In an effort to standardize naming conventions for its technical articles, Microsoft has eliminated the letters at the beginning of the article identifiers.
Load test your projects under near-realistic conditions.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- 01/22/2003
Microsoft announces that it's dropping ".NET" from name of upcoming network operating system family of products as release date looms.
The mother of all Visual Studio code libraries.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- 01/22/2003
Scale up your efforts to debug and monitor enterprise projects.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- 01/08/2003
Here's a way to recode objects in many ways without losing your place.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- 01/08/2003
Spear those dead, useless registry keys and values with Reg.exe after a Norton Antivirus failure.
- By Bill Boswell
- 01/06/2003
Figuring out what group policies apply to an object on your Windows 2000 network can be a painstaking process; but Windows .NET’s Resultant Set of Policies feature promises simplification.
Microsoft is touting its next-generation secure computing infrastructure as a giant leap for mankind. Not everyone agrees.
- By Roberta Bragg
- 01/01/2003
Microsoft rules when it comes to monitoring conditions in tech. Yet, to surf the same waters, you need to read wave action—and Microsoft’s next moves—accurately, too.
- By Scott Bekker
- 01/01/2003
Panda Antivirus Enterprise Suite keeps those viruses at bay.
- By Robert J. Shimonski
- 01/01/2003
RouterSim's MCSE WindowSim can help you pump up your IT muscles.
- By Douglas Mechaber
- 01/01/2003
Back in the old days, "hacker" defined people who delighted in getting right down into the bits and making software work well. Henry S. Warren's Hacker's Delight captures some of the algorithms and feeling of classical hacking.
- By Mike Gunderloy
- 01/01/2003
What better way to kick off a new year than with a cool new tool?
- By Chris Brooke
- 01/01/2003
Is Microsoft making the right decisions with its cert program in regards to .NET? Well, consider how other companies change their exams to address a significant technology shift.
- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 01/01/2003