At Comdex Sunday night, Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates announced Release Candidate 2 (RC2) of the Windows.Net Server 2003, with revised plans to ship the server upgrade in ...
Windows Server 2003 Release 2, which roughly meets the slated delivery date Microsoft announced last year, offers significant new features including better branch office support, integration of the WS ...
As July 14 — marking the end of Windows Server 2003’s official support lifetime — approaches, the message from all sides grows louder: Upgrade or else. Analysts and pundits are making a case for the ...
Microsoft is putting the finishing touches on the second release candidate, or near-final testing version, of Windows .Net Server 2003, sources said. The clock is ticking for Windows .Net Server 2003, ...
Windows Server 2003 died today as a product, but not necessarily in the hearts and minds of IT pros, nor in the networks they manage. The July 14, 2015 product lifecycle end date signifies the end of ...
A Windows developer has successfully compiled both Windows XP and Windows Server 2003 from source code leaked online last week. Last week, a 43GB collection of Microsoft source code was released as a ...
You know it well by now: Windows Server 2003 support is ending July 14, 2015. If you’re one of the (far too) many still running WS2003, it’s time to arm yourself with your action plan because what you ...
Just after enterprises have finished migrating their desktops from Microsoft Windows XP, they now have to turn around and move away from Windows Server 2003. The venerable (and now vulnerable) ...
The arguments against keeping Windows Server 2003, which will have support stopped on July 14, are straightforward; it’ll be a hacker’s dream; there will be huge compliance headaches, and so on. Yet ...
It’s been a hectic few hours for security researchers around the world as ransomware ‘WannaCry’ have been causing a menace for organizations and companies worldwide; most notably, the UK’s NHS was ...
In a previous column, I discussed upgrading from Windows NT 4.0. Like an older car, it gets from point to point. But features such as air bags and traction control can’t simply be bolted on.
Although many network administrators will probably upgrade to Windows Server 2003 from Windows NT or Windows 2000 Server, you might need to install a Windows Server 2003 server from scratch. Here's ...
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