has publicly acknowledged the discovery of the first Windows Vista protection flaw. But just how severe is it? Opinions seem to be to fluctuate extensively. York Times claims the flaw is serious ample to result in Microsoft "facing an early crisis of confidence in the quality of its Windows Vista operating system." Microsoft isn't portraying things as being quite so dire. Stephen Toulouse,
microsoft office 2010 pro plus 32bit, a senior product manager in Microsoft's safety group, said he's not seeing any wringing of hands in his circles: will ever get the software right 100% out on the gate. What we've done as a company is build in defense in depth capabilities in the products themselves,
win 7 64 bit key sale, as well as create good processes internally that prioritize reported vulnerabilities and get them into the update cycle, while also taking the root cause information and changing the way we create the software so we can learn from these situations," Toulouse blogged. which conducted its own tests on the vulnerability, is siding more with Microsoft's characterization than that of the New York Occasions. the flaw conducted by BetaNews suggest that, while the (message box) bug can crash Windows XP, its roots in the Win32 API dating back to Windows 3.1, coupled with the fact that the source code for the proof-of-concept appears to be straight ANSI C,
windows 7 home premium activation key, directly contradict the Times' implication that the bug somehow afflicts Internet Explorer 7.0,
win 7 pro 64bit," BetaNews reported. all Windows flaws deserve serious attention,
windows 7 home premium, it seems like Vista Flaw No. 1 may not be as horrendous as some headlines and stories may be suggesting.