General availability on newer Linux distributions and CU1 signal a push toward stability, security and production readiness.
Change signals a shift away from legacy monitoring packs toward modern observability and Azure-based monitoring tools.
Microsoft will retire SCOM SQL monitoring packs in 2027, pushing customers toward Azure Monitor and cloud billing.
Microsoft has resolved a known issue that was causing security applications to flag a core Windows component, the company ...
Hackers are claiming to be selling internal source code belonging to Target Corporation, after publishing what appears to be ...
How to survive the 2026 compliance cliff. Learn why Ilum is the architectural standard for Oman PDPL, EU switching, and ...
If when you log into your Windows 11 or Windows 10 computer, and you fire up Outlook but you notice the email client is disconnected from the server, consequently preventing you from sending or ...
What are the best Minecraft servers? We've jumped into some of the many multiplayer servers around to find the best, friendliest, and most fun of them all. Joining any one of the paid or free ...
A database is one or more sets of data, for example numbers, characters and images, bundled together with software that enables data to be added, removed or retrieved. Databases can be used to store ...
Despite the global burden of HIV-1, the majority of sequence data and research remain disproportionately focused on subtype B, primarily circulating in the global north. Sub-Saharan Africa, the ...
Microsoft has announced that SCOM Management Packs for SSRS, PBIRS, and SSAS will reach End of Support in January 2027, forcing enterprise migration to Azure Monitor.
If you’re licensing your virtual SQL Servers by core, you may be missing out on a significant opportunity to reduce costs.