Timothy Dyck

About

Timothy Dyck is a Senior Analyst with eWEEK Labs. He has been testing and reviewing application server, database and middleware products and technologies for eWEEK since 1996. Prior to joining eWEEK, he worked at the LAN and WAN network operations center for a large telecommunications firm, in operating systems and development tools technical marketing for a large software company and in the IT department at a government agency. He has an honors bachelors degree of mathematics in computer science from the University of Waterloo in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, and a masters of arts degree in journalism from the University of Western Ontario in London, Ontario, Canada.

DB Test Pioneer Makes History

Its not often that a standard clause in software license agreements is created because of one person, but thats the history behind the benchmark result gag clause, also known as the DeWitt clause, in many software license agreements. In 1982, when relational databases were just getting started, David DeWitt, then an assistant professor (and now […]

JBuilder 6 Extends Its Reach

JBuilder 6 Extends Its Reach”> Developers probably spend more time living in their development tools than in their own homes, which makes a comfortable fit really important. In Version 6 of its venerable JBuilder tool line, which is available now, Borland Software Corp. extends the tool in new areas to cover emerging Java technologies such […]

Geekspeak: January 28, 2001

Comparing performance on server databases is a black art and is an issue that vendors discourage the press from examining too closely. To bring some light to the subject, eWeek Labs, along with PC Magazines PC Labs, is doing a large-scale server database test. Whats most important about this benchmark is that the database systems […]

XML Standards Updated

The all-too-familiar struggle to satisfy time-to-market simplicity and final-feature-set criteria is in full swing in several key XML standards bodies, the results of which will affect all users of XML. The World Wide Web Consortium just finished one of its busiest periods ever, with 27 publications released last month. Several of these proposals were releases […]

.Net Tightens Windows Security

With the shipment of Microsoft Corp.s .Net Framework run-time environment last week, Windows developers have a powerful new platform for developing secure applications in any .Net language. .Net is a radical rethinking of how Windows application security works and jumps Windows security forward several generations. In an all-day briefing with eWeek Labs, Brian LaMacchia, development […]

Samba Links to Directory

The first alpha releases of Samba 3.0 provide a preview of whats to come in the next major release of the open-source, Windows-compatible file and print server for Unix. The biggest changes are internal, including new native support for Unicode and NT-compatible error codes, which both improve compatibility with Windows servers. These steps are key […]

Developers to Star in 2002

2001 was the year of the system administrator: Anti-virus protection, disaster recovery plans and client-side OS upgrades were all key IT tasks last year. 2002 will be the year of the developer: This year well see the start of a trend in enterprise applications away from dropping in packaged applications toward a more assemble-to-order approach. […]

SQL Anywhere Studio Gets Faster

Organizations looking for a branch-office database and software developers who want to store data in custom applications will find iAnywhere Solutions Inc.s SQL Anywhere Studio 8.0 database an excellent choice. (iAnywhere Solutions is a subsidiary of Sybase Inc.) SQL Anywhere is a mature, polished product and offers a lot of sophistication for a database that […]

Run .Net Code on Pocket PCs

One of the main benefits of the Microsoft .Net development platforms use of processor- independent byte code is easy program portability. The first fruits of this benefit are now available to Pocket PC developers, who can use a Technology Preview release of .Net Compact Framework to write .Net applications for Windows CE-based PDAs and phones. […]

ID System Hurdles: Connectivity, Data Cleaning

If the U.S. Government were to seek to establish a national identity card, it would confront a rats nest of technical problems, despite recent advances. The big-three immediate technical issues are authentication, verification and encryption. The good news is that biometric-based authentication systems based on fingerprint scanning or visual face recognition are now relatively cheap […]