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.

Loose Lips Sink Sites

eWeek labs just-completed Openhack III test was a great exercise in low-level security hacking, but dont forget that good security is also about issues technology cant resolve. As a case in point, here is my favorite Openhack e-mail in slightly edited form: “Give me the protocol to upload a page to the http://xtype.openhack.com/ server, and […]

Technology Trips Up Drivers

Im a big fan of Hertzs NeverLost GPS-based navigational system, as Im so often in strange cities trying to drive to places Ive never been before. Its accurate, it automatically recalculates my route when I miss an exit, and, best of all, the output is oral, so I dont have to look away from the […]

Openhack III Undefeated

Shortly after 3 a.m. EST last Thursday, eWeeks third Openhack interactive security test finished its 17-day run with all prizes remaining unclaimed. This is eWeek Labs first Openhack test in three tries that hasnt been penetrated successfully, and the credit goes to Argus Systems Group Inc.s PitBull line of operating systems and to the Argus […]

Growing Up Slowly

To deploy or not to deploy?” That is the question eWeek Labs posed to eWeeks Corporate Partners—and it is a question that is sure to be lingering in many IT shops regarding Windows 2000. It has been almost a year since Windows 2000, arguably the most hyped product in recent years, was unleashed on the […]

A Cool SSH Security Tool

Putty, Simon Tathams quietly developed SSH client, has become one of my most often used tools over the past several months, particularly during eWeek Labs ongoing Openhack III security test. Secure Shell, a secure, remote-terminal protocol, is a basic tool for administering secure Unix-based systems, and I use it instead of Telnet whenever I can. […]

Storage, SMP Get Much Better in Linux

The Linux 2.4 kernel is the first kernel the enterprise helped build, and it shows. Driven by the demands of enterprise customers, enterprise applications and intensive benchmarking (some of which was carried out by eWeek Labs), the Linux 2.4 kernel has far more of an enterprise focus than ever before. In particular, storage manageability, capacity […]

Openhack III Bowed But Not Broken

The battle has begun, and the first salvo was a fierce one, as a cascade of denial-of-service attacks swept over the Openhack III site in its first four days of operation. As of midday Thursday, no one had succeeded in any of the four hacking goals, although eWeek Labs saw creative DoS attacks directed against […]

SOAP Toolkit Cleans Apps

Developers using Microsoft tools who want to design distributed Web applications should download the companys SOAP Toolkit 2.0 Beta 1 at msdn.microsoft.com/xml/general/soap1and2.asp. The tool kit provides a set of tools and sample code (the samples are written in Visual Basic right now, not C or C++) for using Simple Object Access Protocol in Web applications. […]

Heres The Openhack III Deal

In our continuing quest to find and evaluate the best ways to secure digital infrastructure, eWeek once again invites hackers from around the world to examine, probe and crack into four servers accessible from the Internet. In eWeek Labs past two annual tests, we built our site using a classic IT security design: We used […]

IFS Unifies File, E-Mail Storage

Depending on which industry analyst or database executive eWeek Labs asks, we hear estimates that between 70 percent and 95 percent of the worlds data is stored only in unstructured formats such as word processing documents, HTML files and e-mail. This information is found outside of the cozy, well-managed confines of a database server and […]