Fresh from the Test Center: A one-two punch from Trapeze Networks and AirDefense makes it easier to figure out what's happening on your wireless network and control who goes where. Brian Chee set up Trapeze RingMaster 5.0 with AirDefense 7.0 at his lab and was impressed by the system's intelligence - based on his policies, it knew which threats were serious and which ones were minor, and could send alerts accord Fresh from the Test Center: A one-two punch from Trapeze Networks and AirDefense makes it easier to figure out what’s happening on your wireless network and control who goes where. Brian Chee set up Trapeze RingMaster 5.0 with AirDefense 7.0 at his lab and was impressed by the system’s intelligence – based on his policies, it knew which threats were serious and which ones were minor, and could send alerts accordingly. Want to lock down your own WLAN? Read our review first.Power hunger strike: Does Vista’s Aero UI really eat battery life? Randall Kennedy put that myth to the test, and his results may surprise you. Take a look at his findings on the Enterprise Desktop blog.All around the site: A slideshow of products and features from Dell’s Project Hybrid announcement has some snazzy stuff (liquid-cooled server! Super-thin monitors!). This week’s Storage Insider column wants to speed up acceptance of built-in disk encryption to protect data, while Roger Grimes rails against real-time block lists that don’t allow innocent servers a way out (that means you, AT&T) in this week’s Security Adviser column. Technology Industry