Archive for the ‘Interesting News’ Category

IE8 is finally here.

Thursday, March 26th, 2009

Windows Internet Explorer

Image via Wikipedia

IE8 is finally out, well it has been, but it now no longer has the “beta” tag. IE8 has a few upgrades from IE7 in many cases, but it has some major problems that would make it really hard for the masses to sing its praises.

We’ll look at some of the good things first. The look of IE8 doesn’t change much from IE7, so it’s not like you have to learn how to use it all over again or figure out where all the buttons are. The privacy mode is a very helpful tool because it doesn’t store any details of your browsing session, as long as it’s on.

The tab system has a new feature, color-coding. When you open a new tab by following a link on a website, it’s instantly given the same color as the parent tab, helping you keep things in order. As for now, this is where the neat things end.

As for the cons, we’ve found that IE8 is less stable then IE7, and we’re talking more than just crashes. Hang-ups seem to be frequent, to the point where you can’t even close the window. It’s kind of odd considering that IE8 only uses (18MB) of memory upon launching, compared to Firefox (26MB) and Safari 3 at (34MB), so it’s not that it’s gobbling up memory.

You’re also going to see slow page downloads somewhere around 4.3 seconds, compared to 3.4 seconds for IE7, that’s the slowest of the three major browsers. You’re probably thinking “so what? It’s one second”, but when you’re looking at the average user only spending around 9 seconds on a page before he or she bounce’s, that’s not what web designers want to hear.

A new tool that you’ll need a lot is called “Compatibility Mode,” which lets IE8 pretend its IE7. The button is located to the far right of the address bar and the reason is, for years, designers have been making two versions of their site, one that will work in IE and one for everyone else. Now with IE8 finally changing its engine, those “IE” versions wouldn’t look so hot without the use of this feature.

There is also another good reason IE8 is equipped with this feature. Big names like eBay, Apple.com, Facebook, Google, and even their own site, Microsoft.com do not render properly in IE8. Microsoft however has implemented a running table of sites that automatically falls back to “Compatibility Mode” so you won’t even see the icon when you visit these sites.

Are you excited about the new changes IE8 has made to make it more mainstream for designers and viewers? Or has it gone on too long that it just creates more problems trying to fix the existing one?

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Sneak Peek at Windows 7 – Will you have an easy upgrade path?

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Designed for Windows XP computer hardware logo

Image via Wikipedia

There is little that Microsoft is revealing about its Windows 7 upgrade plans, although some information has come to light.  The most important is that both Windows XP and Windows Vista users will be entitled to upgrade to Windows 7.

Microsoft has not revealed a pricing structure yet but there is a strong rumor that Windows Vista users who purchase the operating system shortly before the release of Windows 7 will receive a free upgrade. (more…)

10 ways to protect your company from employee transition risks

Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009

SAN FRANCISCO - FEBRUARY 6:  Art Coviello, Exe...

Image by Getty Images via Daylife

 

Editors Note:  This was orginally published by Chad Perrin on blogs.techrepublic.com.

Employment transition is an often overlooked danger to company security. Make sure you have policies and procedures in place that will protect your business from security compromises when someone leaves your company.


The day a decision is made to transition an employee out of a company — whether it is the employee or the employer who makes that decision — is the wrong time to develop and apply security policy related to employment transition. Such policies should be planned and implemented long before that day comes. Being unprepared could result in security breaches, as well as resentment on the part of both former and current employees. Disgruntled employees create the very internal security problems against which you should protect your organization.

The following is a list of categories of security policy related to employment transitions. Some categories may overlap in certain areas, but each has its own, irreplaceable importance to overall policy effectiveness.

1: Access controls

Biometric data, keycards, keys, parking or gate passes, and other physical access controls should be tracked and managed carefully. Many security precautions such as firewalls, deactivated remote access accounts, and strong password policy can be circumvented at times simply by walking up to a physical computer and doing things the “hard” way. Such items should be managed as carefully as possible without disrupting the work of employees, so that the items are more easily recovered, deactivated, and/or replaced if and when the time comes. In extreme cases, locks may need to be changed and new keys reissued, but in many cases a well-managed system should allow most access control measures for a given employee to be simply deactivated with a few keypresses or mouse clicks.

(more…)