creedo299
Epochal Historian
Note the Longhorn System would be connecting the future robotics systems, to the internet, so that the Windows oriented robots, could talk to their factories for verification on upkeep and maintenance issues.
Hence, this post is of relative inportants.
http://weblog.physorg.com/news1590.html
A software firm was granted a preliminary injunction against Microsoft preventing it from deploying the technology, slated to be included in next generation operating system Longhorn.
Alacritech, San Jose alleges that Microsoft has violated two of its patents on technology which speeds up the connection of PCs on networks. This technology is called Dynamic TCP offload data acceleration.
Alacritech said in a statement that when it discovered Microsoft Chimney was based on its patents, it offer the firm a licence. But the Vole rejected the licensing deal it offered.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=22524
Legal smoke affects Microsoft Chimney, Longhorn
Injunction granted in lang may yer lum reek case
By INQUIRER staff: Thursday 14 April 2005, 08:55
[AD]A SOFTWARE firm was granted a preliminary injunction against Microsoft preventing it from deploying the technology, slated to be included in next generation operating system Longhorn.
According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Alacritech won a preliminary injunction against Microsoft in a court in San Francisco.
This San Jose firm alleges that Microsoft has violated two of its patents on technology which speeds up the connection of PCs on networks. This technology is called Dynamic TCP offload data acceleration.
Microsoft has dubbed this technology "Chimney", and, according to the Journal, faces around 30 patent suit cases. Alacritech holds a number of network patents, listed here. The patents in question are numbered 6,427,171 and 6,987,868 - both relating to a protocol processing stack for use with an intelligent network interface device.
Alacritech said in a statement that when it discovered Microsoft Chimney was based on its patents, it offer the firm a licence. But the Vole rejected the licensing deal it offered. The firm's lawyer said that the firm owned numerous patents in the same field. Mark Lauer, a partner at the Silicon Edge Law Group, said that last year, at WinHEC, "Microsoft said this technology would allow them to rule the world for the next few years". µ
L'INQS
http://www.remotelyanywhere.com/dmcq/server_edition.asp
Enterprise Edition
Server Edition
Personal Edition
Secure Remote Control
Fully control keyboard, mouse and monitor from any Java-enabled web browser
Six levels of security including 128-bit SSL encryption
Remote-to-local printing without the installation of additional drivers
more info
Integrated Administration Tools
System-level background access via HTML-formatted interface does not disturb user
Edit registry, schedule reboots, manage users, and administer processes and services
View CPU/file usage and virtual memory settings
more info
Easy Enterprise Deployment
Command line installation and scripted mass-deployment support
Background installation does not interrupt the user
Central syslog and database logging for events and network console ready
more info
File Transfer
Two direction file transfer and automatic folder synchronization
Delta file transfer uses disk caching to enhance speed
more info
Scripting & Alerts
Real-time monitoring, logging, and alerting includes ODBC support
Create custom alerting scenarios with a flexible built in scripting language
Alerts can be delivered via e-mail or text messages
more info
Wireless PDA Support
Specialized interface supports access and control from most handheld devices
more info
Also try another product by 3am Labs:
System requirements: Control Windows XP / 2000 / NT4 / ME / 98 / 95. Access from any web-enabled device.
“The best choice for help desk staff and network administrators.â€
- PC Magazine Editor's Choice, July 2002
RemotelyAnywhere is RSA SecurID Ready
"RemotelyAnywhere stands out from the crowd because it complments remote control and file transfer with a host of tools aimed squarely at support staff.â€
Hence, this post is of relative inportants.
http://weblog.physorg.com/news1590.html
A software firm was granted a preliminary injunction against Microsoft preventing it from deploying the technology, slated to be included in next generation operating system Longhorn.
Alacritech, San Jose alleges that Microsoft has violated two of its patents on technology which speeds up the connection of PCs on networks. This technology is called Dynamic TCP offload data acceleration.
Alacritech said in a statement that when it discovered Microsoft Chimney was based on its patents, it offer the firm a licence. But the Vole rejected the licensing deal it offered.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=22524
Legal smoke affects Microsoft Chimney, Longhorn
Injunction granted in lang may yer lum reek case
By INQUIRER staff: Thursday 14 April 2005, 08:55
[AD]A SOFTWARE firm was granted a preliminary injunction against Microsoft preventing it from deploying the technology, slated to be included in next generation operating system Longhorn.
According to a report in the Wall Street Journal, Alacritech won a preliminary injunction against Microsoft in a court in San Francisco.
This San Jose firm alleges that Microsoft has violated two of its patents on technology which speeds up the connection of PCs on networks. This technology is called Dynamic TCP offload data acceleration.
Microsoft has dubbed this technology "Chimney", and, according to the Journal, faces around 30 patent suit cases. Alacritech holds a number of network patents, listed here. The patents in question are numbered 6,427,171 and 6,987,868 - both relating to a protocol processing stack for use with an intelligent network interface device.
Alacritech said in a statement that when it discovered Microsoft Chimney was based on its patents, it offer the firm a licence. But the Vole rejected the licensing deal it offered. The firm's lawyer said that the firm owned numerous patents in the same field. Mark Lauer, a partner at the Silicon Edge Law Group, said that last year, at WinHEC, "Microsoft said this technology would allow them to rule the world for the next few years". µ
L'INQS
http://www.remotelyanywhere.com/dmcq/server_edition.asp
Enterprise Edition
Server Edition
Personal Edition
Secure Remote Control
Fully control keyboard, mouse and monitor from any Java-enabled web browser
Six levels of security including 128-bit SSL encryption
Remote-to-local printing without the installation of additional drivers
more info
Integrated Administration Tools
System-level background access via HTML-formatted interface does not disturb user
Edit registry, schedule reboots, manage users, and administer processes and services
View CPU/file usage and virtual memory settings
more info
Easy Enterprise Deployment
Command line installation and scripted mass-deployment support
Background installation does not interrupt the user
Central syslog and database logging for events and network console ready
more info
File Transfer
Two direction file transfer and automatic folder synchronization
Delta file transfer uses disk caching to enhance speed
more info
Scripting & Alerts
Real-time monitoring, logging, and alerting includes ODBC support
Create custom alerting scenarios with a flexible built in scripting language
Alerts can be delivered via e-mail or text messages
more info
Wireless PDA Support
Specialized interface supports access and control from most handheld devices
more info
Also try another product by 3am Labs:
System requirements: Control Windows XP / 2000 / NT4 / ME / 98 / 95. Access from any web-enabled device.
“The best choice for help desk staff and network administrators.â€
- PC Magazine Editor's Choice, July 2002
RemotelyAnywhere is RSA SecurID Ready
"RemotelyAnywhere stands out from the crowd because it complments remote control and file transfer with a host of tools aimed squarely at support staff.â€