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.

Zope Dons a New Hat

CONTENT MANAGEMENT At last months internet World, Digital Creations CEO Paul Everitt filled me in on the companys plans to focus on building content management systems. Although known largely for its open-source Zope application server, Digital Creations (www.digicool.com) takes a refreshingly service-oriented approach to its business. The company sees itself not as an application server […]

Caching Now Points Away From HTML

Caching has risen from the dead over the past year. We at eWeek Labs now see it being used in very nontraditional ways, such as database and streaming-media caching, even while its traditional application, serving up static Web pages, starts to disappear. Database caching is just starting to enter the mainstream, with traditional database companies […]

Oracle App Server Taps Power of Caching

Oracle Corp.s release last fall of its Oracle9i Application Server marked the first determined effort in the market to combine the benefits of caching with an application server. The product includes a Web cache and a read-only database cache, and both have the potential to expedite dynamic Web page generation (the whole point of an […]

Centrinity Is All Talk—Literally

At the eWeek Excellence Awards winners banquet last month, I had the opportunity to hear about one of the most interesting companies Ive come across in a while. Centrinity has, over the past decade, developed an incredibly ambitious voice, e-mail, instant messaging, fax and groupware integrated communications system (called FirstClass Unified Messaging) based on the […]

Web Site Teaches a Privacy Lesson

eWeek labs this past year had up-close-and-personal experience with the data security, privacy and integrity issues that keep e-business managers up at night: the eWeek eXcellence Awards Web site (www.excellenceawardsonline.com). Significantly increasing the complexity of the Web project was our requirement that companies nominating products make a donation of $100 to the Starlight Childrens Foundation […]

Agent Adept at Updates

Those who need to support Compaqs line of laptops, desktops and servers will find ActiveUpdate 2.0 (Compaq SoftPaq 16266), the companys automated software update agent, a significant step beyond the traditional hunt-and-click method Compaq has required them to use in the past. Using ActiveUpdate, you no longer have to search through Compaqs site every few […]

XML Messaging Framework

Realizing the cart cant go before the horse, Microsoft Corp. has developed a comprehensive set of proposed standards about how to use XML to send and receive business-to-business messages online. The BizTalk Framework 2.0 specification, released in December, updates its 1.0 predecessor adding ways to check for reliable message delivery, and it includes information on […]

Who Uses Netscape?

One of the continuing problems Web developers face is how to develop pages that look good and work properly, no matter what browser, connection speed or screen resolutions visitors use. WebSideStorys StatMarket service provides some of these statistics based on daily traffic data collected from 150,000 sites visited by 50 million users. The service provides […]

MySQL Makes a Move Up-Market

MySQL ABs widely used open-source database, MySQL, is taking a big step forward in the corporate world with the addition of transaction support. Until now, MySQL has been most popular as a content back end for dynamic Web sites because it is lightweight, free, fast and simple to use. Theres also a wealth of information […]

Geekspeak: February 26, 2001

Anyone whos tried out a beta of or otherwise seen Ximians upcoming Evolution mail and calendaring client probably did the same initial double take I did: The software looks amazingly like Microsofts Outlook, down to the ordering of buttons, images used on icons, choice of fonts, and position and selection of on-screen shading. The effort […]