Microsoft Offers Visual Studio Express Products Free for 1 Year
Microsoft has announced that for the next year, it will offer the new Visual Studio Express Editions to customers for free. After that, the price will be $49 per product.
November 7, 2005
Subscribe to Windows IT Pro: https://store.pentontech.com/index.cfm?s=1&promocode=eu205xfL
===============
To ensure that future email messages you receive from WinInfo Daily UPDATE aren't mistakenly blocked by antispam software, be sure to add [email protected] to your list of allowed senders and contacts.
==========
This email newsletter comes to you free and is supported by the following advertiser, which offers products and services in which you might be interested. Please take a moment to visit this advertiser's Web site and show your support for WinInfo Daily UPDATE. Migrating Novell GroupWise to Exchange 2003 - GroupWise Users, it's time to go http://ads.quest.com/WindowsITProUpdateNLGroupWiseMigratorforEx110705 ==== Sponsor: Quest ==== Migrating Novell GroupWise to Exchange 2003 - GroupWise Users, it's time to go Our new tech brief, "Migrating from Novell GroupWise to Exchange 2003", will provide a high-level overview that companies need to take into consideration when migrating from GroupWise. It is intended to assist messaging managers and directors grappling with the many complexities associated with a migration project and provide guidance before, during and after the migration. Quest GroupWise Migrator for Exchange enables organizations to migrate from GroupWise to Exchange with true co-existence and minimal user impact. Learn more, download the tech brief today! http://ads.quest.com/WindowsITProUpdateNLGroupWiseMigratorforEx110705
==========
In the News - Microsoft Offers Visual Studio Express Products Free for 1 Year - Windows AntiSpyware Becomes Windows Defender ==== In the News ==== by Paul Thurrott, [email protected] Microsoft Offers Visual Studio Express Products Free for 1 Year Yesterday at the Launch 2005 event in San Francisco, Microsoft successfully launched Visual Studio 2005 and SQL Server 2005. The company also unveiled an unexpected announcement--for the next year, Microsoft will offer the new Visual Studio Express Editions to customers for free. After that, the price will be $49 per product. "We are announcing a pricing promotion for Visual Studio Express," a notice on the Microsoft Web site reads. "For the first year after the products launch on November 7th, 2005, customers will be able to visit MSDN to download their copy of Visual Studio Express for free! Our customers are very excited about the release of these products, so this limited-time download is our gift to the hobbyist, student, and novice community." The Visual Studio Express products include various versions of Visual Basic 2005, Visual C# 2005, Visual C++ 2005, Visual J# 2005, and Visual Web Developer 2005. SQL Server 2005 Express Edition, which replaces the Microsoft SQL Server Desktop Engine (MSDE), will remain free. The Express Editions are designed for individual developers creating Windows applications, Web sites, Web applications, and Web services. In related news, the deadline-driven release of Visual Studio 2005 has triggered griping from some developers who believe that Microsoft ignored numerous reported bugs in order to release Visual Studio 2005 at yesterday's launch event. However, the software giant maintains that all 24 of the partners on its customer board and the members of the Secure Windows Initiative Team signed off on Visual Studio 2005 last month, enabling Microsoft to start shipping the product this month. Customers who are interested in downloading any of the Visual Studio Express Editions or who want to find out more about these products should go to the Microsoft MSDN Web site. http://msdn.microsoft.com/vstudio/express/ (Windows XP Service Pack 2 must be installed on your desktop before you download any of the Visual Studio Express Editions.) Direct download links: Visual Basic 2005 Express Edition http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=51405&clcid=0x409 Visual C# 2005 Express Edition http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=51411&clcid=0x409 Visual C++ 2005 Express Edition http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=51410&clcid=0x409 Visual J# 2005 Express Edition http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=51412&clcid=0x409 Visual Web Developer 2005 Express Edition http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=51413&clcid=0x409 SQL Server 2005 Express Edition http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=56005&clcid=0x409 Windows AntiSpyware Becomes Windows Defender
In late 2004, Microsoft purchased GIANT Company Software and acquired its industry-leading antispyware product. Since that time, Microsoft Windows AntiSpyware (as the product has been known) has been in perpetual beta. This week, we learn that the new release of the product will be named Windows Defender, but there is still no mention of a release date. Windows Defender will contain substantial changes to the Windows AntiSpyware beta version. In addition to the spyware detection and removal technologies, Windows Defender will include other malware detection and removal features and will run as a service, giving it lower-level access to the OS. "What's really cool about this name is that it's more positive than 'Windows AntiSpyware,'" says Microsoft group program manager Jason Garms. "Windows Defender is about what Windows will do for customers, defending them from spyware and other unwanted software. Our solution has really been about more than just the standard definition of 'spyware'. We've always said we will provide visibility and control, as well as protection, detection, and removal from other potentially unwanted software, including root kits, keystroke loggers, and more." A version of Windows Defender will be included in Windows Vista (due in late 2006), and Microsoft says that it continues to plan for a free Windows Defender version that will be made available to Windows XP users. The question, of course, is when. With Windows Vista hurtling toward a Beta 2 release in December, Microsoft has been focusing on the version of Windows Defender that will be included with that product, causing development of the Windows XP version to lag. But Microsoft might have bigger problems than delays. According to a report in the "Seattle Post-Intelligencer," the Windows Defender name was already being used by an Australian developer, Adam Lyttle. His Windows Defender product protected Windows users from malicious Web sites. Adam Lyttle told the Post-Intelligencer's Todd Bishop that Microsoft contacted him a month ago, charging him with infringing on the Windows trademark but neglecting to mention that the software giant wanted to use the "Windows Defender" name. Lyttle subsequently signed over rights to the name to Microsoft and was "shocked" when he later learned the company intended to use the name for one of its own products. To read the complete article, use the following link:
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/business/247483_msftdefender08.html ==== Events and Resources ====
(A complete Web and live events directory brought to you by Windows IT Pro: http://www.windowsitpro.com/events ) Are You Really Prepared for Disaster Recovery?
Join industry guru Liam Colvin in this free Web seminar and get the tips you need to validate your disaster recovery data. You'll learn if your backup and restore data is worth staking your career on, what type of geo-clustering is right for you, which response to use in crisis situations, and more!
http://www.windowsitpro.com/go/seminars/disasterrecovery/?partnerref=1109emailannc ==== Featured White Paper ==== Stopping Crimeware and Malware: How to Close the Vulnerability Window
Computer users can no longer wait for a new vaccine every time a new security threat appears. How do you defend your network in a world of smarter, faster, Internet-borne zero-day attacks? Find out about an Intrusion Prevention System that can detect and destroy malware with virtually zero false positives.
http://www.windowsitpro.com/go/whitepapers/panda/stopcrimeware?code=1109emailannc ==== Announcements ==== Windows IT Pro Monthly Online Pass = Quick Answers
Sign up for a Monthly Online Pass and get inside access to ALL the articles, tools, and helpful resources published in Windows IT Pro, including exclusive subscriber-only content. You'll have 24/7 access to a database of more than 9,000 Windows articles that will give you all the answers you need, when you need them. BONUS--Includes the latest digital issue of Windows IT Pro. Sign up now for just US$5.95 per month:
https://store.pentontech.com/index.cfm?s=1&promocode=eu205buw ==== Contact Us ==== About the newsletter -- [email protected] About technical questions -- http://www.windowsitpro.com/forums About product news -- [email protected] About your subscription -- [email protected] About sponsoring UPDATE -- [email protected]
===============
This email newsletter is brought to you by Windows IT Pro, the leading publication for IT professionals deploying Windows and related technologies. Subscribe today!
https://store.pentontech.com/index.cfm?s=1&promocode=eu205xfb
Manage Your Account
You are subscribed as %%$email%%
You are receiving this email message because you subscribed to this newsletter on our Web site. To unsubscribe, click the unsubscribe link: %%UNSUB_HREF%%
View the Windows IT Pro privacy policy at
http://www.windowsitpro.com/aboutus/index.cfm?action=privacy
Windows IT Pro is a division of Penton Media Inc. 221 East 29th Street, Loveland, CO 80538 Attention: Customer Service Department
Copyright 2005, Penton Media Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Read more about:
MicrosoftAbout the Author
You May Also Like