming of Microsoft's MCP exam retake promotion is coming to an end on August 31, 2005.
Biometric firm that once targeted government now looks to partners to address SMBs.
From the business wires this week:
Systems Management Server 2003 exam being beta tested from Aug. 8 to Aug. 22. Will count toward MCSE and new Technology Specialist cert.
From the business wires this week: pre-configured Microsoft Exchange 2003 migration packages, a software deployment solution, an automated disk defragger and a search engine for Microsoft Exchange.
Microsoft sees desktop tech cert catching on, with the company issuing more than 8,000 Microsoft Certified Desktop Technician titles as of June this year.
Who says you have to wait for Longhorn to get those features?
Microsoft is changing IE, the OS and RSS itself to change the way users interact with the Web.