TODAY'S TOP STORIES:
DATABASES
Quest Central 5.5 continues the software's tradition of enabling database administrators to manage multiple tasks with a common workflow across various platforms.
In this kickoff to our extrusion-prevention rolling review, we analyze the market, lay out the vendor invitation and describe the test bed. In future issues, we'll test products in our labs and review them to find the best extrusion-detection and -prevention offerings.
A strong start to our database extrusion-detection/-prevention series, Imperva's Secure Sphere is quick to learn user behavior, and its numerous signatures let it handily block known attacks against both the database server and the underlying OS.
Today's attackers are gunning for fortune, not fame, and they know the big score lies at the end of a SQL query. Got protection?
Vigilance is the best defense against malicious insiders attempting to steal sensitive information.
Databases are more likely than ever to cause network congestion. We examine how to fine-tune the ways your client application queries the database so you can break up those bottlenecks.
Guardium has put together a solid feature set that should please security pros looking to take back control of database activity.
Are data-privacy regulations and dreams about stolen employee data keeping you up at night? It may be time to protect your data where it lives--in your database.
Enzo 2006 may work well for small orgs with few databases, but it could become an implementation nightmare for enterprises with thousands of clients communicating with tens to hundreds of database servers.
This data modeling tool offers a complete toolset that supports nearly the entire database development lifecycle.
It's not easy supporting the wide range of mobile devices your users employ. Implementing mobile device management products will rein in the madness and prevent data theft. Find out which of the four we tested earned a tip of our ten-gallon hat.
IBM Software is offering up its Java-based Cloudscape database to the open source world.
A range of products promise to keep your data residing in SANs and other storage infrastructures safe from pilfering. We looked at a variety of offerings to help you decide what's best for your environment.
A complete cluster crash is a server admin's worst nightmare. Our intrepid columnist describes his, and how he dealt with it -- and how you can avoid it.
Although Microsoft's SQL Server and Access application still rule the database roost, the open-source MySQL is charging hard to make up ground, according to a new survey.