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11 July 2002
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PGP Outlook plugin has major security hole. Relax, there's a patch [The Register]
"A malicious e-mail can create a buffer overrun in Network Associates' PGP plugin for MS Outlook on Windows, which in turn can be used to run arbitrary code with the user's level of privilege. At a minimum this could compromise the user's passphrase and expose his encrypted messages, and at a maximum surrender control of the machine. Attachments do not need to be activated; merely selecting the malicious message is sufficient."
6:38:50 PM
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There's an updated vesion of TcpTrace now available, that has some GUI improvements / bug fixes. [Simon Fell]
12:23:15 PM
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One thing I like about the new XML Web Services Developer Center is the fact that most [but not quite all] have decent, bookmarkable URLs, now if they can just break the long running MSDN tradiation of breaking all the links every month, I'll be really happy. [Simon Fell]
12:18:02 PM
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"The .NET Architecture Center is a new site devoted to business, software, and infrastructure architects. The Center is a collaborative effort involving Microsoft product teams, MSDN, TechNet, and Microsoft's new Architecture Review Board, and it spans the boundaries of MSDN, TechNet, and other sources to serve multiple perspectives, or views, of enterprise architecture."
.NET Architecture Center
10:29:38 AM
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"Microsoft also announced Wednesday a new, free SDK (software development kit) for enterprise developers, which lets them create their own programming tools and integrate them into Microsoft's Visual Studio .Net developer environment. The tool, called Visual Studio .Net Integration SDK, was previously only available to partners such as Rational Software Corp. and Mercury Interactive Corp., both of which each commercial applications known as developer tool "plug-ins" for Microsoft developers.
The SDK will be available for free to Microsoft customers that use it for building plug-ins for internal use, skirting the $10,000-per-year fee that commercial tool vendors must pay for the SDK, said Microsoft's Henry."
Microsoft courts .Net developers
10:23:37 AM
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© Copyright
2002
Jamie Cansdale.
Last update:
03/08/2002; 02:17:08.
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