Microsoft said it will bring 10 safety update next week to patch a evidence tying 34 vulnerabilities in Windows, Internet Explorer, Office and SharePoint.

The patches will also nullify two bugs that Microsoft recognized in February and April.
"I'd really call this a reasonable month," said Andrew Storms, executive of safety operations at nCircle safety.
"Looking at the criticality of the bulletins, and the information that the number is short, it doesn't look like an enormous month to me."

By the information, though, next week's updates will be enormous. Though the 10 updates fall short of the record of 13 first set in October 2009, then recurring in February 2010 Microsoft will fix a total of 34 vulnerabilities, the similar number as the present record, also set last October.

Microsoft has been shipping irregular huge and tiny batches of fixes, with the larger-sized updates landing in even numeral months. In May, for instance, the corporation subject just two bulletins that patched two vulnerabilities. April's collection, for now, amounted to 11 bulletins that fixed 25 flaws.

The monthly advance announcement spelled out the patches predictable to emerge next Tuesday.

Of the 10 updates, Microsoft labeled three as "dangerous," the uppermost threat ranking in the company's four-step system. The seven residual patches have been dowel as "important," the next step down from critical.

Two of the three critical updates will address issue in Windows, whereas the third will undertake Internet Explorer (IE).