home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 2004-01-21 | 57.1 KB | 1,302 lines |
- Volume 2, Issue 3 Atari Online News, Etc. January 21, 2000
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 2000
- All Rights Reserved
-
- Atari Online News, Etc.
- A-ONE Online Magazine
- Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
- Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
-
-
- Atari Online News, Etc. Staff
-
- Dana P. Jacobson -- Editor
- Joe Mirando -- "People Are Talking"
- Michael Burkley -- "Unabashed Atariophile"
- Albert Dayes -- CC: Classic Chips
-
- With Contributions by:
-
- Carl Forhan
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, send a message to: dpj@delphi.com
- and your address will be added to the distribution list.
- To unsubscribe from A-ONE, send the following: Unsubscribe A-ONE
- Please make sure that you include the same address that you used to
- subscribe from.
-
- To download A-ONE, set your browser bookmarks to one of the
- following sites:
-
- http://people.delphi.com/dpj/a-one.htm
- http://www.icwhen.com/aone/
- http://a1mag.atari.org
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphi.com/m/main.asp?sigdir=atari
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
- A-ONE #0203 01/21/00
-
- ~ Free Internet Grows! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Lynx 'Othello'!
- ~ Crusoe To Be Unveiled! ~ Half.Com - The Town!?! ~ iPaq Release Nears
- ~ Barter Sites Take Hold ~ Worms For Game Boy! ~ Win2000 Encrypted
- ~ Dreamcast Tomb Raider! ~ Web Regs Preempted? ~ Tomba! 2 For PSX!
-
- -* Microsoft Settlement Remote! *-
- -* Excite@Home-Usenet Clash Nears End! *-
- -* MS Says It Broke No Laws, Nor A Monopoly *-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's beginning to look a lot like.... Sure, now we get the snow! This past
- week has been absolutely horrendous! We're having the second of two storms
- within the week. In and of themselves, no big deal - I grew up in Maine
- where snow 2-3 times a week during the winter was the norm. And we got
- SNOW, not the occasional few 4-6 inches here. But, we've also lost our heat
- twice this week with no determined cause. Other than the bitter cold, we
- don't know why that happened. Work has been just a bundle of joy, as well.
- Yes, I'm being sarcastic!! The hospital's budget concerns has everyone on
- edge! Never a dull moment...
-
- So, what do you think of the news of Bill Gates stepping down? How about
- the Time-Warner buyout by AOL? My head's still spinning over these two
- stories! And Microsoft is still wailing that it's a victim! And dinosaur
- bones are being auctioned off on the internet!! What a world we live in!
-
- I don't remember if I mentioned it or not, but I recently picked up a
- secondhand digital camera for my PC. I actually bought it from my brother
- for an excellent price. Sometimes that bothers me because you can never
- tell just what kind of a "deal" my brother offers! But anyway, I've been
- playing around with it and it's a lot of fun. The pictures have been
- wonderful; I've been using my two dogs as subjects. The things that can be
- done with this camera are amazing. And to top it off, the software that
- accompanies it allows even more options. I've only begun to work with it,
- but I have got quite a few terrific pictures which I've saved and printed
- out. The detail and color clarity have been wonderful. If you can find an
- affordable digital camera, get one.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- jmirando@portone.com
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Well, we're getting our second snow of the
- season here in Connecticut right now. I know that it might not be a big
- deal to someone who lives in, say, Colorado, but here in the northeast it's
- only been in the past two weeks or so that we've gotten weather cold enough
- to make it truly feel like winter.
-
- Most of the people I know spent the first part of the winter complaining
- that there was no snow or that it was just too warm to be winter, and
- the rest of it complaining that there IS snow and that it IS cold.
-
- It's just human nature, I guess. You always have what you don't want and
- want what you don't have. I used to be that way about computers. When I
- had a T/S ZX81 I wanted a Spectrum. When I had a Spectrum I wanted a
- VIC-20. When I had a VIC-20 I wanted a C64....
-
- And when I had a C64 I wanted to give up computers all together. <grin>
-
- Of course, it wasn't until I got my first ST that I really figured out
- exactly what it was that I wanted out of a computer. Good graphics, ease
- of use, and a genuine community of like-minded people who have, to this
- day, been a constant source of help and support.
-
- Sure, we all knew that there would be other computers some day. But be
- honest... has any computer before or since been as special as that first
- ST? My first ST, a 1040 STFM, still sits in a closet, buried under various
- miscellaneous items. To be honest, it's much less of a computer than my TT,
- and even my Mega STE. But I just can't bring myself to part with it.
- There's a large part of myself in there along with the assorted chips and
- resistors and such. I spent so many hours pouring over online posts and
- program listings and graphics and in chats that it feels as if part of me
- oozed from my fingers into the keyboard and right down to the circuit
- board. Now how could I ever part with that?
-
- Now there are probably one or two of you out there who are reading this
- and thinking, "C'mon fella, it was just a computer. And not a very
- advanced one at that". But how advanced it was doesn't matter. It was
- the first computer that I felt comfortable with. And that is what makes
- it special.
-
- Now let's get to the news, hints, tips, and info from the UseNet...
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
- Joseph Zorzin asks:
-
- "Where can I find a ROM dumper utility for an Atari 1040ST?
-
- I have downloaded Gemulator and I also downloaded 2 versions of the Atari
- ROM- 1.4 and 2.6 from http://www.lgd.fatal-design.com/. All of which work
- fine with some Atari programs but I'm having no luck with Megamax Laser C
- which crashes my Pentium.
-
- So, the author of Gemulator suggested getting a dumper utility to download
- the ROM from my own 1040ST which still works."
-
- David Jackson tells Joe:
-
- "I can understand why Laser C crashes your emulator. Compilers are usually
- very designed very specifically for the architecture. Is there some reason
- why you would want to run your Laser C programs under the emulator?"
-
- Joe replies:
-
- "My Atari is getting long in the tooth. I suspect it may die any day. Also,
- I did a lot with Laser C before my Atari hard drive crashed and rather than
- buy another Atari hard drive - it seems sensible to do it all on a PC in
- emulator mode - until I can learn MS Visual C++, then convert the programs
- written on the Atari for my consulting business. The author of Gemulator
- swears it works..."
-
- Kenneth Medin adds:
-
- "Check your ST's TOS version. If it says 1985 it's 1.0, 1987 is 1.2 and
- 1989 is 1.4 and download the same version. Really no need for a dumper
- utility as most TOS versions are available.
-
- Start the emulator in "Atari disk mode" and set it up to boot from floppy
- and in monochrome. Now put in your normal boot floppy from the real ST.
- Keep any original floppies write-protected as Win-95/98 also writes to the
- floppy when reading (SIC!).
-
- If this does not work then you are probably out of luck. Gemulator 2000
- is generally very good but you may also try a more "games oriented"
- emulator. Sorry, I don't remember any names."
-
- John Kormylo asks a question about STinG:
-
- "I had Hsmodem, Sting, Dialer, CAB & Newsie all working with my old PPP
- ISL (text logon), but when I tried to use a new PPP ISL with PAP, I get a
- 2 bomb crash (A2 contains a NULL) during the link initialization stage of
- dialer.
-
- Has anyone else had this problem? Has anyone found a solution?
-
- The readme says that he never actually tested the PAP feature. Is there a
- newer version where someone HAS tested the PAP?"
-
- Frank Lawrence tells John:
-
- "I am using all of STING's latest uploads along with HSMODEM7 on my TT
- and am using a PAP with no problems at all. Could this be a problem with
- the buffer settings in HSMODEM7?"
-
- John Garone adds:
-
- "Aha! Come to think of it, If I tried to set the buffers to max (65534 I
- believe) It gummed up the works. Instead (for laziness) I use the "u"
- (auto) setting in all the buffers (sets for 256). This ungummed the works!
- Hope this helps!"
-
- For the adventurous among us, Don Shoengarth tells us that he's...
-
- "Looking for some input on which AES replacement is the best to use on a
- TT030 w/4ST & 4TT ram."
-
- Martin-Eric Racine tells Don:
-
- "AES 4.1 (a.k.a. MultiTOS) might be enough. It does colour icons and 3-D
- effect, plus multi-tasking. However, the desktop wasn't made with long
- filenames in mind, which might be a problem. I believe it has been
- distributed along with KEMD, for a while.
-
- Otherwise, there is the commercial N.AES, which several of us prefer,
- because it has several novelties that MultiTOS never got around to and is
- generally more stable. However, it doesn't come with its own desktop.
- Thing is a favorite desktop for many people. The main other option is
- Jinee.
-
- Both of the above run on top of MiNT. Note that you don't need a full
- Minix partition for this. Just put MINT.PRG in your auto folder and
- configure a few things in the MINT.CNF setup file (which goes to
- C:\mint\mint.prg usually). That's it.
-
- Otherwise, you could also run MagiC, but Bengy is probably better at
- claiming the merits of this one than me."
-
- Dennis Vermeire adds:
-
- "So far, several people here have advised you to take the MiNT route, and
- without even asking what exactly you want to run or use it for. What they
- forgot to mention is that MiNT in combination with N.AES is quiet memory
- hungry.
-
- When choosing a OS, one should make a wishlist.... there is no such thing
- as the perfect OS, they all have their plus and cons.
-
- MagiC is commercial, easy to setup and maintain. Most of the commercial
- software is programmed to use the features of MagiC to reach their full
- potential. Since most of the commercial software is released by ASH, one
- can be assured this will remain so for future releases. N.AES has been
- playing catch up lately and the last version is "Magic compatible" now.
- But to put it in the words of Coca Cola "nothing beats the real thing".
- MagiC is available in English with a English manual, every Atari dealer
- will be able to order it for you. AFAIK the complete N.AES package is
- only available in German with German documentation. And it's not really
- easy to get hold of either.
-
- In general MagiC runs smoother and has a better graphic appearance. To
- install the package you only need two mouseclicks and reboot the TT.
-
- You should really give us a bit more feedback, when choosing the ideal
- OS it's important to know what you intend to do with it, what kind of
- programs you are using or thinking of using. Are you going to network
- the TT with other computers or use it as a stand alone computer? How
- much are you prepared to spend. Most importantly what do you expect of
- the OS? "
-
- Rene de Bie asks for help with his new TT:
-
- "I am a NOT experienced user on these machines and want to know how the
- partitioning and system files are called and used.
-
- My harddisk in TT won't boot and I found out that a harddisk driver on a
- floppy AHDI606.PRG when I run it, I have to select install devices to get
- my harddisk. But how can I make my harddisk bootable?
-
- Secondly, which driver is recommended and why?"
-
- John Logan tells Rene:
-
- "There ought to be a facility on the HD program which says 'Install Hard
- Disc Driver' (or words to that effect). Click on that and then select the
- drive to install it on - normally for a hard drive that is Drive C."
-
- Ken Macdonald adds:
-
- "You simply run ahdi606.prg and it boots the hard drive. correct.
-
- >I have to select install devices to get my harddisk.
-
- once you install the new devices on the desktop, select "save the desktop"
- from the menu bar. this will save 'desktop'info into a file called
- newdesk.inf
-
- To make the hard disk bootable, start up hdx.prg
-
- on menu bar click on install.
-
- choose the partition to install on (usually c:\)
-
- reboot.
-
- hard drive should now boot, and any programs(*.prg) in \auto folder will
- run, and any *.acc/essories in root directory (c:\)will load
-
- Although you can configure AHDI using AHDICONF.prg,
- and although CBHD is freeware,
- I use and recommend HD Driver by Uwe Seimet
- http://home.nikocity.de/nogfradelt/atari_english.html"
-
- Michael Freeman asks about a problem running STinG with MagiC:
-
- "I just got Magic 6, and I've run into a little problem with Sting. With
- the exact same Sting setup I use in Geneva, only with Magic running
- instead, I get a "Passing connection to Sting failed!" dialog after the
- dialer connects. Now I know that Sting does work with Magic, as I've seen
- a number of people talking about it, so what the heck am I doing
- wrong?!?!?! The documentation with Magic is pretty thin and doesn't cover
- much except the extreme basics, and the Sting documentation I have is even
- worse!...
-
- ...
- I discovered that Fast Serial didn't like Magic. I was using Fast Serial
- because HS Modem didn't want to work very well for me with Geneva. I tried
- it with Magic, and everything's ok now.
-
- One new problem: CAB 2.7 demo will only show partial pages (usually the
- last few lines) of downloaded html. For instance, I went to www.atari.org,
- and the top of the page started with a screwed-up version of the "Star Trek
- Women" vote, with the Pacman animated GIF, and a few other things, but the
- majority of the page was missing. This happened with most pages I tried to
- download, but not with the ones I have offline. It does seem to download
- the entire page, and it sits at "Prepare Formatting..." for quite a while
- before showing the partial page. I'll try messing with settings and
- changing CAB.OVL's to see what I come up with."
-
- Joe Villarreal adds a word of encouragement:
-
- "I installed Magic6/jinnee (12/27/99) and had no problems using Sting. I
- had been using Geneva/Neodesk before.
-
- It must not be a major problem. I would check the order in the auto
- folder, the Sting.INF file, the .STX files, and the CPX's."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Tune in again next week, same time,
- same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Lynx 'Othello'! 'Worms' For GBC!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Tomb Raider Coming To Dreamcast!
- 'Tomba! 2'
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Infogrames North America, Inc. Attacks Game Boy Color
- With Worms: Armageddon
-
- Slimy Critters Hit Stores This Week
-
-
- The worms crawl in, the worms crawl out ... of Game Boy Color with
- Infogrames North America Inc.'s latest release, Worms: Armageddon, hitting
- store shelves this week.
-
- The game packs the strategy and action of a sophisticated war scenario into
- a fun-filled, hilarious and sometimes misguided battalion of angst-ridden
- worms.
-
- As in previous versions of the Worms family, Worms: Armageddon is a
- turn-based strategy game, where teams battle across bizarre, randomly
- generated landscapes or finely crafted custom designed levels. Players have
- a set time in which to make a move with their army of worms before the game
- automatically switches to the next team, giving the players time to conjure
- up their next maneuver by choosing from a nearly endless arsenal of madcap
- weapons. In addition, no game of Worms: Armageddon is ever the same, making
- game-play virtually endless.
-
- ``Worms: Armageddon combines strategy and comedy in a way that makes it one
- of the most entertaining games on the market," said David Riley, director
- of marketing for Infogrames North America, Inc.'s Action and Strategy
- Label. ``Bringing this title to Game Boy Color will allow Worms fans to
- take the action on the go as well as introduce it to a whole new gamer
- audience. It's addictive, hysterical, straight-to-the-point fun."
-
- Worms: Armageddon features such options as one or two player action.
- Players either compete against a computer opponent, or take turns blasting
- a friend. Other options include using the wind as a tool in shooting
- accuracy, selecting the energy level for each worm, determining the amount
- of worms on a team, and choosing from a variety of different weapons.
- Players can choose from such creatively destructive weapons as bazookas,
- which wreak havoc on worms and the surrounding landscapes, to exploding
- sheep, top-secret furry friends that relentlessly run toward the enemy worm
- and detonate on command.
-
- Developed by Infogrames' Paris Studios, Worms: Armageddon is available at
- an estimated retail price of $29.99 and can be found at most major retail
- outlets.
-
-
-
- Sega and Eidos Interactive Partner to Bring `Tomb
- Raider: the Last Revelation' to Sega Dreamcast
-
-
- For the last three years, the ``Tomb Raider" series has only been
- available on the PlayStation« game console and PC. Now, Sega of America
- makes history - again. Sega announced Thursday that Eidos Interactive will
- ship ``Tomb Raider: The Last Revelation" for Sega Dreamcast, the 128-bit,
- Internet-ready videogame console, this spring. Developed by Core Design,
- ``Tomb Raider: The Last Revelation" is just one of many titles that Eidos
- has committed to bringing to the platform this year. The ``Tomb Raider"
- series has already enjoyed tremendous success, selling more than 18 million
- copies worldwide and Sega expects that this well-known franchise will
- further fuel the retail demand and consumer enthusiasm for the Sega
- Dreamcast hardware.
-
- Taking advantage of the unsurpassed power of Sega Dreamcast, Eidos has
- greatly enhanced the graphics of this title. In this version, Lara Croft
- has been remodeled so that she is displayed in high resolution to match the
- game's lavish environments, thus creating unprecedented realism in the
- game. ``Tomb Raider: The Last Revelation" for Sega Dreamcast will also
- feature an enhanced lighting system, a greater draw distance than seen on
- other versions, real-time shadow casting, bump mapping, environment
- mapping, volumetric fogging and an enhanced sound system.
-
- ``We are honored that Eidos is bringing a well-known property such as `Tomb
- Raider' to Sega Dreamcast," said Neal Robison, group director of third
- party licensing for Sega of America. ``This further solidifies the
- commitment and enthusiasm of the third party community for the platform and
- signals how well it is selling in the marketplace. We will continue to
- focus on third party support for Sega Dreamcast to bring the best library
- possible to our consumers."
-
- ``Eidos has been a supporter of Sega Dreamcast since the launch of the
- console. Alongside publishing original Sega Dreamcast titles, we have a
- strategy of developing versions of our most successful franchises for the
- platform," said Mike McGarvey, chief operating officer of Eidos. ``'Tomb
- Raider' is one of the most successful brands in our industry's history and
- the power of the Sega Dreamcast console greatly enriches the whole Lara
- Croft experience for game fans the world over."
-
-
-
- Tomba! 2 the Evil Swine Return for
- PlayStation Kicks Off New Year With Full 3D
- Graphics and Daring New Adventure
-
-
- Sony Computer Entertainment America announced Tuesday the nationwide
- release of TOMBA! 2 The Evil Swine Return, now available exclusively for
- the PlayStation game console. Combining improved 3D graphics with the
- classic style gameplay of a platform game intertwined with role-playing
- game (RPG) elements,
-
- TOMBA! 2 The Evil Swine Return follows everyone's favorite pink-haired hero
- on an all new fantastical adventure. Featuring a smoother learning curve,
- novice players can select a less complicated, whimsical journey, while
- experienced players can choose a more elaborate path full of challenging
- sub-quests and obstacles.
-
- ``TOMBA! 2 The Evil Swine Return builds upon the originality and humor of
- the original TOMBA!, now delivering an imaginative 3D experience," said
- Ami Blaire, director, product marketing, Sony Computer Entertainment
- America. ``We are confident that this game will appeal to both young and
- more advanced gamers, making it one of the 'must-have' family-friendly
- titles for PlayStation."
-
- In TOMBA! 2 The Evil Swine Return players follow Tomba as he embarks on a
- wild new adventure to save his girlfriend from the band of evil pigs who
- have kidnapped her. Throughout the game, Tomba must perform basic moves,
- acquire special actions and discover new items and weapons to assist him in
- warding off the enemies.
-
- To perform special actions, Tomba must equip himself with magical clothes
- that allow him new moves and powers, including:
-
- Bird Clothes -- needed to glide through the air for a limited amount of
- time
- Flying Squirrel Suit -- needed to float in the air for a longer period
- of time
- Pig Suit -- needed to perform hip attack move
- Evil Pig Robes -- needed to obtain magic powers to defeat the next pig
- boss
-
- With more than 150 new items and weapons to discover, Tomba can obtain a
- black jack, boomerang, grapple, heavy duty hammer and more. Players find
- themselves continuously searching for more items and weapons, unveiling
- hidden paths, battling humorous yet challenging enemies and encountering
- numerous tasks along Tomba's visionary quest.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE Gaming Online - Online Users Growl & Purr!
- """""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Othello Is Coming For The Lynx!
-
-
- Long-time Lynx hobbyist Harry Dodgson is releasing Othello for the Atari
- Lynx in February 2000 through Video 61. This excellent port of the classic
- board game includes multiple play modes (single player, head-to-head, and
- more), attractive graphics, and crisp audio.
-
- You may contact Video 61 by visiting their web page, located at:
-
- http://www.atarisales.com
-
- Ask about Othello for the Lynx, and tell them you heard about it from
- Songbird Productions!
-
- Carl Forhan
- Songbird Productions
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Chances of Microsoft Settlement Become More Remote
-
-
- Chances of a settlement in the Microsoft Corp. antitrust case were never
- very good, but after a week of raucous public debate over breaking up the
- company the possibility of a deal seemed more remote than ever.
-
- Both sides had promised Judge Richard Posner -- the chief of the United
- States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit acting as a private
- mediator in the case -- to stay quiet during the talks. Talks began after
- U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson found in early November, 1999,
- that Microsoft had used monopoly power to harm consumers, competitors and
- other companies.
-
- The quiet lasted from late last year until last week, when USA Today
- reported the government was going to propose breaking the company into two
- parts.
-
- Representatives of the Justice Department and the states expressed anger
- and frustration -- both privately and in public statements -- about what
- they said was an incorrect characterization of the discussions.
-
- Even worse from their point of view was the fact that they had been
- described at all. The Justice Department and the states both released
- statements saying the USA Today story contained significant errors.
-
- The story inevitably sparked many others, including one by Reuters, which
- reported that the government planned to seek a break-up of Microsoft in
- some form.
-
- All of the stories appeared to be incomplete and missed important aspects
- of the evolving government plan, which remains secret, persons familiar
- with the case say. But government officials say they can't discuss the
- case at all without running the risk of violating a pledge of secrecy.
-
- ``Because of the current posture of the case it would be inappropriate for
- us to debate the merits of any particular remedy," said Gina Talamona, a
- Justice Department spokesman.
-
- That put Microsoft in a quandary. It, too, had promised the judge not to
- discuss the subject of remedies. But it faced a changed landscape,
- analysts say.
-
- ``All of a sudden we were no longer debating whether structural remedies
- are appropriate," said Ed Black, chairman of the Computer and
- Communications Industry Association.
-
- ``Instead, it's what kind of structural remedies," he said. "And I think
- Microsoft got very worried, very concerned, that momentum was building
- that structural remedies were inevitable."
-
- On the morning the stories appeared, Microsoft announced a hastily
- organized press conference for 1:30 p.m. that day, without mentioning the
- subject.
-
- As it turned out, the subject was Bill Gates' decision to give up his post
- of chief executive officer to his old Harvard chum, Microsoft President
- Steve Ballmer. Gates, who will remain as chairman, said he would focus on
- software.
-
- Ballmer's most highly quoted statement had nothing to do with his new job,
- though. Ballmer said it ``would be absolutely reckless and irresponsible
- for anyone to try and break up this company."
-
- Black speculated the press conference was deliberately timed to change the
- direction of public discussion about a break-up. He said Microsoft was
- taking a ``chicken little" approach, saying ``the sky is falling and the
- industry and economy will go to hell if you touch Microsoft."
-
- But by Microsoft's lights it was faced with a deliberate press campaign by
- the opposition.
-
- In a teleconference, Ballmer said he believed the talk of a break-up was
- purposely leaked by Justice Department officials in hopes of pressuring
- Microsoft to settle quickly.
-
- ``I believe the leaks are deliberate. I don't think there's any doubt
- about that," Ballmer said.
-
- Against that background, the company will file its next papers in the case
- on Tuesday. If no settlement is reached, the case will continue as
- scheduled. Judge Jackson is set to hear oral arguments Feb. 22.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Says It Broke No Laws, Not a Monopoly
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. argued in its antitrust case on Tuesday that its actions
- were lawful and that it lacked monopoly power due to numerous competitive
- threats.
-
- In the court filing, the software giant disagreed with many of the
- findings of fact reached by U.S. District Court Judge Thomas Penfield
- Jackson last year which concluded Microsoft's dominance in personal
- computer operating systems had harmed consumers, competitors and computer
- makers.
-
- ``Even accepting the court's findings of fact, plaintiffs still have not
- satisfied their burden under the governing law on any of their claims,"
- Microsoft argued in its reply to the government's brief, filed in
- December.
-
- Microsoft disagreed with the view that it held monopoly power in the
- market for Intel-powered personal computers. Microsoft said that narrow
- definition excluded ``many of the most serious competitive threats faced
- by Microsoft's operating systems".
-
- The company also argued that earlier court rulings made it clear that it
- had the right to design its Windows operating system to include the
- Internet Explorer Web browser, and that it never foreclosed the field to
- competitors.
-
- The government side, consisting of the U.S. Justice Department and 19
- states, and Microsoft will file one more reply each before the judge hears
- oral arguments on conclusions of law on Feb. 22.
-
- Shortly before Tuesday's court filing, Microsoft reported stronger than
- expected earnings for its second quarter ending in December, helped by
- strong demand for personal computers.
-
- Profit rose to 44 cents a share from 36 cents in the same quarter a year
- earlier, marking a continuation of a strong year in which Microsoft has
- exceeded analysts forecasts.
-
- ``Software is the key to the future. It will drive and accelerate
- innovations in hardware, wireless, broadband, e-commerce and other fields,"
- said Steve Ballmer, president and chief executive officer-designate at
- Microsoft.
-
- Both sides in the antitrust case have been meeting regularly with a
- Chicago judge appointed by Jackson as a mediator but there are few signs
- of a settlement emerging.
-
- Reports last week that the government was seeking to break up the world's
- largest software company, were criticized as incomplete by people familiar
- with the case.
-
- Nevertheless, the stories by news organizations, including Reuters, were
- the type of public discussion that Judge Richard Posner -- chief of the
- United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit acting as a private
- mediator -- had hoped to avoid.
-
- Microsoft said talk of a break-up was reckless and accused Justice
- Department officials of deliberately leaking information.
-
- The Justice Department denied it discussed the mediation talks and noted
- the stories contained significant errors. ``The Justice Department will
- not discuss any aspect of the mediation process," a department official
- said.
-
-
-
- Merger May Preempt Web Regulation
-
-
- The proposed merger of America Online and Time Warner could help keep the
- government from having to regulate high-speed Internet service, the
- nation's top telecommunications official says.
-
- But the chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, Bill Kennard,
- said his agency will review the merger carefully to ensure that ``first
- and foremost the public interest is served."
-
- ``Obviously this transaction will raise some interesting new issues that
- we haven't confronted before because it's a different kind of merger than
- we've looked at," he said.
-
- So far, the FCC has declined to force cable companies providing high-speed
- Internet access to share their lines with rivals, staking out a hands-off
- position in the contentious debate.
-
- Until its merger announcement, AOL was leading a charge to persuade
- regulators or courts to force cable TV operators - notably AT&T Corp. - to
- lease their high-speed connections to Internet service providers, such as
- AOL.
-
- But with its Time Warner acquisition, AOL would have its own large network
- of cable TV lines over which to deliver Internet services dozens of times
- faster than today's dial-up connections.
-
- That meshes with the commission's policy of letting companies resolve
- their concerns about Internet access without regulators getting involved.
-
- ``Some of the statements we've seen around this AOL-Time Warner
- transaction are encouraging," Kennard said.
-
- It still is unclear whether the Justice Department or the Federal Trade
- Commission will handle the antitrust review of the merger case. A number
- of lawmakers have indicated their interest in holding hearings on the
- deal, including Senate Commerce Committee Chairman John McCain, R-Ariz.
-
- McCain, who is seeking the GOP presidential nomination, said this weekend
- he thinks the deal ``needs careful scrutiny" and expressed fears about
- the ultimate impact of the wave of recent mergers in the communications
- industry.
-
- ``Obviously, you reach a point at some time where it's not good for the
- consumer and it stifles competition," McCain said Sunday on NBC's ``Meet
- the Press."
-
- The FCC examines media mergers to see whether they are in the public
- interest - an examination that is separate from the review conducted by
- antitrust regulators.
-
- Kennard said he hoped to have a number of the mergers currently before the
- commission wrapped up in the first half of the year. U S West/Qwest,
- CBS/Viacom, AT&T/MediaOne, Bell AtlanticGTE and MCI WorldCom/Sprint all
- have transactions before the agency.
-
- ``These mergers clearly touch every American in some way and we've got to
- make sure that we are advocating their interests when these mergers come
- before us," Kennard said.
-
-
-
- @Home-Usenet Scuffle Could Be Settled
-
-
- A compromise may be reached between broadband Internet service provider
- Excite@Home and members of the Usenet community who want to prevent
- @Home's servers from posting messages to the newsgroup service.
-
- David Ritz, the Usenet volunteer who earlier this week called for a
- Universal Death Penalty (UDP) against the service scheduled to go into
- effect on January 19th at 5:00 p.m., now says he will recommend extending
- the deadline for @Home's compliance.
-
- UDP's are used against ISP's that consistently post high volumes of spam
- -- unwanted junk e-mail -- to Usenet newsgroups. It is the harshest
- punishment the community-run service can threaten. When a UDP is enacted,
- the volunteers who monitor newsgroups for spam prevent messages
- originating from the offending ISP's servers from being posted to the
- newsgroups. Because Usenet has no central governing authority, the
- punishment is enforced voluntarily by the Usenet community.
-
- According to Ritz, 25 to 40 percent of the articles posted from @Home's
- service are spam. Of that, Ritz says 90 percent comes from unknown outside
- sources that are exploiting "back doors" in @Home's service to deliver the
- unwanted postings. Ritz wants @Home to identify and "close" the back
- doors.
-
- In a statement posted to Usenet on Wednesday, @Home's network policy
- manager David Jackson promised the company is taking aggressive action to
- "decrease the amount of extraneous news traffic originating from
- home.com."
-
- Ritz says after speaking with @Home representatives he is confident they
- are "sincere" in their efforts. He said he will recommend @Home be given
- additional time to deal with the spamming problem before facing a UDP.
-
- Although he would not specify exactly how long the extension would be,
- Ritz said @Home should have the loopholes fixed in "under a month."
-
- "It is my hope that a UDP will not happen," said Ritz. "No one wants a UDP
- to happen but I felt my options were exhausted."
-
- Ritz added that he had tried contacting @Home about the problem for 16
- months before he issued the call for the UDP.
-
- In the past, just the threat of a UDP has been enough to spur ISP's to
- action. Both Bell Atlantic and PsiNet were able to avoid UDP's by cutting
- down on spam. Others, like Compuserve and UUNet, did not comply and were
- blocked from the newsgroups.
-
- Aside from being an annoyance, large amounts of spam can effectively clog
- up the newsgroups, making them nearly impossible to be used for their
- intended purpose of discussion and sharing information.
-
- Although UDP's are supposed to be a last resort, some groups feel they are
- not an appropriate measure at all. Pathlink Technologies, which keeps
- track of Usenet spam and distributes free filtering software called
- UltraHippo, says it will not support the call for the UDP.
-
- "You're going to punish legitimate posters," said Pathlink president Cindy
- Esco. "The percentage of people responsible for spam, compared to the
- number of Usenet participants it will punish, means it's not the best way
- to go about solving the problem."
-
- Esco believes the best way to deal with spam is through extensive use of
- filtering tools.
-
- However, just because Pathlink won't support the UDP, Esco thinks it will
- likely still be effective should it be enacted. In fact, both Ritz and
- Esco acknowledge the publicity generated by the call for the UDP has
- already begun to have an impact just by calling attention the problem.
-
- "Certainly nobody wants to be associated with a UDP," said Esco. "They've
- made their point."
-
- Excite@Home confirms it is in ongoing talks with Usenet to resolve the
- spamming issue. Company spokesperson Marci Gottlieb said Excite@Home is
- "very hopeful" the UDP can be averted.
-
-
-
- Secret Processor To Be Unveiled
-
-
- A top-secret computer chip designed and funded by a powerful group of
- high-tech leaders is slated to roll out this Wednesday amid a flurry of
- high expectations - and intrigue.
-
- For the past five years, Transmeta Corp. has secretly toiled away on the
- project under the leadership of CEO David Ditzel, a former chip designer
- for AT&T's Bell Labs and Sun Microsystems Inc.
-
- What makes Transmeta all the more interesting is the cast of characters
- attached to the Santa Clara-based company. Employees include superstar
- designers like Linux creator Linus Torvalds, while investors consist of
- industry barons like Microsoft Corp. co-founder Paul Allen and billionaire
- financier George Soros.
-
- ``This is going to really raise eyebrows, and yes, the big chip makers -
- Intel and AMD - should be worried," said Drew Peck, a microprocessor
- analyst from Cowen & Co. ``It doesn't hurt that it's coming from some of
- the most extraordinarily talented people in the semiconductor business."
-
- The company has refused to reveal exactly what it is developing, cloaking
- its actions in a veil of mystery - thus adding to the hype. But Transmeta
- says it's finally ready to spill the beans.
-
- Reporters and analysts have been told to plan to spend the better part of
- Wednesday with Transmeta at a 175-acre historic estate and villa in the
- foothills of the Santa Cruz Mountains.
-
- There, according to marketing officials, ``the world's first family of
- software-based smart microprocessors" will be unveiled and demonstrated.
-
- The coy approach continues on Transmeta's Web site.
-
- ``We rethought the microprocessor to create a whole new world of mobility.
- Arriving January 19th, 2000. The Crusoe Processor."
-
- The words fade into a bucolic picture of illusory footprints meandering
- across a white sandy beach.
-
- Buried in the Web site's source code, an additional message discloses that
- ``Crusoe will be cool hardware and software for mobile applications."
-
- ``Obviously their ploy here is to generate a lot of buzz in advance, and
- evidently they've succeeded in that regard," said Peck.
-
- So what's behind the buzz?
-
- Transmeta officials have given hints that Crusoe is a new type of
- semiconductor, or computer chip. The company designs them, but will not
- manufacture them.
-
- Crusoe's combination of hardware and software could create a viable
- challenge to industry leader Intel Corp. But until Transmeta's product and
- strategy are unveiled, analysts remain cautious in their outlook.
-
- ``It's certainly a promising team," Gartner Group analyst Martin Reynolds
- said. ``Running up against Intel is not a good thing to do, but if you
- look at processors that do lots of multimedia stuff, maybe there is a
- place for something truly innovative there. For example, look at where set
- top boxes are going. There are different requirements for processors for
- those things."
-
- Joe Byrne, a chip analyst for Dataquest, was equally wary.
-
- ``There's a lot of competition in this market, so you have to be guarded
- in terms of your outlook," said Byrne. ``However, this is a very
- interesting cast of characters and it will be interesting to see what
- they've produced."
-
-
-
- Compaq To Test New Waters With iPaq
-
-
- Compaq Computer is on the verge of shipping its long-awaited iPaq, a
- simplified PC that it hopes will return the company to glory in the
- corporate market.
-
- The iPaq is a watershed product for the Houston-based PC maker and one
- that, in some ways, Compaq is betting its future on. Compaq has set a
- number of goals for the iPaq, including simplified design, direct delivery
- to customer and Internet-centric features. It plans to begin shipping the
- iPaq Jan. 24.
-
- The iPaq comes in two versions: USB port only and USB with "legacy"
- connectors. While some of the legacy-lite models will come with Windows 9x
- operating systems, legacy-free models will be available only with Windows
- 2000. Interestingly, Windows 2000 won't begin shipping from Microsoft
- until sometime in February, although many Microsoft customers have already
- been sent final versions of the OS.
-
- Compaq relied on standard, off-the-shelf components in designing the iPaq,
- a bold departure from its past tendency of introducing some proprietary
- components. This change helped shorten development time and cut costs.
-
- "The tallest barrier we have getting things to our customers is not the
- price. We typically have an 18-month development cycle for products, but
- iPaq came together in about 100 days," said Michael Takemura, product
- marketing manager of Compaq's Internet products and services group.
-
- The entry-level iPaq--with 500-MHz Celeron processor, 64-MB of RAM and
- 4.3-GB hard drive--starts at $499.
-
- The company also hopes to transform the way it and its customers think
- about buying and using PCs, Takemura said.
-
- The iPaq represents a unified design approach that will become more
- deliberate and pronounced over time, particularly in products used both in
- the office and at home, Takemura said. "We see a collision course between
- work and home happening today, with more corporations supporting
- telecommuters and home workers."
-
- This unified design approach first appeared in Compaq Armada notebooks
- last summer. With the new Armada line, Compaq introduced floppy, CD-ROM
- and DVD-ROM drives and other components able to be swapped between
- different models regardless of design. Customers will be able to use the
- same Armada drives and removable storage devices on the iPaq
-
- Customers will have to adjust to new pricing from Compaq. Eight basic iPaq
- models will be available, but for a fairly inflexible price compared to
- the volume discounts customers might be used to. The move reflects
- Compaq's determination to build and deliver iPaq direct at an aggressive
- price and to simplify the procurement process.
-
- "It's like going in and buying a Saturn," Takemura said. "It's a single
- price. You don't have to haggle over it."
-
- Compaq will look to build simpler PCs and other devices that are easier
- for IT managers to manage and maintain and easier for workers to use and
- connect to the Internet.
-
- The first step, Takemura said, is a set of management tools from Lindon,
- Utah-based Altiris that Compaq plans to release at the same time as the
- iPaq. The management tools will first appear on the iPaq.
-
-
-
- Microsoft to Ship 'Strong Encryption' Software
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. said Tuesday it would release its Windows 2000 operating
- system worldwide using ``strong encryption," in the first major product to
- be exported with the security feature since the government eased export
- controls on heavily coded software.
-
- The industry lobbied hard for the government to ease restrictions on
- 128-bit code, which is much harder to crack than existing 64-bit. It is
- used to send secure electronic mail and protect data on networks from
- hackers.
-
- The Clinton administration had opposed the use of the use of such strong
- coding, arguing that criminals or terrorists could use it to cover
- illegal acts. But the industry won its case that the restrictions
- hampered U.S. competitiveness.
-
- Microsoft made its announcement at the start of an industry computer
- security conference in San Jose, Calif. at which a number of companies
- are expected to unveil plans for strong-encryption export products.
-
- Microsoft said the Windows 2000 operating system, set for commercial
- release next month, would mark the first platform with 128-bit encryption
- to be shipped internationally under the federal regulations on encryption
- exports announced last Friday. Microsoft said it worked closely with U.S.
- government regulators to obtain the necessary approvals to ship Windows
- 2000 with strong encryption to worldwide customers.
-
- In the past, developers from other countries have added strong encryption,
- and some companies were given special permission to use the feature. But
- for new software, it will be built in and available to almost any
- commercial customer. The software has long been sold in the United States
- with 128-bit security.
-
- ``Windows 2000 will be the most secure operating system Microsoft has
- ever shipped, and we are excited to be able to further extend this
- security for our international customers via 128-bit encryption," said
- Brian Valentine, senior vice-president of the Windows Division at
- Microsoft.
-
- Windows 2000, said to the most ambitious product launch ever for
- Microsoft, will be available commercially Feb. 17.
-
-
-
- Millions Sign Up for Free Internet
-
-
- Jennifer Hudson uses AltaVista's free Internet service for her Dallas home,
- but tapes paper across her computer screen to block out the annoying ads.
-
- Eric Martineau and his Boston co-workers use NetZero's free Web service -
- along with a software program created by a hacker that zaps the ads off
- the screen.
-
- Internet service providers that offer free access in return for bombarding
- users with advertising are rapidly signing up subscribers, turning heads at
- mainstream companies that charge $20 or more a month. But how many people
- are actually looking at all the ads is unclear, fueling doubts about
- whether the free services will ever make a profit.
-
- Analysts say about half the subscribers of these free services may not
- have used them in the last month. In interviews, some users expressed
- aggravation with the ads, and several said they went out their way to try
- to avoid them.
-
- ``It was always there. It took up the screen," Martineau said of NetZero's
- service, recalling with pleasure how he and 15 co-workers ran hacker
- software to wipe out the ads.
-
- Despite the rough spots, analysts say the free services could force
- fee-based Internet providers to lower their rates and mull new ways to
- make money.
-
- The number of active users of free Web services is expected to more than
- quintuple from 1.6 million U.S. households today to 8.8 million by the
- end of 2003, according to the Jupiter Communications research firm.
- That's a far faster rate of growth than the overall increase in Internet
- use, from 45 million Americans today to 68 million in 2003.
-
- NetZero's latest figures, showing it has 3 million subscribers, would
- make it the nation's second-largest Internet access provider after
- America Online, an astonishing rise for a company just launched in 1998 -
- even if you discount half the users as inactive.
-
- Driving the growth are Internet users who have come to expect a wealth of
- services and goods over the Web at free or discounted prices. At least
- some of them don't mind minor annoyances to get freebies.
-
- Brenda Forsythe, a public relations executive based in Austin, Texas, has
- used NetZero since last summer and says it's definitely worth the
- ``distracting" ads. She's pleased that it doesn't disconnect her from
- the Web too much, unlike other services. ``It's been very dependable,"
- she said.
-
- Such positive feedback is a wake-up call to traditional for-fee services.
-
- ``It is a threat," said Emily Meehan, an analyst with the Yankee Group
- research firm. She said that companies that sell Internet access will
- have to work harder to sell services that consumers perceive as worth
- paying for.
-
- America Online Inc., for instance, agreed last week to buy Time Warner Inc.
- in large part because its cable-TV lines will enable AOL to sell high-speed
- Internet access to customers.
-
- That said, the free-service route is a rough business - unless the
- provider is able to grow into a dominant Internet force, gaining many
- millions of users with which to lure paying advertisers.
-
- The new market is highly fragmented, with NetZero claiming the largest
- number of subscribers, followed by AltaVista's service, at 1.5 million.
- Freewwweb, owned by Smart World Technologies, tallies 250,000 users, and
- WorldSpy claims 100,000. There are others - and none are making money.
-
- ``I expect there won't be a large number of these companies" in a few
- years, said Joe Laszlo, an analyst with Jupiter Communications.
-
- One hurdle for free ISPs is signing up newcomers to the Internet.
- Startups can't afford mass-mailings of software disks like America
- Online, so instead rely on surfers to find their way to Web sites to
- download services.
-
- Many users, therefore, already pay for an Internet hookup, and may only
- use the free one as a back-up - or not at all.
-
- The free Internet providers are working to get around these criticisms.
- NetZero tries to get folks to pay more attention to its ad banner by
- offering an array of services, including free e-mail. Indeed, it signed
- an advertising deal last week with General Motors that could be worth
- more than $100 million and give GM exclusive access to information about
- NetZero customers.
-
- Other free providers are eschewing ads altogether. WorldSpy jumps users
- to a start page that doubles as a shopping destination, to tempt people
- to buy products on other Web sites ranging from books to electronics.
- WorldSpy gets a cut of the purchase price.
-
- ``We don't have any of the floating ad bars," said WorldSpy chief
- executive Sharon Rothstein. ``If you look at what consumers are saying,
- that's a highly intrusive element."
-
-
-
- Consumer Sites Adopt Barter Model
-
-
- A new crop of start-ups and their heavyweight financial backers are betting
- that the next wave in consumer e-commerce will have people trading their
- belongings without cash.
-
- Coinciding with a rash of business-to-business barter start-ups, the
- consumer-oriented swap sites aim to let users unload goods they no longer
- want in exchange for things they do want. The sites--which include
- Swap.com, Webswap.com, Intellibarter.com, MrSwap.com, and Swaprat.com --
- typically plan to charge transaction fees, though most are waiving them
- while building their user bases.
-
- Perhaps most striking about this quintet of nascent sites is the degree to
- which they've already differentiated themselves.
-
- Swap.com has narrowed its market to kids under 18 years of age. Swaprat,
- initially offering only CDs, will add more categories but only for items
- with which they can offer users licensed catalogs, such as books and
- videos.
-
- MrSwap.com--launching first with music, movies and games--resembles the
- business-to-business barter firms by providing an intermediate virtual
- currency so that users don't have to negotiate item-for-item trades.
- Unlike most of its competition, it will charge only for shipping and
- handling, making most of its money through advertising and mailed
- promotions.
-
- Intellibarter will distinguish itself by creating a section for bartering
- expertise on collectors' items.
-
- Backing up the new wave of cashless trading sites is a ton of venture
- funding.
-
- WebSwap was first out of the gate in November with $13 million in a first
- round from Sequoia Capital and Accel Partners. WebSwap plans to launch
- this quarter.
-
- Swap.com is launching under the auspices of Bill Gross's Idealabs, a
- start-up incubator that claims eToys, GoTo.com, NetZero, and Ticketmaster
- Online-CitySearch among its successful ventures. Swap.com has the
- investments of "a handful of pretty big name VCs," according to Barb Wade,
- vice president of creative and production for the start-up, but she would
- not name them.
-
- Swaprat is also keeping mum about its funding. Chief executive Michael Lin
- said the firm is waiting to settle with "a major Silicon Valley VC firm"
- that he would not name.
-
- MrSwap.com said it was in the process of closing a $12 million round with
- two "A-list, top-tier VC firms."
-
- By and large, the sites are carving out roles as middlemen, most charging
- nominal fees for exchanging goods without having to carry any inventory.
-
- The market--the start-ups and their investors believe--is vast and
- untapped.
-
- "The idea was to capitalize on what companies like Amazon and eBay and
- Priceline did, reinventing the way buyers and sellers came together,"
- Swaprat's Lin said. "We thought we could use the Internet to revolutionize
- traditional swapping by adding liquidity and letting people go across the
- entire Internet."
-
- Lin envisions expanding the swap site to encompass community features.
-
- "It's more than just the simple transaction itself," Lin said. "It's in
- the nature of the swap transaction that you're both a buyer and seller at
- the same time. And entertainment goods are good predictors of common
- interests. So it becomes a great model for community. As we collect
- information about what people are swapping, can group people together."
-
- Teen- and child-oriented Swap.com thinks it has found the ideal market,
- one with little money to spend and lots of junk to trade.
-
- "Kids are still growing so they move through merchandise pretty rapidly,
- and wind up with bedrooms and closets full of junk they don't use
- anymore," Wade said. "And don't have any pocket money. With Swap.com the
- kids get their opportunity to take their stuff and use it as currency."
-
- Intellibarter, for its part, grabbed headlines following Christmas with an
- ad campaign focused on getting users to trade unwanted holiday presents.
-
- Swap.com, which will launch officially Feb. 14 with a national advertising
- blitz, has seen heavy pre-launch traffic following some Los Angeles-area
- publicity.
-
- In addition to investors' and users' enthusiasm, Swap.com has attracted
- the interest of major movie studios, Wade said, including three she would
- not name that have approached Swap.com about becoming sponsors in exchange
- for promoting their products.
-
-
-
- Oregon Town Becomes a Dot-com City
-
-
- It had to happen sometime.
-
- Choosing Internet dollars over tradition, this tiny eastern Oregon town
- on Wednesday became the first municipality to actually name itself for
- the ubiquitous ``dot-com" suffix of the Internet by temporarily changing
- its nearly two century-old name to Half.Com.
-
- In the process, it wrung from a Pennsylvania company of the same name
- $75,000 and 22 computers for the town's elementary school. The startup
- company, which bills itself as a one-on-one Internet auction site, hopes
- the one-year stunt will generate publicity worth much more.
-
- The new name won't show up on any map, but the company wants to post a
- sign on the main road into town that would read: ``Welcome to the first
- dot-com city in America, Half.com - aka Halfway, Oregon."
-
- ``It's been amazing," said company marketing director Mark Hughes, who
- has spent much of the past month shepherding the deal. ``We've had calls
- from media around the world - Holland, Japan. We couldn't have imagined
- anything like this."
-
- City Councilor Merrilyn Seal said the deal, approved by unanimous vote of
- the council on Wednesday, is a good opportunity for both sides. ``I feel
- we have made two halves whole," she said.
-
- Half.com also promised to help build a Web site for the city, and it
- offered Internet sites to businesses in the community, as well. Many
- business people in town, who sell everything from fish bait to elephant
- garlic, already say they plan to take advantage the offer.
-
- The deal could turn out to be one of the cleverest marketing schemes in
- recent memory, and a modest money-maker for the town of just over 360
- people that has been ravaged by the decline of mining, logging and
- ranching in recent years.
-
- ``It's a gas," said Babete Beatty, who owns a bakery, restaurant and
- hotel in town. ``I don't think it's going to do any harm."
-
- But some people are worried that half.com - the company - is getting a
- bit too much bang for its buck.
-
- ``The City Council is giving this town away," said Mrs. Beatty's
- husband, Dale Beatty. ``They've got a million dollars' worth of (free)
- advertising already."
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
- Atari Online News, Etc.is a weekly publication covering the entire
- Atari community. Reprint permission is granted, unless otherwise noted
- at the beginning of any article, to Atari user groups and not for
- profit publications only under the following terms: articles must
- remain unedited and include the issue number and author at the top of
- each article reprinted. Other reprints granted upon approval of
- request. Send requests to: dpj@delphi.com
-
- No issue of Atari Online News, Etc. may be included on any commercial
- media, nor uploaded or transmitted to any commercial online service or
- internet site, in whole or in part, by any agent or means, without
- the expressed consent or permission from the Publisher or Editor of
- Atari Online News, Etc.
-
- Opinions presented herein are those of the individual authors and do
- not necessarily reflect those of the staff, or of the publishers. All
- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
-