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IETF looks to streamline work

Network World
November 25, 2002 12:04 AM ET
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The Internet Engineering Task Force debated the group's status and future direction last week at a meeting in Atlanta. At issue are concerns that the Internet's premier standards-setting body is taking too long to develop useful protocols and is not responsive enough to real-world needs. The IETF took five years to develop a set of protocols to support interoperability of instant-messaging systems. IETF members are complaining about the time it takes IETF leaders to approve working group documents and the lack of information about how IETF leaders make decisions to approve or reject these documents. The IETF also has lost some leaders because the workload is so heavy that these volunteer jobs essentially have become full-time positions. No decisions about changing the IETF's processes were made, but the group is discussing various proposals on its mailing list at www.ietf.org.

After 25 years with the company, Charles Wang last week stepped down as chairman of Computer Associates. President and CEO Sanjay Kumar will succeed Wang. Wang also left his seat on the board of directors, and the board in return named Wang to the honorary position of chairman emeritus. Wang founded CA in 1976 with a staff of four and one software product, CA-SORT. From there, Wang led the company to become the first software vendor to reach $1 billion in sales in 1989 and to offer more than 1,200 products this year - with its Unicenter network management software remaining within the top five in its market. Kumar joined CA in 1987 and has served as president and CEO since August 2000.

Intrusion-detection system vendor Lancope is investing an undisclosed sum of money in a joint-development project with the nation's high-tech spy agency, the National Security Agency, to build a new type of IDS appliance. The appliance would make use of visualization technology pioneered at the Naval War College by Dave Ford, special assistant to the Secure Network Technology Office at the NSA in Fort Meade, Md. Code-named Terminator, the appliance will display incoming datastreams in color to indicate anomalies rather than signature-based attacks. Terminator, expected to be available as a prototype in six months, will be used by the government initially and later sold by Lancope commercially.

The final release date of Windows .Net Server 2003 has slipped yet again as Microsoft announced last week that the operating system will be available in April. The second release candidate, which is a test version of the software before final release, will be available next week. The final release was scheduled for year-end, after more than a year delay from its original date. Microsoft said the operating system will be released in conjunction with Visual Studio .Net 2003, the company's set of development tools to support its .Net Web services initiative. The highlight of Windows .Net Server 2003 is its support of the .Net framework, which is the run-time environment similar to a Java Virtual Machine for Web services created with Visual Studio .Net.

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