Newsletter – June 2011 Greetings from ManageEngine Desktop Central! We are happy to announce the availability of latest hotfix to Desktop Central 7 – Build 70224. Here’s the complete list of enhancements & bug fixes over previous hotfix: Enhancements & Bug Fixes Enhancements A new component, Notification Server, included for instant remote access.
Do you still keep your administrative passwords in text files and spread sheets?
Modern IT and other enterprises are heavily dependent on servers, databases, network devices, security infrastructure and other software applications for their day-to-day operations. These infrastructure are accessed and controlled through administrative passwords.
June 2011 Patch Tuesday Bulletins are now Supported by Desktop Central
Microsoft released 16 bulletins, 9 of them rated Critical and 7 rated Important, addressing issues in Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Office, Internet Explorer, .NET, SQL, Visual Studio, Silverlight and ISA addressing 34 vulnerabilities.
Webcast: Drobo, MS Exchange and Data Protection in a Small Business
Data Protection in a Small Business: Mario Blandini with special guest Peter Benoit, a consulting executive focusing on storage for Microsoft enterprise applications, discuss storage options to support Microsoft Exchange Server 2010 in a growing small business
Mijn computer is weg: ik wil mijn bestanden terug!
Laat ons weten wat u van ons vindt: service-provider.f-secure.i-qbox.com Bekijk deze video als uw computer zoek of beschadigd is, en u al uw bestanden moet herstellen van F-Secure Online Backup naar een nieuwe pc.
Rootkits Part 2
Corey explains inline function hooking, what kinds of Windows functions are susceptible to hooking, and how rootkits use hooking for backdoor access to your network.
Apples can be infected too!
One of the Apple's marketing lines for Macs has been that they do not suffer from the same virus infections that PCs have. This clearly has nothing to do with Macs being more stable than PCs, it is because fewer people own Macs than own PCs. Cyber-criminals are looking to infect as many machines as possible because this is how they create profit