home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 2000-07-07 | 61.6 KB | 1,410 lines |
- Volume 2, Issue 27 Atari Online News, Etc. July 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
- Coming Soon:
- http://a1mag.b-squared.net
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphi.com/m/main.asp?sigdir=atari
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
- A-ONE #0227 07/07/00
-
- ~ AllAdvantage: No IPO! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Sony Refiles Suit!
- ~ Lara Croft Being Wooed ~ Intel Nixes Xeon Chip! ~ IE5 Goes Mac!
- ~ AOL Enhances E-Mail! ~ Interpol Needs Web Help ~ Teen 'Web Masters'
- ~ Web's USA Flavor Fades ~ DotComGuy Halfway Home ~ Summer Doldrums!
-
- -* Microsoft Limits Temp Staff! *-
- -* Astronauts' Lives Risked By Hacker? *-
- -* IE's Lead Over Netscape Grows With Update! *-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- What a terrific holiday week, weather-wise! It's been a great week,
- starting off with a nice weekend, an unfortunate day of work in-between the
- weekend and 4th of July, and a remaining short week at work. The Fourth was
- delightful here in Boston. Although I haven't attended the festivities on
- the Esplanade in many years due to the crowds, I do watch some of the
- activities on television. Another spectacular show this year. The day
- started off well with a barbecue at the home of one of my assistants. A
- great day all around. And now another weekend is upon us!
-
- This summer continues to be a slow period for news. Other than the usual
- and boring articles pertaining to mergers, ups and downs of the "dot-coms",
- and "junk" news - it's fairly uneventful lately. I mean you have to know
- it's a slow news week when one of the prominent "headlines" pertains to the
- fact that "DotComGuy" hasn't given up his vigil! Things can only go up from
- there!
-
- On the local and personal front, things are finally getting caught up. The
- gardens are in and finally doing well. The new lawn is taking shape nicely
- (no thanks to Joe!). And the pool is finally open, but I haven't taken the
- inaugural swim yet. I may get to relax this weekend? Nah, that will be the
- day!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- jmirando@portone.com
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I'm just finishing a week's worth of
- vacation, and I must say that it was completely unsatisfying. First of
- all, it included The Fourth of July "long weekend". Just knowing that I
- would have gotten the day off anyway kind of soured it for me. Second
- of all, I actually have three weeks worth of vacation, but was asked to
- only take one week now. I can remember a time when one week off was
- more than enough for me. Not any more. The modern age of employer/employee
- relations has come to stay, and I'll take all I can get, thank you very
- much.
-
- Okay, on to other things. The TEAM ATARI SETI@home search group is
- quickly approaching 21 years of contributed CPU time with only 38 of us
- participating. If you're interested, check out the main SETI@home site
- at http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu and the TEAM ATARI site at
- http://setiathome.ssl.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/cgi?cmd=team_lookup&name=team+atari .
- If there's any chance at all that you could put your PC or Mac to work
- in its idle time, sign up and join the team.
-
- Next subject. I found an interesting site while perusing the net the
- other day. Some of you may have seen this or heard about it already,
- but there's a web page out there dedicated to the "iTari" game system,
- a copy of the Atari 2600 in a translucent case a' la iMac. The writing
- is quite amusing without being offensive, and the pictures of the
- system look pretty good. I think I'll wait to place my order though.<g>
- There are also several other fun "products" that you can view by
- clicking on the "The AAlgar Corporation" link down at the bottom of the
- page. Take a look and check it out:
- http://www.aalgar.com/aalcorp/062900/
-
- I did use about two hours of my spare time this week to watch CONTACT
- with Jodie Foster and Matthew McConaughey again. While the search for
- extraterrestrial intelligence doesn't quite happen like they showed it
- in the movie, it DOES tend to fire the imagination. What is actually
- out there, and will we ever get to see it? I don't know, and I don't
- know. When we were visiting the moon on a fairly regular basis, I
- didn't think it would be long until we were setting foot on Mars and
- learning more about our own planet because of it. But after we got
- bored with our trips to the moon... and the other participants in the
- cold war never got there at all... we just stopped. Sure, we've got
- satellites all over the place and a spiffy space-based telescope that
- can see farther away, and therefore farther back in time, than ever
- before, but it's not the same as having a human being there on the
- spot. NASA, like a good portion of today's society, has gotten into the
- habit of doing things "virtually". I know it's not fashionable to say
- so these days, but it just ain't the same. "Cheaper, Faster, Better"
- isn't always "better".
-
- It kind of reminds me of what happened with Atari. Instead of actually
- progressing and evolving, they simply lowered the price on what they
- already had. The original "virtual advancement".
-
- Well, let's get to the UseNet stuff...
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
- Marlin Bates asks for help with a Mega STE:
-
- "I just recently re-acquired a Mega STe (I had one eons ago) and have a
- few questions! (It is like learning a new language!)
-
- The bundle I got was VERY generously supplied with all of my software
- wants (I should think!) so I have a few hardware questions:
-
- 1. Can the graphics on the Mega STe be enhanced in any way? Any
- expansion boards, etc?
-
- 2. Is there any easy way to get an Epson 600 Printer to work with
- this? It has a parallel port, but I suspect it needs a driver or
- something similar."
-
- Daniel Dreibelbis tells Marlin:
-
- "There were a number of video boards available for the MegaSTe - it
- uses the same VME expansion slot as the TT. Two that come to mind are
- the ones that were made by Cyrel and the Crazy Dots board, I also
- recall a Nova card that uses the same slot. Mario Becroft, a young
- fellow out in New Zealand, is currently working on a new VME video card.
-
- For the printer, I have only one word: NVDI 5. It contains an
- excellent set of drivers for the Epsons."
-
- Marlin replies to Daniel:
-
- "Wow. I did not realize so many were available. Now comes the hard
- part: where does one find these boards?"
-
- Our old friend Hallvard Tangeraas adds:
-
- "I don't know about the other boards: my guess is that they're not made
- or sold any longer so you have to buy them second-hand (a good place to
- ask for stuff like this is in this exact group!).
-
- For Mario's board, you can check out his website for more information
- as well as contact information (not sure though if he has specific
- information for the graphic board yet):
-
- http://gem.win.co.nz/mario/hardware/ "
-
- Marlin now asks about sound:
-
- "Newly acquired Mega STe here and I can not seem to get Audio CDs to play
- correctly. I launch the AudioCD DA and it seems to play (access light
- and the prog display acts normal) BUT no sound comes out! Also, if I
- try to move the sound slider box on the app "up" it just pops back to
- the "0" position."
-
-
- Mark Bedingfield tells Marlin:
-
- "Plug the speakers into the front of the cdrom, you can make an adaptor
- using a couple of resistors to mix STE and CD audio."
-
- Marlin replies to Mark:
-
- "Hmm, well, this sounds interesting and I appreciate the answer, but I am
- still curious as to what the problem is with my system (if any). I mean
- why am I not able to get the music on the STe, it seems like I should.
- OR, is that just it, I can not?
-
- There is a button on the accessory that says "record" so I am assuming
- that music can get in to the STe."
-
- Lyndon Amsdon tells Marlin:
-
- "I have an IDE cd-rom (you probably have SCSI) and AFAIK when you play
- an audio CD using the controls on the front of the CDROM or software
- the audio doesn't get transferred over the IDE/SCSI cables, it comes
- from the audio port.
-
- The STe motherboard hasn't got a socket for audio like PC soundcards.
- You can either :
-
- (1) Use the headphones connected to the headphone socket on the front
- of the CDROM.
-
- (2) Use the RCAs on the back of the CDROM connected to a amplifier.
- (if you have them)
-
- (3) Make a nice little circuit to send the audio into the STe
- motherboard. This has the advantage of controlling the Treble, Bass
- and volume of the CD audio.
-
- Yes, you can record parts of the CD (or all of it!) to the hard drive.
- Then play it of the hard drive. Watch out as it can eat up a lot of
- hard drive space! (600mb at top quality!)"
-
- Oh what the heck. Let's turn this into a "Marlin Asks" column. He's
- asking some good questions... and getting some good answers.
-
- He now turns his gaze to STinG and CAB:
-
- "I will apologize in advance for all of my questions over the next few
- days, months, years (!)
-
- As some of you might know by now, I have re-acquired a Mega STe. It
- came with plenty of software and, well, I need the short course in all
- of this new stuff!
-
- Question one: How do I get on the net with the STe? I seem to have
- something called STing installed as well as CAB. I know that CAB is a
- web browser, but how do I get the ST hooked up over a PPP/Slip
- connection?
-
- Question Two: Can the STe do 57k via modem? Curious about that."
-
- Greg Goodwin tells Marlin:
-
- ">Question one: How do I get on the net with the STe
- 1) Connect a modem to one of the serial ports (the modem port
- is the most commonly used). I'm not really sure of the MegaSTEs
- maximum speed. Most ST models top out at 19200, while the
- Falcon and TT can in theory go to 115K or 230K (for some reason,
- my Falcon is unreliable above 56K).
- 2) Make sure you have HSMODEM7 in the auto folder. HSMODEM7 is
- a suite of programs, with strange names like SCC.PRG. You only
- need the two or three applicable to your computer.
- Unfortunately, I can't remember the exact setup from memory and
- my Falcon is at home. FWIW, HSMODEM fixes some poor code in TOS
- relating to modem speeds above 9600.
- 3) Set up and run STing. This is done by placing STING.PRG and
- STING.INF in the auto folder (STINg.INF is an ASCII file telling
- the computer where to find the rest of the STING package) and
- SERIAL.CPX and STING.CPX in the CPX folder. The other two CPXs
- are not needed. Upon running DIALER.PRG, you will be able to
- tell STing about your ISP and configure it. (You can also hand
- edit the ASCII files DEFAULT.CFG and DIAL.SCR, but you do not
- have to). This can get a bit tricky, so feel free to ask for
- help.
- 4) Finally, run CAB. You will need an overlay (CAB.OVL) from
- Dan Ackerman's web site [is Oliver still updating his?]
-
- Some things to note....
-
- First, get HSMODEM running. It has to be before STing in the
- auto folder since it configures the serial port!
-
- Secondly, get STing running. STing has tools (like Ping) that
- let you get the bugs out. Until STing is running smoothly,
- there is no point in trying to run an application. Remember,
- STing actually does the work of communicating over the internet,
- even if it doesn't do anything with the data other than
- transport it.
-
- Finally, CAB (or any other STing compatible program) takes the
- data from STing and displays it. It then gives data back to
- STing for sending over the net. Worry about this last.
-
- I know this sounds like a mess, but it really isn't that bad
- provided you take the time to read all the instructions and do
- one step at a time."
-
- Derryck Croker adds a very good bit of advice:
-
- "Nicholas Bales' FAQ should answer many of your questions,
- http://bales.online.fr/atari "
-
- Matthew Simpson-Morgan asks and oldie but a goodie:
-
- "I've found some clock programs for ST in the .acc format, but I don't
- know how to run them so they integrate with the programs I use; also, I
- don't know where to find them once a program is running - ie, on the
- menu etc. I have a Mega ST4, and it has 2 slots for backup batteries,
- which I was told keeps the clock time... n.ow, if I can just get a clock
- to load with my Cubase etc. I recently discovered the auto-folder idea
- (I only have floppies, no hard drive), but I know .acc files load
- differently."
-
- Steve Stuppple tells Matthew:
-
- "Programs/files with the .ACC extension are 'Desktop Accessories', they
- load in on boot-up, or resolution change, and sit their waiting for
- something to do.
-
- They cover a wide variety of applications:
-
- Fastcopy is a disk copier
- Harlekin is a bit of everything
-
- You could call it a crude multi-tasking.
-
- On my machine I have several, including the CPX control panel which is
- an extension of the accessory idea.
-
- At default, unless you've got a program in your AUTO folder to alter it,
- the computer look in the ROOT directory of the boot drive, in your case
- drive A, for any .acc files. It then attempts to load them in, IN the
- order they are in the directory NOT as you see them when you open the
- disk.
-
- Every now and again you will come across a couple of acc's that don't
- like each other and case the machine to bomb out! So if you want to play
- around with some, bear this in mind. 99% are OK with each other.
-
- If you do keep bombing out on bootup, and it boots fine without acc's,
- try eliminating a program 1 by 1, or change the order they load in!
-
- I mentioned that they come in all types of applications, well they also
- come as novelty items: a cat running after the mouse cursor, eyes
- following you around, and one called MITES; this doesn't show up in the
- menu (I think) but you see like pixels, sorry mites, on screen eating
- the image!!!
-
- > also, I
- >don't know where to find them once a program is running - ie, on the
- >menu etc.
-
- Some a totally invisible, but MOST are there on the menu bar on the top
- left, in the same menu that gives you the TOS copyright stuff.
-
- Underneath the info are 6 space for up to 6 .acc programs. There are
- program that help you extend that.
-
- >I have a Mega ST4, and it has 2 slots for backup batteries,
- >which I was told keeps the clock time....
-
- You can set the time using Atari's Control Panel, yes it's an .ACC
- program:) If you have a language disk, it should be on it. This allows
- you to customise some of the Desktop to your liking: Colour, mouse
- speed, keyboard, printer etc...
-
- There is 2 types of control panel, one you can change your serial port
- aspects and one you can't, in which case there will be another ACC
- program on the language disk.
-
- > now, if I can just get a clock
- >to load with my Cubase etc.
-
- I don't quite understand the question!!! If you are after a clock, as in
- clock program that shows you the ACTUAL time, then look for something
- called clock.acc.
-
- > I recently discovered the auto-folder idea
- >(I only have floppies, no hard drive), but I know .acc files load
- >differently. Would appreciate some help!
-
- As you are a floppy user, if you've got only one drive. Create yourself
- a small RAM disk and use it as a second drive, remember to save the data
- before you switch off.
-
- If you have a 4 meg machine, you can easily create a 2 meg RAM disk, and
- use it as a hard drive. I use to do this before I got my hands on hard
- drive.
-
- And yes, these come ACC's as well. The most novel is DC software's RAM-
- IT! (I hope I've got the right name! I'll be shot otherwise!) This
- actually treats the RAM disk as a physical disk, giving it track and
- sectors!!! It's the only one I've seen that does this, great if you
- want to make up a 720k disk in memory without having to mess around
- writing to floppy etc."
-
- Tim Conrardy posts this interesting bit of info about 720 Kbyte disks
- and Windows:
-
- "Recently on the Atari-Midi mailing list there has been a thread going
- about reading/writing 720K discs on Win 98. It seemed that some people
- were having no problems with Win 95, while others were having problems
- with Win 98. One of our members (Donald Skaggs)performed some
- experiments and below are his conclusions. Looks like good research.
-
- Nicholas (Bales): If you are reading this, perhaps this should be added
- to the Atari Faq as this is a recent Bug that has been an issue lately.
-
- *********************************************************
- Tim's Atari Midi World http://atari.atlantis-bbs.com
- Mirror Site: http://sites.netscape.net/timconrardy/index.htm
- Atari-Midi Mailing List:http://www.egroups.com/group/atari-midi
- _______________________________________________________________
-
-
- Can't read or write 720K disks between the PC and ATARI? Get Blue screen
- with error messages on the PC and can't read files on the ATARI?
-
- Most likely a program is interfering with this function in Windows or
- the disk is not formatted for DOS on TOS 1.0/1.02. as long names on
- Windows are unreadable on the ATARI.
-
- How do you know if you have TOS 1.0/1.02? Hit CNTRL/ALT/DEL together and
- let go. Does the ATARI reboot? NO? Well then you have TOS 1.0/1.02.
- These early TOS versions do not format for DOS on their own but it can
- be done with a program called Maxifile--and others.
-
- Now that you have a DOS formatted 720K disk you find Windows gets a ton
- of errors when you try to read or write from the 720K disk. Now what?
-
- You have two options:
-
- 1) Since the problem is MOST LIKELY NOT in Windows itself start
- uninstalling programs on the W9X machine until the bug goes away. Then
- get a version of the problem program that does not interfere with the
- 720K disk read/write operation. You can only experiment with that to
- see.
-
- 2) Start from scratch. Reformat your drive. Reload W9X and try
- Read/Write functions to 720K disks after each program install. Windows
- on it's own will most likely handle 720 ATARI/PC DOS disks fine.
- However there are programs that clobber that operation in W9X.----EZCD
- CREATOR DELUXE from Adaptec for one. Earlier versions worked fine with
- no interference with the 720K DOS disk read/write operation.
-
- Now that you have figured out what Windows program is clobbering your
- ATARI/PC 720K DOS disk operation then you find that that MIDI file (or
- other) copied to the DOS disk will not read on the ATARI.What's the deal
- with this?
-
- Long names (any file name greater than wxyzwxyz.xyz i.e eight
- characters in the prefix and three characters in the suffix) are
- unrecognised on the ATARI (at least on the early versions of TOS and
- probably later versions).Even if you rewrite the name of the PC file
- to the eight character ATARI prefix limit on either the PC or ATARI the
- PC has written garbage to the disk and the file will be unreadable on
- the ATARI. Bummer.
-
- You can always read/write 720K ATARI/PC DOS disks in Windows SAFE MODE
- (F8 during W9X bootup)."
-
- Lyndon Amsdon tells Tim:
-
- "Thats quite interesting. I've just bought an old 386 laptop and
- have been playing around with it. I download programs etc from
- Atari with the internet connection then take it to PC using floppy
- disks.
-
- One file was 760 something kilobytes so I formatted the disk on the ST
- to 82 tracks and 10 sectors. TOS works fine with this format
- (usually!) but Windows 3.1 came up with "disk is not formatted".
-
- I found exiting Windows then using DOS was a lot more stable and didn't
- care too much about type of format.
- You'll have to learn those good old DOS commands again but it works
- for me!"
-
- Edward Baiz asks a good question about digital cameras:
-
- "I was just wondering and would like an opinion. Which is the best kind
- or digital camera, the one that puts the pictures on a 3.5 inch disk
- or else the ones that have a cable and need to be hooked up to the
- computer so that images can be transferred?"
-
- I'll save my opinion until last and see if anyone else comes up
- with the same reasoning. In the meantime, Steve Hammond tells Edward:
-
- "The best are the ones that use memory cards. These can hold in excess
- of 64 mb (depending on type). Keep in mind that for a file that will
- produce a decent 4x6 or 5x7 inch print you are going to need about a
- 3 to 4 mb uncompressed image file (tif). Cameras that use a floppy
- are normally only 640x480 resolution, useful for 72 dpi screen
- resolution only. If they do produce a higher resolution you are not
- going to get very many images on a 3.5 floppy even when saved as jpegs
- (and data transfer to the floppy is much slower than to the memory
- cards)."
-
- Simon Osborne adds:
-
- "Get a camera that can connect to a computer via Serial port, as I think
- the Atari programs only support that method of transport."
-
- Daniel Dreibelbis adds this interesting tidbit:
-
- "Actually, since he has a Hades, there's another option that he has
- open to him - SCSI. According to Dave Barkin, Microtek makes a PCMCIA
- card reader device that hooks up via SCSI, and low and behold, an Atari
- equipped with SCSI and HD Driver installed will recognize that device
- and allow both reading AND writing to the card. Which means that it
- opens up the number of cameras he can use.
-
- I'm actually quite excited about digital cameras, and I'm now
- noticing that the prices have been dropping very rapidly as of late - my
- local Business Depot has new Kodak and HP cameras staring at $450 CDN .
-
- Now I think one of the essential bits of kit that'll be needed for
- the Milan II will be digital camera drivers...."
-
- Ken Springer puts his thoughts into the mix:
-
- "I don't know about picture quality, but if all I had was Atari
- computers, I'd get the one that uses the disks for a couple of reasons.
- 1) They save in a standard format, such as TIFF or JPG, which means you
- can pop them in any computer anywhere anytime. None of the memory
- saving cameras can dump to the Atari platform AFAIK. There used to be a
- (French?) company that made a cable for connecting some of the early
- CASIO models, but I believe they are no longer around. 2) As long as
- you take extra floppies, you can take pictures until the batteries are
- dead. <G>
-
- It seems most cameras have different resolutions you can choose from, so
- the number of pictures you can take depend on the chosen resolution and
- memory/# of floppies. As the resolution abilities of the camera get
- better, the floppy versions will be limited by the storage ability of
- the floppy.
-
- Sony is the only floppy camera(s) that I know of, and they tend to be
- higher priced, too. There's more stuff to them because of the floppy
- business. Now that I've also got a Windows machine in addition to my
- Atari's, I don't know which type I'd get."
-
- Well, John Garone pegged my opinions, almost to the letter:
-
- "I've opted for the Sony direct to disk only because I was'nt sure
- of the compatibility with PCM cards or direct connections to my Falcon!
- (not much help for you there!). The memory cards should be faster
- copying in the camera, hold more pics and there are floppy memory
- card adapters for interface. But the direct to disk is stable and you'll
- have that floppy as back-up if not erased (usable till the floppy
- dies!)."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Tune in the next time around, same
- time, same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying
- when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Lara Croft Wooed!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Sony Re-files Suit Against Connectix!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Sony Refiles Patent Claims Against Connectix
-
-
- Connectix' declaration of victory in a recent patent dispute with Sony may
- be premature. Connectix announced on Thursday that Sony had filed a
- voluntary dismissal of a patent case involving Connectix' Virtual Game
- Station (VGS), a program that allows Mac users to play many games designed
- for Sony's PlayStation game console. However, Sony refiled the suit on
- Friday, telling Cnet that it was following the judge's advice to avoid
- "procedural issues that may have been appealable."
-
- Sony filed the case in February, charging that VGS infringed on 11
- PlayStation patents.
-
- A San Francisco court in May dismissed seven of Sony's nine claims in a
- separate lawsuit alleging that VGS violated its copyrights and trade
- secrets (see "Court dismisses most Sony claims against Connectix"). A
- hearing on the two remaining claims is scheduled for Sept. 1. Sony told
- Cnet that a hearing on the new patent claims has not been set.
-
- "While we recognize that Sony may still attempt to bring some of these
- claims back before the court at a later date, this represents the third
- victory in a row for Connectix in this case," said Connectix CEO Roy
- McDonald in a prepared statement on Thursday, before Sony refiled the
- case. "We hope that at some point Sony will recognize the merits of
- cooperating with us in giving added flexibility to consumers and fans of
- the PlayStation. It is time for them to withdraw entirely from their
- course of filing baseless litigation that the courts must dismiss."
-
-
-
- Sony-Connectix Bout Moves to Next Round
-
-
- A week after withdrawing, then refiling, a patent-infringement suit over
- Connectix's PlayStation emulator, Sony predicted the case will come to
- trial this fall.
-
- After last week's withdrawal and refiling of a patent-infringement suit,
- the multifaceted legal conflict between Sony Computer Entertainment
- America Inc. and Connectix Corp. seems to be back on track, and Sony told
- ZDNet News it expects the dispute to come to trial this fall.
-
- Last Thursday, Sony's lawyers pulled one of two outstanding lawsuits it
- had begun against Connectix in San Francisco Federal District Court, both
- centered on Connectix's Virtual Game Station, a software package that
- allows Apple Macintosh computers and Windows systems to run games designed
- for Sony's PlayStation game console.
-
- The patent-infringement case was withdrawn one day before Judge Charles
- Legge was to decide on Connectix's motion to dismiss, but Foster City,
- Calif.-based Sony refiled a revised version, containing six of the
- original's eleven charges, that evening.
-
- As a result of the refiling, the case was reassigned initially to a
- magistrate court in Oakland, Calif.; Sony is requesting that it be
- returned to Judge Legge's bench. If this request is granted, then the next
- step would be for Judge Legge to set a schedule for hearing evidence.
-
- But first he may have to decide on a renewed motion to dismiss. "It's
- likely we'll file another motion," Roy McDonald, president and CEO of San
- Mateo, Calif.-based Connectix. "It could happen in weeks," he added.
-
- However, James Gilliland, a partner at San Francisco's Townsend & Townsend
- & Crew and a lawyer for Sony said, "We're assuming the case is going to
- trial in the fall."
-
- This suit joins an ongoing intellectual-property suit Sony filed against
- Connectix in January 1999, only weeks after VGS first shipped for the Mac.
- This case is scheduled for a September hearing in which Judge Legge will
- decide whether or not it will go to a jury.
-
- That suit differs from the patent-infringement case in that it covers
- alleged issues of copyright infringement, trademark dilution and
- misappropriation of trade secrets. However, it also hinges on Sony's
- contention that the Virtual Game Station software offered insufficient
- protection against running pirated versions of PlayStation games,
- especially compared with the anti-piracy measures Sony claims are built
- into the game console's hardware.
-
- "Sony is doubtful that any software could provide adequate piracy
- protection," Gilliland said.
-
- Game piracy is of particular concern to Sony, since the company receives
- revenue from the sale of both Sony-branded games and through licensing of
- third-party developers.
-
- In February 1999, Sony sought a temporary restraining order on shipments
- of VGS but Judge Legge rejected the company's request. However, in April
- 1999, Legge did issue a preliminary injunction against Connectix that was
- based on the issues of copyright infringement and trademark dilution, but
- not the issue of trade secrets.
-
- As a result, Connectix suspended shipments of VGS, although copies of the
- product already in the channel remained available for sale.
-
- Almost a year later, in February 2000, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
- issued a "reverse and remand" order against the lower court's preliminary
- injunction.
-
- The appeals court said Connectix's development of VGS, which involved
- looking at but not copying (in a process called "reverse engineering")
- PlayStation code, was protected under the "fair use" principle and
- therefore not a violation of Sony's rights. Connectix resumed shipping the
- product along with updates.
-
- According to the court's decision, "Intermediate copies made and used by
- Connectix during the course of its reverse engineering of the Sony BIOS
- were protected fair use, necessary to permit Connectix to make its
- non-infringing Virtual Game Station function with PlayStation games."
-
- In the face of that decision, Sony filed a second suit against Connectix
- the next week, claiming that VGS represented 11 patent infringements.
- After last week's refiling, it remains in a preliminary state.
-
- In May, Judge Legge disallowed seven of the nine copyright-infringement,
- trademark-dilution and trade-secret complaints in the original suit. He
- stated in his motion that, based on the February findings of the Ninth
- Circuit Court, Sony would lose on the trademark and copyright claims. As a
- result, the case was whittled down to the issues of misappropriation of
- trade secrets and unfair competition on the part of Connectix.
-
- On June 30, Sony presented to Judge Legge the evidence it plans to present
- at the trial of this case, should it proceed to that phase.
-
- Current scheduling calls for Connectix to respond by August 15. On Sept.
- 1, Judge Legge will hold a hearing to determine whether or not the
- trade-secrets claim will go to a jury.
-
- Also on June 30, Sony petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court to review the
- Ninth Circuit Court's decision on copyright, hoping to reinstate the
- claims the Circuit Court dismissed.
-
- "Chances are always small that the Supreme Court will address any case,
- but this one addresses very important issues in software copyright law, so
- we're hopeful they will," Sony attorney Gilliland said.
-
-
-
- Lara Croft Creator Wooed by Infogrames
-
-
- Troubled British computer games company Eidos Plc., creator of computer
- heroine Lara Croft, is being wooed by French software group Infogrames
- Entertainment, industry sources said Tuesday.
-
- The sources said the companies were in talks for an all-share transaction
- that could result in Infogrames offering equivalent of 700 pence for each
- Eidos share.
-
- At this price Eidos would be valued at 720 million pounds ($1.09 billion)
- or 3.7 times its 1999 sales.
-
- Eidos has been scouting for a suitable suitor after sharp falls in its
- shares recently following two quick profit warnings in recent months,
- reflecting problems in adapting its software to the next generation of
- gaming platforms.
-
- Talks are, however, at a delicate stage and much depends on how the French
- management is able to deal with bringing on board the creative people at
- Eidos.
-
- However, if a succeeds it would create a $2.0 billion company and major
- force in Europe's burgeoning electronic entertainment industry, which is
- expected to witness a fast growth in the next few years on the back of
- growing popularity of the Internet.
-
- The sources said Infogrames, which has been talking to Eidos for the last
- 2-1/2 weeks, could well take another three weeks before it can formally
- announce a deal.
-
- Eidos shares closed sharply higher, touching an intra-day high of 570
- pence before closing at 534 pence, around nine percent above its previous
- closing price.
-
- The price is, however, a far cry from its over 12.70 pounds last December,
- when it was riding the crest of popularity for software-based games.
-
- The prospect of issuing fresh paper took its toll on Infogrames shares in
- Paris, which at one stage fell seven percent before closing around three
- percent lower at 24.50 euros.
-
- While analysts said Infogrames would benefit from Eidos' sport licenses,
- strong franchise in Lara Croft and a strong sales force in the UK, some
- were surprised with the price at which it was being negotiated.
-
- ``The premium is a bit high and Infogrames has never overpaid in the
- past," one analyst said.
-
- Antonin Baudry, analyst at ETC in Paris, said there were worries that
- Eidos would dilute its earnings.
-
- ``Infogrames is already busy dealing with its loss-making GT Interactive
- unit in the United States and if you add Eidos, this puts a lot on its
- plate. The Eidos news will penalize Infogrames's stock price in the short
- term," he said.
-
- Some observers also said that Infogrames has unnecessarily delayed a deal
- with Eidos and could have easily bought it cheaper two months ago, when it
- was trading at little over three pounds.
-
- The company's shares have underperformed the FTSE All Share Index by
- around 53 percent as Monday when it closed at 487 pence.
-
- Eidos is understood to have attracted attention for other firms as well
- but Infogrames was found to be a more appropriate fit than others.
-
- Analysts have speculated that software giant Microsoft and Electronic Arts
- Inc in the United States could have been interested in Eidos. The company
- is currently developing 10 of Sony Corp's PlayStation 2 titles and is
- working closely with Microsoft and Nintendo Co. Ltd. to support their new
- consoles to be released in late 2001.
-
- It has also secured worldwide publishing rights to Sony's PlayStation and
- PC versions of the animated feature film "Chicken Run," due out this
- summer.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Microsoft Limits Temporary Workers
-
-
- Saturday will mark the end of an era at Microsoft, when a new policy goes
- into effect that restricts the company's extensive use of temporary
- workers.
-
- Besieged by lawsuits and complaints, Microsoft is limiting the length of
- temporary workers' contracts to 365 days, and will further require that
- workers must take 100 days off between assignments.
-
- The policy was announced in February, giving temps time to find new jobs.
- More than a third of Microsoft's new hires in the past three years have
- been former temporary workers, according to company spokesman Dan Leach.
-
- For others, however, the new policy may mean forcing them to leave jobs
- for no reason other than the passage of a year's time.
-
- ``For those temps who didn't get full-time jobs, they're now out of a job
- for 100 days," said Marcus Courtney, co-founder of WashTech, a pro-union
- organization funded by the Communications Workers of America. ``They've
- done their jobs well, and many of these positions are truly permanent.
- Microsoft is just choosing to staff those jobs with temps."
-
- Courtney contends that temporary workers deserve the same benefits as
- full-time Microsoft workers. He notes that Microsoft approves the final
- hiring of each worker, and is more directly involved with performance and
- other issues than the temporary service agencies, which actually sign the
- workers' checks.
-
- WashTemp has about 250 members, a level that's remained steady since the
- group's inception in 1998. He said workers are afraid of retribution from
- Microsoft and other companies, though he said he knew of no workers who
- were disciplined for speaking out on labor issues.
-
- Temp workers themselves have mixed feelings. Many agree that temp workers
- at Microsoft are treated differently. Benefits come from the temp agency -
- the legal employer of the workers - and often fail to match Microsoft's
- generous benefits package for full-time employees.
-
- Temporary workers often make as much as the permanent workers and
- sometimes more, said another former temp who would only speak on condition
- of anonymity. She said she made as much as $80,000 in less than a year.
-
- ``It's a cash cow," said the ex-temp, who worked in Microsoft's online
- divisions and is now a full-time worker at another area technology
- company. ``I definitely got paid well, but when I left, I took a job for
- substantially less money so I could feel more like I belonged on a team."
-
- Of the 19,000 Microsoft employees in the Puget Sound area, anywhere from
- 5,000 to 6,000 are temporary workers, Leach said. Those hiring levels
- won't change, he added.
-
- ``We've made this change in response to criticism about all this," Leach
- said. ``I don't believe there's any kind of second-class citizenship here,
- but there are legitimate business reasons to differentiate between the
- two."
-
- Microsoft is currently battling a class-action suit brought by temporary
- workers who are seeking stock option benefits extended to full-time
- workers in similar positions.
-
-
-
- AOL/Netscape Hit With Privacy Lawsuit
-
-
- The suit alleges that Netscape's SmartDownload feature illegally monitors
- downloads of .exe and .zip files.
-
- New York class action attorneys are accusing America Online Inc.'s
- (NYSE:AOL - news) Netscape subsidiary of eavesdropping on consumers who
- download software through its network.
-
- The law firm of Abbey, Gardy & Squitieri has sued AOL in federal court in
- New York, claiming that Netscape Communications Inc.'s SmartDownload
- software illegally monitors downloads of .exe and .zip files.
-
- SmartDownload is a program that's usually installed by people downloading
- the Netscape browser. After installation, the service is automatically
- activated whenever a user downloads files from the Web. AOL acquired the
- software when it bought Netscape in November 1998.
-
- The suit seeks class action status and was filed on behalf of Christopher
- Specht, who runs several Web sites where people can download files.
-
- The suit claims that SmartDownload captures and transmits back to Netscape
- uniquely identifiable information when a person visits a Web site and
- downloads software.
-
- "Unbeknownst to the members of the Class, and without their authorization,
- defendants have been spying on their Internet activities," the suit says.
-
- That action, the suit claims, permits Netscape to create a profile of a
- customer's downloads.
-
- AOL was not immediately available for comment.
-
- The privacy violation claims could have ramifications for other disputes
- over who has the right to see what information people have downloaded. For
- example, the music industry has been eager to get the names and numbers of
- people it claims have illegally downloaded copyrighted music.
-
- AOL is currently the target of several class action suits. A Florida judge
- recently approved class action status in a suit accusing AOL of illegally
- charging hourly subscribers who were forced to view pop-up ads. AOL said
- it plans to appeal.
-
- A separate suit, filed in federal court in Tampa, alleges that the company
- failed to notify some customers that their calls were long distance and
- did not provide local-access numbers.
-
-
-
- Hacker Risked Astronauts' Lives
-
-
- A computer hacker put space shuttle astronauts' lives at risk by
- overloading NASA's communication system in 1997, the agency told the BBC in
- a program to be aired Monday.
-
- The hacker interfered with computer systems monitoring the heartbeat, pulse
- and medical conditions of the space shuttle crew as it docked with the
- Russian Mir space station, NASA inspector general Roberta Gross told the
- BBC program Panorama.
-
- ``We had an activity at a NASA center where a hacker was overloading our
- systems ... to such an extent that it interfered with communications
- between the NASA center, some medical communications and the astronauts
- aboard the shuttle," Gross said.
-
- Although NASA had backup communication systems, the incident ``shows the
- potential that hackers have for doing some real damage to NASA's mission
- and astronaut safety," she said.
-
- Panorama interviewed Gross for an investigation into how Internet and
- computer systems have become the vulnerable spots in the defenses of
- Western nations.
-
-
-
- Interpol Needs Help On Net Crimes
-
-
- Acknowledging international law enforcement's inability thus far to combat
- fast-moving Internet crime, Interpol is considering letting a Silicon
- Valley security company help it protect businesses from malicious hackers.
-
- If the partnership is reached, it would be the first time the international
- police agency has paired with a private company to fight Net crime,
- Interpol secretary general Raymond Kendall told AP.
-
- The company, AtomicTangerine of Menlo Park, Calif., has approached Kendall
- with an idea to create an "early warning system" that would help private
- sector businesses protect themselves from cyberattacks, he said. In turn,
- information gathered by private companies could be made available to
- Interpol, says AtomicTangerine, a consultancy that spun off from SRI
- International, formerly the Stanford Research Institute.
-
-
-
- IE's Lead Over Netscape Lengthens With New Version
-
-
- Microsoft this week has quietly made available for download the final
- domestic version of its Internet Explorer 5.5 browser and has released
- international versions as well.
-
- Although the domestic release is not yet official, Microsoft posted the
- point upgrade to its browser on its Windows Update site. It also released
- Chinese, German, Japanese and Korean versions of the browser.
-
- The browser has been available in "beta," or test, form since December,
- and the final version was released to software download and review sites
- including CNET Networks, parent company of News.com, last week.
-
- Features new to IE 5.5 include improvements in the speed and reliability
- of printing and a way to preview print jobs, Microsoft said at the time of
- its beta release. The company was not available for comment this morning.
-
- Under the hood, the browser has increased support for World Wide Web
- Consortium (W3C) standards, including Cascading Style Sheets 1 (CSS) and
- Synchronized Multimedia Integration Language (SMIL), as well as support
- for a Microsoft presentation technology known as Dynamic HTML (DHTML).
-
- The upcoming version of Microsoft's consumer operating system, code-named
- Millennium, includes IE 5.5. That product, also released to the review
- press last week, is set for general release Sept. 14.
-
- Microsoft is readying the final version of IE 5.5 as Netscape
- Communications tests version 6.0 of its competing browser. That numbering,
- however, may be confusing; Netscape's new browser, rebuilt from the ground
- up, has been in development so long that the company skipped the "5.0"
- designation altogether.
-
- Formerly known as "Communicator," Netscape 6.0 is scheduled for a second
- beta release in late August and a final "gold master" version in the late
- fall, AOL said today. AOL acquired Netscape in March of last year. AOL
- scotched the name "Communicator" for browser versions 6.0 and above,
- citing greater consumer recognition of the name "Netscape."
-
- With the new browser, Netscape catches up to Microsoft in some crucial
- respects. Like second-rung browser maker Opera Software, Netscape
- redesigned the version from scratch to provide a browser separable into
- discrete components, or modules. Microsoft's browser has long had that
- modular structure.
-
- W3C standards form another area of technological competition. Both
- Netscape, and most recently, Microsoft have come under fire from
- independent advocacy groups for not hewing closely enough to W3C
- recommendations. As a result of lax adherence to standards, Web authors
- have had to spend time testing--and in many cases rewriting--Web pages for
- the various browsers.
-
- Netscape, however, has won plaudits from those same advocates for its
- standards compliance with the underlying browser engine of its 6.0
- release.
-
- On the marketing front, Microsoft has been running away with the browser
- sector, continuing a trend that was partly responsible for the antitrust
- trial that threatens to bring the software maker under the government's
- anti-monopoly knife.
-
- A recent study found that 86 percent of Web surfers worldwide use IE. The
- glacial pace of Netscape's development, which has faced repeated delays,
- only aided Microsoft's rise.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Hacks IE 5.5 for Mac
-
-
- When Microsoft representatives tossed T-shirts to the crowd at the recent
- MacHack 2000 conference, some attendees threw them back. But no one
- appeared to return the MacHack CD, which includes the first beta version
- of Internet Explorer 5.5.
-
- New features in the beta--which Microsoft described as a "technology
- preview" that's "not reflective of the final product"--include extensible
- toolbars to which you can drag graphics from a Web page. The graphics - GIF,
- JPEG and PNG files--become buttons that can link to the image's URL or
- execute a JavaScript. Animated GIFs dragged to the bar continue to animate.
- By modifying the XML code that configures the toolbar, you can add your own
- URLs or define four states for each button: enabled, disabled, rollover and
- depressed.
-
- Another new feature gives you more flexibility when opening links in new
- windows. IE 5.0 lets you open a new window in front of the current one by
- command-clicking on a link. IE 5.5 adds the ability to open a new window
- that appears behind the current one by command-shift-clicking on the link.
-
- A new Type-select navigation feature lets you use the keyboard to move
- among links on a Web page. As you begin typing, the browser places a focus
- ring around the text or graphic link that most closely matches your
- keystrokes. When you press Return, the browser goes to the selected link.
-
- The beta also includes a revamped version of the Tasman rendering engine,
- which was introduced in IE 5. Microsoft said the new version offers
- "significant improvements" in performance, stability and
- standards-compliance when rendering CSS 1, CSS2, HTML 4, JavaScript and
- XML pages.
-
- Unlike most of the hacks presented at the conference, IE 5.5 beta 1 does
- not include source code.
-
- The company said that the beta preview is not Carbon compliant. Microsoft
- has developed a Carbonized version of IE 5.0 that was included on the Mac
- OS X Developer Preview 4 CD distributed to attendees at Apple's Worldwide
- Developers Conference in May (see "A bridge made of Carbon").
-
- The MacHack CD, which includes 85 hacks as well as papers from the
- conference, is available for $19.95 (plus shipping) through the Mindvision
- online store. You can also purchase the MacHack 1999 CD, now dubbed the
- MacHack Historical CD, for the same price, or buy both for $34.95.
-
-
-
- Intel Shelves 800-MHz Xeon Chip
-
-
- Intel has canceled plans for high-end versions of its 800-MHz Xeon
- processor, saying computer makers didn't want the chip.
-
- The Xeon is Intel's high-end version of its Pentium III. The most
- expensive Xeons come with 1MB or 2MB of high-speed cache memory built into
- the chip itself.
-
- Intel released 700-MHz versions of these large-cache Xeons in May but
- decided to skip the 800-MHz version, company spokesman Otto Pijpker said
- today.
-
- Intel customers such as Compaq Computer "asked us to reduce the pace of
- large-cache processor introductions," Pijpker said. The move had nothing
- to do with Intel's ability to make the chips, he said.
-
- Compaq spokesman Steve Thieme concurred.
-
- "Our customers are looking for less frequent updates with larger
- incremental gains," he said. "We certainly relay our customer requirements
- to Intel."
-
- Indeed, computer makers have a lot of work to do to keep up with Intel's
- upcoming high-end chip launches for server computers, said Insight 64
- analyst Nathan Brookwood.
-
- The Itanium chip, the first in a new family of higher-powered 64-bit chips
- from Intel, will launch in the next few months at speed of 800 MHz, with
- Level 3 cache of 2MB and 4MB, Pijpker said.
-
- Foster, a new update to the existing 32-bit chip line and successor to
- Xeon, will debut in the first quarter of 2001 at speeds greater than 1
- GHz, Pijpker added.
-
- But even without those new lines, just keeping up with the existing
- Cascades line of current Pentium III and Xeon chips is difficult,
- Brookwood said.
-
- "Every time Intel comes out with a new speed bump in the current Cascades
- line, these guys have to stop and qualify not only uniprocessor models,
- but dual-processor, four-way, eight-way...None of those qualifications is
- easy work."
-
- In an effort to adjust to the different demands of higher-end marketplace,
- Intel has been trying to ease back on how fast new chips come out.
-
- "For a while we tried really hard to keep up with the desktop space. But
- the customer feedback was that, in general, they weren't going to
- introduce servers at the same rate they introduce new PCs," Pijpker said.
-
-
-
- AllAdvantage Nixes Pending IPO
-
-
- AllAdvantage, an incentive-to-surf start-up, has pulled the plug on its
- plans to go public.
-
- The Hayward, Calif.-based company filed a request for withdrawal of its
- S-1 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday, citing
- adverse market conditions.
-
- The 15-month-old company, which pays members to surf the Web in exchange
- for viewing ads, filed to sell 15 million shares to the public for between
- $8 and $10 in early February, according to its S-1 filing. But since that
- time, the market for dot-coms has taken a beating.
-
- Public companies that target advertising to Net users haven't escaped the
- market's malcontent. Shares of ad networks such as DoubleClick and Engage
- have fallen 70 percent to 80 percent from their all-time highs. That
- doesn't bode well for AllAdvantage, which doesn't have a clear-cut path to
- profitability.
-
- "We incurred net losses of $37.1 million from inception, March 24, 1999,
- through December 31, 1999 and $65.6 million for the three months ended
- March 31, 2000. We expect to continue to incur operating losses for the
- foreseeable future," stated an amended filing from June 2.
-
- "Our revenues may never exceed our expenses, and we may never achieve
- profitability," the filing stated.
-
- AllAdvantage's business model has been called into question because its
- member costs have exceeded its revenues. According to a filing in early
- June, the company paid $32.7 million to members from December to March,
- but made only $9.1 million for the same period.
-
- To control the exorbitant costs associated with its business, in June
- AllAdvantage slashed the number of hours it will pay members to surf,
- causing some members to scoff. About 7 million people worldwide are
- registered with AllAdvantage, and about 2 million actually use the
- program, according to a company spokesman.
-
-
-
- AOL Enhances Its E-Mail to Protect Users From Scams
-
-
- America Online, concerned about Internet ``scams," has begun to identify
- genuine e-mail from the Internet service provider with added graphics or
- color to help its 23 million users easily identify e-mail that is truly
- being sent by AOL.
-
- The Internet services giant began the feature, which is designed to help
- its subscribers avoid ``being spoofed or caught in fraudulent activity,"
- last week. Official AOL mail includes communications from AOL Chairman
- Steve Case, welcome letters and any e-mail from screen names
- ``AOLYouveGotPics" and ``AOL Official Mail."
-
- ``The most important thing driving Official Mail is to help our members
- distinguish mail sent from AOL from (mail sent) by those looking to scam
- our members," said Tricia Primrose, AOL spokeswoman, adding that the
- company has seen scams that ask users for credit card information or
- passwords under the guise of being AOL.
-
- E-mails sent by AOL will be identified with a blue icon in the new mail
- listbox, a blue border around the mail or an official AOL seal in the
- lower left-hand corner of the mail form.
-
- The feature is not in response to any recent hacker attacks, Primrose
- said, adding that it has been in development for a while. Last month, AOL
- said vandals had broken into its service and gained access to an
- undisclosed number of member accounts.
-
- Analysts said larger Internet service providers have more need for this
- type of protection than smaller players, whose e-mail correspondences do
- not leave their network.
-
- ``It isn't a necessary assurance of security in and of itself," said
- Frank Prince, an analyst at Forrester Research. "Once (users) are geared
- to an idea that this color scheme means it is safe, if someone can
- replicate it, they have made it worse. That is the risk of these sorts of
- iconic solutions."
-
- However, he added that public sentiment is clearly demanding that ISPs of
- all sizes and shapes do their best to protect users from Internet
- exploitation.
-
-
-
- DotComGuy Still Won't Leave House
-
-
- DotComGuy has passed the halfway mark without losing it.
-
- The 26-year-old computer systems manager, who legally changed his name to
- reflect his online life, rented a Dallas town house six months ago and
- volunteered to live off e-commerce for a year, never to venture past his
- tiny backyard.
-
- Since Jan. 1, he's bought his necessities and luxuries exclusively
- online.
-
- DotComGuy's home is a far cry from the empty, two-story domicile he strode
- into with nothing but a laptop computer and an Internet connection. Now, by
- any yuppie yardstick, his ducks are clearly in a row - the ``Dotcompound"
- has a workout room, postmodern furniture, pets and gourmet food.
-
- The effort has corporate sponsorship from online interests that hope
- DotComGuy's life - and its dependence on the Internet - will encourage
- others to use cyberspace for transactions normally reserved for the
- storefront.
-
- Similar experiments have been undertaken before - the TV program ``Good
- Morning America" housed two New Yorkers in an ``e-cave" for a week last
- year with a refrigerator, a $500 daily stipend, and Web access - but
- DotComGuy has vowed to live off the Internet longer than anyone else so
- far.
-
- Two dozen cameras provide video of DotComGuy's almost every move. His
- only sanctuary from the cameras is a bathroom. The entire operation is
- run from an adjoining town home, where a bank of computers run by the
- DotComGuy team arrange the broadcast on the Internet at
- www.dotcomguy.com.
-
- DotComGuy spends a good part of his day doing mundane things, and one
- can't help but notice the self-consciousness of someone under constant
- surveillance. Even the dog - DotComDog - seems excruciatingly self-aware.
- DotComGuy has developed a peculiar habit: announcing thoughts that would
- normally be internalized by others.
-
- ``I've gotten better at it, though I'm not as good as I probably should
- be," says the former Mitch Maddox. ``I need to do it more often so
- people know what's going on - I've invited them into my home and I need
- to at least be a courteous host and tell them what's going through my
- mind."
-
- DotComGuy prepares meals with food delivered by online grocers. He says
- he doesn't miss stepping out into the world to shop for food.
-
- ``With groceries, people say 'well, you're isolating yourself, you're not
- interacting with people.' Truly, the last time you went to the grocery
- store, was your interaction with people of any quality?" he asks. ``You
- were in a hurry, you didn't want to talk to anybody, you didn't want to
- wait in line, and you were probably in an express line."
-
- So far, the location of DotComGuy's house has been kept secret, mainly
- for his security, spokeswoman Stephanie Germeraad says.
-
- Patrick Keane, a senior analyst at Jupiter Communications, a New
- York-based research firm that studies Internet commerce, says the whole
- concept of DotComGuy seems like ``Internet 1997" to him. ``The novelty
- is gone, the shock value nonexistent," he said. ``If I'm an advertiser,
- there are a lot better places to place my branding message."
-
- But the site, which has banner ads from companies like United Parcel
- Service, has more than 11/2 million hits a day, Germeraad said, though
- that number is lower than when the site first started. It seems a core
- group of users log on to see what DotComGuy is up to a regular basis and
- the average time per session is 27 minutes.
-
- If anything, the DotComGuy experiment sheds more light on the life of a
- homebound bachelor.
-
- ``We know his habits pretty well, his demeanor, his personality,"
- Germeraad said. ``But he fools us every now and then. Sometimes we'll
- think we know what he's going to say or do, and he totally comes at us
- from left field."
-
- Such interest of others' lives is really nothing new, according to social
- psychology professor Frank T. McAndrew at Knox College in Galesburg, Ill.
-
- ``All these things, like MTV's ``Real World" and the new ``Survivor"
- program, show how he have sort of an innate interest in the goings on of
- other people's personal lives," McAndrew said. ``It's so we've evolved
- to know that other people are monitoring us all the time - for any little
- faux pas."
-
- DotComGuy says his most embarrassing moment has been a tripping on the
- stairs and sitting on a chair that broke. He shrugs them off as one-time
- occurrences.
-
- Now it's dinnertime.
-
- ``What's today's date?" he asks as he dates a check for a pizza he just
- ordered online, going between the computer mouse and the checkbook. ``I
- don't keep track of the days," he says, shifting in his chair.
-
- ``I don't concern myself with it because, if I did, then I'd go nuts!"
-
-
-
- Americans Rule the Web - For Now
-
-
- Say "hello" to a World Wide Web that is truly that. From content to
- culture, the Internet - born of American government need - is rapidly
- losing its U.S. flavor as more computer users connect from abroad.
-
- Some U.S.-based search directories now accommodate speakers of languages
- such as French and Chinese. Sports sites highlight soccer rather than
- baseball. A few American e-commerce services, such as Amazon.com, accept
- payment by EuroCard.
-
- These changes come as the U.S. cedes more control over Internet addresses
- and other policies. The California-based Internet Corporation for Assigned
- Names and Numbers will elect officers by continent this fall, as one way to
- limit the influence of U.S. representatives.
-
-
-
- Teens Design Future of Websites
-
-
- One of the "webmasters" of the future is an 18-year-old from California
- with a knack for losing things. That's why Ara Anjargolian created
- Secondsaver (www.secondsaver.com), an online calendar for people who can't
- seem to remember where they're supposed to be, when they're supposed to be
- there - or even where they put their calendar.
-
- The Glendale, Calif., youth's Web site took first place in the annual
- ArsDigita Foundation contest for teen programmers, winning him $10,000.
-
- "Someday, even your refrigerator is going to be connected to your computer,
- and will let you know when you're out of milk," he said. "I want to be a
- part of that."
-
- Anjargolian was one of 11 teen finalists from around the world honored by
- ArsDigita for creating and maintaining useful, unique, nonprofit sites.
- Eight finalists each won $1,000. Two who led teams won the grand prize for
- group efforts, taking home $5,000 each.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
- 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.
-