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> mSecureOTA 3.5: Wireless security for Domino
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IN THIS ISSUE:
>
No conspiracy: Microsoft, IBM to blame for Domino's decline
>
IBM's 'Atlantic' tools about to leave port
>
Microsoft issues 10 security bulletins, seven critical
>
More headlines
>
Chapter Download: Crawling the Web with Java
>
Ask Chuck Connell: Mail merge with MS Word and Notes
>
Domino blog contest: How many movie titles can you place?
>
The Missing Link: This is my son @ and my grandson @, Jr.
![Headlines]()
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No conspiracy: Microsoft, IBM to blame for Domino's decline
[SearchDomino.com]
Lotus pros scoff at the notion that there's a conspiracy against Notes and Domino. Instead, it's Microsoft's savvy and IBM's complacency that's making them feel like second-class citizens.
MORE INFO:
> Read columnist John Vaughan's take on the new Lotus message
> Do you understand Lotus' strategy? Is it working? Let us know
IBM's 'Atlantic' tools about to leave port
[eWEEK]
IBM says it will ship its forthcoming Atlantic toolset by the end of the quarter. The bundle is the latest version of its Rational tools suite, offering advanced modeling and design capabilities as well as team development and business process integration and management functionality.
Microsoft issues 10 security bulletins, seven critical
[SearchSecurity.com]
IT managers have 10 Microsoft security updates to sift through for October, seven of them critical.
More headlines
[From around the Web]
Will services disappoint IBM? (MarketWatch.com)
Funner worm spreads to U.S. (TechNewsWorld)
Shopping for groceries with IBM (Market Wire)
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DOWNLOADS:
Chapter Download: Crawling the Web with Java
Crawler technology is useful in many types of Web-related applications For example, you might use a crawler to look for broken links or find changes in a commercial Web site. The Web crawler developed in this chapter from the book The Art of Java, by Herbert Schildt and James Holmes, is called Search Crawler. It crawls the Web, looking for sites that contain strings matching those specified by the user, and displays the
URLs of the sites for which matches are found.
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Need help with Notes/Domino administration?
Too many layoffs? No one around? Need help with Notes/Domino administration? We provide it. Outsourced services for account management, e-mail troubleshooting, security audits, version upgrades, performance tuning, application maintenance, and more. We work on-site or remotely as the project requires. Rapid turnaround to resolve your problems. For more information, e-mail [EMAIL PROTECTED], call Chuck Connell at 781-939-0505, or
click here.
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ADVICE:
Ask Chuck Connell: Mail merge with MS Word and Notes
Dear Chuck: Is there a way to get Microsoft Word and Notes working together in a "mail merge" to pull the electronic mail addresses from a Notes directory?
Click here to read Chuck's expert response.
CONTESTS:
Domino blog contest: How many movie titles can you place?
Back in August, Mike Lazar was the featured expert for the Expert Answer Center. He solved plenty of Domino administration problems, and he kept up a daily blog for his two-week stint. He played a little game in his blog, and now it's time for you to play back. Mike named his blogs with lines from his favorite movies. How many movies can you name? Read the last blog entry for contest details and how you can win a copy of Exam Cram 2: Lotus Notes and Domino 6 System Administrator by Tony Aveyard and Karen Fishwick.
![The Missing Link]()
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This is my son @ and my grandson @, Jr.
[Ananova]
This makes that whole Prince thing look alarmingly normal. According to the Beijing Morning Post, a man in central China wanted to name his newborn son "@." Not "#" or "&" or even "/" but "@." Not exactly your standard Chinese character. The man said that the @ symbol is so common thanks to e-mail that it would make an uncommonly good name for his newborn. But province officials named the @ppellation unacceptable, and
claimed that Chinese law requires that all names be translatable into Mandarin. So for now, you can just call the kid "The boy formerly known as @."
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