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- Volume 2, Issue 14 Atari Online News, Etc. April 7, 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:
-
-
- 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 #0214 04/07/00
-
- ~ SEC Defends Tactics! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Virus Calls 911
- ~ Netscape 6 Unveiled! ~ AOL Launches AOL Plus! ~ Want A Lackey?
- ~ High-Tech Less Privacy ~ MSN: Six Months Free! ~ NUON News!
- ~ Red Sox Break Drought? ~ Get A 'Free' Dreamcast ~ Excitebike 64!
-
- -* Microsoft Broke Antitrust Law *-
- -* Microsoft Penalties Hearing May 24! *-
- -* eBay Reveals Federal Investigation Ongoing *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- What a week in the world of technology! The major news, of course, is the
- verdict handed down against Microsoft - guilty of antitrust violations. I
- don't think that the outcome of this case was surprising. And I'm also not
- surprised that a pre-verdict settlement was not reached. Now we'll just
- have to wait a couple of months to find out what penalties will be doled
- out against Microsoft.
-
- Atari's Jack Tramiel was often quoted as saying that "business is war."
- But, even in war - and as stupid as it may sound - there are certain rules
- of conduct. Apparently, Microsoft failed to live up to those rules. No one
- likes a bully.
-
- Last week I mentioned I felt terrible. Well, I broke down and saw a doctor.
- Since my bout with pneumonia a few years ago, I get a little nervous when
- similar symptoms appear and don't go away in a reasonable length of time.
- Anyway, it turned out that I had no traces of bronchitis or pneumonia. The
- likely culprit was allergies. I guess that it's already turning out to be a
- bad time for allergy sufferers due to a reasonably dry winter and warm early
- spring. What bothers me, besides the allergies, is that I'm usually not
- bothered by such things! I've known that I have been allergic to most of
- the common things that cause allergies, but I don't usually have the typical
- reactions. This year it's different. I guess I'll have to suffer while
- trying to reduce some of the symptoms with medications. Life goes on.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- jmirando@portone.com
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I can't believe how fast the days seem to
- be going by. It seems that autumn was only yesterday, and now it's
- spring already. I know that most people would be happy if we could skip
- the cold weather of winter, but I kind of like it.
-
- I know, I've mentioned that a lot lately. But it's true. There's simply
- nothing like a chilly evening spent looking through a frosty window at
- whatever happens to be in your field of view.
-
- I guess that there are some of you shaking your heads as you read this
- and saying, "Is he out of his damned mind? He wouldn't be saying that if
- he lived here." And you're probably right. Here in the Northeast we have
- real winter, but not what you'd see if you lived in Kodiak, Alaska. I can
- AFFORD to think it's nice. <grin>
-
- Soon enough the temperature will rise to the uncomfortable range and
- we'll take refuge in air conditioning and ask each other, "Is it hot
- enough for ya?" Darn, I hate that.
-
- I'm not even going to try to tie this line of thought to something to do
- with Atari computers. I mean heck, we all know what we like and what we
- don't. You don't need me constantly reminding you of the reasons you
- like Atari computers, do you? You know as well as I do that they have
- their own personalities. I guess that maybe computers don't become
- "cookie cutter" until after a certain amount of them are made. The PCs I
- use are, by and large, fine machines representing the best that hardware
- technology has to offer. But they just don't have any personality like
- my old 1040 did. It and its family... the Stacy, MegaSTE, and TT... all
- have their own personalities. It's kind of nice to feel that familiarity
- in a machine. It's something I don't expect to see in another computer.
- At least not until 'the next big thing' rears its head.
-
- Well, that's enough of that. Let's take a look at what's going on with
- the UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
- Christer Backroos asks:
-
- "Does anyone know if the author of ghostlink ever released a version
- which would work through the parallel port?
-
- He mentions it in documentation but I've never found a version supporting
- this..
-
- Or do you know if there are sources available somewhere, I think I could
- be able to do the parallel modification to code by myself..
-
- ps: I'm quite happy now since just yesterday I got a 1040Ste for myself
- with 4megs of ram. A nice improvement from a 520Stfm with 512kb of mem."
-
- Derryck Croker tells Christer:
-
- "Why not try PARCP? Does the same job. Try Petr Stehlik's (sp) mirror site
- at http://www.cyberstrider.org if it's still there."
-
- Iggy Drougge asks about graphics cards for the MegaSTE/TT:
-
- "Seeing as the VME slot is rather widespread, how come no-one
- has written any drivers for cards not expressly designed for
- atari use? This could solve the Ethernet problem, too."
-
- Martin-Eric Racine tells Iggy:
-
- "Mainly because commercial VME cards are considered industrial
- equipment and sell with a correspondingly high price tag.
-
- Also, several manufacturers flatly refuse to provide programming
- docs or open source drivers. They support mainly OS9 and that is
- the only thing used on the VME market, in their opinion.
-
- Mind you, that also applies to a variety of LocalTalk products.
-
- For instance, some years ago, someone on the STiK development
- list pointed out that LocalTalk to Ethernet adapters sold for
- very cheap, so I contacted several manufacturers (Fallaron, etc.)
- and asked if it would be possible to have either driver sources
- or API docs to write drivers from a non-Mac OS. "We haven't sold
- any of those in ages and either ways, we are not considering
- revealing any of our development specs to any third-party."
-
- Same answer for their previous SCSI-Ethernet adapters.
-
- (both LocalTalk and SCSI adapters were quite popular on m68k
- Macs, because they did not come with a built-in Ethernet port)
-
- For VME products, people are slightly more open (e.g. some of the
- companies have programming API documents they openly share with
- their multi-billionaire customers, pending an NDA signature) but
- even their standard catalog items are overpriced. For instance, I
- tried contacting BWVM to get them to produce another run of their
- VME Ethernet card. Well, even their bog standard card would have
- sold for twice the price of an already expansive Riebl VME card
- from Best Electronics.
-
- To answer another question in this thread, the reason why some of
- those cards are supported by NetBSD is that certain VME computer
- systems (e.g. m68k-based SUN) are now considered obsolete by the
- industry and being dumped for very cheap by second-hand retailers
- or educational institutions, so people cannibalize the cards from
- the complete systems and stuff them in their TT running NetBSD."
-
- John Kolak asks about converting USB to serial:
-
- "Anyone have any idea how to connect a USB equipped iBook to an Atari
- serial port? Is this simple like a null-modem adaptor, or are the specs
- on the two kinds of serial too different?"
-
- Lonny Pursell tells John:
-
- "I think they are far too different, you cannot just connect them.
-
- Also the Atari is not "hot swappable" so if you attempt it, make sure
- the Atari is powered down."
-
- Edward Biaz asks about HSMODEM on his Hades:
-
- "I have a question concerning HSModem. I have a Hades and am using the
- file HA_ESCC.prg. Basically everything is fine. When I am using Cab I
- get an average CPS of 7000. My question involves the result I get when
- I do a reset. If I do a Control-Alternate-Delete reset, the computer
- hangs on the file HA_ESCC.prg in the Auto folder. If I use the reset
- button, then things boot all the way through. It also hangs if I use
- the shutdown program in Magic and tell it to reboot. Anyone have an
- idea as to how I can adjust the HA_ESCC.prg or do something else to fix
- this?"
-
- Martin Byttebier tells Edward:
-
- "Very easy. DON'T USE HA_ESCC.PRG, it's buggy as hell. I'm really surprised
- you still using it. Just use the scc.prg as found in the HSMODA 7 packet.
- This works fine."
-
- Jerry Martin asks about CAB with WDialog:
-
- "I have a rather strange problem at the moment with CAB. This arose
- suddenly bout three or four months ago, but I never really got to the
- bottom of it. I am hoping someone might have some idea as to what is
- the problem.
-
- I am using CAB 2.8 (used to use 2.7c) and have some form of a conflict
- with WDIALOG 2.04
-
- When CAB is started with a command line (URL) it does not open the page.
- However, while running and if a URL is passed via VA_START, the page is
- opened. Just now, I discovered that if I disable WDIALOG in the Auto
- Folder, all runs smoothly again (i.e. I can pass CAB a URL hen
- starting and it will open)
-
- If you need any more details about my system setup I will be happy to
- provide them."
-
- Greg Goodwin asks Jerry:
-
- "Where did you find 2.8? Is it English?"
-
- Derryck Croker tells Greg:
-
- "CAB2.8 is from ASH. The english RSC files can be gotten from my web
- site: http://www.cix.co.uk/~derryck/index.htm "
-
- Jerry comes back and posts:
-
- "I have solved the problem! ;-)
-
- A number of months ago, after I registered COMA, I came across a
- Fax-Driver for SpeedoGDOS and even though I use NVDI, decided to
- install it to see what would happen! Funnily eeough it _almost_ worked.
- It registered as a driver under NVDI, and successfully rendered about
- 25% of any page. After this experiment, I never removed the driver.
- However, it seems that this was creating some problem with CAB's
- Initialisation, and after removing it, now everything is running
- smoothly! Phew!"
-
- Greg Goodwin posts:
-
- "Well, just a note to other enthusiasts, I have been able to get a
- fair amount done with Spectre and I am a fan of Dave Small's work. So
- feel free to ask any questions.
-
- (And if you are one of those users that managed to get the program
- to successfully use system 7 and above, clue me in on how it's done.
- If you don't want others to know, you're secret's safe with me)
-
- And as far as PCDitto goes.. got the program, it runs.. how do you
- get this program to recognize a hard drive?"
-
- John Kolak tells Greg:
-
- "Gee Whiz, that's an old issue! I once had it running with a hard drive,
- but don't remember how. May have hardcopy instructions somewhere around
- here. Has something to do with assigning a partition on your hard drive
- (unless you want to use the whole hard drive), doing an fdisk and
- format. Voila! That's it!"
-
- Miles Howe asks:
-
- "Has anyone been able to use the MagicPC Demo files with Gemulator 2000?"
-
- James Haslam tells Miles:
-
- "I don't think you can! :) MagicPC is a standalone PC program, like
- Gemulator, so you can't run one with the other.
-
- ie they are both Atari emulators, that can run Atari software."
-
- Kevin Dermott tells James:
-
- "In the gemulator docs it gives instructions how to do this. it involves
- using the magic ram file in place of a tos image one but I never got it
- to work. It's just like Magic PC can run a tos image instead of the
- magic os but not many people know this either."
-
- Jason Bloomer asks:
-
- "I currently have a Atari 1040 Ste, that has 2 meg of ram in it. I would
- like to add 2 more megs. I am wondering what type of memory it takes. I
- currently have a bunch of 1mb, 1x8, 30 pin SIMMs, will these work?"
-
- Our good friend Sheldon Winick of The Computer STudio tells Jason:
-
- "They should work just fine. Since you have a "bunch" of those SIMMs, you
- might want to install a set of four matching SIMMs. Mixing SIMMs of
- different configurations can, in some instances, cause problems."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Enjoy the spring weather while you
- can. Soon it will be hot and humid, and we'll all be wishing we had a
- few of these cool breezy days to spare. See ya 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 - 'Excitebike 64'! GO Red Sox!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Free Dreamcasts - SegaWeb!
- Nuon and Nyko News!
- And much more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Sega to Unveil Online Gaming, Free Console Strategy
-
-
- Sega of America Inc., anticipating serious competition in the cut-throat
- video game business, will unveil on Tuesday a radical shift in its business
- strategy by offering its own Internet service and giving away to
- subscribers its Dreamcast video console via a $200 rebate.
-
- Sega, the U.S. unit of Sega Enterprises Ltd., will launch a new company
- devoted to online gaming called Sega.com, and its own branded Internet
- service, to be called SegaNet. The high-speed service will let gamers play
- each other over the Internet with a Sega Dreamcast, which was launched last
- year.
-
- With a business model not unlike the companies that offer free PCs or
- Internet devices in exchange for monthly Internet access, Sega will offer a
- rebate of $200 -- the cost of the Dreamcast game console -- to gamers who
- sign up for two years of SegaNet Internet service. It expects to launch
- this service in the fall, at a cost of $21.95 a month.
-
- Subscribers will also get a free keyboard.
-
- Sega also hopes to woo gamers away from PCs, which currently allow users to
- play a limited number of games over the Internet. Currently, there are no
- Sega games available online.
-
- Sega launched its comeback attempt in the video game industry last year
- with the Dreamcast and now faces looming U.S. competition from industry
- leader Sony Corp. and its much-heralded new Playstation2 this fall.
- Nintendo Co. Ltd. also is launching a new system next year and now software
- behemoth Microsoft Corp. has said it plans to enter the market with the
- X-Box, a game console using PC technology, in the fall of 2001.
-
- ``The market is all about leapfrogging each other and the consumer is
- confused," said Charles Bellfield, a spokesman for Sega. Sega needs to
- distinguish itself from its rivals, which have hundreds of millions of
- dollars in their coffers to spend on marketing, so Sega is placing its bets
- on online gaming and giving its console away for free.
-
- ``It's a radical change but a radical change is needed," said Sean
- McGowan, a video gaming analyst with Gerard Klauer Mattison & Co. ``It's a
- very risky strategy... This is not a company that is sitting on a ton of
- cash. They are betting the ranch because they have to. Sega is clearly the
- weakest financially of all the major players. They have got to do something
- drastic."
-
- Sega said it will have sold two million Dreamcast units in North America in
- April since its launch last September. The number is impressive until
- compared to the Sony Playstation2, which sold over one million units just
- in its weekend debut last month in Japan.
-
- The company said its goal with its new give-away program is to distribute
- four million more Dreamcasts by 2001, giving it an installed base in North
- America of about six million users.
-
- ``In the first two years, we will break even," said Brad Huang, the newly
- appointed president and chief executive of Sega.com Inc. Sega.com, like
- Sega of America, will be based in San Francisco's Multimedia Gulch
- district. ``It will be community building." Huang also noted Sega will
- face a lower cost to acquire its Internet service customers than giants
- such as AOL.
-
- Sega is convinced that its target audience -- serious gamers ranging from
- 12 to 24 years old -- wants to play games over the Internet. The Sega
- Dreamcast console is the only console that comes with a modem
- pre-installed. The modem can be popped out and switched for an Ethernet
- connection for broadband Net access.
-
- ``Our audience wants to go the next level," said Sega's Bellfield. ``They
- want rivalry and competition and they can only get that by competing with
- each other."
-
- Sega said the attempts by some game developers to make games more difficult
- using artificial intelligence will not answer the needs of the hard core
- gamers, because they will eventually learn all the tricks.
-
- Sega said that at launch, it will announce a major Internet service
- provider as the backbone for SegaNet. The company said SegaNet will be
- faster than the typical Internet service provider, because it will have its
- own virtual private network.
-
- About a dozen major games are expected at the launch.
-
- Sega also plans to have a specially designed MP3 player that inserts into
- the Dreamcast console, in the space which is currently occupied by the
- visual memory unit, for downloading music from the Internet. The device
- will cost below $100 and its 64 megabytes of disk space will store about
- two hours of music.
-
- ``The key is they are going to have to execute, the titles are going to
- have to have tremendous playability," said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst
- with the Gartner Group. ``It's a very good offensive move on their part to
- get the online gaming stuff going as quickly as possible."
-
-
-
- NYKO Technologies Inc. and Hot Products Inc. Join
- Forces to Propel NUON Video Entertainment Accessories
-
-
- NYKO Technologies and Hot Products Inc. announced Tuesday a strategic
- alliance to integrate the design, manufacturing, distribution and marketing
- of licensed NUON peripherals and accessories under the terms of licenses
- they both hold with VM Labs of Mountain View, Calif. for utilizing NUON
- media processing technology.
-
- Under this agreement, both companies will continue to focus on their core
- strengths. HPI will be responsible for the design, development and
- manufacturing while NYKO will concentrate on the marketing and distribution
- of a wide variety of NUON products.
-
- ``HPI's engineering and manufacturing expertise is a perfect partner to our
- distribution strengths," said Robert J. Rienick vice president, sales &
- marketing for NYKO. ``Having worked together over the past year, we both
- understand that NUON requires a long-term commitment. This allows both
- companies to dedicate the necessary resources where they are most needed,
- especially at launch, and insures an immediate product line-up capable of
- handling the speed and power of NUON technology."
-
- According to James L. Copland, chairman & CEO of HPI, ``The combined
- expertise of our two companies within the accessories and peripherals
- category will allow us to capitalize on the initial launch of NUON
- technology by Samsung and Toshiba in the coming months. And while the
- stunning visual effects and tremendous DVD movie playability will fuel
- market share gains, we're most excited about the possibility of all future
- NUON DVDs functioning as a complete video entertainment system, including
- the family gaming console."
-
- NUON Technology turns a standard DVD player into an enhanced DVD player
- capable of accessing advanced DVD movie features, interactive game play and
- Internet web-browsing.
-
- Donald A. Thomas Jr., director of peripheral licensing and promotion at VM
- Labs stated, ``I am delighted with NYKO Technologies and Hot Products
- Inc.'s strategic alliance, and fully support the synergy that this combined
- enterprise will represent for NUON-enhanced products. We fully expect this
- arrangement to result in numerous additional successful licensed NUON
- peripheral products over the next few years, and look forward to working
- closely with these peripheral partners."
-
- Motorola supports the NUON technology, and incorporates it into its
- NUON-enhanced Streamaster set-top boxes. These set-top boxes are used for
- delivery of on-demand video services to residential homes throughout the
- world by the telecommunications industry.
-
- Jim Clardy of the Austin-based Multimedia Systems Division commented,
- ``Motorola has been working closely with HPI on the development of a line
- of NUON controller solutions in support of Motorola's global customer
- network. This newly formed alliance should benefit the retail arena with
- high-quality NUON peripheral products."
-
-
-
- Boston Red Sox End World Series Drought According
- to 'High Heat Baseball 2001' Season Simulation
-
- Sosa Outslugs Griffey and McGwire in National League Homerun Race
-
-
- In their third annual simulation of the upcoming Major League Baseball
- season, The 3DO Company's High Heat Baseball 2001 game predicted that the
- hard-luck Boston Red Sox will break their 82 year World Series drought and
- win the championship, beating the Atlanta Braves four games to two. In a
- closely-contested National League homerun race, Sammy Sosa bested fellow
- Central Division rivals Ken Griffey and Mark McGwire in the homerun
- category, slugging 59 to McGwire's 54 and Griffey's 51.
-
- 3DO's High Heat Baseball game has successfully predicted that the New York
- Yankees would win the World Series the past two seasons, and in 1998 the
- game accurately foretold that Mark McGwire would smash the homerun record.
-
- The High Heat Baseball 2001 game also predicted the following for the
- upcoming baseball season:
-
- Player Awards:
- National League MVP: Larry Walker, Colorado Rockies
- American League MVP: Nomar Garciaparra, Boston Red Sox
- National League Cy Young: Greg Maddux, Atlanta Braves
- American League Cy Young: Pedro Martinez, Boston Red Sox
- National League Batting Title: Larry Walker, Colorado Rockies
- American League Batting Title: Bernie Williams, NY Yankees
- National League Homerun Champion: Sammy Sosa, Chicago Cubs
- American League Homerun Champion: Juan Gonzalez, Detroit Tigers
-
- 2000 Division Winners:
- National League East: Atlanta Braves
- National League Central: Cincinnati Reds
- National League West: San Francisco Giants
-
- National League Wild Card: Houston Astros
-
- American League East: NY Yankees
- American League Central: Cleveland Indians
- American League West: Seattle Mariners
-
- American League Wild Card: Boston Red Sox
-
- Playoffs:
- Atlanta Braves over the Houston Astros in four
- San Francisco Giants over the Cincinnati Reds in five
-
- Boston Red Sox over the Cleveland Indians in four
- NY Yankees over the Seattle Mariners in three
-
- Atlanta Braves over San Francisco Giants in five
- Boston Red Sox over the NY Yankees in four
-
- World Series:
- Boston Red Sox over the Atlanta Braves in six
-
- The High Heat Baseball 2001 game for the PC offers the most immersive
- sports experience available without actually taking the field with an
- improved, state-of-the-art 3D engine, a dramatic increase in the number of
- superstar ``signature" animations, intelligent crowd noise, and an all-new
- ``smart" camera that takes you to the action like a top television
- producer would. New game features include Internet/LAN play of Exhibition,
- Season, and Playoff games, a Fast Play mode, and a batting practice mode
- that lets you select the type of pitches and where they're thrown, making
- it easier for new players to get started down the path to a winning season.
- New career and season features include All-Star team selection, manager
- profiles and an annual amateur draft bringing even more depth to game play.
- The High Heat Baseball 2001 game is also available this month for the
- PlayStation game console.
-
- Last year, the High Heat Baseball 2000 game was named ``Sports Game of the
- Year" from every major PC gaming publication including PC Gamer, Computer
- Gaming World, PC Accelerator, and Maximum PC.
-
-
-
- Supercross Challenger Brian Mason
- 'Catches Air' With Excitebike 64
-
-
- In the '80s, ``Flyin' Brian" Mason was one of hundreds of thousands of
- kids across the country hooked on motocross by playing Nintendo's video
- game, Excitebike for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES).
-
- Today, Brian rides a real 'excitebike' in five intense Supercross races
- backed by sponsorship from Nintendo and its new game, Excitebike 64,
- exclusively for the Nintendo 64 video game system.
-
- At 20 years old, Mason is competing in his first full professional
- Supercross season this year. As part of this sponsorship, he's riding in
- the last five races of the season for Excitebike 64. This up-and-comer on
- the Edge Supercross team will do double duty by riding in both the 125cc
- and 250cc series, a feat that is rarely attempted.
-
- ``Excitebike is one of the reasons I started riding, so it's unreal to have
- Nintendo as a sponsor," says Brian Mason. ``Excitebike 64 has triple jumps
- and huge air -- just like racing on the circuit -- only the crashes don't
- hurt!"
-
- Excitebike 64 boasts more than 20 tracks to challenge players' motocross
- skills including indoor stadiums and massive outdoor environments, with
- plenty of jumps, bumps and stunts for up to four players. The accurately
- modeled physics engine maintains the realism of motocross action and tight
- bike control. Excitebike 64's realistic rider and detailed crash animations
- give players a sense of being part of the action.
-
- ``This is a great opportunity for both Brian and Nintendo," says George
- Harrison, Nintendo's vice president, advertising and corporate
- communications. ``Brian's ready to take it to the next level in the same
- way Excitebike 64 sets new standards in four-player action and custom track
- design."
-
- As part of the sponsorship, Brian will make personal appearances at local
- retail outlets in Dallas, New Orleans, Chicago and Las Vegas which are
- scheduled before the Supercross races this spring. He'll talk about his
- experiences on the racing circuit, give away Excitebike 64 premiums and
- challenge consumers to one-on-one races in Excitebike 64. For further
- details, visit www.nintendosports.com.
-
- ``Brian's a hot property on the circuit," says Jim Sirko, manager Sirko
- Sports Marketing. ``With the help of Excitebike 64 and a lot of hard work,
- "Flyin' Brian`` hopes to one day join the likes of Nintendo's own Ken
- Griffey, Jr. and Kobe Bryant."
-
-
-
- Infogrames North America, Inc. Sends Sony PlayStation
- Soaring with Eagle One: Harrier Attack
-
-
- It's not World War II but the Hawaiian islands are under terrorist attack
- again and it's up to you to save the day in Infogrames North America,
- Inc.'s latest PlayStation hit, Eagle One: Harrier Attack.
-
- The title, which began shipping to most major retail stores last week,
- sets players in the midst of international terrorism and covert military
- operations. Your country needs you, Eagle One, go get 'em!
-
- An underground terrorist group has detonated an electromagnetic pulse
- device in the air over Hawaii, which has destroyed all lines of
- communication, rendering U.S. military forces based there useless. The U.S.
- President responds by deploying a Marine Corps task force led by Eagle One.
- Using various multipurpose attack planes, the player must regain control of
- the Hawaiian Islands through 25 adrenaline-pumping missions.
-
- ``Eagle One: Harrier Attack isn't your run-of-the-mill flight simulation
- game, it is a unique action combat game featuring exciting cinematics,
- exhilarating missions, and intense fighting action," said David Riley,
- director of product marketing for Infogrames North America Inc.'s
- Action/Strategy Label. ``This game will appeal to anyone who likes fast
- jets, powerful weapons and a cool storyline."
-
- Players will be able to fly up to five different aircraft in the game
- including the Harrier Jumpjet, an A10 Warthog, an F16 Falcon, a rescue
- helicopter, and the top secret Raven Stealth jet, each of which demonstrate
- varying top speeds, accelerations and turning capabilities.
-
- Before being thrown into the action, players can hone their skills with the
- training option, where players learn about the two different flight modes
- of Eagle One, Hover mode and Jet mode. Hover mode allows the Harrier to
- maintain its height and pitch, which is key in performing vertical landings
- and stabilizing the jet for precision shooting, while Jet mode makes the
- Harrier behave like a normal jet, providing the speed and agility needed to
- complete missions quickly.
-
- Trainees will also get briefed on the various weapons, ranging from such
- standard weapons as canons and rockets, to more advanced mission specific
- weapons as laser-guided bombs. Lastly, new pilots will learn how to refuel
- and rearm their aircraft. After training is complete, players move on to
- the 25 real missions where their skills will be thoroughly tested with
- air-to-air, air-to-ground and sea-borne objectives.
-
- Eagle One: Harrier Attack also features two-player split screen action with
- two choices of play, including cooperative mode where players help one
- another complete the missions, and dogfight mode, where players attempt to
- get their opponent out of the sky by any means necessary. Whether utilizing
- the single player or two-player options, players can use the unique instant
- replay system to relive great stunts and maneuvers made in the last ten
- seconds.
-
- Developed by Glass Ghost, Eagle One: Harrier Attack is available at an
- estimated retail price of $39.99 and can be found at most major retail
- outlets.
-
-
-
- 3DO Ships Army Men - World War for the PlayStation
-
-
- The 3DO Company announced that it has begun shipping the PlayStation game
- console version of the Army Men - World War game, the follow-up to the
- best-selling Army Men 3D game, to retail outlets throughout North America
- and online shopping sites.
-
- The Army Men brand has enjoyed significant success at retail, with the Army
- Men -Sarge's Heroes game for PlayStation game console, the Army Men game
- for Game Boy Color, and the Greatest Hits Army Men 3D game for PlayStation
- game console all appearing currently on the Top 50 Best Selling Videogame
- Titles as reported by The NPD Group. The Army Men - Sarge's Heroes game
- blasted to the top of the charts when it appeared last September on the
- Nintendo64 game system, debuting at #2 on the NPD charts in its first month
- of retail sales, and remaining in the Top 10 Best-Selling Nintendo Titles
- for five months.
-
- An all-new episode in the explosive, ongoing war between the Green and Tan
- Armies, as well as the first time the battle has been waged in the heart of
- Tan country on the PlayStation game console, the Army Men - World War game
- takes the size and scope of the miniaturized conflict to a tremendous and
- terrifying scale.
-
- Taking a cue from the infamous Battle of Normandy, the Army Men - World War
- game finds players in command of the Green Army as it attempts to breach
- Tan soil and establish a beachhead, facing down a withering hail of enemy
- fire. Only the most cunning and finest military minds will be able to
- prevent a total rout as they guide their troops through 18 brutal
- infantry-level missions covering three different terrains and multiple
- environments including beaches, jungles, war-torn cities, and abandoned
- countryside settings. A heavy emphasis upon tactical action adds a new
- strategic element to the gameplay, as combatants vie for control of
- strategic ground and heavy weaponry such as howitzers, .50-caliber twin
- machine guns, flamethrowers, grenades, mortars, and bazookas. This time the
- action is so intense and personal that even the most combat-ready grunts
- will be packing their bayonets.
-
- In order to survive the deadliest exchange of gunplay ever seen by
- plastickind, players must seize control of tanks, jeeps, and PT boats and
- pound the enemy battalions into submission using all-new heavy artillery.
- This concentrated barrage of firepower must buy time for the green foot
- soldiers to swarm across the beach, make it to the barbed wire mesh which
- awaits, and find cover in the shade of the rugged bluffs that overlook the
- point from which they were deployed. For the sake of their country, these
- brave ambassadors of the green nation will fight onward through the
- trenches, though they are besieged by the horrors of war upon all fronts.
- Victory may be a tenuous hope at best, but only one thing is for certain...
- surrender is not an option.
-
- ``Every war needs its heroes, even the plastic ones," said Trip Hawkins,
- chairman and CEO of The 3DO Company. ``With the release of the Army Men -
- World War game we salute the patriotic struggle of the countless unsung
- generals who have been struggling against the Tan Army in the name of
- freedom since Day One. It's not a game anymore... this time an entire army
- lives or dies by their command."
-
-
-
- An Epic Struggle Between Good and Evil Ignites on
- the PlayStation as Activision Ships Alundra 2
-
-
- Gamers get ready to wield magic, cunning and the power of the mighty sword
- when Activision, Inc. ships Alundra 2 for the PlayStation game console. The
- highly anticipated sequel to the critically acclaimed title Alundra will be
- available in retail outlets across North America the week of March 20, 2000.
- Rated ``T" by the ESRB, Alundra 2 will carry a suggested retail price of
- $39.95.
-
- In Alundra 2, players take on the role of Flint, a renegade swordsman on an
- epic quest to save the kingdom of Varuna from the sinister Baron who has
- taken control. As players embark on a fantastical journey through a land
- filled with unsuspecting danger and adventure, they must confront more than
- 10 mega-bosses in real-time battles. Dive-bombing ravens and skeletons are
- among over 40 monsters that gamers must face as they immerse themselves in
- an all absorbing story.
-
- Players climb, swim, jump and fight through a 3D world as they solve
- hundreds of action-based puzzles and seek out over 60 hidden items, raging
- from herbs and coins to magic amulets, which will aid them in their quest.
- In addition, the elements -- earth, wind, fire, and water -- can be
- summoned in to assist players in defeating evil foes.
-
- ``Alundra 2's immersive graphics and movie sequences draw gamers into a
- magical world filled with brainteasing puzzles, mini-games and monster
- bosses," said Mitch Lasky, executive vice president, Activision Studios.
- ``Offering over 40 hours of gameplay, this sequel will electrify and
- enchant a wide range of gamers."
-
- Developed by Matrix and produced by Contrail, Alundra 2 has been designed
- from the ground up with a real-time, fully 3D polygonal engine and a camera
- that can be manually rotated -- allowing for three scalable views. Over two
- hours of in-game cut-scenes, voice-overs and a sweeping score combine to
- enhance this moving adventure story. Ten mini-games, including a radio
- controlled car game, a mining cart race, lots of classic-arcade-style fun
- and more are knit into the storyline allowing gamers to earn necessary (and
- ultra-rare) items that propel the voyage forward. Hidden puzzle pieces,
- ongoing sword mastery, over 20 world map locations and two levels of
- difficulty make for challenging, revisited gameplay.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Judge Finds Microsoft Broke Antitrust Law
-
-
- A federal judge ruled Monday that Microsoft Corp. broke U.S. antitrust law
- by abusing its monopoly in personal computer operating systems.
-
- District Court Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson said Microsoft violated key
- parts of the Sherman Act on three of the four main allegations leveled by
- the Justice Department and 19 states.
-
- ``The court concludes that Microsoft maintained its monopoly power by
- anticompetitive means and attempted to monopolize the Web browser market,"
- Jackson wrote in a 43-page ruling.
-
- The finding is expected to lead to consideration of penalties to prevent
- future violations, remedies that could include breakup of the software
- giant.
-
- ``Microsoft's anticompetitive actions trammeled the competitive process
- through which the computer software industry generally stimulates
- innovations and conduces to the optimum benefit of consumers," said
- Jackson.
-
- Microsoft promised to appeal Jackson's ruling and said it believed the
- legal system would ultimately rule in its favor.
-
- The company's stock, off sharply for the entire day as investors awaited
- Jackson's ruling, was halted just prior to the release of the findings. The
- shares resumed trading at 17:44, are were trading at $90 7/8. down $15 3/8.
-
- In findings of fact issued last November, Jackson had already found that
- Microsoft's behavior hurt consumers, computer makers and other companies .
-
- Settlement efforts in the case collapsed Saturday when a mediator said he
- could not bridge wide differences between the parties after four months of
- effort.
-
- While it is legal to gain a monopoly through skill or luck, it is illegal
- to use that power to perpetuate a monopoly by preventing competitors from
- springing up.
-
- Jackson also found that Microsoft tied its Internet Explorer software to
- its Windows operating system to exclude Netscape's rival product.
-
- But he declined to find that Microsoft's marketing arrangements with
- computer makers and others amounted to illegal denial of marketing methods
- to Netscape, which has become a part of America Online Inc. since the trial
- began nearly 18 months ago.
-
- Justice Department antitrust chief Joel Klein praised the ruling. ``The
- decision will benefit consumers and stimulate competition and innovation in
- the high-tech industry," Klein said in a statement.
-
-
-
- Microsoft to Appeal Antitrust Verdict
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. said on Monday it would appeal a judge's ruling that the
- software giant violated U.S. antitrust law, and voiced confidence it would
- ultimately prevail in the case.
-
- Microsoft co-founder and Chairman Bill Gates also said the ruling would not
- stop the Redmond, Wash.-based company from creating new products and
- looking to retool its business for the Internet age.
-
- ``We will seek an expedited appeal of this ruling, following a remedies
- phase and final decree," Microsoft spokesman Tom Pilla said, just minutes
- after Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson issued his conclusions of law in the
- case.
-
- In a 43-page ruling, Jackson ruled that the world's biggest software
- company violated key parts of antitrust law by abusing its monopoly in
- personal computer operating systems to harm rivals and consumers.
-
- ``While we did everything we could to settle this case, and will continue
- to look for new opportunities to resolve it without further litigation, we
- believe we have a strong case on appeal," Gates said in a statement.
-
- ``Microsoft's past success has been built on innovation and creativity, and
- our future success depends on our ability to keep innovating in the
- fastest-moving marketplace on earth," Gates said.
-
- Pilla noted an appeal could be filed only after Jackson decides on legal
- remedies, a process that will take several months as he weighs proposals
- from the U.S. Justice Department and the 19 states involved in the case.
-
- ``We continue to believe that the legal system will ultimately rule in our
- favor and uphold our ability to develop new and innovative software
- products," Pilla said.
-
- Microsoft's general counsel Bill Neukom said in a statement that the
- company had ``strong grounds" for an appeal and that government regulation
- of the software industry would stifle innovation and harm consumers.
-
- ``It's important for people to understand that today's court ruling is just
- one step in a legal process that could last several years," Neukom said.
-
- Jackson's ruling against Microsoft, which came after months of negotiations
- between Microsoft and Justice failed to produce a settlement, was widely
- expected based on his preliminary finding late last year that Microsoft
- abused a monopoly in PC operating systems to harm consumers and rivals.
-
- News that the talks had collapsed pounded Microsoft shares, sending them
- down 15 3/8, or more than 14 percent, to 90 7/8 and shaving about $80
- billion off the company's market capitalization.
-
- Microsoft, which less than two weeks ago was the most highly valued company
- in the world, with a market capitalization of more than $560 billion, on
- Monday was left in the No. 3 spot at $470.46 billion, behind No. 1 Cisco
- Systems Inc. at $532.15 billion and No. 2 General Electric Co. at $521.47
- billion.
-
- After the ruling, the company rose to 92 in after-hours trading. Several
- Wall Street analysts said on Monday that despite the shadow cast by the
- lawsuit, which could now drag on for years, Microsoft's business appeared
- strong, with several new products expected to power growth this year.
-
-
-
- U.S. Could Seek Restrictions This Year on Microsoft
-
-
- The government could seek restrictions on Microsoft Corp. that take effect
- this year, long before the landmark antitrust case works its way through
- higher courts, experts said Tuesday.
-
- District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson ruled Monday that Microsoft
- committed serious violations of the nation's antitrust laws, opening the
- way for consideration of penalties in the final phase of the trial that may
- end in October.
-
- But because the appeals process could stretch the case until 2002 or
- beyond, some experts think the government should seek interim restrictions
- as a way to restrict Microsoft sooner.
-
- A Justice Department spokeswoman had no comment.
-
- ``I do expect for the government to ask for some intermediate relief,"
- said Herbert Hovenkamp, a professor at the University of Iowa college of
- law who has co-written an important treatise on antitrust law and consulted
- for the government on the case. Hovenkamp said he has not, however, talked
- to the government about the possibility.
-
- Jackson has ruled Microsoft used its monopoly power in personal computer
- operating systems to illegally intimidate other firms and preserve that
- monopoly.
-
- The Justice Department and 19 states which brought the case could
- ultimately ask for remedies ranging from restrictions on Microsoft's
- conduct to splitting it into several smaller firms.
-
- But obtaining a tough remedy that would permanently alter Microsoft could
- take years, so the government would have to seek some lesser change if it
- wanted quick relief.
-
- Intermediate relief ``is certainly something the Justice Department ought
- to think about proposing, but because the appeal will not have been heard,
- appellate courts may be hesitant to approve the granting of such relief,"
- said Harvey Goldschmid, a professor of law at Columbia Law School.
-
- At a minimum, Goldschmid said, the seeking of intermediate relief may have
- the salutary effect of resulting in an expedited appeal.
-
- ``I think that would be very healthy," Goldschmid said.
-
- Soon after Judge Jackson announced his ruling Monday, Microsoft said it
- would seek an expedited appeal of the ruling at the conclusion of the
- trial's next phase.
-
- Any appeal by the company or request for intermediate measures from the
- government would have to wait until the Judge issues remedies, expected by
- October.
-
- Several lawyers who read Jackson's decision said it appeared to have been
- written carefully, with an eye on higher courts.
-
- ``The decision for the most part followed established (legal) precedent and
- so the issue on appeal is more likely to be factual issues," said Mark
- Schechter, an antitrust lawyer with Howrey & Simon.
-
- Attacking Jackson's findings of fact, which were issued months before his
- conclusions of law, will be tough, Schechter said. Microsoft will have to
- show that Jackson was ``clearly erroneous."
-
- But Joseph Sims, an antitrust lawyer with Jones, Day said that there were
- relatively few cases under the portion of antitrust law used against
- Microsoft, so that the company would easily be able to find precedents that
- support its views.
-
- ``This is an area where there's something for everybody out there in the
- case law," he said.
-
- Steven Newborn of Clifford Chance said that if Microsoft is able to win at
- the U.S. Court of Appeals level, and Texas Gov. George Bush, a Republican,
- is elected president, the firm might be able to reach a favorable
- settlement.
-
- Otherwise, the Justice Department could appeal a losing appeals court
- decision to the Supreme Court.
-
-
-
- Judge To Decide Microsoft Penalty
-
-
- The judge overseeing Microsoft's antitrust case must now decide what
- punishment to mete out: Slice the software giant into Baby Bills? Impose a
- hefty fine? Force Microsoft to reveal its secret software code to rivals?
-
- U.S. District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson will spend the next few months
- trying to determine the best way to craft a remedy that won't hamper the
- company's ability to innovate in an industry changing at warp speed.
-
- Unlike the judge's ruling Monday - a sweeping verdict that handed the
- government a powerful but anticipated victory after nearly two years of
- legal wrangling - the punishment Jackson will dispense is uncertain. He
- will hold hearings to explore the options, taking into consideration
- recommendations from Microsoft, the Justice Department and 19 states
- involved in the case.
-
- ``The dilemma for the judge and for the Justice Department is how to make
- the remedy effective without making it overly regulatory," said Warren
- Grimes, an antitrust expert who teaches law at Southwestern University
- School of Law in Los Angeles.
-
- Joel Klein, who heads the Justice Department's antitrust division, offered
- few hints at what remedy the government would seek, other than one ``that
- will protect consumers, innovation and competition by putting an end to
- Microsoft's widespread and persistent abuse of its monopoly power, and to
- rectifying its unlawful attempt to monopolize the Internet browser
- market."
-
- The options before Jackson range from breaking up the company that made
- founder Bill Gates a billionaire to ordering Microsoft to change its
- business tactics.
-
- Among the milder options: prohibiting Microsoft from using price as a way
- to punish clients who deal with competitors and forcing the company to
- relinquish control of the first screen most people see when they turn on
- their computers. Microsoft also could be ordered to license, if not
- completely surrender, the lucrative blueprint, the so-called ``source
- code," for its Windows software.
-
- While the government reportedly dropped its pursuit of a company breakup
- during recent settlement attempts, Jackson's ruling may have emboldened
- Justice attorneys to ask for the toughest penalty possible.
-
- There are several scenarios for breaking up the company, said attorney
- Glenn Manishin, who helped write a study for a prominent trade association
- that endorsed a divestiture. The judge could split up Microsoft into
- companies selling separate products, such as Windows software and Internet
- content, or break it into several ``Baby Bills" or ``Mini-Microsofts"
- each with identical products.
-
- ``The drastic is the most effective and the most conservative approach to
- dealing with a monopoly," Manishin said. The alternative is a set of
- court-enforced provisions that rarely curb behavior effectively, he said.
- Such an injunction, Manishin said, would be a ``black hole of judicial
- regulation."
-
- ``Black holes suck up everything around them - it would suck up all the
- resources of the Justice Department, all the time of the judge, and all the
- competitors would be focused on one courtroom in Washington where they
- would run when they had a complaint about Big Brother Bill," he said.
-
- Jonathan Zuck, president of the Association for Competitive Technology, a
- pro-Microsoft group, said the idea of breaking up the company is ``clearly
- universally recognized as ludicrous."
-
- ``The whole point of a remedy is it's supposed to do some good. It's not
- meant to be punitive," Zuck said. ``So no matter how mad the (plaintiffs)
- may be at Microsoft, remedies are supposed to create a better
- environment."
-
- Grimes acknowledged that a company breakup may not ride well with the
- public, whose opinion may be a factor to Jackson, but it may be the easiest
- way to enforce antitrust laws.
-
- ``Once it's broken up, you don't need to supervise it anymore because you
- just have competing companies," he said. ``Whereas, if you try to use
- behavioral sanctions that have to be monitored, you end up with the
- potential for a lot of government supervision of Microsoft's behavior, and
- no one wants that."
-
- Of course, remedy hearings could be avoided altogether if both sides revive
- attempts to settle the case out of court.
-
- ``That's always a possibility," said William Kovacic, an antitrust expert
- at George Washington University. But with Jackson's ruling backing the
- government, ``the price to Microsoft of getting out just went up."
-
-
-
- Judge Sets May 24 for Microsoft Penalties Hearing
-
-
- The judge in the Microsoft Corp. antitrust trial on Wednesday set May 24
- for an expedited hearing on penalties, as Chairman Bill Gates came to town
- to lobby lawmakers and appear at a White House conference.
-
- In his order, District Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson also said the Justice
- Department and the states which together brought the case could file
- proposed remedies separately if they disagreed on their approach.
-
- Jackson ruled on Monday that Microsoft broke the nation's antitrust laws by
- illegally using its monopoly in personal computer operating systems to harm
- competitors and perpetuate that monopoly.
-
- Jackson set April 25, or at the latest April 28, for a filing of the
- proposed remedies by the Justice Department and states.
-
- ``The plaintiff states shall file any single proposed form of permanent
- injunction preferred by a majority of the plaintiff states if at variance
- with the version proposed by the United States," Jackson ordered.
-
- A majority would be 11 of the non-Justice Department plaintiffs, which are
- 19 states and the District of Columbia.
-
- Microsoft is to reply by May 10, and the Justice Department and the states
- are to reply by May 17.
-
- The speedy schedule, on which all sides agreed, means that the case will be
- completed this year in the trial court. That would set the stage for a
- quick move into appellate courts, or possibly a direct move to the Supreme
- Court.
-
- Jackson told the parties Tuesday he wanted to get the case to an appeals
- court as quickly as possible, perhaps straight to the Supreme Court, in as
- few as 60 days. The Supreme Court can hear a direct appeal from the trial
- court decision in major antitrust cases brought by the government.
-
- ``My transcendent objective is to get this thing before an appellate
- tribunal -- one or another -- as quickly as possible because I don't want
- to disrupt the economy or waste any more of yours or my time," Jackson
- said according to a transcript of the meeting released late on Tuesday.
-
- But after meeting with Gates, Republican Sen. Slade Gorton, who is from
- Microsoft's home state of Washington and one of its staunchest supporters
- in Congress, said that the firm is not in favor of an expedited appeal. He
- said Microsoft would prefer to appeal Judge Jackson's ruling to a federal
- circuit court of appeals, widely regarded as more conservative than the
- Supreme Court.
-
- ``I think that it is safe to say that Microsoft would prefer that it go
- through the regular process," Gorton told reporters.
-
- If the Supreme Court agrees to an expedited appeal, it would bypass the
- U.S. Court of Appeals in the District of Columbia. The appeals court in
- 1998 dealt the Justice Department a major defeat in an earlier, related
- Microsoft case, overturning a decision by Judge Jackson.
-
- Less than a mile down Pennsylvania Avenue from Jackson's chambers,
- Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates was due to appear later Wednesday at a White
- House conference on the so-called New Economy, the spectacular growth
- powered by computing and high-speed communications.
-
- Gates spent the morning meeting with groups of lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
- Those who were present at the meetings said he talked briefly about the
- trial but mostly about the future of technology.
-
- At a private meeting with Republican members of the House of
- Representatives, Gates was asked if a new administration would make a
- difference in the outcome of the case. Gates replied: "Probably yes,"
- according to two lawmakers who were present.
-
- With presidential elections set for November, both lawmakers said Gates did
- not mean that as a partisan remark, but meant that either a new Democrat or
- Republican administration would make a difference.
-
- Republican presidential candidate George W. Bush early in March made
- comments supportive of Microsoft, although aides later said he was neutral
- in the case and would simply prefer it was settled out of court.
-
- Gates also met with Democrats. Senator Kent Conrad, from North Dakota, said
- Gates had focused most of his remarks on the New Economy issue and for the
- most part had not discussed the trial.
-
-
-
-
- Netscape Releases New Browser With Hopes Trimmed
-
-
- Netscape, makers of the Web-browsing software at the heart of the U.S.
- government's antitrust case against Microsoft Corp., is set to unveil on
- Wednesday a much-delayed upgrade that marks the sharply curtailed ambitions
- of the once pioneering program.
-
- Netscape 6, the latest version of the program millions rely on as their
- primary window to the Internet, will be introduced at a trade show in Los
- Angeles by officials of America Online Inc., which acquired Netscape last
- year.
-
- But the software which created the first Internet explosion and once held
- nearly a 90 percent market share, faces an uphill battle against
- Microsoft's Internet Explorer, which now ships in every Windows PC and
- holds nearly 70 percent of the market.
-
- Much of the Microsoft antitrust trial has centered on Microsoft's tactics
- versus Netscape. On Monday, the U.S. judge in the case ruled that
- Microsoft's actions violated antitrust laws by attempting to monopolize the
- browser market.
-
- ``This used to be a debate between Coke and Pepsi. But the discussion is no
- longer whether a particular brand of flavored soda sells well," said
- Clayton Ryder, an industry analyst with Zona Research of Redwood City,
- Calif.
-
- For while the Netscape Web software has been plagued by delays in
- introducing new features, Microsoft has pumped out new versions that allow
- faster access to data and printing, simplify use of audio and video, and
- other improvements.
-
- ``The discussion has become how does this fit in as part of a fuller
- meal?" Ryder said, referring to Microsoft's success in making Internet
- Explorer the standard to which many companies now develop new Internet
- programs.
-
- Netscape's new software is the result of a drawn-out effort known as the
- Mozilla open-source project -- a volunteer network of independent Internet
- programmers who banded together more than two years ago to keep Netscape
- browser development alive.
-
- The company chose to forego the release of the fifth generation of Netscape
- last summer, offering users of Netscape incremental changes to its Netscape
- Navigator 4.7 program.
-
- Under America Online, the Netscape browser has been transformed from a
- single, monolithic product into a set of component technologies that are
- used not simply in Netscape 6 but have been licensed to a variety of other
- industry players.
-
- Instead, Netscape developers have focused on making the new software more
- easily customizable and ready to run on software alternatives to the
- Microsoft Windows operating system that dominates on personal computers.
-
- AOL has licensed the so-called ``Gecko" browser technologies at the core
- of Netscape to IBM, Intel Corp., Liberate Technologies Inc., NetObjects
- Inc., Nokia, Red Hat Inc. and Sun Microsystems Inc for use in separately
- branded products.
-
- AOL also is using the technology behind Netscape 6 as the core of its ``AOL
- Anywhere" strategy, a bid by the world's top Internet services company to
- distribute Web services not only on PCs but via television, cellphones and
- handheld computers.
-
- Ryder said the Netscape browser has become increasingly irrelevant among
- commercial Internet users. Instead, it has reverted to something akin to
- the original Mosaic browser, which popularized use of the World Wide Web in
- 1993.
-
- ``Netscape is not terribly different from its predecessor, NCSA Mosaic:
- it's got free distribution, it's become something of a toy, a research
- project, something techies like to play with," Ryder said. ``Have we come
- full circle?" he asked.
-
-
-
- Netscape Unveils Browser Update
-
-
- Netscape Communications Corp. on Wednesday unveiled the long-awaited update
- of its Web-browsing software in a bid to usurp Microsoft Corp.'s dominance
- of the way people travel the Internet.
-
- Netscape, bought by America Online last year, also announced a deal with
- Gateway to build a family of small, home Internet appliances designed to
- use Netscape 6. They would include a small, tablet-like screen that users
- can carry from room to room while surfing the Web.
-
- Netscape 6 is faster and far more flexible than other Internet browsers,
- AOL Chairman Stephen Case said in a speech touting the new browser and
- appliances at the Internet World 2000 conference.
-
- The browser is designed to be easily adapted for use in settop boxes,
- cellular telephones and other devices. Users also can modify the appearance
- and some functions to suit their personal tastes.
-
- ``These new initiatives are part of our AOL anywhere strategy of embedding
- the efficiency and convenience of the Internet into people's everyday
- lives," Case said. "... It's nothing less than the start of the second
- Internet revolution."
-
- Once the leading browser, Netscape was surpassed by Microsoft's Internet
- Explorer after Microsoft began giving its software away and bundling it
- with its dominant Windows operating system.
-
- Microsoft's pre-eminence is such that even AOL features Explorer as the
- preferred browser for jumping subscribers of its online service to the
- broader Internet. In exchange, AOL was given a prominent link in the
- Windows operating system, which runs 90 percent of the world's personal
- computers.
-
- That arrangement is likely to continue for the foreseeable future, said
- Barry Schuler, president of AOL's Interactive Services Group.
-
- Microsoft's dominance of the browser market became a key element of the
- government's antitrust case against the software giant. In a news
- conference, Schuler declined to comment on U.S. District Judge Thomas
- Penfield Jackson's ruling on Monday that Microsoft illegally attempted to
- monopolize the browser market.
-
- ``It's been a hard time for Netscape," Schuler said, referring to its loss
- of market share. ``We've been heads down trying to develop products."
-
- Whether Netscape can regain any of the ground it lost remains to be seen,
- an analyst said.
-
- ``Most people choose browsers based on religious preference. They don't
- choose them based on real performance differences," said Harry Fenik,
- executive vice president of Zona Research.
-
-
-
- AOL Launches AOL Plus to Deliver Multimedia Content
-
-
- America Online Inc. said on Tuesday it launched AOL Plus, which delivers
- multimedia content and features to subscribers using AOL 5.0 over any
- high-speed connection, marking one of its first steps toward the
- long-awaited introduction of high-speed access on AOL.
-
- Downloading the technology will let the interactive services giant's
- members use AOL Plus' multimedia content and features, which include
- full-motion video and streaming audio.
-
- AOL Plus is available to any of the company's subscribers using its 5.0
- software over a broadband connection and AOL 5.0's ``speed detect" feature
- will be introduced this week, marking a full-fledged introduction of the
- service. A company spokeswoman declined to comment on how long AOL Plus had
- been in a testing phase.
-
- At launch time, AOL Plus will provide content and features from a host of
- players including CBS MarketWatch.com, CNet Networks Inc., CNN and Launch
- Media Inc. will provide music video content to AOL members.
-
- Over the next several months, AOL Plus will expand to include shopping,
- games, autos and real estate content.
-
- ``Our goal in developing AOL Plus was to set new standards for streaming
- video and audio programming while offering AOL members the easiest-to-use,
- most reliable broadband content experience online," said Jonathan Sacks,
- senior vice president of AOL Interactive services, in a statement.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Takes Aims at AOL in Internet Access War
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. said on Tuesday it would give away six months of Internet
- access service as part of a new $40 million marketing blitz aimed at
- stealing market share away from the industry leader, America Online Inc.
-
- The three-month promotion marks the software giant's biggest push to add
- subscribers to its revamped MSN Internet service provider, Yusuf Mehdi, MSN
- vice president of marketing, said in an interview.
-
- Under the deal, customers who subscribe to one year of MSN service would
- get the first six months free, Mehdi said. The last six months would cost
- the standard $21.95 a month, which is comparable to competing services.
-
- ``We're taking it to the next level," Mehdi said. ``No other major ISP
- (Internet service provider) is doing this.
-
- The new campaign comes on the heels of a promotion that gave customers who
- signed up for three years of service $400 worth of merchandise at retail
- partners such as Radio Shack.
-
- The promotion -- announced a day after a federal judge ruled Microsoft had
- violated antitrust laws by abusing its monopoly in personal computer
- operating systems -- also raises the stakes in the highly charged race to
- usher people into cyberspace.
-
- ``They've got a lot of room to make up," said Alan Alper, an analyst with
- technology research firm Gomez Advisors. "Whether its too little, too
- late, who knows? But they're at least trying."
-
- Microsoft, toughing it out not only with AOL but also smaller services like
- AT&T Corp.'s WorldNet and EarthLink Corp., overhauled MSN last year,
- jazzing up its content offerings and bringing in new management.
-
- ``Microsoft has tried very hard to become the choice for the Web-savvy
- individual," Alper said, adding that MSN was really a hybrid business
- combining Web access with Internet directory services in the style of
- so-called ``portals" like Yahoo! Inc.
-
- ``They've evolved from an online information service into a collection of
- properties fronted through MSN, with Web access built in," Alper said.
-
- Although with 2.5 million subscribers, MSN lags far behind AOL's 22
- million, Medhi said he thought Microsoft was building steam, pointing to
- figures that showed the company netted half a million new subscribers in
- the last four months.
-
- ``I think the momentum is shifting now to MSN," Mehdi said.
-
- The marketing campaign would include advertising during top TV shows such
- as ``Who Wants to Be a Millionaire". Microsoft would also mail out 13.5
- million CDs containing MSN software. to do in-store promotions, Mehdi said.
-
- Mehdi said he hoped the promotion would attract as many as 1 million new
- users over the next three months, although he said the ``churn", or number
- of customers who quit the service, would be hard to predict.
-
- Mehdi also gave a glimpse into Microsoft's hopes for the MSN unit, saying
- that the access business and the MSN.com Web site would be the foundation
- of many Internet services and help drive sales of the Windows operating
- system and of the Office suite of business software.
-
- ``Ultimately Microsoft is preparing for the day when it's less of software
- company and more of a services company," said Gomez Advisor's Alper.
-
-
-
- FBI Investigating Computer Virus That Calls 911
-
-
- A computer virus that could disrupt 911 emergency services is being
- investigated after it was detected in the Houston area, the FBI said in a
- statement on Monday.
-
- Search warrants were issued in the case last week but no arrests have been
- made, said a spokesman for the agency, which has made computer security a
- top priority since leading Web sites came under cyber-attack in February.
-
- In a statement, the agency said the self-propagating Texas virus erases
- hard drives, then causes infected computers to dial 911 emergency telephone
- numbers and leave the line open.
-
- ``A call of this nature could potentially cause local emergency personnel
- to respond to false 911 calls," the agency said. It said local 911
- services in Houston had not detected a "significant increase" in the
- number of such calls.
-
- The National Infrastructure Protection Center in Washington, D.C., said in
- a separate statement the virus is not widespread.
-
- ``To this point, information and known victims suggest a relatively limited
- dissemination of this script in the Houston, Texas area," said the
- statement, which was posted on the Internet.
-
- The NPIC, which is a joint government-private sector agency created in 1998
- to assess threats to computer networks and other infrastructures, said the
- virus was spread by source computers that ``scanned several thousand
- computers through four Internet service providers (including) America On
- Line, AT&T, MCI and Netzero."
-
- The virus spreads by attacking computers with Windows operating systems set
- up to allow users to share files over the Internet, it said.
-
-
-
- eBay Reveals Federal Investigations
-
-
- Online auction company eBay Inc. revealed that the Justice Department has
- subpoenaed documents relating to an investigation of Sotheby's and
- Christie's of alleged price-fixing in commissions.
-
- EBay said in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on
- Thursday that the government is seeking information on its changes in
- commissions and buyer's premiums and ``discussions, agreements or
- understandings with other auction houses, in each case since 1992."
-
- The request stems from an investigation begun in 1997 of Sotheby's and
- Christie's. The auction houses, which control 95 percent of the $4 billion
- worldwide auction market, have said they are cooperating with prosecutors,
- and news reports have said the auction houses are being scrutinized for
- failing to charge fees to their wealthiest clients.
-
- In the filing, EBay warned that the cost of providing documents and
- defending itself in the investigation, the latest in a series, could impact
- earnings and divert management attention from regular business. The company
- also said other suits could follow.
-
- EBay spokesman Kevin Pursglove said because of the ongoing investigation,
- the company cannot comment further on the matter.
-
- In December, the Justice Department's antitrust division requested
- documents relating to eBay's lawsuit against Bidder's Edge, a company that
- polls auction sites and lists auctions posted on eBay and other sites.
-
- As such ``aggregate sites" attract customers of their own, they can cut
- into eBay's own Web traffic and associated advertising revenues. EBay
- contends it merely wants to have the companies sign licensing agreements,
- which also require paying the company a fee, to protect its users from
- fraud or incorrect information.
-
- The San Jose-based company also revealed the City of New York's Department
- of Consumer Affairs had requested and received documents in an
- investigation into consumer complaints about fraud on eBay's site.
-
- Just this week, eBay revealed it had contacted police after winning bidders
- complained they had not received the merchandise from a California man
- doing business on the site. Critics say scam artists sell and deliver
- merchandise on the site for a while, building up positive customer reviews,
- then defraud dozens of winning bidders in one swoop.
-
- EBay says it gets complaints from about one in every 25,000 transactions -
- a figure some say is too high, given that it hosts auctions for millions of
- items daily.
-
- ``A large number of transactions occur on the eBay Web site," eBay said in
- its filing. ``As a result, the company believes that government regulators
- have received a substantial number of consumer complaints about the eBay
- Web site which, while small as a percentage of its total transactions, are
- large in aggregate numbers."
-
-
-
- SEC's Levitt Defends Internet Patrol Plan
-
-
- Responding to a rash of criticism from Congress and privacy hawks, the head
- of the Securities and Exchange Commission defended a plan to automate its
- surveillance of the Internet to combat fraud, saying it only monitors
- materials already in the public domain.
-
- In a rare written statement issued on Wednesday, SEC Chairman Arthur Levitt
- said the agency has no intention of monitoring or intercepting private
- communications as some have suggested.
-
- The securities regulator is seeking proposals to purchase software
- programming that would search out key words on the Internet like ``get rich
- quick" and other phrases that are typically used in schemes to defraud
- investors.
-
- ``The SEC has never had any intention of intercepting or monitoring private
- transmissions, including conversations taking place in chat rooms or on
- e-mail, in the pursuit of Internet fraud," Levitt said.
-
- Two leaders of a Congressional panel said on Tuesday the automated system
- sought could violate the privacy of Americans. They demanded more details
- on the SEC's request for proposals and the basis of law the agency was
- using in the endeavor to monitor and stamp out online fraud.
-
- ``We are concerned that this project would unduly impinge upon the privacy
- rights of ordinary Americans who have nothing to do with securities
- fraud," said Rep. Michael Oxley, an Ohio Republican and chairman of the
- House Commerce subcommittee on finance, and the panel's ranking Democrat,
- Edolphus Towns of New York, in an April 4 letter to Levitt.
-
- Still, the SEC chief defended the plan vigorously, contending that it would
- not expand the agency's patrol of the Internet but instead free up SEC
- attorneys to pursue cases instead of surfing the Web for wrongdoing.
-
- ``This is no different, in both manner and scope, than finding a newspaper
- article with the aid of a tool that helps you do so more quickly and
- exactly," Levitt said.
-
- Approximately 153 cases involving online fraud have been brought by the
- commission since late 1994, mostly in the last two years, including cases
- involving stock touting and the posting of false press releases on the
- Internet in an attempt to drive up or hurt a company's stock price.
-
- ``The request for proposals was carefully drafted to require that the
- contractor chosen respect the privacy of non-public communications
- conducted over the Internet," Levitt said in the statement.
-
- The request would bar the contractor from using a system that would access
- private materials on the Internet, he said.
-
- An official from the watchdog American Civil Liberties Union, who had
- criticized the plan as possibly violating the right to free speech as well
- as being an illegal search and seizure, said that Levitt's comments were
- ``somewhat reassuring" but the ``devil is always in the details."
-
- ``I think there are still significant questions about whether or not the
- SEC or any federal agency can collect information about private individuals
- who are engaging in lawful conduct," said Barry Steinhardt, the ACLU's
- associate director.
-
- In a letter sent to Levitt on Tuesday, Steinhardt said "Americans should
- be able to continue to use that tool without fear of government monitoring
- of lawful speech."
-
- He requested a meeting with the SEC and possibly Levitt to discuss the
- plan.
-
- A spokeswoman for Rep. Oxley had no immediate comment while a spokesman for
- Rep. Towns declined to comment.
-
-
-
- Privacy Threatened by High-Tech Lifestyle
-
-
- Forget any notions that Big Brother is after your personal information --
- high-tech fridges and mobile phones are more likely culprits, a high-tech
- security firm executive warned a computer and privacy conference on
- Wednesday.
-
- As consumers embrace new technology, growing pools of personal data ranging
- from phone records to shopping habits are freely available on the Internet,
- said Austin Hill, president and co-founder of Zero-Knowledge Systems Inc.
-
- New Internet-enabled devices, such as fridges designed to work with the Web
- for grocery shopping and mobile phone networks that constantly track
- subscribers, are adding to the problem, he said at the tenth annual
- Computers, Freedom and Privacy conference in Toronto.
-
- ``I don't want to live in a world where every single one of my moves is
- tracked because I happen to want a cell phone or I happen to enjoy getting
- directions from my car," he said.
-
- ``Will I get free McDonald's if I leave a DNA sample at the door?"
-
- To stem that flood of data, a combination of technology, industry
- self-regulation and government policy must build better dikes for privacy
- protection, he told reporters following his speech.
-
- Canada, which passed a long-awaited privacy bill late on Tuesday, will
- force federally-regulated companies to get consumer consent before
- supplying personal information to a third party.
-
- While that betters the United States -- which has no such legislation --
- Canadian shoppers are still exposed because many buy goods on the Internet
- from U.S. companies.
-
- ``No piece of legislation is perfect," Hill said. ``I think it's a
- starting point."
-
- Governments increasingly are adopting policies to protect consumer data,
- said Ontario Information and Privacy Commission Ann Cavoukian in an
- interview. Hong Kong and New Zealand recently introduced such policies and
- Australia is expected to introduce privacy legislation next week, she
- added.
-
- ``Increasingly the U.S. is being pressured to do something," she said.
-
- But the biggest threat to privacy may lie with the private sector, said
- Hill. There is no incentive for corporations to ensure their technology
- does not invade individual privacy.
-
- ``We need to start holding companies accountable," he said.
-
- ``Privacy will be one of the most impertant issues of the next century -- I
- believe it will be to the future what civil rights and environmentalism
- were to this century."
-
- Hill, whose Montreal, Quebec-based company sells a service that veils an
- Internet surfer in a secret pseudonym, is optimistic despite abundant
- examples of information abuse.
-
- A U.S. news magazine program was able to compile a family's phone and
- medical records, credit applications, social security numbers and work
- records for a few hundred dollars, Hill said.
-
- ``It's a mess out there," he said. ``It will be something that we have to
- fight for at every step of the way."
-
-
-
- Mylackey.com Does All Your Annoying Errands
-
-
- Who wants to clean the fish tank and pick up the dry cleaning on a sunny
- Saturday morning? Now there's Mylackey.com to do all the drudge work in
- your life.
-
- The year-old Seattle-based company, which provides a range of services on
- one Web site, plans to expand into seven more cities by the end of the
- year.
-
- "We'll do anything a customer asks," chief executive officer Brian
- McGarvey said.
-
- He isn't kidding.
-
- When McGarvey ticks off a list of services his company provides, it sounds
- like a fraternity initiation.
-
- "Tomorrow we're sending someone to cut firewood," McGarvey said flatly.
- "We've been asked to pick up dog poop, and even to provide escort
- service--that one we turned down. We'll do anything that's legal."
-
- On Mylackey.com, consumers can find someone to detail their car ($75),
- repair their snowboard ($30) or walk their dog--individually or with a
- pack--($18-$38 for up to 2 hours). Among its most popular offerings are
- lackeys who run errands for $40 for a 2-hour period.
-
- There's another company offering personal services online--Concierge
- Confidant in Denver--but the services area isn't fully developed on the
- Net, said Jupiter Communications analyst Ken Cassar. That's because of the
- complex logistical problems and the high costs of building infrastructure
- and a brand name, he said.
-
- Unlike online retailers, which ship products from a central warehouse,
- service providers "need to build a base of operations wherever they do
- business," Cassar said.
-
- Financial analyst Vernon Keenan of San Francisco-based Keenan Vision says
- there are few U.S. cities where a home-delivery business can be profitable
- and even fewer that will support a concierge service.
-
- "New York is the only one in the states," Keenan said. "That's the only
- city with a high enough concentration of fussy people willing to pay for a
- servant."
-
- At Mylackey, one challenge is finding a really good lackey, McGarvey said.
-
- McGarvey enlists established service providers, themselves business
- owners, and guarantees their work. McGarvey's contract with the masseuses,
- limousine drivers and truck drivers he employs stipulates that when they
- answer a Mylackey order, they are Mylackey employees.
-
- The company bonds and insures each worker and they arrive in a
- lemon-colored company van wearing a Mylackey uniform. In turn, they get a
- portion of each sale that is a bit smaller than if they had made the sale
- on their own.
-
- "I'm spending a lot on marketing and bringing in the customers," McGarvey
- said. "I'm worrying about all the headaches that come with running a
- business. They want to be with us because all they have to worry about is
- doing the kind of work they enjoy."
-
- McGarvey came up with the idea for Mylackey while complaining to a friend
- about how little time he had to pick up his dry cleaning. It started as an
- idea for an Internet dry-cleaning business and evolved from there.
-
- Because the contracted companies work at a discounted rate, Mylackey
- doesn't add a service charge. As a result, Mylackey charges the going
- rates for common services such as dry cleaning, tailoring or house
- cleaning services, McGarvey said.
-
- "Whether these companies succeed or not depends on how much they have
- spend to market themselves," said Jupiter's Cassar. "If they need to spend
- $50 million a year to build their brand, then it's going to be rough."
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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