Archive for February 2nd, 2008

Our View: Micron should be more open

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

Will Micron Technology stay in Idaho, or will it go? Even state officials are baffled. Gov. Butch Otter’s chief economist says Micron will stay. Otter’s economic development guru suggests Idaho should plan on life without its largest private employer - just in case.The whole situation has a muddled, improvised feel, largely of Micron’s making.Private companies like to keep their competitors guessing - the essence of a shrewd business strategy. Companies shouldn’t leave the state’s decision-makers guessing. But Micron’s tight-lipped approach to losses and layoffs has bred a culture of confusion.The confusion reached a head Friday. Jim Ellick, the head of the Commerce Department, said the state should prepare two budgets: one that assumes Micron will remain in the state, one that assumes Micron will leave.Micron, Ellick told the Statesman Friday, is “either going to stay and everything’s great or they’re going to leave and everything’s bad.”Ellick doesn’t exactly chart out much of a middle ground - and, of course, he provides a refresher in the value of economic diversification.State economist Mike Ferguson offered a much more hopeful forecast Friday - a relative phrase, since he projects the company will lose 1,000 workers in 2008 and another 1,000 in 2009. “We don’t believe we’re on the verge of losing our biggest private employer,” Ferguson said. “Beyond 2009, we see growth resuming.”Ferguson’s prediction seems consistent with recent comments made by Mike Reynoldson, Micron’s head of government affairs. Earlier this month, he told legislators that the company expects to see depressed prices for DRAM memory improve in 2009. Said Reynoldson: “We have always come out of a downturn as a stronger company.”How should lawmakers read the company’s signals, and the mixed messages from the executive branch? The Micron question will go a long way to set the tone for the spending decisions facing lawmakers.It may make some lawmakers uneasy about Otter’s $3 billion general fund budget, and the governor’s plans to pour surplus dollars into college scholarships, state building and park maintenance and scientific modeling of Idaho’s aquifers. It may also give lawmakers qualms about raising vehicle registration fees to address a statewide backlog in highways.In a February 2005 report - which still appears on Micron’s Web site, even after $320 million in 2006-07 losses and 1,100 Treasure Valley layoffs - the company touts its economic impact on Idaho. At the time, Micron accounted for 3.7 percent of Idaho’s economic activity. Said the report: “It is unusual for a single private employer - especially in the high-tech sector - to have such a large impact on the state’s economy.”With that impact comes responsibility. Even in a turbulent business such as the semiconductor industry, transparency is key. The guessing game over Micron’s future provides more proof that Micron has done a poor job of helping Idaho understand what the future holds.As a Statehouse adage goes, when Micron catches the sniffles, the state’s economy gets the flu. We can hardly blame lawmakers if they’re having a hard time reading the thermometer.

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New Student Portal on the Sun Developer Network

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

Aaron Houston, Program Coordinator for JUGs and Java Champions, pointed out that there is a new Student Portal on the Sun Developer Network, and could be a helpful resource for both high school and college students.Sun SPOT kits are available for price down to USD 300/kit for students and teachers/professors. The discount can ask about on the Sun SPOT Forums. There is a competition to submit a proposal for a Sun SPOT idea and you could receive a Free SPOT to implement it.The Sun SPOT Device is a small, wireless, battery powered experimental platform. It is programmed almost entirely in Java to allow regular programmers to create projects that used to require specialized embedded system development skills. The hardware platform includes a range of built-in sensors as well as the ability to easily interface to external devices.Rick opined on this advancement by saying that nvesting in resources for students is the best way to ensure another generation of well-equipped young developers and extend the lifetime of a platform like Java.

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IBM and Fair Isaac Expand Alliance Delivering EDM Solutions

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

IBM and Fair Isaac have expanded their cooperative efforts into a joint strategic and global marketing alliance. Under an agreement announced recently, Fair Isaac’s enterprise decision management (EDM) solutions, which typically support decision-making in industries such as finance, insurance and healthcare, will be centered on IBM’s service-oriented architecture (SOA) products.”Both Fair Isaac and IBM fully embrace and support SOA to deliver open-standards business applications to any number of users regardless of their existing technology infrastructure” said Mark Hanny, vice president of strategic partnerships, IBM.Both companies will work together to build the next generation of Fair Isaac’s enterprise decision management applications on IBM’s DB2, WebSphere, Rational, and Lotus product lines. The two companies will also focus their development on applications running on IBM’s Portal and System z and p platforms.”Our joint clients can now more easily overcome one of the key challenges of implementing an SOA infrastructure to deliver Information on Demand (IOD) managing, integrating, and unlocking value from their business information and become more flexible to better compete globally,” added Hanny.The new strategic alliance agreement also grew out of a need to integrate four of Fair Isaac’s products, including Capstone (origination), Finance (account management), Debt Manager (collections and recovery) and Falcon (fraud prevention).The agreement includes joint development and co-marketing and sales of applications aimed at financial services. IBM’s Global Business Services division will provide systems integration support.

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First BETA Version 4.0 of HttpComponents- HttpCore Released

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

The Apache Hyper-Text Transfer Protocol Components project, has released the first BETA version of HttpComponents HttpCore 4.0-beta1. This release marks the end of API instability in HttpCore. As of this release the API compatibility between minor releases in 4.x codeline will be maintained. It includes several major improvements such as enhanced HTTP message parsing API and optimized parser implementations, Java 5.0 compatibility for HttpCore NIO extensions.The focus of the development efforts will be towards providing better test coverage, documentation and performance optimizations. The HttpCore components implement the most fundamental aspects of the HTTP protocol. They are sufficient to develop basic client side and server side HTTP services with a minimal footprint and no external dependencies. HttpCore NIO extensions can be used to build asynchronous HTTP services based on non-blocking I/O model capable of handling a great number of simultaneous connections with just a few I/O threads.

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Murphy: Allred keeps an even keel as Showcase comes to Boise

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

The numbers, including five consecutive double-doubles, suggest he is ready and his coach believes he will be called up to the NBA soon. But Idaho Stampede center Lance Allred constantly fights the urge to look ahead.”I’m hearing a lot of things, but I’m trying not to count my eggs before they hatch,” Allred said. “You just keep an even keel or else you could go crazy - you really could.”Allred and the rest of the players in the NBA Development League will find it a little tougher to stay calm when the league’s annual Showcase begins Monday at Qwest Arena.Representatives of all 30 NBA teams and most foreign leagues will be in attendance during the four-day, 14-game event. Each D-League team plays twice.That’s two opportunities to impress the scouts and become the 102nd call-up from the D-League, which began in 2001. Ten players have gotten the call this season, including Idaho’s Luke Jackson, who signed with the Miami Heat.”It lets you know the system is working, and you’re in the right system for if you want to get to the NBA,” said the 6-foot-11 Allred, who is averaging a team-high 18.8 points and 10.6 rebounds.Those kinds of numbers will get him noticed by scouts, who likely already have the 26-year-old on their radar.”I’m not expecting Lance to be here all season,” Stampede coach Bryan Gates said.The Showcase, which is expected to attract NBA general managers, could give Allred the final push. Last year, Golden State - which, ironically, was the only team not there - called up Renaldo Major during the event. Several players could have a similar story this week.Even if it’s not an NBA team that calls, players can earn a lucrative living from one of the foreign leagues.Allred, however, tried to downplay the significance of the Showcase to his NBA dreams, pointing out that he plays just as hard in every game.”If you’re playing any harder in a Showcase game than you are in a regular game, shame on you,” he said. “You can’t treat it any different. You just got to go and play basketball.”Part of that is Allred’s demeanor. Part is trying to stay on that even keel.And part of it is untrue.”Every Showcase I’ve witnessed, the games are at a playoff intensity. The games are all competitive and the players definitely seem to go a little harder,” said Chris Alpert, the league’s vice president of basketball operations and director of player personnel.Alpert is a key liaison between the NBA and the D-League, often alerting needy NBA teams to specific players in the D-League. It is a zero-sum game. In order for a D-League player to get the call, there must be an opening in the NBA.That’s why Allred keeps an NBA transactions Web site bookmarked on his computer. Allred, who went to training camp with the Boston Celtics, is eligible to sign with any of the 30 NBA teams.”You don’t want to be a bad guy and say, ‘Oh yeah, injured. Go down. Go down,’ ” Allred said. “But every man’s misfortune is another guy’s opportunity. You wait for your chance to come up.”That’s what they’re all doing. Not just the players, but the coaches, the referees, the front-office personnel. All hoping for an opportunity to make their move to the NBA.And stick there.Coaches know the game.Gates’ double-double center could soon be gone. His veteran point guard and the league’s MVP last season, Randy Livingston, is also likely to be moving up before the end of the season.But Gates couldn’t be happier. His greatest satisfaction comes not from wins, but from seeing players make that jump.”Our teams, they understand what our league is about,” Alpert said. “Ultimately, you’re going to lose your top players.”It can’t happen soon enough for Allred, or the rest of the league’s players in Boise this week.All aiming to be No. 102.All aiming to keep their sanity.Brian Murphy: 377-6444

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Letters to the Editor

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

NUCLEAR ENERGYAsk for the full clean up
Do you remember the nuclear waste deal in 1995? Colorful ads promised this nuclear deal would “say no to leaving waste over the aquifer.” They promised if we import tons of foreign spent nuclear fuel, this deal would “guarantee that the federal government must come up with the money to clean-up existing INEL waste for disposal outside our state.”The final plan is out for official public comment now, quietly released during the holiday season. The “preferred alternative” #4 does not come even close to removing 10 percent of the buried plutonium.Why is the state not demanding alternative #5, which removes “all” the buried plutonium?The final plan concludes a full clean-up is too expensive! Have you ever seen an Idaho politician refuse $8 billion in nuclear jobs? Why are the politicians refusing to demand a full clean-up?Do you remember the infamous Pit 9? In 1993, that was chosen as the worst plutonium pit. Now, this final plan cherry picks just a very small portion of Pit 9!When God blessed Idaho, there was no man-made plutonium in our water. Please call your silent politicians. Ask for the full clean-up proposed in Alternative 5 at Brandt.Meagher@icp.doe.gov.DR. PETER RICKARDS, D.P.M., Twin FallsWhere did the West go? Keep Idaho green
Coming up nuclear plants?What ever happened to “green” - windmills, solar and vouchers for fuel cell-natural gas homes, buildings and electric cars and trucks? “Keep Idaho green,” don’t put us, our aquifers, the Tetons, Yellowstone, our farms, our tourism under a dark cloud, or worse a disaster.We have to ask, would housing costs go down, sales, would people move away? What ever happened to common sense … smelling the roses, or our Snake River, the gas? Where did the West go?Help save Idaho, all us Republicans, Democrats, Independents, Libertarians, Christians and non-Christians! It’s a no-brainer to my way of thinking. We haven’t yet even used “traditional” energy sources. Slam the door on nuclear power.”Keep Idaho green.”MONTY STIPP, MeridianHEALTH CARESave money, go to Mexico for dental work
Imagine a country where the majority of the people have no health insurance and they cannot afford to go to the doctor or the dentist.Image a country where the majority of people hope they die before they have to go to a nursing home because of the cost.The last four years I have been going to the dentist in Algodones, Mexico. I was happy with my local dentist, but I could not afford the cost. I am almost 70 years old, my teeth are worn down and I had a few teeth missing. This fall I went to Mexico to a dentist that I have 100 percent confidence in, and got 28 new porcelain crowns, including three bridges. The whole process took three days. The total cost was less than what my daughter paid a specialist to get one crown. I now have teeth better than my originals.Millions of Americans go to Mexico for major operations, dental work, and prescription drugs because they cannot afford the price in the US. Millions of Mexicans come to this country and go to our hospital emergency rooms and receive free health care. What kind of country would let this happen?If you need dental work, check out this Web page, www.sanidentalgroup.cjb.net.GARY WILLSON, ReubensEAGLE FOOTHILLSCity Council put best interests of Eagle first
Power (city voters) and knowledge (North Ada County Foothills Association) helped lead City Council to approve a far more responsible M3 Company Foothills development agreement than what Council was ready to approve just two months ago. The Nov. 6 Eagle city election results proved that knowledgeable Foothills’ advocates are not a “relatively small group of critics” with a “significant self-serving negative bias that does not truly represent breadth of the community.” (Councilman Bandy’s October campaign quote.)Congratulations and gratitude go to John Petrovsky’s NACFA for pursuing a course of public leadership, persistence and informed advocacy for a responsibly managed foothills growth plan, during the past five years at the county and city levels. NACFA stepped in where elected city officials feared to tread with developers.Gratitude goes as well to the recent successful and influential Preserve Eagle campaign platform. City Council subsequently switched to damage control mode to regain leadership credibility on the major issue of city growth. Thanks go to Council for deciding on Nov. 20 and Dec. 11 to put the best interests of the city of Eagle first rather than those of a Foothills developer. Well done, City Council.PATRICIA MINKIEWICZ, EagleBARACK OBAMAStop spreading political rumors as facts
Most will agree that politics is too partisan; but what to do about it? First, stop spreading “Patriot Police” rumors as fact. Clarice Wright stated that Barack Obama attended a radical Muslim school as a child, and recited the Pledge of Allegiance with his hands at his side, his back to the American flag.CNN investigated the charge of attending a radical Muslim school, a “madrassa.” Not true. He attended the Basuki school, a general school, from 1969-1971. Students dress in school uniforms and teachers in Western attire.A photograph of Sen. Obama’s alleged pledge infraction was taken on Sept. 16, 2007, at Sen. Tom Harkin’s annual steak fry festivities in Iowa. The photo was taken during the National Anthem not a recitation of the pledge. The area was covered with American flags so while he had his back to the one in the picture he was facing a flag as were the others in the picture.To diminish the partisan nature of our system, Clarice, stop spreading false rumors. When anyone allows themselves to be used by the “Patriot Police,” partisanship is magnified. So what will it be? Furthering the problem or becoming part of the solution?ED LONSDALE, Boise

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Microsoft Delays Shipment of SQL Server 2008

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

Microsoft’s schedule for shipping SQL Server 2008, the upcoming new release of the company’s database software, is slipping from June 30 into the third quarter. Microsoft recently disclosed the schedule change, described by the company as a “clarification on the roadmap for SQL Server 2008,” in “The Data Platform Insider” blog on the company’s Technet Website for IT professionals.Microsoft also revealed that SQL Server 2008 would still be celebrated at the company’s big launch gala in February, along with Windows Server 2008 and Visual Studio 2008. However, it won’t actually be finished until the third quarter of the year. Instead, what Microsoft will deliver at its “Heroes Happen Here” event in Los Angeles next month will be a “feature complete” community technology preview or CTP of SQL Server 2008, according to the blog. “Microsoft is excited to deliver a feature complete CTP during the Heroes Happen Here launch wave and a release candidate (RC) in Q2 calendar year 2008, with final release to manufacturing (RTM) of SQL Server 2008 expected in Q3,” the post, by Francois Ajenstat, director of SQL Server marketing, said.Once considered a technology that could only handle smaller databases, SQL Server is now running data warehouses larger than 20 TB in size, according to Microsoft. Among the areas of improvement in SQL Server 2008 besides the business intelligence capabilities are better scalability and an easier way to develop against the database via technologies like LINQ, a new querying syntax.SQL Server 2008’s delay is relatively minor, especially compared to the two-year delay for its prior version, SQL Server 2005. Development of that database was slowed by numerous security fixes. Windows Server 2008’s RTM has also been postponed several times, though it is currently expected to ship around the time of the L.A. launch. Visual Studio 2008, by contrast, was released in mid-November.

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Letters to the Editor

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

WINTER GARDEN AGLOWVisit this stunning display
Anyone who has not visited the beautifully lighted Idaho Botanical Garden this holiday season should gather up the family and go. It’s like visiting fairyland, with a much expanded area as a result of the new Lewis and Clark Native Plant Garden.Many thanks to the volunteers who must devote thousands of hours to creating this stunning display. The result is a wonderful gift to Valley residents.ALICE HENNESSEY, BoiseOILFind out what media aren’t telling about oil supply
Gas price increases and reports of economic hard times on the way are alarming.More alarming, however, is that the local and national media are reporting the symptoms, while staying conspicuously mute about the root disease. We all know that there is a problem with oil supply. The world’s petroleum geologists have been saying it is a problem they call “Peak Oil” and that it will get increasingly worse. Google “Peak Oil” and follow the links. You will find U.S. senators, ex-presidents, bankers, oil executives, scientists, mayors, governors, and literally hundreds of thousands of highly placed experts around the world who consider “Peak Oil” the most imminent threat to our global civilizations.Blow away the smoke and shatter the mirror of popular America media fantasy, and you will find that the consumer culture, the personal automobile, the interstate highway system, obesity, the electrical grid, and many other “normal” things will be only a distant memory in 5 to 10 years.If you do nothing else today, google “Peak Oil” and find out what they (the fascist government-corporate-media entity) are not telling you.BOB BLURTON, BoiseNATIONAL POLITICSU.S. on verge of bankruptcy, Bush is lying again
American citizens are being led down the path to bankruptcy by a bunch of war-mongers, paranoids and perverts. Our sinking U.S. dollar will soon be worth about 25 cents Canadian. Instead of doing his job in Congress, our leading Idaho conservative, “Sen. Larry Craig,” has been moonlighting as a plumbing inspector in Minneapolis restrooms. It’s easy to see why our real estate industry is now in shambles, along with some big banks. Instead of repairing our broken Social Security system, Bush has plundered our Social Security trust fund to the tone of $2.4 trillion. After being assured by the United Nations that Iraq has been completely disarmed, Bush gave that tiny landlocked, half starved country a taste of Christianity by attacking and slaughtering them by the thousands. Any Iraqi hero who dared to oppose us was immediately labeled a terrorists or insurgent and tortured accordingly. Iraq was once our friend and ally in their chemical warfare against Iran. We are no longer trusted, for very good reasons. With our country on the verge of bankruptcy, Bush is back to lying again to start a new war with Iran. ROBERT G. SCHULTZE, RigginsDEVELOPMENTWhat is ecological impact of cutting down trees?
Boise is being deforested by developers. A lot on Alanta Street, that once had over 15 mature trees, is being denuded for four new skinny houses. This hole in the woods regimen has taken hundreds of trees on the Bench. Our neighborhoods slowly are looking like those of the west valley, with their look alike houses set on arid lots. Four houses replace one, trees are cut down. What is the ecological impact? What is the aesthetic result? What is Boise?CARL ROWE, BoiseTRANSPORTATIONTrucks cause most damage, trains make more sense
In the Dec. 14 issue of the Statesman an article in the Reader’s View section titled “trucking vs. railroads” caught my eye. First off, I have no dog in this fight but it struck me after reading this article I lean toward the railroad point of view.Mr. Noud and Ms. Fowers denigrate an unsupported claim “… about trucks causing astronomical damage to roads …” All you have to do is follow a semi down I-84 and see how the trailer’s tires fit into the “grooves” in the road and then look at how automobile tires do not even come close to tracking in the grooves to know, without being a “scientist” that the trucks are making the grooves. Trucks should pay more to help pay for the damaged roads. Oh, and throw in the studded snow tire drivers to pay their fair share of road damage.I, for one, am tired of subsidizing commercial heavy trucks use and destruction of public roads.And one more thing, Mr. Noud and Ms. Fowers, if the railroads made small spurs and unloading points in most cities they could unload their trailers and deliver them to anyone with a loading dock.JAMES LUCKER, MeridianTHE STATESMANStatesman should edit foolish Web comments
When reading articles on this web site, must I read the opinions of what any fool with a computer was thinking when they read it? The idea of stimulating debate on events covered is commendable, but when any moron with an agenda gets to place their comments right on the same page as the actual article, it’s not good. I’m usually either annoyed or offended by comments that have no bearing on the article in question. My guess is that this will eventually cause a problem. Imagine a scenario where an article about a poor kid getting hit by a car has comments by “Blufan69″ indicating that it’s a good thing because he resents bicycles on the road … and the kid’s mom reads this and complains to anyone who’ll listen. Is she gonna say “Blufan69″ is an insensitive jerk, or that the Statesman is? I’m pretty sure your Web gurus can hide the comments with a click … or make it an “opt in” situation. On the other hand, the chances of me avoiding this Web site go up with the chances of me ever buying a newspaper from the Idaho Statesman … so I suppose it could be some mad genius’s strategy for increasing circulation … but I doubt it.JOSEPH PEAVEY, BoiseJapanese paper offers better coverage than here
I recently returned from spending three weeks in Japan. Imagine my surprise when I picked up a copy of the Japan Times and found better sports coverage than our “beloved” Statesman. In fact, the Japan Times had a oversize half page of NHL coverage every day. Kind of puts the Statesman’s pathetic sports page in perspective. Sure would be nice if our sports editor could get with the program and put out a daily sports page that had more than just Broncos’ coverage.TIM KUTKUHN, BoiseReligion wasn’t relevant in local business article
I have just finished reading Ken Dey’s Dec. 18 article “State files suit against Boise business owner,” and find it appalling that he found it necessary to include the accused’s religion in his article. There is absolutely nothing in the piece that would remotely suggest there is any reason to include the accused’s religion. It seems that the media for some unearthly reason as a whole have to take a shot at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. You rarely, if at any time, mention that the accused is a Baptist, or a Methodist, or a Catholic.Enough is enough. If there is no direct connection with the piece, just leave it out.Perhaps if Mr. Dey wants to be connected with a newspaper, he just stick with just removing and replacing it in the bottom of a birdcage.ROBERT W. MCCAMMON, BoiseBANK ROBBERIESHow do criminals get away with it time after time?
I just don’t understand how time after time after time, that these low-life thugs, that rob these local banks and convenience stores in Boise, continually are getting away with it. What in the world are these cops doing in this town? There has to be something done about this matter. They are either short-staffed, or just not doing their job. It is pretty obvious that you can get away with these crimes, and that is why there are so many robberies. There has to be a drastic change, or our safety in Boise will be so bad that you won’t even be able to go out after dark!TONY ECHEVARRIA, Boise

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Grand Theft Auto IV Set to Hit Shelves in April

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

Publishing label Rockstar Games has said the latest in its Grand Theft Auto franchise will be released worldwide on April 29th, following last year’s high profile delay of the franchise to concentrate on its multi-platform release. GTA IV, which was originally slated for release last year, is expected to be one of the top-selling games of 2008 and is likely to revive debate over the series’ depictions of sex and violence. The game will be released worldwide on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 consoles. After the date was announced, publisher Take-Two Interactive’s share price rose by more than 10 per cent. “We are so excited to be releasing ‘Grand Theft Auto IV,’” Sam Houser, founder and executive producer of Rockstar Games, said in a statement. “We’ve pushed ourselves very hard to make something incredible, and hope the game sets a new benchmark for interactive entertainment.”The game, that is one of the most anticipated titles of 2008 for Microsoft Xbox 360 and Sony PlayStation was initially scheduled to be launched on October 16, 2007, but in August the Take Two officials decided that there is no way the development team could meet the goal of perfecting the engine in time to meet the deadline.Strauss Zelnick, chairman, Take-Two, then said, “Certain elements of development proved to be more time-intensive than expected, especially given the commitment for a simultaneous release on two very different platforms As for the story of the game, Rockstar has released so far three trailers. GTA IV is taking us to Liberty City (a fictional city based on New York city). There are several references to Liberty City on buildings and objects, as well as several distinct features that make the city a replica of New York, including the Statute of Liberty, Empire State Building and the Brooklyn Bridge.The game though is looking like it is continuing to shape up with a great deal of polish to it, we will surely find out everything in April.

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Vista Encountered Less Security Flaws than XP, Says Microsoft

Saturday, February 2nd, 2008

Microsoft is giving itself high marks in its first year Vista security report, at least when comparing the OS first year vulnerability and patch statistics to its Windows OS predecessor and other modern workstation operating systems, such as Red Hat, Ubuntu, and Apple Mac OS.Microsoft employee Jeff Jones has published a Windows Vista one-year vulnerability report in his Security Blog that includes analysis of the company’s newest operating system alongside Windows XP and several competitors.During the Vista’s first year of availability, 17 security bulletins, patching 36 vulnerabilities, were released for the OS on occasions, according to Jeff Jones, security strategy director in Microsoft’s Trustworthy Computing Group. Jones also found that a change to the way Microsoft handles patching has resulted in less work for system administrators on Vista compared to Windows XP.atch events [distributions of one or more bulletin] are an indirect measure of how the combination of product security quality and vendor update release policies and processes impact security administrators specifically, how many days in the year did the administrators have to mobilize to deploy one or more security updates, Jones said on his security blog. y analysis found that administrators were required to mobilize much less often for Windows Vista than any other product examined.The report has been criticized for not taking into account factors like software quality, administrative controls, physical controls, or just how damaging each exploit can be.Jones notes, however, that the report is not an attempt to prove which operating system is ore secure than the others, but rather an analysis on how Microsoft improvements to the security update process and development process have reduced the impact of security updates to Windows administrators significantly compared to its predecessor, Windows XP.Microsoft released Vista for enterprise clients, along with Office 2007, in November 2006. The home version was distributed two months later.

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