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SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers - Todd Klindt’s SharePoint Admin Blog

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers

Before they get away from me I want to start listing the builds of SharePoint 2010. Hopefully I’ll keep it up to date. J

To see which build your farm is, go to Central Administration > System Settings > Manage servers in your farm (/_admin/FarmServers.aspx)

Or using Windows PowerShell: (get-spfarm).buildversion

To see which build your products are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Check Product and patch installation status. (/_admin/PatchStatus.aspx)

To see which build your databases are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Review database status (/_admin/DatabaseStatus.aspx)

 Patch terminology KB article.

Build

Release

Component

​Information

Download Link

Notes

14.0.4763.1000

RTM

All components

Download

14.0.4762.1000

RTM Farm Build Version
       

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation 2010 

KB2028568

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Shared Components

KB2281364

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft SharePoint Portal

KB983497

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft User Profiles

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Search Server 2010 Core

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Web Analytics Web Front End Components

KB2204024

          

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation​ 2010

KB2352346

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Server 2010

KB2352342
       
14.0.5128.5000
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Foundation​ 2010  KB2394323
14.0.5128.5000​
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010 KB2394320
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2459125
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2459257
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2475880​
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2475878
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2512804​
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2512800
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2512801
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2460045 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Office Web Apps KB2460073 Download
​​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2460047 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2460058 Download
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601
​14.0.6105.5000 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599 Download Regressions
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601​ Download
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590 Download
14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU ​Office Web Apps KB2553919 Download
14.0.6109.5002 ​August 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2553048 Download Regressions
14.0.6109.5000 ​August 2011 CU ​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2553117 Download
14.0.6109.5000
​August 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2553047 Download
14.6112.5000 ​October 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2596505 Download ​Bugs, Notes, and Regressions
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU ​​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2596508 Download
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU

Posted via email from Bryant Avey | Comment »

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers - Todd Klindt’s SharePoint Admin Blog

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers

Before they get away from me I want to start listing the builds of SharePoint 2010. Hopefully I’ll keep it up to date. J

To see which build your farm is, go to Central Administration > System Settings > Manage servers in your farm (/_admin/FarmServers.aspx)

Or using Windows PowerShell: (get-spfarm).buildversion

To see which build your products are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Check Product and patch installation status. (/_admin/PatchStatus.aspx)

To see which build your databases are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Review database status (/_admin/DatabaseStatus.aspx)

 Patch terminology KB article.

Build

Release

Component

​Information

Download Link

Notes

14.0.4763.1000

RTM

All components

Download

14.0.4762.1000

RTM Farm Build Version
       

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation 2010 

KB2028568

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Shared Components

KB2281364

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft SharePoint Portal

KB983497

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft User Profiles

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Search Server 2010 Core

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Web Analytics Web Front End Components

KB2204024

          

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation​ 2010

KB2352346

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Server 2010

KB2352342
       
14.0.5128.5000
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Foundation​ 2010  KB2394323
14.0.5128.5000​
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010 KB2394320
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2459125
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2459257
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2475880​
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2475878
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2512804​
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2512800
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2512801
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2460045 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Office Web Apps KB2460073 Download
​​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2460047 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2460058 Download
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601
​14.0.6105.5000 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599 Download Regressions
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601​ Download
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590 Download
14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU ​Office Web Apps KB2553919 Download
14.0.6109.5002 ​August 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2553048 Download Regressions
14.0.6109.5000 ​August 2011 CU ​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2553117 Download
14.0.6109.5000
​August 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2553047 Download
14.6112.5000 ​October 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2596505 Download ​Bugs, Notes, and Regressions
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU ​​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2596508 Download
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU

Posted via email from Bryant Avey | Comment »

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers - Todd Klindt’s SharePoint Admin Blog

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers

Before they get away from me I want to start listing the builds of SharePoint 2010. Hopefully I’ll keep it up to date. J

To see which build your farm is, go to Central Administration > System Settings > Manage servers in your farm (/_admin/FarmServers.aspx)

Or using Windows PowerShell: (get-spfarm).buildversion

To see which build your products are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Check Product and patch installation status. (/_admin/PatchStatus.aspx)

To see which build your databases are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Review database status (/_admin/DatabaseStatus.aspx)

 Patch terminology KB article.

Build

Release

Component

​Information

Download Link

Notes

14.0.4763.1000

RTM

All components

Download

14.0.4762.1000

RTM Farm Build Version
       

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation 2010 

KB2028568

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Shared Components

KB2281364

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft SharePoint Portal

KB983497

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft User Profiles

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Search Server 2010 Core

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Web Analytics Web Front End Components

KB2204024

          

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation​ 2010

KB2352346

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Server 2010

KB2352342
       
14.0.5128.5000
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Foundation​ 2010  KB2394323
14.0.5128.5000​
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010 KB2394320
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2459125
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2459257
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2475880​
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2475878
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2512804​
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2512800
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2512801
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2460045 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Office Web Apps KB2460073 Download
​​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2460047 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2460058 Download
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601
​14.0.6105.5000 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599 Download Regressions
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601​ Download
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590 Download
14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU ​Office Web Apps KB2553919 Download
14.0.6109.5002 ​August 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2553048 Download Regressions
14.0.6109.5000 ​August 2011 CU ​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2553117 Download
14.0.6109.5000
​August 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2553047 Download
14.6112.5000 ​October 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2596505 Download ​Bugs, Notes, and Regressions
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU ​​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2596508 Download
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU

Posted via email from Bryant Avey | Comment »

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers - Todd Klindt’s SharePoint Admin Blog

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers

Before they get away from me I want to start listing the builds of SharePoint 2010. Hopefully I’ll keep it up to date. J

To see which build your farm is, go to Central Administration > System Settings > Manage servers in your farm (/_admin/FarmServers.aspx)

Or using Windows PowerShell: (get-spfarm).buildversion

To see which build your products are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Check Product and patch installation status. (/_admin/PatchStatus.aspx)

To see which build your databases are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Review database status (/_admin/DatabaseStatus.aspx)

 Patch terminology KB article.

Build

Release

Component

​Information

Download Link

Notes

14.0.4763.1000

RTM

All components

Download

14.0.4762.1000

RTM Farm Build Version
       

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation 2010 

KB2028568

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Shared Components

KB2281364

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft SharePoint Portal

KB983497

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft User Profiles

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Search Server 2010 Core

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Web Analytics Web Front End Components

KB2204024

          

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation​ 2010

KB2352346

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Server 2010

KB2352342
       
14.0.5128.5000
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Foundation​ 2010  KB2394323
14.0.5128.5000​
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010 KB2394320
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2459125
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2459257
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2475880​
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2475878
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2512804​
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2512800
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2512801
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2460045 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Office Web Apps KB2460073 Download
​​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2460047 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2460058 Download
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601
​14.0.6105.5000 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599 Download Regressions
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601​ Download
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590 Download
14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU ​Office Web Apps KB2553919 Download
14.0.6109.5002 ​August 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2553048 Download Regressions
14.0.6109.5000 ​August 2011 CU ​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2553117 Download
14.0.6109.5000
​August 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2553047 Download
14.6112.5000 ​October 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2596505 Download ​Bugs, Notes, and Regressions
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU ​​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2596508 Download
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU

Posted via email from Bryant Avey | Comment »

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers - Todd Klindt’s SharePoint Admin Blog

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers

Before they get away from me I want to start listing the builds of SharePoint 2010. Hopefully I’ll keep it up to date. J

To see which build your farm is, go to Central Administration > System Settings > Manage servers in your farm (/_admin/FarmServers.aspx)

Or using Windows PowerShell: (get-spfarm).buildversion

To see which build your products are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Check Product and patch installation status. (/_admin/PatchStatus.aspx)

To see which build your databases are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Review database status (/_admin/DatabaseStatus.aspx)

 Patch terminology KB article.

Build

Release

Component

​Information

Download Link

Notes

14.0.4763.1000

RTM

All components

Download

14.0.4762.1000

RTM Farm Build Version
       

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation 2010 

KB2028568

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Shared Components

KB2281364

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft SharePoint Portal

KB983497

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft User Profiles

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Search Server 2010 Core

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Web Analytics Web Front End Components

KB2204024

          

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation​ 2010

KB2352346

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Server 2010

KB2352342
       
14.0.5128.5000
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Foundation​ 2010  KB2394323
14.0.5128.5000​
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010 KB2394320
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2459125
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2459257
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2475880​
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2475878
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2512804​
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2512800
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2512801
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2460045 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Office Web Apps KB2460073 Download
​​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2460047 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2460058 Download
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601
​14.0.6105.5000 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599 Download Regressions
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601​ Download
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590 Download
14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU ​Office Web Apps KB2553919 Download
14.0.6109.5002 ​August 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2553048 Download Regressions
14.0.6109.5000 ​August 2011 CU ​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2553117 Download
14.0.6109.5000
​August 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2553047 Download
14.6112.5000 ​October 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2596505 Download ​Bugs, Notes, and Regressions
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU ​​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2596508 Download
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU

Posted via email from Bryant Avey | Comment »

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers - Todd Klindt’s SharePoint Admin Blog

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers

Before they get away from me I want to start listing the builds of SharePoint 2010. Hopefully I’ll keep it up to date. J

To see which build your farm is, go to Central Administration > System Settings > Manage servers in your farm (/_admin/FarmServers.aspx)

Or using Windows PowerShell: (get-spfarm).buildversion

To see which build your products are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Check Product and patch installation status. (/_admin/PatchStatus.aspx)

To see which build your databases are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Review database status (/_admin/DatabaseStatus.aspx)

 Patch terminology KB article.

Build

Release

Component

​Information

Download Link

Notes

14.0.4763.1000

RTM

All components

Download

14.0.4762.1000

RTM Farm Build Version
       

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation 2010 

KB2028568

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Shared Components

KB2281364

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft SharePoint Portal

KB983497

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft User Profiles

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Search Server 2010 Core

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Web Analytics Web Front End Components

KB2204024

          

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation​ 2010

KB2352346

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Server 2010

KB2352342
       
14.0.5128.5000
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Foundation​ 2010  KB2394323
14.0.5128.5000​
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010 KB2394320
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2459125
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2459257
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2475880​
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2475878
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2512804​
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2512800
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2512801
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2460045 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Office Web Apps KB2460073 Download
​​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2460047 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2460058 Download
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601
​14.0.6105.5000 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599 Download Regressions
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601​ Download
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590 Download
14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU ​Office Web Apps KB2553919 Download
14.0.6109.5002 ​August 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2553048 Download Regressions
14.0.6109.5000 ​August 2011 CU ​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2553117 Download
14.0.6109.5000
​August 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2553047 Download
14.6112.5000 ​October 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2596505 Download ​Bugs, Notes, and Regressions
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU ​​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2596508 Download
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU

Posted via email from Bryant Avey | Comment »

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers - Todd Klindt’s SharePoint Admin Blog

SharePoint 2010 Build Numbers

Before they get away from me I want to start listing the builds of SharePoint 2010. Hopefully I’ll keep it up to date. J

To see which build your farm is, go to Central Administration > System Settings > Manage servers in your farm (/_admin/FarmServers.aspx)

Or using Windows PowerShell: (get-spfarm).buildversion

To see which build your products are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Check Product and patch installation status. (/_admin/PatchStatus.aspx)

To see which build your databases are, go to Central Administration > Upgrade and Migration > Review database status (/_admin/DatabaseStatus.aspx)

 Patch terminology KB article.

Build

Release

Component

​Information

Download Link

Notes

14.0.4763.1000

RTM

All components

Download

14.0.4762.1000

RTM Farm Build Version
       

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation 2010 

KB2028568

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Shared Components

KB2281364

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft SharePoint Portal

KB983497

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft User Profiles

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Search Server 2010 Core

14.0.5114.5003

June 2010 CU

Microsoft Web Analytics Web Front End Components

KB2204024

          

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Foundation​ 2010

KB2352346

14.0.5123.5000

August 2010 CU

SharePoint Server 2010

KB2352342
       
14.0.5128.5000
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Foundation​ 2010  KB2394323
14.0.5128.5000​
October 2010 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010 KB2394320
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2459125
14.0.5130.5002
December 2010 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2459257
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​
SharePoint Foundation 2010 
KB2475880​
14.0.5136.5002​ February 2011 CU​ SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2475878
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2512804​
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2512800
14.0.5138.5000
​April 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2512801
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2460045 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Office Web Apps KB2460073 Download
​​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2460047 Download
​14.0.6029.1000 ​Service Pack 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2460058 Download
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599
​14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601
​14.0.6105.5000 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 1 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​​​SharePoint Server 2010​ KB2536599 Download Regressions
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​SharePoint Foundation 2010  KB2536601​ Download
​14.0.6106.5002 ​​June 2011 CU Mark 2 ​Project Server 2010 KB2536590 Download
14.0.6105.5000 ​June 2011 CU ​Office Web Apps KB2553919 Download
14.0.6109.5002 ​August 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2553048 Download Regressions
14.0.6109.5000 ​August 2011 CU ​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2553117 Download
14.0.6109.5000
​August 2011 CU ​Project Server 2010 KB2553047 Download
14.6112.5000 ​October 2011 CU ​SharePoint Server 2010 KB2596505 Download ​Bugs, Notes, and Regressions
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU ​​​SharePoint Foundation 2010 KB2596508 Download
14.6112.5000 ​​October 2011 CU

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Why SharePoint Sucks, Part II « Perspectives on #SharePoint

Why SharePoint Sucks, Part II

 

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I am amazed at the popularity and the comments I have received from my original blog post Why SharePoint Sucks. I seemed to have hit a nerve with a number of people and I appreciate your feedback. I want to continue my original thoughts and elaborate further.

At the risk of getting lynched, let me say that the majority of people responding and vehemently saying that SharePoint sucks are developers and technical administrators (The IT Crowd). You guys are very smart and talented but I think your focus is wrong and that’s why you don’t like SharePoint.

The IT crowd is used to working with ultimate control. I can’t do this exactly the way I want so the product sucks.

The IT crowd gets bored easily and is not interested in the easy solution. A wizard? Real developers code applications by hand. Besides, a wizard does not give me ultimate control.

The IT crowd are engineers who focus on speed and performance and are obsessed with stats. If it is not perfect, they are not happy. We can run the query 200 milliseconds faster if….

The IT crowd has no business deploying SharePoint to users! Traditionally, deployment is done by the IT crowd, because traditional systems required talented engineers to deploy applications. SharePoint does not.

The IT crowd needs to focus on SharePoint as a platform. Set up the platform so it works fast, scales, is maintainable and searchable. SharePoint is a platform for developing business applications.

The application development can be done without the IT crowd. SharePoint wizards, ready-made templates, and out-of-the-box functionality can satisfy the majority of the most common business requirements. Here lies the reason why SharePoint sucks. The IT crowd still wants to develop applications. “That’s the way it’s always been done, and we can make it faster and better!” But that is not what we need! A new breed of developers evolves with SharePoint. This group–let’s call them site owners, site collection owners–builds applications on the platform using less flexible tools but achieve incredible speed to market due to the limited flexibility. Websites can be created in seconds or days without code. Gasp! No code development? What’s this world coming to?

Development done without code changes everything! Applications that can be built in seconds require development of practices for managing these applications. That is called Governance, and the IT crowd does not care about governance because it has nothing to do with technology. SharePoint ultimately is more about content management and less about technology after the platform is deployed.

Arguing that users don’t need to be trained because it’s just a web site is rubbish. Users are savvy people and will find ways to build their own “applications”. I have seen entire divisions run on email, and Excel spreadsheets. That is wrong, for so many reasons. The users and IT crowd both know this. However, the users don’t have time or knowledge to build the platform, and the IT crowd is complaining about the platform because they don’t like the way it was built and they believe they can do a better job.

SharePoint sucks because not enough attention is paid to the business application of SharePoint even before the platform is created and after to measure whether the platform was created as per the business needs. You can’t give users a platform and wish them luck. You have to give them a solution to a problem they are experiencing. You can’t just tell them to stop using email and the LAN drive without giving them a compelling reason to change.

I have yet to meet a user who complains when I give them an application that solves a problem they are having. They don’t care which version of the browser we are using. All they can see is “Wow! I don’t have do manage this anymore; the application manages it for me.” If the users are using a bicycle to move product and we give them a car to do the same thing, they will be happy. The IT crowd is arguing over the engine efficiency between car 1 or car 2. The user is just happy to get a car!

SharePoint sucks because not enough attention is paid to the business application of SharePoint after the platform is created.

There. I said it. Now let the arrows fly.

Gord Maric

SharePoint and Business Intelligence consultant

Note: The IT Crowd is a hilarious comedy about IT and Business.

I thought this was interesting - Thanks for sharing it Rob!

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Gallery: Dark Lord Conquers Earth in Star Wars: Wired.com #StarWars

Gallery: Dark Lord Conquers Earth in Star Wars: The Complete Vader

Complete Vader / page 74

This Hungarian poster is just one of the vintage Darth Vader variants in Star Wars: The Complete Vader, a new book documenting the Dark Lord’s international allure.


Complete Vader / page 77

A 1999 advertising graphic for a Star Wars-themed Japanese clothing line.


Complete Vader / page 77

Concept sketch for Yoshitoku’s samurai version of Darth Vader


Complete Vader / page 78

Yoshitoku’s quarter-scale Darth Vader costume from 2007


Complete Vader / page 146

Emek poster promoting a Good Charlotte gig at Skywalker Ranch


Complete Vader / page 77

Japanese poster for The Empire Strikes Back by Noriyoshi Ohrai


Complete Vader / page 77

Japanese Starlog magazine cover


Complete Vader / page 117

Gentle Giant’s Vader action figure


Complete Vader / page 129

Animatic interior of the Vader mask


Complete Vader / page 137

Japanese videogame poster


Complete Vader / page 161

Sharon BuMann’s butter sculpture of Darth Vader in a refrigerated display case at the 2004 Tulsa State Fair


Complete Vader / page 144

Polish poster by Witold Dybowski


Complete Vader / page 142 pullout

Japanese Darth Vader subway poster from the late 1980s, produced by Panasonic


Complete Vader / page 75

Vader-themed ice cream wrapper art from Germany


Complete Vader / page 138

Darth Vader Transformers action figure


Complete Vader / page 142 pullout

Japanese ad features Darth Vader with school girls


Complete Vader / page 147 top left

Portuguese Darth Vader promotion


Complete Vader / page 147

Japanese poster for The Art of Star Wars exhibit


Complete Vader / page 56

Japanese poster


Complete Vader / page 159

Concept art for The Force Unleashed shows a battle-weary Vader.


Complete Vader / page 160

A child’s drawing of Darth Vader


Complete Vader / page 162

Steampunk Vader by Eric Poulton


Complete Vader / page 163

Cameron Balloons’ 2007 Darth Vader hot-air balloon


Complete Vader / page 164

Brandon Bond’s back tattoo portrait of the Sith Lord


Complete Vader / cover

Enter to win a copy of Star Wars: The Complete Vader below.


How strong is Darth Vader’s grip on humanity? The new book Star Wars: The Complete Vader charts the Dark Lord’s utter domination of Earth’s imagination, showing off rarely seen variations on George Lucas’ antihero, from international movie posters to an Oklahoma butter sculpture.

The picture-packed hardcover, which hit stores Tuesday, assembles a galaxy of artwork and information about sci-fi’s most wicked father figure, blasting us with 192 pages of sketches, photographs and nerd-worthy nuggets of officially vetted Vader lore.

Written by Ryder Windham and Pete Vilmur, The Complete Vader also packs an assortment of pull-out facsimile documents enfolded in pocket inserts, including hilariously micromanaged instructions typed on Lucasfilm letterhead that detail exactly how actors should wear the Darth Vader uniform when making personal appearances:

“The pants (with suspenders) go on first, then the shirt and vest. The codpiece is put on next, then the chestplate with straps…. The cape should fall in pleats on either side of the belt buckle, with the light boxes arranged, one on each side of the buckle.”

Lucasfilm’s scrutiny notwithstanding, Darth Vader lends himself to a wild assortment of interpretations. Star Wars’ global impact is represented with wild posters from Japan and Hungary, while Germans weigh in with vivid Vader-themed ice cream bars. The book also collects offbeat Vader-shaped items like a Transformer toy and a functioning hot-air balloon.

See a sampling of Vader variations in The Complete Vader gallery above.

Win a Copy of Star Wars: The Complete Vader

Wired.com is teaming with publisher Random House to give away one copy of Star Wars: The Complete Vader, which retails for $60.

To qualify for the giveaway, check out the Complete Vader gallery above and describe your favorite Darth Vader image in the comments section below.

Deadline to enter is 12:01 a.m. Pacific on Oct. 26, 2011. One randomly selected winner will be notified by e-mail or Twitter. Winners must live in the United States.

Note: If you do not have an e-mail address or Twitter handle associated with your Disqus login, you must include contact information in your comment to be eligible. Any winner who does not respond to Wired’s notification within 72 hours will forfeit the prize.

Images courtesy Lucasfilm

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SharePoint Live Virtual Conference & Expo http://sharepointvcx.com/default.aspx #SharePoint

http://sharepointvcx.com/default.aspx

October 26, 2011
10:30am – 4:30pm ET

Thanks to Our Attendees, Presenters and Sponsors for a Great Virtual Conference! —>

SharePoint Live Virtual Conference & Expo offers a day of in-depth technical training for IT professionals and developers. Learn best practices from the field as our technical experts show you how to deploy, manage and build solutions for SharePoint.

Register today for this FREE, online technical training conference and connect with thousands of SharePoint professionals without leaving your desk!

This free event requires no travel and no conference fees. You and your team can listen to the industry’s most respected speakers on valuable topics and the solutions to make it all happen. You can also interact directly one-on-one with exhibitors and attendees through the Virtual Expo Hall.

For information on sponsoring or exhibiting, please contact Matt Morollo, mmorollo@1105media.com, (508) 532-1418.

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The List of Buzzwords You Should Never Use In a Pitch #TWiST

The List of Buzzwords You Should Never Use In a Pitch

I get several hundred pitches in the course of a typical day. It’s part of the job — startups, PR agencies and big tech companies pitch us on their products, and we decide which ones are the best fit for our readers.

But going through hundreds of pitches every single day is rough. We (journalists) can’t possibly go through every email, so we look for signals that help us sort out the stories we want to follow up on and the stories we need to trash.

One of the signals that can get your email trashed is the use of buzzwords. While not every pitch with a buzzword in the subject is a bad pitch, most of them turn out to be for crappy products that don’t stand on their own merits. There’s a strong correlation.

In the interest of killing the overuse of buzzwords, I have collected a short list of the worst buzzwords to use in a pitch. These are the worst of the worst. They are overused and add little to no value to a pitch.

(In the interest of being helpful and not just preachy, next week I’ll post some tips for what you SHOULD do to get your pitch noticed.)

Check out the list below. This is a living list — I intend to update it regularly, so let me know what words you’d like me to add the list in the comments.


The List of Buzzwords You Should Never Use In a Pitch


In no particular order…

  1. “Disruptive” – Punishable by instant deletion of your email.
  2. “Game-changing” – The market will decide if your technology is game-changing. We don’t need you to make the claim.
  3. “Revolutionary” – Even worse than game-changing.
  4. “Next-generation” – This word doesn’t really describe any of the attributes of your product. What the hell is a “next-generation social network?” Just tell us what your product does, not how shiny it is.
  5. “Solution” – “Solution” always seems to get paired with other terrible buzzwords, e.g. “leading solution,” “disruptive solution.” Don’t call yourself a solution — just explain what you solve.
  6. “Leading” – “We’re the market leader in…” “We’re the leading solution for…” Leaders don’t typically scream, “I’m the leader!” They prove they’re the leader until nobody can ignore what they’re doing. I don’t need Foursquare to tell me they’re the leader in geosocial or Google to tell me they’re the leader in search.
  7. “Excited” – Look, I get that you’re excited about your product/startup/announcement. You should be. But it’s such an overused word in press releases that it has lost its meaning. Check out one of my favorite Tumblelogs, Everyone’s Excited In Press Releases to see what I mean.
  8. “Never Before Seen.” – No. Just no.
  9. “Synergy” – This word has been on the blacklist of many journalists for years.
  10. “__ Killer” – I am not even opening your email if it says “iPhone killer”, “Facebook killer”, “Quora killer,” etc.
  11. “Groundbreaking” – See “game-changing” and “revolutionary”.
  12. “Transformative” or “Transformational” – See #11.

Bonus: Buzzwords You Should Use With Caution In Your Pitches


  1. “SaaS” – Also known as Software as a Service, it is a term that describes an industry. It’s also a term that some professionals just throw into pitches because they think it makes their product more legitimate. The truth is that “SaaS” is not a selling point anymore.
  2. “Engage” and “Engagement” – Engagement is a good thing, and it’s useful in certain situations. But if you start using it as a generality — “We’re a high-engagement tool,” “We increase user engagement” — without specifics, your pitch will fall on deaf ears.
  3. “Open” – Open can mean anything. For some, it means open-source software. For some, it means free software. For some, it’s just a silly buzzword they think will get people to like them more. Be careful when you describe something as “open”, and be specific about what “open” means.
  4. “Transparent” – See above.

Image courtesy of ThinkGeek. Also, I really need to buy that stamp.

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Bluetooth 4.0: Innovations Take Tech Far Beyond Hands-Free Douchery | Fast Company

Bluetooth 4.0 is helping distinguish the iPhone 4S from existing peer devices because it’s the first smartphone to have it.

bluetooth

Bluetooth. Say the word and your mind is off and reeling. Few brands can rival it for conjuring vivid images of its users—alpha types douchily barking orders between low-fat latte gulps.

For many of us, however, in practice it remains one of those must-have specs with which our deepest interaction is to reckon that “2.0 is better than 1.0, and it does stereo right?” But the truth is you should care about Bluetooth 4.0 because you’ll probably end up using it a lot, even if don’t know it.

Bluetooth 4.0, you see, is helping distinguish the iPhone 4S from its existing and near-future peer devices (most of which sport some variety of Bluetooth 2.0), because it’s the first smartphone to have it. But it’s also in the recent line of refreshed Macs and soon enough it’ll start turning up in phones, tablets, and computers made by pretty much every other manufacturer. 

Bluetooth was created years ago as an international effort, licensed from an official body, to produce a smart, short-range device-to-device radio communications network that could be connected and broken at will. The idea was to simplify pairing mobile devices together, to make it easy to “find” a Bluetooth device and to bring low-power-consumption radio communications to a whole new range of gadgets, iincluding those hands-free headsets you use to chat on your phone while driving (though you know you should really pull over to talk, right?). It was smart, it was relatively cheap, and it did exactly what it said on the box. Of course there were glitches, and some early devices had difficulty talking to each other or even maintaining a good connection, but these were slowly ironed out. Later BT protocols allowed for even lower power consumption (vital when thinking about the limited battery life of, say, a smartphone), simpler pairing, and stereo audio alongside more sophisticated remote wireless control of devices.

And now there’s BT 4.0. As part of the new standard, the BT Forum has designed in all of the previous specifications (which it’s now archived, and labeled “Classic”) and pushed BT tech to the max. Perhaps the most important aspect is the new low-power-consumption mode, and smart-power management that means a BT4 device really only sups on power when it needs to—to the extent that many tiny portable devices could now be powered for significant lumps of time by a common watch battery, sitting idle and almost completely unpowered when not needed (some stats say a coin-sized battery could push power to a BT4 device on standby for a year). 

Right out of the gate this has important implications: A host of medical and lifestyle devices could now sport proper wireless capability and the abilty to “wake” on command. Everything from vital lifesign monitors to health and fiteness devices that put FitBit and Nike+ to shame should now be possible, without the hassle of having to regularly charge components of the system nor worry about pairing them to your smartphone. And because there’s this new, low power agreed standard, expect to see many of these devices now communicating with a smartphone directly—instead of with a proprietary interface (like a heart monitor and wristwatch) meaning you can get much more powerful data and analysis right there on the scene.

But Bluetooth 4 is even smarter than that. Its simplest no-code pairing system could allow you to sit your smartphone next to your PC, have them both intelligently and automatically connect up (without all that bothersome messing about in securityspace) and share data without you having to hook up to your probably already cluttered home Wi-fi network—using more power than BT4 would. That same protocol could let you easily and rapidly share your data between smartphones, when bumped together—in a mode of data communication that was only recently standardized for NFC technology. Or your iPhone could be your secure, wirelessly identified key to automatically log in to your computer.

And this is where it gets interesting. Because part of the pre-iPhone 4S hype focused on the fact that Apple would include NFC tech and thus jump-start the entire wave-and-pay system. But it didn’t show, probably because Apple thinks the system’s not yet mature enough. But BT4 is mature, to the point where Apple—fastidious to the Nth degree when choosing hardware—chose that particular brand of chip. Could Apple be planning on pulling off a bizarre coup and start a wireless pay revolution that uses BT4 instead of NFC? All it would need would be a hardware manufacturer on tap to do the interface to a cash register and EFTPOS system, and a specialized app. Unlike trying to pull off this trick years ago, there’s now momentum behind the “wave and pay” type of system, and the consumer is warming to the idea.

Plus there’re a few technological reasons it makes sense: In some ways BT4’s longer-range sensitivity and the fact it can in many cases handle a faster data rate than simple NFC setups lends the tech much better toward some of the advanced wave-and-pay ideas that Apple’s been patenting. For example, say a store offers you a discount on the understanding that when you wirelessly pay, it can upload a branded screensaver to your device. See? That’s no joke.

[Image: Flickr user azadam]

Chat about this news with Kit Eaton on Twitter and Fast Company too.

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Update: Man Bikes Around the World with $2 in Pocket – Intelligent Travel

Ever dream about packing up and leaving it all behind? Ten years ago that’s exactly what Keiichi Iwasaki, then 28 years old, did. But he didn’t take a plane or a boat. For the past decade he’s been pedaling his way around the world on a bicycle. It all started in April 2001 when Iwasaki left his home in Maebashi, Japan with just 160 yen, around $2, in his pocket. He intended to bike through Japan, but enjoyed the trip so much that he caught a ferry to South Korea and hasn’t looked back since.

Two years ago we posted about Keiichi’s unusual adventures, which he funds by performing magic tricks on the street. When we last spoke to him, he was in Switzerland, preparing to climb Mont Blanc, Europe’s highest peak. Keiichi not only achieved this goal, but he managed to make it even more impressive than his climb to the summit of Mount Everest.

Summiting Mont Blanc (Photo Courtesy of Keiichi Iwasaki)

“When I climbed Mount Everest, I climbed with 17 members and many Sherpa (mountain guides), so they made the route, fixed the line for us, and made it easier to climb. But on Mount Blanc, I climbed completely alone,” Keiichi told me from his current location on the Adriatic coast of Italy. This meant that he had no one to tie his ropes for him, leaving him vulnerable to slip over the cliff. Keiichi also had no guides so he had to find the trail left by former climbers, which wasn’t always easy. Luckily, he made it to the summit; a moment that Keiichi said made him realize that nature is both beautiful and dangerous.

After this achievement, Keiichi biked to Liechtenstein, Austria, France, Monaco, Malta and Italy using the same bicycle he bought in Spain two years ago (his fifth bike, after two broke and two were stolen).

Keiichi, who has not been back to his native Japan since 2002, says he sometimes misses his family and friends back home, although Skype and email help to stay connected.His parents have visited him five times and a number of friends have met him during his travels. Despite occasional bouts of homesickness, Keiichi plans to keep traveling since he still has the “emotion and curiosity to see the world.”

Performing magic tricks in Italy (Photo courtesy of Keiichi Iwasaki)

Keiichi is in no hurry to leave Italy – he’s enjoying the historical architecture and, of course, the “pizza, wine and gelato” – but he hopes to go to Africa next. And in the next five years, he plans to bike his way through North and South America. After that? Perhaps a quick trip back to Japan to eat some “real Japanese food,” and then he hopes to sail around the world by boat.

In the meantime, he’s happy to bike around the world, still funding his trip entirely on magic tricks.

Former Traveler editorial assistant, Sarah Langdon, is a fifth-year visual communications major at the University of South Carolina and is spending her last semester studying in Buenos Aires, a city that truly never sleeps. Follow her on Twitter @sarahmlangdon.

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#Radiation In Our Food | Fox News #Japan

Radiation in Our Food

By

Published June 30, 2011

| FoxNews.com

Though the horrendous tsunami that hit Japan on March 12, 2011 seems like old news in the midst of today’s headlines, the crippled nuclear power plants at Fukishima Daichi continue to spew radiation into water, air and soil, with no end in sight. 

Even as thousands of Japanese workers struggle to contain the ongoing nuclear disaster, low levels of radiation from those power plants have been detected in foods in the United States. Milk, fruits and vegetables show trace amounts of radioactive isotopes from the Fukushima Daichi power plants, and the media appears to be paying scant attention, if any attention at all. It is as if the problem only involves Japan, not the vast Pacific Ocean, into which highly radioactive water has poured by the dozens of tons, and not into air currents and rainwater that carry radiation to U.S. soil and to the rest of the world. And while both Switzerland and Germany have come out against any further nuclear development, the U.S. the nuclear power industry continues as usual, with aging and crumbling power plants receiving extended operating licenses from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, as though it can’t happen here. But it is happening here, on your dinner plate.

Taking a page from the BP pubic relations handbook, TEPCO (Tokyo Electric Power Company) and the Japanese government have downplayed the extent of the nuclear disaster at Fukushima Daichi, in which three of six nuclear reactors are in ongoing meltdown. According to Japanese nuclear engineer Naoto Sekimura, nuclear fuel rod meltdown at the damaged plants began only hours after the tsunami, and the situation has not been contained. There is still an ongoing threat of a total “China Syndrome” meltdown, and Japanese officials now say that the three damaged plants may possibly continue to emit uncontrolled radiation for another year.

According to Greenpeace, the ocean around large areas of Japan has been contaminated by toxic radioactive agents including cesium, iodine, plutonium and strontium. These radioactive agents are accumulating in sea life. Fish, shellfish and sea vegetables are absorbing this radiation, while airborne radioactive particles have contaminated land-based crops in Japan, including spinach and tea grown 200 miles south of the damaged nuclear plants. Meanwhile, on U.S. soil, radiation began to show up in samples of milk tested in California, just one month after the plants were damaged.

Radiation tests conducted since the nuclear disaster in Japan have detected radioactive iodine and cesium in milk and vegetables produced in California. According to tests conducted by scientists at the UC Berkeley Department of Nuclear Engineering, milk from grass fed cows in Sonoma County was contaminated with cesium 137 and cesium 134. Milk sold in Arizona, Arkansas, Hawaii, Vermont and Washington has also tested positive for radiation since the accident. 

Additionally, drinking water tested in some U.S. municipalities also shows radioactive contamination. Is the fallout from Fukushima Daichi falling on us? Yes, it is.

Thanks to the jet stream air currents that flow across the Pacific Ocean, the U.S. is receiving a steady flow of radiation from Fukushima Daichi. And while many scientists say that the levels of contamination in food pose no significant threat to health, scientists are unable to establish any actual safe limit for radiation in food. Detection of radioactive iodine 131, which degrades rapidly, in California milk samples shows that the fallout from Japan is reaching the U.S. quickly.

Though California is somewhat on the ball regarding testing for radiation in foods, other states appear to be asleep at the switch with this issue. Yet broad-leaf vegetables including spinach and kale are accumulating radiation from rain and dust. Some spinach, arugula and wild-harvested mushrooms have tested positive for cesium 134 and 137 according to UCB, as have strawberries.

According to the U.S.-based group of medical doctors Physicians for Social Responsibility (PSR), no amount of man-made radiation in water and food is safe. “There is no safe level of radionuclide exposure, whether from food, water or other sources, period,” said Jeff Patterson, DO, immediate past president of PSR, in late March. “Exposure to radionuclides, such as iodine 131 and cesium 137, increases the incidence of cancer. For this reason, every effort must be taken to minimize the radionuclide content in food and water.”

Doctor Alan Lockwood MD echoes this. “Consuming food containing radionuclides is particularly dangerous. If an individual ingests or inhales a radioactive particle, it continues to irradiate the body as long as it remains radioactive and stays in the body.”

“Children are much more susceptible to the effects of radiation and stand a much greater chance of developing cancer than adults,” states Andrew Kanter, MD, president of PSR’s board. “So it is particularly dangerous when they consume radioactive food or water.”

Should you panic about this? No. That will do no good. But you can call, write and email your congressperson, your senator, and any other elected officials in your district, ask them to push for testing of foods and water in your area, and tell them to take the threat of global nuclear fallout seriously. For while none of the 104 nuclear power plants in the U.S. are melting down at present, we have had our own nuclear accidents. Remember Three Mile Island? Radiation has made its way to the American dinner table. This is a time to speak out, and to put pressure on policy makers. Clearly, it’s far better to be politically active now than radioactive tomorrow.

Special thanks to Steve Hoffman of Compass Marketing in Boulder Colorado, who extensively researched this issue and provided the source materials for this story.

Chris Kilham is a medicine hunter who researches natural remedies all over the world, from the Amazon to Siberia. He teaches ethnobotany at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, where he is Explorer In Residence. Chris advises herbal, cosmetic and pharmaceutical companies and is a regular guest on radio and TV programs worldwide. His field research is largely sponsored by Naturex of Avignon, France. Read more at www.MedicineHunter.com

An older article from Fox News published back in June, but still relevant.

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Online Banking Safety Guide for the 47 Percent of Consumers Who Are Underprotected #Security

McAfee Releases Online Banking Safety Guide for the 47 Percent of Consumers Who Are Underprotected

New Guide Cites Top Industry Research, Identifies Three Virtual Banking “Personality Types,” and Offers Tips for Safer Online Transacting

SANTA CLARA, Calif., Aug 03, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) — Acting on recent data that reveals many consumers still aren’t protected by even basic antivirus software when banking online, McAfee today released an educational guide for banking safely on computers, tablets or mobile devices. According to Javelin Strategy & Research, in 2010 47 percent of household financial managers did not have antivirus software installed.

Combining McAfee intelligence with the latest U.S. banking data from many top sources revealed that most consumers fall into one of three categories of online banking behavior, and that age tends to play a strong role in safety and security habits online. Most people’s level of confidence with banking online is associated with their overall comfort level online, including participating in such activities as shopping, searching, and social networking.

McAfee identified three main personality types associated with online and mobile banking, and offers customized tips for each group in its safe online banking guide:

1. ‘Competent, But A Little Careless’ Ages 18-24: This group is the most comfortable with technology but they tend to be overconfident, neglecting to put even basic security practices into place. As a result, this group leaves themselves vulnerable to banking malware. Sixty-eight percent do not even have basic antivirus software installed on their computers, according to Javelin Strategy & Research.

Tips for ‘Competent, But A Little Careless’ bankers:

— Start with a clean PC. This means making sure that your device is clean of threats by using a free diagnostic tool such as McAfee(R) Security Scan Plus, which scans and detects malware, Trojans, and potentially unwanted programs in running processes.

— Buy comprehensive security software that protects you from viruses, spyware, adware, and identity theft. Always choose a reputable brand such as McAfee Total Protection(TM) software. When it comes to security software, free is not better. A September 2010 USA TODAY survey of 16 anti-virus companies shows that no-cost anti-virus programs generally lack important features such as a firewall, website health checks, and automatic updates.

— Avoid distracted banking: Be careful not to respond to fake bank emails (or phishing attacks) because you are multitasking. Remember, banking fraud often happens because consumers give out their own user names and passwords to fake banking sites.

2. ‘Confident But Casual’ Ages 25-45: This group uses the Internet for both work and personal reasons and are the most frequent online banking users. According to Javelin, they tend to be more likely to have antivirus software installed, with 42 percent of 25-34 year-olds and 47 percent of 35-44 year-olds using it. However, according to an August 2010 NCSA/APWG Survey, this group tends to be casual or over-confident about security, with 52 percent of 25-44 year-olds feeling as if they are already doing enough to stay safe online.

Tips for ‘Confident But Casual’ bankers:

— If you don’t have online security protection already, you need a comprehensive security suite that protects you and your family’s banking integrity. Also, remember to run a security scan before signing up for any online banking services to ensure you’re starting with a computer free of malware.

— Never respond to unsolicited email from a bank that requests personal information, such as your user name, password, or address. Even if the email looks legitimate, NEVER reply, click on links or open attachments included in the email.

— Review your financial statements and transactions as soon as they arrive, so if there are any anomalies or unauthorized transactions you can clear them up right away.

3. ‘Conservative And Cautious’ Over 45 Years Old: This group is not as familiar with technology as younger generations, and a smaller percentage use online banking. Javelin found that they tend to be more cautious when going online, and as a result, they are better protected than the younger group, with approximately 55 percent having security software installed. This group should continue to be cautious about offline banking scams in general; research shows that some older Americans are vulnerable to automated voice messages that request financial account numbers.

Tips for ‘Conservative And Cautious’ bankers:

— Be sure to run a security scan on your PC before you sign up for any online banking services to ensure you’re starting with a computer free of malware.

— Beware of copycat sites that look very similar to major banking institutions, and always be sure that you’ve typed in the correct web address when visiting your bank online. Be familiar with your bank’s logo and site design.

— Create strong passphrases. Don’t be afraid to go beyond the standard eight characters and a couple of numbers - the longer, the better, and change your passphrases often.

Mobile Banking

According to Forrester Researchin its January 2011 U.S. Mobile Banking Forecast, mobile banking has experienced rapid growth in the U.S. over the past three years, more than doubling from five percent of online adults in 2007 to 12 percent by the second quarter of 2010. Furthermore, Forrester predicts that one in five—or 50 million—U.S. adults will be using mobile banking by 2015. It is important to remember that while banking via mobile devices is very convenient, it is still important to exercise caution.

Tips for Banking Safely Online — Using Mobile Devices

— Connect to your bank’s mobile site or app securely by making sure that your wireless network is secure. Never send sensitive information over an unsecured wireless network, such as in a hotel or cafe

— Download your bank’s mobile application, so you can be sure you are visiting the real bank every time, not a copycat site.

— Install anti-theft technology, and back up your data.

— Configure your device to auto-lock after a period of time.

— Consider using McAfee(R) Mobile Security (TM) on your device, which allows you to backup and restore personal data, wipe personal data from the device in the event of a loss, and remotely lock your device and delete all personal information in the case of theft, as well as locate the device via GPS.

— Be sure to keep all of your apps and device software up to date

Background

As both threats and technology evolve, there are more ways than ever that financial information can be compromised, from offline methods such as dumpster diving and stolen laptops to online methods including email scams, mobile hacking, fake banking sites known as phishing scams, and data breaches like the one Sony recently experienced with PlayStation.

Despite the dangers, consumers continue to embrace the anytime, anywhere convenience of online banking, but they aren’t necessarily being safe. Javelin research reveals that 68 percent of 18 — 24 year olds do not have basic antivirus software on their computers. Additionally, Javelin found that 47 percent of 45 to 54-years-olds lack security protection, and 44 percent of 55 to 64-year-olds lack protection.

With that in mind, McAfee is redoubling its efforts to offer consumers the very best practical information on online banking safety, whether they are banking from their computer or mobile devices.

“Most instances of banking fraud are not due to the bank’s technology being compromised,” said Dave Marcus, director of security research for McAfee Labs. “It’s more likely that people are unwittingly giving out their personal banking information to criminals via phishing scams and copycat sites, or their computers being infected with malware.”

Online Banking Safety Guide, Graphics and Video

For complete details on each of the online banking personality types and accompanying graphics, please visit the McAfee blog: https://blogs.mcafee.com/consumer/guide-to-online-banking-safety

For an animated tutorial on phishing, one of the greatest banking-related dangers for consumers according to McAfee researchers, please visit the following link. Find out what phishing is, how to spot fake emails, and how to avoid it all together: http://us.mcafee.com/en-us/local/html/identity_theft/hooked_by_phishing_scam.asp

Other Resources

— FraudWatch International

— McAfee Security Advice Center — www.mcafee.com/advice

— McAfee Facebook Page — www.facebook.com/mcafee

About McAfee

McAfee, a wholly owned subsidiary of Intel Corporation /quotes/zigman/20392/quotes/nls/intc INTC +0.08% , is the world’s largest dedicated security technology company. McAfee delivers proactive and proven solutions and services that help secure systems, networks, and mobile devices around the world, allowing users to safely connect to the Internet, browse and shop the Web more securely. Backed by its unrivaled Global Threat Intelligence, McAfee creates innovative products that empower home users, businesses, the public sector and service providers by enabling them to prove compliance with regulations, protect data, prevent disruptions, identify vulnerabilities, and continuously monitor and improve their security. McAfee is relentlessly focused on constantly finding new ways to keep our customers safe. http://www.mcafee.com

SOURCE: McAfee

McAfee  Kim Eichorn, (408) 346-3606  kim_eichorn@mcafee.com  or  H3O Communications  Jennifer Smith, (415) 618-8802  jennifer@h3ocommunications.com

Copyright Business Wire 2011

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