Microsoft has pulled four bulletins from its announced list of Patch Tuesday fixes, but did not specify why it was backpedaling on the security releases. It now plans to issue four security bulletins on Tuesday, rather than the eight originally announced, the software giant said last week in an updated notice on its Web site.
It most likely was due to bugs.
When I worked there, they would announce things that were full of bugs and then work really hard to clean them up on time. Sometimes, that just couldn’t happen and they had to slip their release dates.
They’ll fix the problems and release them in a week or so, I think.
They would announce things that were full of bugs and then work really hard to clean them up on time. Sometimes, that just couldn’t happen and they had to slip their release dates.
They also announce things that aren’t written yet and then have to slip their release dates (Longhorn anyone?)
They also announce things that aren’t written yet and then have to slip their release dates (Longhorn anyone?)
And, God knows, that never happens with open source projects… oh, wait …
yes, we are waiting…….
come on, tell us !
Shame on you for doubting the faith.
😛
Possibly true, but then Open-Source projects usually don’t have any incentive to announce products with stupid deadlines just to squash competition.
Right and OSS announces projects to keep people from spending their money on existing products that work in order to keep them tied-in to that gawd-awful monopoly that is OSS. C’est terrible.
Unless I’m much mistaken (which I’m not), C’est terrible is actually calling something neat or cool…
Curious, I read that literally as, “it is terrible”, but my french has not seen much use since high school. That must be how they say it’s cool in bizarro France or is it slang, like U.S. kids might say, “that’s sick”, or something.
Move along, nothing to see here…
Microsoft has pulled four bulletins from its announced list of Patch Tuesday fixes, but did not specify why it was backpedaling on the security releases. It now plans to issue four security bulletins on Tuesday, rather than the eight originally announced, the software giant said last week in an updated notice on its Web site.
The four mentioned were actually features mistakenly ‘corrected’.