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The server can be monitored and administered from the Microsoft Management Console. Wizards are used for administration and configuration (useful for setting VPN connections).
Microsoft released a beta, or test version, of its Internet Security and Acceleration Server 2004 software on Tuesday. The product is designed to offer an improved application-lay ...
Microsoft, Redmond, Wash., claims that ISA's updated architecture has been specifically designed to combat the latest types of Internet attacks and worms with features such as signature scanning.
* Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration Server 2004 It’s designed to run “right out of the box” without complicated installations, according to the man responsible for the product ...
Microsoft has made available 120-day evaluation copies of the new Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server 2004, which can be downloaded from the link below.
Amid a concerted effort to heighten the profile of its security offerings, Microsoft Corp. announced the availability of its Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server 2004 on Tuesday at its ...
Microsoft has eliminated Internet Security and Acceleration Server (ISA) from the bundle and replaced it with a one-year trial subscription to Forefront Security for Exchange Server Small Business ...
Microsoft yesterday released a patch aimed at protecting its ISA (Internet Security and Acceleration Server 2000), an enterprise-level firewall and Web cache server, and Proxy Server 2.0, which ...
The vulnerability affects Microsoft's Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server 2000 software, which acts as a firewall, a content filter and a Web content cache.
Altogether, the patch load plugged an array of security holes in Windows, Microsoft Office, Internet Explorer and Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration Server.
In addition, Microsoft released Service Pack 2 for Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server 2004 along with updates to its Simple SAN storage initiative, both of which work in conjunction ...
One of those fixes, for a security vulnerability in Microsoft Video ActiveX Control affecting computers running Windows XP or Windows Server 2003, though, has been awaited for quite a while.