Monday, April 13, 2009

Conficker Worm Update

April 1st came and went without the Conficker Worm seeming to do anything. Often, when the media gets a hold of these things they get a little out of hand. Don't take that to mean that the Conficker Worm is not serious. It is. The problem is that the writers of this worm are very clever. They have been able to get this worm installed on millions of computers and the worm is just waiting for more commands from them.

Here are 2 videos put together by F-Secure, a major Internet security provider. You'll be amazed at how clever and tough to catch these guys are. However, as you will see, the good guys can be clever as well.

Video 1
Video 2

Friday, April 10, 2009

Microsoft Changes Windows XP Deadline...Again

Jun 09 was the latest date that Microsoft pegged for the end of Windows XP sales. Through that date system builders such as ourselves could sell workstations with Windows Vista but then apply downgrade rights and actually install Windows XP. This week Microsoft moved the date out to April 2010.

While I understand that many companies are reluctant to start migrating to Vista for various reasons, I do not think this is the best move for Microsoft. My reasoning may not be what you you expect. By continually extending the end of life of Windows XP, Microsoft is allowing major software vendors to continue to drag their feet in making sure their applications will run properly in Windows Vista and now Windows 7 which is expected to ship later this year.

If the April 09 date was kept, many major software vendors will still not be ready. This is just ridiculous. Windows Vista was released in 2007 and available to software vendors as far back as 2006 in beta versions. And at this point Windows Vista will be replaced with Windows 7 later this year. This affects you. If the June 08 date was kept, you would be in a situation where you would not be able to run these applications on new computers. This is not a good thing. Software vendors need to move faster in migrating to new operating systems. I don't think 4 years fast enough.

At least Windows 7 is fairly close to Windows Vista as far as software development is concerned, so software vendors should be able to migrate to Windows 7 fairly easily as long as they are at least close to rolling out there Windows Vista versions of their applications. Let's hope that is doesn't take another 4 years.