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IIS


1 Beefing Up IIS: 10 Tips From A Former Solaris Admin

2 Tips 10 Down To 6

3 Tips 5 Down To 1

4 Conclusion

Beefing Up IIS: 10 Tips From A Former Solaris Admin



(Page 1 of 4 )

Matt used to administer Solaris servers. He's now changed over to IIS and in this article he will share 10 incredible IIS-boosting tips with you.As an IIS administrator it sometimes gets downright annoying having to fend off all the insults from Apache administrators I meet who clam innate server superiority.

Generally the discussion about Web administration starts by listing the various security holes plaguing IIS and the negative press that the platform has garnered over the last year. After this, it invariably moves to a discussion about how NetCraft and other stats sites show Apache as the dominant server on the Web, or how a certain hugely popular site runs off Apache, or how there are so many cool modules to add to Apache.

Pointing out that scads of non-identified corporate in-house servers run IIS, or that it too is a free web server (since it comes with the operating system), or that there are in fact plenty of cool add-ons for IIS (including many that provide source code) -- all of this does little to dissuade these server chauvinists of their opinion.

Rather than whining about rude Apache administrators, however, I thought it would be a more useful response simply to write down some of ways that I_ve found of improving IIS. So without further delay, here are my top ten tips for making the most of your IIS web server software.
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Distant Star's Sound Waves Reveal Cycle Similar to Sun

Illustration of the CoRoT satellite measuring the acoustic fluctuations of a star.

In a bid to unlock long-standing mysteries of the sun, including the impacts on Earth of its 11-year cycle, an international team of scientists has successfully probed a distant star.

By monitoring the star's sound waves, the team has observed a magnetic cycle analogous to the sun's solar cycle.

Results of the study, conducted by scientists at the U.S. National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Colo., and colleagues in France and Spain, are published this ...

More at http://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=117554&WT.mc_id=USNSF_51&WT.mc_ev=click


This is an NSF News item.

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