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September 19th, 2007

You are currently browsing the articles from MS Windows Vista Compatible Software written on September 19th, 2007.

ITsVISTA Web Links: September 19th, 2007

Written by Joe on September 19th, 2007 with no comments.
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Check it out: Speech@Microsoft

Nope, it’s not a new email address — it’s a new blog.  The team responsible for incorporating speech technology into Windows Vista, among other products, has a new blog called Speech @ Microsoft.  Their blog started just this month and inaugural posts cover such topics as using speech APIs (COM or .NET) in applications and which languages are supported by Windows Speech Recognition and TTS (text-to-speech) in Windows Vista.  If you’re interested in Windows Vista’s speech recognition capabilities (you did know that it’s present in all editions of Windows Vista, didn’t you?), then keep this blog on your radar.

Written by Nick White on September 19th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on speech technology and Developers and Featured News and Windows Vista.

Check it out: Speech@Microsoft

Nope, it’s not a new email address — it’s a new blog. The team responsible for incorporating speech technology into Windows Vista, among other products, has a new blog called Speech @ Microsoft. Their blog started just this month and inaugural posts Read More……(read more)

Written by Windows Vista Team Blog on September 19th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on speech technology and Developers and Featured News and Windows Vista.

Partner News: The Six Most Important Changes in Fireware 9.1

What’s New in Fireware 9.1:
  • Spam Quarantine – spamBlocker customers can create a safe, full-featured quarantine for spam, bulk mail, and suspect email messages. Granular control allows the system administrator to configure preferences for mail disposition, storage allocations, and other parameters.
  • POP3 Proxy – This new proxy protects POP3 users against multitudes of email-borne threats for even greater zero day protection.
  • Unlimited File Size Scanning for AntiVirus – A new anti-virus scanning engine eliminates limits on the size of attachments and downloads scanned for viruses by customers using Gateway AV/IPS.
  • AV Scanning for FTP – Gateway AV/IPS customers can also apply AV scanning to all inbound and outbound files transferred via FTP, adding granular defense against many different types of malware. This works in tandem with the existing FTP proxy to boost protection in this critical attack area.  
  • Server Load Balancing (Fireware Pro users only) – Server load balancing allows the Firebox to distribute requests for a company’s URL or other public-facing content to a “server farm” or group of servers. Multiple algorithms offer tailored traffic distribution to the specific server environment. Fireware 9.1 also detects server outages and automatically routes requests to the remaining servers until the offline server is back online.

Beginning today, new Firebox X Core appliances will ship with Fireware 9.1, while new Peak appliances come with Fireware Pro 9.1. Existing customers who have current LiveSecurity Service subscriptions can download 9.1 for free.


Help Core and Peak Customers Get the Upgrade  To make it easy for your current customers to get the benefits of the Fireware/Fireware Pro upgrade – as well as the Firebox X Edge 8.6 upgrade released last month – visit the Partners site and follow the links to 8.6 and 9.1 Launch Central.


Written by bardissi on September 19th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on Watchguard and Network Infrastructure and Non-Profit Technology and Business Computer Support.

Connect Using Dialup Modem - Disabled (Why?)

I have an old friend that lives about a mile away from me. We went to elementary school together, and were best of friends until a little after high school…and we drifted as we got busy with our own lives.

Well… He still remembers me plunking away on my Commodore 64 back in the day, and figures I might know something about computers. He calls me right before my nightly walk and says he needs help getting his new computer on the Internet. Sure I say…I will walk to your house and we will get you setup in no time.

I was expecting to setup a broadband connection for him. When I arrived he had a modem in one hand, and a NetZero disk in the other. He had been working at it all night with no luck.

I sat down and started playing with it. Every time I tried to connect I would get a simple error message from NetZero saying it could not communicate with the modem.

I have my own PPP server at home with a private phone number, so I start trying to setup a connection to test with…and here is what I saw

Connect Using Dialup Modem Disabled

Grr. I can’t select the dial-up option and it won’t tell me why. Worse yet I had no Internet connection to do research to find answers (Unless I wanted to walk a mile back to the house).

I checked the modem, and it tested out fine. It was a good old US Robotics external and it could dial out when I used it from hyperterminal with no problems.

I checked his user account…he was a full administrator.

One by one I disabled startup programs using MSConfig, with the thought that something was getting in the way of dial up networking.

Then I moved on to services. Started disabling the Anti-Virus, etc….and then…only then did I come across this service:

Remote Access Connection Manager Service

Yea. You see the arrow. It was disabled. I enabled it, and started the service. Didn’t even bother with my test PPP connection. Launched NetZero, and it connected on the first try.

Once connected I tried to find out why someone might disable this service. It looks like the previous owner had “Optimized” his system by disabling services that he did not need. Which is perfectly fine as long as you don’t need dial up networking.

As I walked back to my house I pondered this thought - My friend had told me this was the first time he had ever been on the Internet.

Written by Steve Wiseman on September 19th, 2007 with no comments.
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Certifications for SCCM and SCOM

If you want to hear about certifications that Microsoft are developing to help you validate/show your skills on Systems Center, you can attend this Live Meeting we are having on October 24. Rob Linsky, the certification program manager will give you the scoop on what these certs are all about and how to earn them. Click on these links to register for:

October 24, 2007, at 7:30 A.M. Pacific Time
October 24, 2007, at 5:00 P.M. Pacific Time

Microsoft are developing two Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist (MCTS) certs and a professional-series (MCITP) certification for Systems Center, all of which will be available in 2008 (January/February for MCTS; later for the MCITP).

News Source: blogs.msdn.com

Written by Odd-Magne Kristoffersen on September 19th, 2007 with no comments.
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