It's been a day that the industry has waited for for some time: Windows 7 launch day. It seems that it wasn't long ago that commentators were asking whether Vista would be Microsoft's last operating system - we all know how...
October 23, 2009 7:57 AM
It's been a day that the industry has waited for for some time: Windows 7 launch day. It seems that it wasn't long ago that commentators were asking whether Vista would be Microsoft's last operating system - we all know how...
June 26, 2009 11:56 AM
by John E. Dunn
So, do netbooks need special anti-virus programs or not? We're still not sure. First, niche-filler Kaspersky Lab announced a special ‘netbooked' version of its suite, and this week it was the turn of the equally ambitious (and also European) Panda...
March 17, 2009 6:58 AM
by John E. Dunn
The BBC has been accused of going soft recently, but the hiring a botnet complete with 22,000 zombie PCs by its online show Click, is anything but. Inevitably, the legal pedants have had a good bleat about the demonstration ,...
March 16, 2009 6:42 AM
by John E. Dunn
Netbooks are cheapish, fairly basic in features, portable and keep going for hours if you are careful to buy one with a 6-cell battery. But are they secure? It's a valid question. Do low-cost computers have the power to run...
February 13, 2009 12:34 PM
by Tom Jowitt
Microsoft has just announced plans to open its own chain of retail stores, and even hired a former Wal-Mart veteran to run the retail operation. "The purpose of opening these stores is to create deeper engagement with consumers and continue...
January 21, 2009 1:51 PM
by John E. Dunn
A Russian company has started selling a cheap system for cracking WPA encryption keys, but should companies using Wi-Fi be at all worried? Security consultancy GSS certainly thinks so, and put out a media comment article to sum up the...
December 16, 2008 12:14 PM
by John E. Dunn
Here's a joke you've probably heard before. Businesses are going to buy Apple Macs. Feel free to laugh now. Not very likely you might think, but that hasn't stopped a small independent analyst in the US claiming in portentous fashion...
December 5, 2008 12:09 PM
by John E. Dunn
At Techworld we wouldn't normally write about 'Apple' and 'security' in the same breath, and for a very simple reason - Apple security problems are rarely interesting enough. The world's cleverest malware writers devote their efforts to creating fiendish programs...
November 13, 2008 2:50 PM
by John E. Dunn
With the appearance of a new set of malware testing guidelines, it looks as if the hitherto erratic industry of software security testing could finally be about to grow up. But there is still a long journey ahead. The <a...
October 22, 2008 3:21 PM
by John E. Dunn
If I read the market correctly, the argument over whether a company should buy a specialist security appliance for every need, or invest instead in ‘all-in-one' devices is about to be won. The specialist security box is heading for extinction....
October 16, 2008 12:10 PM
by John E. Dunn
When the UK government isn't losing its databases, it's plotting to create new ones of unprecedented scale and reach. Indeed, the word ‘database' might turn out to be the term that defines its whole period in office. It started in...
September 4, 2008 7:29 PM
by John E. Dunn
How many browser wars are we on now? I make it at three and counting, each one won by achieving a different objective. Browser war one, the war to control web standards, saw the massacre of Netscape by Internet Explorer...
August 18, 2008 6:49 AM
by John E. Dunn
Just over two years after Chip and PIN arrived in the UK to save plastic from a torrent of fraud, the nay-sayers are still knocking it at every opportunity. But the problem isn't that it's failed but that its success...
June 25, 2008 11:41 AM
by John E. Dunn
Lock up your routers. The infamous but fascinating DNSChanger Trojan (AKA ‘Zlob’) has returned in a new variant that once again to hacks routers to redirect any DNS lookup made through that device. Ouch! You don’t have to be...
May 27, 2008 11:28 AM
by John E. Dunn
There’s been a vague assumption in some quarters that because Vista initially proved so hard for legitimate programmers to tangle with, malware writers would struggle as well. Here’s a real-world example of Vista being undermined, passed on by PC...
May 20, 2008 12:33 PM
by Tom Jowitt
Do you want your Apple iPhone to look-and-feel like Windows Vista? No, neither did we. But now you can, thanks to a brand new iPhone theme that will make Apple's handset look-and-feel like a Vista-based device. It is hard...
April 21, 2008 11:29 AM
by John E. Dunn
Let’s demystify the process of buying a laptop because there are plenty of vendors who’d like people to pay over the odds: buy a laptop to run a specific operating system. Am I kidding myself it's that simple? Set...
February 14, 2008 10:20 AM
by John E. Dunn
The law of unintended consequences is up there with Murphy’s as the smuggest of its kind, but there’s no denying its talent for stripping bare our assumptions about technology. A report in The Guardian on the OLPC (one laptop...
January 18, 2008 12:13 PM
by John E. Dunn
An editor at US title InfoWorld has reminded me that it has a campaign . to save the soon-to-be discarded XP, now in its last months of sanctioned life. You can learn about XP’s many advantages over Vista, and...
December 17, 2007 3:32 PM
by John E. Dunn
It is sixty years since the invention of the transistor, or was on Sunday December 16th, an event that must have happened in a room somewhere off the long, serious marble corridors of Bell Laboratories' famous Murray Hill facility...