NEWS&ANALYSIS the LEGAL Microsoft, Sendo settle buzz HOSTING SECURITY WebEx adds sales application OpenService updates Threat Manager WEB CONFERENCING SERVICE OPENSERVICE LAST WEEK DEBUTED provider WebEx Communications this week will announce a new version of its service designed for sales professionals called WebEx Sales Center. The service is used for conducting Web conferences with sales prospects. It includes special features to assist sales professionals, such as a subjectmatter-experts database, the ability to launch a Web conference from within a CRM (customer relationship management) application, private chat between sales team members, and a feature called Attention Indicator that shows when a prospect has switched to a different application. Pricing is $225 per port per month. Per-minute pricing packages are also available. —Dennis Callaghan the latest version of its flagship Security Threat Manager security information management solution, which adds functionality that can correlate threats and weigh risks based on the value of individual assets. STM 3.0 considers several factors, including the target vulnerability of a particular attack, value of the threatened assets, attack severity and sensor location, before assigning a risk value to each event. The new version also adds a custom correlation rules editor that lets security managers create and edit their own rules for the system. In addition, the updated release supports Red Hat Enterprise Linux. STM 3.0 is available now. —Dennis Fisher BY THE NUMBERS MICROSOFT AND SENDO INTER- national have settled the lawsuit that the British smart-phone maker filed against the software company in December 2003. Sendo had claimed that Microsoft purposefully undermined Sendo with a “secret plan” to use Sendo’s hardware expertise to establish new manufacturing partnerships that would compete with Sendo. Officials did not divulge the monetary terms of the settlement. Furthermore, as part of the settlement reached last week, all parties deny any and all liability. —Carmen Nobel RFID IBM taps midmarket DESPITE SIGNIFICANT RFID ADOPTION from the biggest companies, IBM is turning its attention to the midmarket. The company announced last week at the Frontline Solutions Conference & Expo in Chicago a suite of services designed to speed the benefits of radiofrequency identification systems to industrial companies and midsize businesses. The offering includes a solutions development workshop along with a site survey and pilot and testing service. —Renee Boucher Ferguson SERVERS Stratus readies low-end unit STRATUS TECHNOLOGIES IS BRING- ing its fault-tolerant server platform down into the volume server space, giving users an alternative to Stratus’ ftServer W Series offers fault tolerance with lower-cost components. clusters and giving Stratus access to an area of the industry that didn’t have it before. The ftServer W Series 2300 system has many of the features of the higher-end 3300, but at about $10,000, it is half the cost, according to officials. The oneway system, powered by Intel’s Xeon processor, runs Windows and offers the same lock-step technology that the larger systems do—two sets of components running in lock step, with one taking over if the other fails. Stratus is targeting the 2300 —which is due in mid-October— at decentralized locations, such as branch offices, retail chains and warehouses. —Jeffrey Burt Security appliances Change in total worldwide security appliance factory revenue, Q2 2003 to Q2 2004 60% SonicWall 45% 30% Juniper Cisco WatchGuard 15% 0 Nokia -15% Source: IDC Worldwide Quarterly Security Server Appliance Tracker 18 e W E E K n S E P T E M B E R 2 0 , 2 0 0 4 QUOTE OF THE WEEK All vendors Solaris is part of our crown jewels, [but] the real crown jewel is Java, and we are trying to push people to write to Java so it doesn’t matter what operating system you have. John Loiacono, Sun Microsystems’ executive vice president for software w w w. e w e e k . c o m