PC Sat Trial Testers: Are You Satisified?
|
Are small-business and home users ready to sign up for subscription-based security services from Microsoft Corp.? Next week, on February 6, Microsoft is officially ending the testing phase of its "PC Satisfaction Trial." But the company is still refusing to say how, when and if it will go live with the various security services it has been testing.
Some PC Satisfaction testers have speculated the services will be rolled into Longhorn; others think they could debut in a future release of MSN. Microsoft's PC Satisfaction Trial was designed to test Microsoft and third-party anti-virus, firewall, backup and PC-health-monitoring services. Sources said that Microsoft was testing whether these kinds of security serviceswhen provided as hosted, managed serviceswould appeal to typically less-security-savvy small-business and consumer customers. These customers, who seldom have strong IT departments at their beck and call, are typically the ones hurt worst by worms and viruses like MyDoom, Blaster, SoBig and the like. Read More About the PC Sat Trial Here
Testers Talk Trial
This tester noted that the anti-virus code that is currently part of the PC Satisfaction Trial test was not from GeCAD, the Romanian anti-virus company that Microsoft purchased. Instead, it seems as if anti-virus code from Command Software is at the heart of the current PC Sat Trial build, he said.
"The firewall is still quite rudimentary and only configurable for outgoing (not incoming) stuff. It's got a long way to go, and MS will have to convince the public that its features compare favorably with the current industry leaders, like Symantec. They haven't convinced the testers, yet." A company spokeswoman contacted Thursday said the company is not commenting on the results of the trial or Microsoft's plans for making these kinds of security services commercially available. (This article contains information excerpted from the June 24, 2003, issue of the Microsoft Watch newsletter.) |

