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- Volume 3, Issue 33 Atari Online News, Etc. August 17, 2001
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2001
- All Rights Reserved
-
- Atari Online News, Etc.
- A-ONE Online Magazine
- Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
- Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
- Rob Mahlert, Associate Editor
-
-
- Atari Online News, Etc. Staff
-
- Dana P. Jacobson -- Editor
- Joe Mirando -- "People Are Talking"
- Michael Burkley -- "Unabashed Atariophile"
- Albert Dayes -- "CC: Classic Chips"
- Rob Mahlert -- Web site
- Thomas J. Andrews -- "Keeper of the Flame"
-
-
- With Contributions by:
-
- Rob Mahlert
-
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
- log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
- and click on "Subscriptions".
- OR subscribe to A-ONE by sending a message to: dpj@atarinews.org
- 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
- Now available:
- http://www.atarinews.org
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphi.com/m/main.asp?sigdir=atari
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #0333 08/17/01
-
- ~ Web Bugs Track Web Use ~ People Are Talking! ~ Stupid People?!
- ~ Court Rejects MS Bid! ~ Banner Ads Replaced? ~ New XaAES Released!
- ~ Online Anonymity Wins! ~ Dreamcast Price Drop! ~ Canadian Xbox Set!
- ~ House Passes Tax Ban! ~ Vintage Computer Fest! ~ Formula One 2001!
-
- -* Cybersquatters To Be Booted! *-
- -* "Big Brother" Watching In Britain?! *-
- -* Xbox On Track For November Despite Rumors! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- What a great week! Certainly a turnaround from the week before! You can
- still tell that it's August in New England, but at least the weather isn't
- as oppressively hot at the moment. It's hard to believe that Labor Day is
- almost upon us! At least most of my summer tasks have been completed and I
- can enjoy the fruits (or vegetables) of my labor. I still have half of that
- mountain of loam to finish laying out. Gee, I need a machete to cut down
- the growth of weeds that's taken it over! The new shed needs to be stained,
- but that shouldn't be too bad a task. It's almost time to close the pool,
- but we're having a new cover fitted to alleviate that task in the future.
- My last summer fling vacation in a couple of weeks should take care of
- everything and still leave plenty of time for relaxation!
-
- You're going to enjoy Joe's editorial comments this week. I have to
- restrain myself from adding to it here because I don't want to spoil it.
- However, I must say that Joe's comments struck a chord! And, I will have
- something to add after his comments!
-
- As the summer winds down, the news maintains a similar low peak. Vacations
- take over, and rightfully so. Things will start to ramp back up after the
- holiday and we'll do the same here at A-ONE. So, sit back and put your feet
- up, and enjoy another cold one!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A New Release of XaAES
-
-
- Done:
-
- 1 - XaAES now runs with MiNT memory protection enabled.
- Many fixes to prevent access to the memory of a killed client.
- 2 - Fixed a bug in half_screen calculation. Too much memory was allocated.
- 3 - WM_ONTOP & WM_UNTOPPED was not always sent when needed. Fixed.
- Menu bar, focus and top window switching now much better.
- 4 - After exiting a app the correct desktop is displayed.
- 5 - It is now possible to leave the file selector with a path only.
- 6 - Used the excellent program of Joakim HĂ·gberg to finally get all the 3d
- drawing correct.
- 7 - Fixed a interference of slider move events with other clients events.
- Sliders behave exact again, no running behind.
- 8 - Fix in objc_add: ob_head and ob_tail of the new object are initialized
- to -1.
- 9 - Rsrc_load and shell_find now use a path set by the client.
- 10 - First benefit of memory protection.
- Could fix a obscure bug in the menu handler that caused bombing when MP was
- enabled.
-
- Memory protection was enough reason to jump the version number.
- A small step for mankind, a huge step for XaAES. ;-)
-
- Read the history file!!
-
- --
- Groeten; Regards.
- Henk Robbers
- http://xaaes.atari.org
-
-
-
- VINTAGE COMPUTER FESTIVAL 5.0
-
-
- Vintage Computer Festival 5.0
- September 15th and 16th, 2001
- Parkside Hall - San Jose Convention Center
- San Jose, California
- http://www.vintage.org/2001/main/
-
-
- Mark your calendar! The fifth annual Vintage Computer Festival is
- scheduled for the weekend of September 15th and 16th at Parkside Hall
- in San Jose, California.
-
- The Vintage Computer Festival is a celebration of computers and their
- history. The event features speakers, a vintage computer exhibition,
- and a vintage computer marketplace. We showcase all different types
- of computers for all different kinds of platforms in all different
- shapes and sizes.
-
-
- EXHIBIT YOUR VINTAGE COMPUTER
-
- Vintage Computer Collectors: we want you! Exhibit your favorite
- computer in the Vintage Computer Exhibition. First, Second and
- Third place prizes will be awarded in 13 categories, including the
- coveted Best of Show.
-
- For complete details on the VCF 5.0 Exhibition, visit:
-
- http://www.vintage.org/2001/main/exhibit.php
-
-
- BUY/SELL/TRADE AT THE VINTAGE COMPUTER MARKETPLACE
-
- Do you have some vintage computer items you'd like to sell? Whether
- you rent a booth or sell on consignment, the Vintage Computer Festival
- Marketplace is the premier venue for selling old computers and
- related items. If you would like to rent a booth or inquire about
- consignment rates, please send e-mail to <vendor@vintage.org> for more
- information or visit:
-
- http://www.vintage.org/2001/main/vendor.php
-
-
- TELL A FRIEND! TELL A FRIEND! TELL A FRIEND!
-
- We really hope to see you at the VCF 5.0! And remember, tell your
- friends!!
-
- A printable flyer in Word format can be downloaded here:
-
- http://www.vintage.org/2001/main/vcf50.doc
-
-
- Vintage Computer Festival 5.0
- September 15th and 16th, 2001
- Parkside Hall - San Jose Convention Center
- San Jose, California
- http://www.vintage.org/2001/main/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I've been sick for the past couple of
- days (stomach bug), so I'm going to keep this short.
-
- I've been thinking a lot lately about prejudice. I was just a kid at the
- end of the 60's but a lot of the stuff that was going on made a huge
- impression on me.
-
- I think I was at just the right age for what was going on... old enough
- to realize that these hippies, yippies, panthers, and what-ever-else
- weren't 'normal', but young enough to realize that it didn't matter....
- that we're all different... and that's the way it should be.
-
- Let's face it. It'd be just plain foolish to think that we were all the
- same. We're all different. And that's a good thing.
-
- So, for the past thirty-plus years, I've conscientiously and studiously
- worked to rid myself of any prejudice. Race? Creed? Color? They're all
- irrelevant to me. "Do your own thing" has been my motto for a long, long
- time. As long as your "thing" doesn't keep someone else from doing
- theirs, I say "go for it".
-
- But as hard as I try, there is one prejudice that I simply can't shake.
- For a long time, I didn't even realize that I had a prejudice. It just
- seemed so natural and right to me that I never gave it a second thought.
- I guess that's the way it is... you get so accustomed to thinking of
- something as unacceptable that you can't see any other point of view.
-
- But now, after a long hard look at myself, I'm afraid that I've got no
- other choice but to admit it... I am prejudiced against a particular
- group of people, and the really terrible part is that I don't WANT to
- change.
-
- So here it is....
-
- I HATE STUPID PEOPLE!
-
- I think they should all be neutered, sequestered in some out of the way
- place, and allowed to have as little interaction with the rest of us as
- possible! They just irritate me. I can't stand the thought of the drain
- they put on society, the resources they consume without giving anything
- back, or the idea of my sister marrying one.
-
- What really gets me going when one of "them" gets a little power and
- tries to further their cause.
-
- Remember Dan Quayle? Right after he lambasted Murphy Brown for being a
- single mother, he began his crusade for "his people" by saying that they
- were tired of things being controlled by the "intellectual elite".
-
- My first thought was, "sure, let's have really stupid people run the
- country for a while and how it works out". They just don't have a clue,
- do they? They have no idea of how things work, or what it takes to be a
- useful, contributing member of society.
-
- Well, I guess I'll just have to deal with it. Times are changing, and
- now there are stupid people everywhere you look. They're gaining more
- and more acceptance, and it looks like I'm falling behind the times
- because I'm not jumping up and down to help them embrace their
- "stupidness".
-
- I can live with that.
-
- Okay, let's get on with the news, hints, tips, and info available on the
- UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================
-
- Fredrik Egeberg asks about using his Nova card with an AfterBurner:
-
- "I have a small plastic connector holding a colourful ribbon cable in
- place on my ab040 board, it goes from underneath the board and fits right
- between the 2 "connect thru" things for the expansion port. This prevents
- my Nova adaptor to fit 100%, it takes a lot of fiddling around to get it
- working once it slides out of place.
-
- Does anybody know what this ribbon cable is for? Apparently it only exists
- on some boards, not all."
-
- Jo Even Skarstein tells Fredrik:
-
- "This cable is present on all Afterburners as far as I know. To avoid
- conflict with the Nova (or any other expansion card), replace the
- connector on the AB with one angled 90 degrees. I've done this on my AB,
- and both my Nova and Eclipse fits without problems."
-
- Fredrik tells Jo Even:
-
- "Ok, I'll see if I can try to find a replacement. Its a pain in the bum
- really since I can't put my MKXcase back together without getting
- nova problems (which I assume comes from the adaptor not being in
- place)."
-
- Jo Even replies:
-
- "I bought some connectors from ELFA, it's standard 1/10" connectors
- which you cut to the length you need. I think one of these is what you
- need: http://www.elfa.se/elfa/produkter/se/14/146781.htm"
-
- 'Jonk' asks a simple, concise question:
-
- "What is the biggest ide drive I can put in a Falcon?"
-
- Dr. Uwe Seimet, author of HD Driver, tells Jonk:
-
- "Currently the maximum IDE drive size is 128 GB (no typo: 128 GB)."
-
- Peter West tells Uwe:
-
- "Wow!!! But he did ask what is the largest he can use on a Falcon,
- which is 26 GB with MagiC and a CD-ROM (see my posting to the
- original enquirer)...
-
- There is almost no limit to the *drive* size, but even with
- MagiC you can't have any partitions larger than 1 GB. And of
- course you are restricted by the number of partitions you can
- have, which depends on the OS. From Uwe's help-text for HDDRIVER
- (the best hard disk driver there is!):
-
- Partitioning Limits
- TOS 1.00-1.02: 256 MByte
- TOS 1.04-3.0x: 512 MByte
- TOS 4.0x: 1 GByte
- MagiC, MiNT: 1 GByte, 2 GByte if DOS compatible
- (Note: DOS compatible formats can only have 1 partition)
-
- Number of Partitions:
- TOS: 14 (C:-P:)
- MagiC: 23 (C:-Z: except U:)
- MiNT: 29 (C:-Z: except U:, 1:-6:)
-
- So with MagiC you could have 21 GB, with MiNT even 27 GB (two
- drives are reserved for floppies), or 1GB less if you are also
- using a CD-ROM.
-
- Personally I have a 6.4 GB IBM fitted internally. This is a 3.5"
- drive with a suitable cable adapter from ASP. One snag with these
- large drives and partitions (mine are some 840 MB, except for C:)
- is that the cluster size is 32 kB, so every file will use at least
- that amount of space, even if it is only 1 byte long!"
-
- Uwe tells Peter:
-
- "You can use FAT32 partitions with MagiC which have virtually no size
- limit."
-
- Peter gets interested and asks Uwe:
-
- "Interesting! Tell me more please. How do you make FAT32
- partitions and what does TOS make of them if it tries to read
- them? (I occasionally have to run without MagiC)."
-
- Uwe replies:
-
- "TOS will not see them because they have a non-standard partition ID of
- "F32" instead of "GEM" or "BGM". You can create FAT32 partitions with
- HDDRUTIL (->HDDRIVER) or with a Tool for MiNT. FAT32 partitions are what
- Windows9x uses for large partitions."
-
- Paul Nurminen asks for help with Cubase:
-
- "Ok, here we go...
-
- Many of you will know that I've posted about Cubase Audio (CAF) in the
- past. Basically, I normally use it for just MIDI work, but I've been
- working on some projects that require _a lot_ of vocals, and CAF has
- been giving me a lot of trouble with random POPS and CLICKS in the
- recorded tracks, and I've been getting some conflicting bits of advice
- from people, so I thought I'd run it past everyone here, to get more
- input.
-
- To start off, I'll tell you that I have a 14MB Falcon, that has had
- the "audio modifications" (for better CAF performance) done long ago,
- and it also has the Nemesis accelerator installed (that includes a
- "buffer board" that is apparently also supposed to help with CAF
- problems). The audio gets to the Falcon [through my TASCAM DAT
- machine] via the SoundPool/Steinberg FDI. And recently, I've also
- connected the JAM OUT PRO (rackmount - 8 outputs with 18-bit D/A
- converters) for a nice clean output signal. Also, I use a 4.29GIG
- Seagate "Barracuda" SCSI hard drive, with several completely empty
- partitions that are used fresh for each song.
-
- My Falcon works great in all other areas, and with other digital audio
- applications that I have tried (QUiNCY, Studio Son, V-Trax, Audio
- Tracker). There are no noise problems with these programs. And my
- Falcon also works well under MagiC 5, and I've used both HD Driver
- 7.61, and ICD Por 6.5.5.
-
- Now, onto the CAF problems:
-
-
- * (1) *
-
- Try as I might, I _cannot_ use HD Driver with CAF. Whenever I run CAF
- under HD Driver (I also run the little CAF_FIX.PRG too), here's what
- happens. I select a track to record audio on, name the file, click
- OK, then a short pause, and BOOOOOM, multiple bombs (like 7 or 8), and
- an immediate crash to the desktop. This happens 98 out of 100 times
- whenever I try to record audio. MIDI works ok though. I have no idea
- what this is all about, as everyone tells me they use HD Driver with
- CAF and never have problems - and I believe them. Uwe???
-
- Well, since HD Driver is the driver I use when I'm doing _anything_
- else on the Falcon, I've set up a floppy that I can boot from, that
- loads the ICD Pro drivers instead. When running CAF under ICD Pro, I
- don't get these crashes. But the random pops and clicks still appear.
-
-
- * (2) *
-
- Many of you, I would think, know Alex at ATY Computer in Oakland
- California, USA. Well, I consider him an expert with the Falcon and
- it's problems. I've dealt with him in the past, and in fact, he is
- the one who installed my Nemesis board a couple of years ago. He
- suggested that I should use the original Atari hard disk driver (AHDI
- v 6.05). He said he hasn't had noise problems when using that driver,
- that he DOES have under HD Driver or ICD Pro. I haven't tested it
- yet, but am planning to.
-
-
- * (3) *
-
- Despite the fact that I thought otherwise, based on what many people
- HERE have told me, Alex informed me that these noise problems are NOT
- related to the Falcon "clock/timing" fixes. He told me the following:
-
-
- [from Alex at ATY Computer]:
-
- "Your Falcon does not need any more "fixes". The buffer
- card portion (that little 1"x 3/4" circuit board that was installed
- underneath the keyboard in the middle section of the Falcon) of the
- Nemesis installation replaces all other CPU clock signal
- modifications. In fact it is the BEST modification to stabilize the
- Falcon"
-
- "I have repaired several Falcons with stability problems by simply
- installing the buffer card portion of the Nemesis. The documentation
- that came with the Nemesis also mentioned that this buffer card fix is
- very stable"
-
-
- * (4) *
-
- Alex also mentioned a few other things to try, like using a different
- SCSI cable or drive (which I have), and also turning OFF the Falcon's
- internal fan. He had this to say about it:
-
- [from Alex at ATY Computer]:
-
- "It might sound strange but some Falcon fans actually can't keep a
- constant speed particularly after they have accumulated enough dust on
- them. The irregular spinning actually feeds back a clipped sine wave
- interference back onto the power supply which in turn causes slight
- delay in the voltage regulation timing. I was studying this problem
- with Atari way back in 1995 when one of my customers complained about
- a similar problem. I took the Falcon, SCSI hard drive, and Cubase
- Audio to the Atari service center in Sunnyvale. We setup the system
- and attached a scope to the 5 volt power line. By pressing down on
- the fan to simmilate the irregular spinning the sine wave changed and
- Cubase crashed while it was recording. We couldn't confidently
- conclude that a bad fan will always cause Cubase to malfunction
- because we pulled an other Falcon out from the warehouse and tried the
- same test. The new Falcon didn't crash Cubase but this fan thing had
- always stuck in the back of my mind"
-
-
- * (5) *
-
- And finally, it was suggested to me by another Falcon/Nemesis/CAF user
- (Wayne Martz) that fragmentation will eventually cause noise problems,
- even if you start with a clean and completely empty partition.
- However, he told me that if, after hearing the noise, you quit CAF,
- and do a defrag on the partition, then restart CAF and reload the song
- (the drive now defragmented), the noise _won't_ be there. I haven't
- yet tested this myself yet, but it sounds promising.
-
-
- Anyway, that's all I can think of at the moment, I welcome any and all
- replies! Let's figure this thing out already!"
-
- Mike Freeman tells Paul:
-
- "Very Interesting "article"! I'd love to see this on a web site
- somewhere. Maybe I'll do it! Anyway, here are my thoughts...
-
- I've tried out HD Driver with CAF and have found the same as you. I don't
- know, maybe there's some setting we're missing, but I can only get CAF to
- reliably work using ICD Pro or AHDI.
-
- Another idea... I normally use CBHD (which also seems to have problems
- with CAF), so I don't know if this works with HD Driver, but try using
- HD Driver as your normal driver, and use a program like Superboot,
- X-Boot, or whatever boot manager you like to run ICD Tools. Just set up
- a selection for "Audio" or whatever, and run ICD Tools from the AUTO
- folder, selected by the boot manager. This seems to work great for me.
-
- I've never personally had these noises, so I can't suggest anything
- regarding the driver on this point, but I have heard that the brand or
- model of drive you use can cause similar problems.
-
- I have Nemesis, and couldn't be happier (unless they made a modern CPU
- upgrade that worked with CAF... nice dream, huh? :) ). Very stable, and
- CAF has no audio or stability problems to speak of.
-
- Clayton Murray asks about emulators:
-
- "I'm interested using an Atari emulator on a laptop PC. The main
- program I want to run is Pagestream. Does anyone have a
- recommendation of what emulator will run that program? I
- (obviously) haven't looked into this much yet. Is there a web
- page that gives the pros and cons of different emulators? At this
- point, I don't think I'll need midi capability, but I may in the
- future.
-
- If it matters, the laptop is a Compaq Presario 1200-XL106 with an
- AMD K6-2 at 475mhz."
-
- Greg George tells Clayton:
-
- "I would recommend GEMulator as being the best non-game emulator. I use
- it with Pagestream 2 all the time.
-
- http://www.emulators.com"
-
- James Alexander adds:
-
- "I think you can now get a version of pagestream that will run directly
- on that machine, check out the website, www.softlogik.com. it should
- be listed there."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this time around. Tune in again next week,
- same time, same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying
- when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - 'Formula One 2001'!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Xbox Set For November 8!
- Dreamcast Sports Bundle!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Microsoft: Xbox on Track to Ship Nov. 8
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. said on Tuesday its highly anticipated Xbox video game
- console, was on track to ship as scheduled in November, denying a report of
- design problems with a key component.
-
- Brokerage Thomas Weisel Partners said in a research note earlier on Tuesday
- that construction on the Xbox video game console could be delayed up to
- four weeks because of a problem with an Intel Corp. motherboard. A
- Microsoft spokesman declined to comment on any specific Xbox production
- issues, but reaffirmed the planned Nov. 8 launch of the next-generation
- console. ``We can say there is absolutely no problem with the design of
- Intel's motherboard," Microsoft spokesman James Bernard said. ``They've
- been fantastic partners and delivered on everything to date."
-
- Motherboards serve as a sort of internal chassis, holding the various
- components that power a video game console or personal computer.
-
- With its blistering processors, hard drive and fast Internet connection,
- the Xbox will go head to head with the reigning video game champ, the
- PlayStation 2 from Sony Corp.
-
- Microsoft is eager to avoid the kind of troubles Sony had for the U.S.
- launch of the PlayStation 2 last year, when parts shortages halved the
- number of units Sony had promised to deliver, thereby driving some
- consumers to buy rival systems.
-
- ``We're still marching toward our planned Nov. 8 launch for Xbox,"
- Microsoft said in a statement.
-
- Microsoft expects to ship between 600,000 and 800,000 of the consoles by
- launch and 1.5 million units by Dec. 31.
-
- Weisel analyst Eric Ross, in a note Tuesday on NVidia Corp., said a design
- flaw in Intel's motherboard for the XBox will delay production of the
- console three to four weeks. He did not elaborate as to how he knew except
- to say that "several sources maintain" there is a flaw. NVidia is
- supplying graphics chips for the console.
-
- Ross could not be reached for further comment.
-
- An Intel spokesman said the company did not comment on this type of report.
- Ross did say in the note the delay will not affect Microsoft's projected
- Nov. 8 ship date for the console, since the production schedule for the
- unit is thought to be slack.
-
- The console is being assembled by contract manufacturer Flextronics
- International Ltd. at plants in Europe and Mexico.
-
- Published reports have pegged the value of that contract to Flextronics as
- $1 billion in 2002.
-
- A spokesman for Flextronics also declined to comment on any possible
- production delays.
-
- Beside Intel, other major manufacturers contributing parts to the XBox
- include Cirrus Logic Inc. and Micron Technology Inc.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Updates Xbox Launch Plans for Canada
-
-
- Microsoft Canada Co. announced updates to the Canadian launch plans for
- Microsoft Corporation's highly anticipated Microsoft Xbox video game
- system. Starting Nov. 8, 2001, Xbox will be available for purchase at
- retail outlets across Canada at an estimated retail price of $459.99 Cdn.
- Microsoft Canada anticipates its launch library of 15 to 20 games will
- contribute significantly to building consumer excitement and driving sales
- of 1 to 1.5 million units across North America by the end of the holiday
- season.
-
- Microsoft aims to spark widespread interest in Xbox titles with its diverse
- launch line-up across a variety of genres. Halo introduces gamers to an
- exciting new world where humans battle aliens on a mysterious ring-world
- with the objective of uncovering Halo's horrible secrets and destroying
- mankind's sworn enemy. In Oddworld: Munch's Oddysee, players embark on an
- adventure using the special powers of two characters, Abe and Munch, to
- cooperatively make their way through the trials of Oddworld. Project Gotham
- Racing is a circuit-based racing game where players can compete against up
- to three friends in photo-realistic downtown environments. In Amped,
- players experience freestyle riding down real mountain slopes with the goal
- of becoming one of the world's snowboarding superstars.
-
- "Xbox, the most powerful and easiest game platform to design for, allows
- game designers to finally realize their true creative visions for games,"
- says Ryan Mugford, Marketing Lead - Xbox, Microsoft Canada Co. "The
- combination of power and creative talent means that on November 8th and
- beyond, Canadian consumers will experience a new level of game play."
-
- Additional launch titles for Xbox include Dead or Alive 3 from Tecmo Ltd.,
- an exclusive fighting title showcasing impressive new environments and
- characters from the popular series. Mad Dash Racing from Eidos Interactive,
- Inc. is an original title for Xbox combining high-speed combat racing and
- 3D adventure action in a thrilling scramble for the finish line. In NASCAR
- Heat from Infogrames Inc., players can experience the power of driving a
- 750 horsepower NASCAR Winston Cup car on their favorite racetrack.
-
- "Microsoft is setting a new standard for video games with Xbox," said Kevin
- Layden, president and COO, Future Shop Ltd. "We expect Xbox to be one of
- the must-have items for the holiday season based on heavy consumer demand
- for cutting edge gaming technology."
-
- "Xbox will have the most exciting games created by the industry's best
- talent," adds Mugford who explains that more than 200 of the world's top
- game artists and publishers have signed on to create Xbox games including
- powerhouse console game studios: Capcom Co. Ltd., Sega Entertainment Inc.,
- Konami and Electronic Arts. These relationships further solidify
- Microsoft's support from the world's best game developers and will help to
- ensure that only the best video games will appear on Xbox.
-
- "We are overwhelmed by the interest from our consumers who have been
- eagerly awaiting the launch of Xbox in Canada," says Jim Tyo, Electronic
- Boutiques' recently appointed VP of Canadian Operations. "Microsoft will
- help drive growth in this competitive industry with Xbox. Its
- future-generation features and price point will offer gamers significant
- value. We are thrilled to be partners with Microsoft to launch this
- exciting new system into Canada."
-
-
-
- Sega Introduces New Sports Bundle, Giving Consumers
- Another Reason to Score a Dreamcast
-
- Sega Gives Consumers a Great Value by Bundling
- the Dreamcast Video Game Console With Three
- Hard Hitting Sega Sports 2K1 Titles For $99.95
-
-
- Sega of America announced the ``Sega Sports AEE Bundle 2K1," which includes
- the 128-bit Internet-ready Dreamcast video game console and three titles
- from the award winning Sega Sports AEE 2K1 line-up for $99.95. Included are
- three of Sega's most highly acclaimed sports titles to date: ``Sega Sports
- AEE NFL 2K1," ``Sega Sports NBA 2K1" and ``Sega Sports AEE World Series
- Baseball 2K1."
-
- ``We are making the Dreamcast more affordable than ever so consumers can
- experience the thrill of playing Sega Sports games on or offline this
- summer," said John Golden, director of product marketing, Sega of America.
- ``Sega Sports has a reputation for incredible content, so by combining
- games from the awesome Sega Sports 2K1 line-up with the Dreamcast makes the
- Sega Sports Bundle 2K1 a terrific value for every sports video game fan."
-
- ``Sega Sports NFL 2K1," ``Sega Sports NBA 2K1" and ``Sega Sports World
- Series Baseball 2K1" are three genre-breaking sports titles that feature
- over 1,300 motion-captured character animations, high-resolution detail and
- facial expressions, artificial intelligence that mirrors real life
- behavior, and accurate game and season statistics. From ``bump and run"
- coverage in ``NFL 2K1," a working spin move and crossover in ``NBA 2K1" and
- true-to-life camera angles in ``World Series Baseball 2K1," these games
- bring all the intricate action of the big leagues to gamers everywhere.
-
- In addition to the Dreamcast and three games, the bundle also includes one
- standard Dreamcast controller, a stereo A/V cable, a 10-meter phone cable,
- an Internet browser CD-ROM and an instruction manual.
-
- Sega also recently announced that both ``Sega Sports NFL 2K1" and ``Sega
- Sports NBA 2K1" have taken on ``All Star 2K1" status and are available at
- retailers nationwide and on www.sega.com for $19.95.
-
- The ``Sega Sports Bundle 2K1" will be available in August at retailers
- nationwide and on www.sega.com for $99.95 while supplies last.
-
-
-
- 989 Sports' Formula One 2001 Delivers Highly
- Sophisticated Exotic Racing Machines to Take Full
- Throttle Onto PlayStation2
-
- The World's Number One Motorsport Provides Gamers
- With Authentic F1 Racing Experience
-
-
- Sony Computer Entertainment America (SCEA) Inc. announced the upcoming Fall
- 2001 release of the 989 Sports' branded Formula One 2001, exclusively for
- the PlayStation2 computer entertainment system. Developed by Studio
- Liverpool, Formula One 2001 is an authentic racing simulation designed by
- racing fans for racing fans. Officially licensed by Formula One
- Administration Limited, Formula One 2001 includes all the race teams, 22
- drivers and 17 Grand Prix tracks of the 2001 FIA Formula One World
- Championship.
-
- To enhance the authenticity, Formula One 2001 allows players to choose
- between 11 different teams, including Ferrari, McLaren (Mercedes) and
- Williams (BMW). In addition, players have the opportunity to choose their
- favorite driver. In addition, Formula One 2001 puts you in the driver's
- seat by providing the user with each driver's unique attributes that
- simulate their real-life skills, whether it's being aggressive, smooth,
- fast in the rain or efficient in managing tire wear and car preservation.
- Depending on the Grand Prix track selection, players also have the ability
- to fully customize their car for optimum performance.
-
- ``Formula One 2001 features some of the most advanced automotive technology
- seen anywhere, creating an intoxicating blend of speed, power and exotic
- good looks," said Ami Blaire, director, product marketing, Sony Computer
- Entertainment America Inc. ``As the number one motorsport in the world
- today, we are pleased to bring this intense, sophisticated racing
- simulation to the PlayStation 2 as a part of the 989 sports brand."
-
- For single players, Formula One 2001 offers Quick Race or Grand Prix modes
- that cater to both newcomers and experienced racers. In addition, players
- have a choice of a Single Race, a full Race Weekend or the ability to
- participate in the entire World Championship. For intense competition
- between players, there is a 2-Player mode which allows friends to take on
- each other as well as the virtual true-to-life Formula One drivers. In
- addition, there is a Time Attack mode for up to 16 players. In this mode,
- one can instantly compare their lap times to that of up to 16 of their
- friends by taking turns to record the fastest lap on any of the 17 tracks
- provided.
-
- Other key features for Formula One 2001 include:
-
- -- Incredible, lifelike Driver Artificial Intelligence -- based on more
- than 30 different parameters compiled by F1 professionals; bringing the
- grid to life and introducing rivalry, aggression, experience and
- determination.
- -- Customize the starting grid before each race to one's liking
- -- recreate famous grids from classic F1 races, or improve one's own
- starting position.
- -- Fully customizable car setup -- the ability to tweak the suspension,
- change tire compound, add more front wing or change gear ratios and
- more.
- -- Four different difficulty levels -- choices include, Novice, Amateur,
- Semi Pro and Pro skill level.
- -- Real time weather conditions -- both wet and dry conditions that adds
- excitement and a new challenge to one's driving skills.
- -- Bar raising level of detail -- full 17 man pit crews, waving flags and
- camera flashes in the grandstands, accurate individual driver cockpits
- and custom photo-realistic textures take Formula One 2001 to a new
- level.
- -- Groundbreaking physics and dynamic models deliver one of the most
- accurate simulations of the most advanced motorsport in the world.
-
- The independent Entertainment Software Rating Board (ESRB) has not yet
- rated Formula One 2001.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Court Rejects Delay of Microsoft Case
-
-
- A federal appeals court on Friday rejected Microsoft Corp.'s bid to delay
- the antitrust case against the company, setting the stage for hearings as
- early as next month to determine what remedies will be imposed against the
- company.
-
- The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia denied Microsoft's
- request that the case be delayed while the software giant appeals the case
- to the Supreme Court.
-
- Barring any further hitch, the case will be sent back to a lower court next
- Friday, where a new judge will be selected to decide what remedies should
- be imposed to prevent any further abuse of Microsoft's monopoly in personal
- computer operating systems.
-
- The timing for moving the case could be crucial for Microsoft, which is due
- to roll out its new Windows XP operating system, packed with new features,
- in October.
-
- The appeals court said Friday Microsoft had ``misconstrued" part of its
- June 28 opinion that upheld many of the findings of the lower trial court
- judge.
-
- The company also, ``failed to demonstrate any substantial harm that would
- result from the reactivation of proceedings in the district court during
- the limited pendency of the (Supreme Court appeal)."
-
- Legal analysts said the ruling clears the last major obstacle to getting
- the case for remedy hearings. The company could still ask the Supreme Court
- to stay the proceedings, but they said it was unlikely the high court would
- grant such a request.
-
- Andy Strenio, a former U.S. Federal Trade Commissioner said the court dealt
- Microsoft a ``mild rebuke" by saying the company had ``misconstrued" its
- earlier ruling.
-
- ``This is sort of short and not sweet for Microsoft," Strenio said. ``It's
- a slight indication from the court that Microsoft's arguments were not well
- received."
-
- Friday's ruling was a victory for the U.S. Justice Department and 18 states
- suing Microsoft, who have argued the case should proceed quickly so
- remedies can be imposed and competition assured in the software industry.
-
- Some of the states backing the case have expressed concern that Windows XP
- represents a troubling repeat of Microsoft's integration of its Internet
- Explorer browser into Windows 98, integration that the appeals court agreed
- helped shore up the Windows monopoly.
-
- ``We are pleased with the court's decision and we look forward to
- proceedings in the District Court," said Justice Department spokeswoman
- Gina Talamona.
-
- A spokesman for Microsoft said the company was ready to go forward with the
- case and was still open to a settlement with the government.
-
- ``While we believe the process was best served through a stay, we are
- prepared to move ahead with getting the remaining issues in the case
- resolved while we await word on Supreme Court review," Microsoft spokesman
- Jim Desler said. ``We remain committed to resolving the remaining issues in
- this case through settlement."
-
- Microsoft had asked the Supreme Court to reverse an appeals court ruling
- the company abused its monopoly in personal computer operating systems,
- citing misconduct by the original lower-court judge.
-
- The company charged the judge's rulings were compromised because he had
- given secret interviews to reporters before issuing them.
-
- Had the appeals court granted Microsoft's request for a delay, the case
- would have gone on hold until October, when the Supreme Court is scheduled
- to return from recess.
-
- Strenio, now an antitrust lawyer at the firm Powell, Goldstein, Frazier &
- Murphy, said Microsoft could still appeal to the Supreme Court to stay the
- proceedings, but the high court would probably reject the idea.
-
- After the case is sent back to the U.S. District Court next Friday, it will
- be randomly assigned to one of about a dozen judges there.
-
- Strenio predicted it would be mid-September at the earliest before the
- remedy hearings actually began. First the new judge would have to set a
- timetable for the hearings and further legal filings by both sides.
-
-
-
- 'Big Brother' Watching? In Britain, Quite Likely
-
-
- Ever get the feeling someone is watching you? In Britain it is more likely
- to be true than anywhere else in Europe.
-
- A government decision on Monday to broaden the network of roadside speed
- cameras to cut traffic accidents has raised fresh concerns among civil
- liberties groups that people's privacy is being invaded far more than they
- might care to believe.
-
- ``There are estimates of 1.5 to 2.5 million closed circuit television
- (CCTV) cameras in Britain, and I don't believe any other country comes near
- that (per capita)," Roger Bingham, of civil rights pressure group Liberty,
- said.
-
- Bingham said he did not have a major problem with more speed cameras, as
- long as they were visible and acted as a deterrent.
-
- But it was another example of how technological advances have made snooping
- easier, from hidden cameras to mobile phones and the Internet, creating an
- Orwellian-like nightmare of ``Big Brother is Watching You."
-
- ``Technology has advanced so far over the last few years that areas where
- you would assume your privacy is intact is no longer the case. There is a
- wealth of means available to monitor and track you," Bingham said.
-
- A spokesman for the parliament-appointed Information Commissioner agreed.
-
- ``It is fair to say that within the United Kingdom there has been a growth
- in the use of CCTV systems by organizations and individuals," he said.
-
- British police are increasingly using hidden cameras to crack down on
- suspected criminals such as hardline Real IRA activists and trawling the
- Internet to catch pedophiles.
-
- Their powers were boosted by the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act
- last year, under which people who refuse to reveal encryption codes to the
- police can be jailed for two years.
-
- Britons were reminded of the prevalence of hidden cameras last week when
- footage was broadcast of a car shunting another one out of a parking space,
- resulting in a conviction for dangerous driving.
-
- And the father of missing British student nurse Louise Kerton, 24, who
- disappeared two weeks ago on her way home from Germany, has bemoaned the
- lack of security cameras in Europe, saying it reduced the chances of Louise
- being caught on film.
-
- But Liberty says people are too complacent about their privacy, often
- assuming that cameras, Internet monitoring and mobile phone tracing are for
- the common good.
-
- ``It is all about them knowing more about you than you about them. There
- should be active regulation and the collection of information only that is
- actually needed," Bingham said.
-
- Those concerned at the state's snooping powers can take heart, however. It
- emerged last week that speed cameras in Norfolk, East Anglia, have not had
- film in them for months.
-
-
-
- 'Web Bugs' Are Tracking Use of Internet
-
-
- Many people who have personal Web pages are unknowingly tracking people who
- visit and sending the information to third parties.
-
- Many people who have personal Web pages are unknowingly tracking people who
- visit and sending the information to third parties, according to a new
- report. The report which will be released today by Cyveillance, which
- tracks Internet sites for corporate clients says that the use of an Internet
- monitoring technology popularly known as "Web bugs" has exploded on personal
- Web pages especially those created free through online companies like
- America Online and Geocities, a company owned by Yahoo. The monitoring
- technology, which can be used to gather information on visitors to a Web
- site, is invisibly added to the Web pages as part of elements that the sites
- offer to help create the Web page. America Online, for example, encourages
- users to place an advertisement offering a free trial membership; the
- company promises to pay users $50 for any new America Online member who
- signs up for the service by clicking on the ad. When users place the AOL ad
- on their pages, they also get a Web bug that passes information along to Be
- Free Inc., an Internet market research and advertising company.
-
- The Web bug technology, which is also known by such terms as "clear gifs"
- and "Web beacons," now appears on 18 percent of personal pages, compared
- with less than 4 percent of pages over all and 16 percent of home pages for
- major companies. In a similar survey that Cyveillance conducted in 1998,
- fewer than 0.5 percent of personal Web pages contained Web bugs.
-
- "The increase was so large on personal pages we went back to check it,
- because we thought it must be a mistake," said Brian Murray, the author of
- the report. The privacy policy of Yahoo states that the company sometimes
- uses Web bugs, but does not say explicitly that it places them on personal
- pages of its users. The America Online privacy policy does not describe the
- use of Web bugs on personal pages.
-
- Often invisible, Web bugs are generally innocuous: they are often used, for
- example, to count visitors to sites or to gather statistical information
- about Web sites without collecting any personal information about those
- visitors. Andrew Weinstein, a spokesman for America Online, said that its
- Web bugs collect no personally identifiable information on the visitors to
- personal pages, and had a single purpose: "to send checks to people" whose
- Web pages attract new customers to the company.
-
- But privacy advocates find the potential of such bugs alarming. Scott
- Charney, an Internet privacy and security expert at PricewaterhouseCoopers,
- said that he had seen an early draft of the Cyveillance survey, and that if
- Web bugs were in fact being used without consumers' knowledge to gather
- information, "it's extremely troubling the technology should not be used to
- collect information in such a covert way."
-
- The use of bugs to track people and to create profiles of them becomes more
- powerful and, some privacy advocates argue, more problematic when the
- technology is used by a network of sites linked to some third party.
-
- The bugs are often placed on pages by third parties, like online
- advertising agencies, to collect data about visitors to pages of the
- agencies' clients and to help the advertising company to determine which
- banner ads the visitors should see.
-
- By sharing information among Web bugs across several different sites, the
- bug can also be used to track people's movements as they wander across the
- Internet. And if the visitor has given personal information to one site,
- say by registering for contests or signing a visitor's log, then the
- information can be linked to his or her activities on any other site with a
- Web bug issued by the same third party.
-
- Cyveillance, which is based in Arlington, Va., conducted the survey, which
- included a million Web pages, to determine how prevalent these bugs have
- become; since the company works with clients to safeguard their reputations
- in the online world, Cyveillance executives said, the survey was intended
- to warn companies about the growing controversy surrounding the bugs. The
- Cyveillance report did not identify companies that place Web bugs.
-
- The Web site for Be Free, the company that gets a great deal of the America
- Online traffic, says it "sits uniquely in the middle of a valuable data
- stream between businesses, their online marketing partners and consumers."
- The company is based in Marlborough, Mass.
-
- Tom Gerace, the company's co- founder, said the company did not collect any
- information that could be used to identify consumers personally. He said
- that he created Be Free with his brother in 1996 to provide "flexible,
- robust marketing analysis so our customers and their affiliates can become
- better marketers over time."
-
- The monitoring technology, which he says he prefers to refer to as Web
- beacons, helps track billions of advertising promotions each month for
- companies like America Online, Microsoft and Barnesandnoble.com.
-
-
-
- Court: Posters' IDs Can Stay Under Wraps
-
-
- In a decision hailed as a victory for anonymous speech, a California judge
- rules that Yahoo won't be compelled to reveal the identities of people who
- posted critical remarks online.
-
- In another victory for online anonymity, a California judge has ruled that
- Yahoo does not need to reveal the identities of some message board
- posters.
-
- In a ruling Friday, Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Neil Cabrinha
- said online critics who posted messages about Oklahoma-based legal company
- Pre-Paid Legal Services can keep their names under wraps.
-
- Pre-Paid said it needed to know the identities of the posters to determine
- whether they had revealed company trade secrets. However, the Electronic
- Frontier Foundation, which represented the posters, argued they were
- merely exercising their First Amendment right to criticize the company,
- and Pre-Paid was trying to silence its detractors by bullying them.
- According to the EFF, Cabrinha ruled from the bench during a hearing
- Friday to quash a subpoena requiring Yahoo to turn over the names.
-
- "This is a great victory for anonymous speech," EFF attorney Lee Tien said
- in a statement. "I believe Judge Cabrinha's ruling will signal to other
- companies that judges will not permit corporate executives to abuse the
- courts in ferreting out their critics."
-
- Pre-Paid did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
-
- As people increasingly turn to message boards to criticize companies,
- lawsuits that seek to unmask posters are becoming popular. Although
- several judges have ordered message board companies to reveal the names of
- those who visit their sites, other rulings have favored anonymity.
-
- In April, a U.S. district judge in Washington state refused to order Web
- service InfoSpace to reveal the names of nearly a dozen anonymous posters.
- And in New Jersey, a state appellate court ruled last month that online
- posters can keep their identities secret in most cases.
-
- However, such rulings aren't stopping people and companies from filing
- similar suits. Just last week, two council members in Emerson, New Jersey,
- sued a message board operator and some online posters for allegedly
- posting defamatory statements.
-
- Supporters of online anonymity are cheering the ruling in the Pre-Paid
- case, saying it could eventually outline how anonymous critics are treated
- in the state of California, which is home to several companies that run
- message boards, including Yahoo.
-
-
-
- Software Replaces Banner Ads On Popular Sites
-
-
- Already contending with a weak advertising market, Web publishers have
- another concern: Gator.
-
- The software company, known for hawking pop-up ads that let companies
- advertise on rival sites, is working a new variation on the theme--selling
- ads designed to block banners on sites such as Yahoo with pop-ups of the
- exact same size and dimension, completely obscuring the original ad. The
- pop-ups hover over the banners even when the Web visitor scrolls down the
- page, making it even more difficult to discern that the visible ad is a
- substitute.
-
- "It's like getting Time magazine in the mailbox and somebody has pulled it
- out and pasted their own ad over the ones inside," said John Keck, media
- director for Foote Cone & Belding's interactive division.
-
- The technique is the latest in an arsenal of guerrilla marketing tactics
- being pushed by developers of some free Web downloads, which include Gator
- and some popular peer-to-peer file-swapping companies. Such applications,
- which are increasingly bundled with software code known as plug-ins, help
- advertisers place highly targeted messages on Web surfers' computer
- screens.
-
- The latest trick pits advertiser against advertiser on its own war-torn
- battlefield: the banner. It could also cause additional concern for
- executives at Web sites suffering from a severe downturn in ad revenue.
-
- One of the Web's first and most popular ad formats, banners were designed
- to offer an unobtrusive link that interested readers could click on to get
- more information about a product or service, usually on the advertiser's
- own Web site. But they have been criticized lately because the vast
- majority of surfers do not click on them. As a result, publishers have
- turned to bigger and more invasive formats such as pop-ups to squeeze more
- responses from visitors--and persuade reluctant marketers to once again
- advertise on the Web.
-
- Gator, among others, is aggressively courting consumers and advertisers.
- The company gives away an online helper application that manages passwords
- and user IDs and has millions of active users. While Gator is free, the
- company that developed it sells keywords to marketers that lets them
- launch pop-ups at opportune moments. For example, a shopper visiting
- Staples.com might receive a promotion for rival Office Depot while surfing
- the site.
-
- Now the company is selling "pop-up banners," delivered to fit exactly over
- existing banner space on any site.
-
- Is it legal? While Gator executives say the practice is a service for
- consumers and fully disclosed when they install the software, legal
- experts say that because Gator is profiting from the sale of advertising
- that feeds off another Web site's advertising, it could be in a sticky
- legal situation.
-
- The company is "preventing you from seeing the critical ad space that the
- site relies on for advertising--this is an act of unfair competition,"
- said Michael Overing, an attorney and adjunct faculty at USC's Annenberg
- School of Communication.
-
- "It's like you're driving down (the highway), and you're wearing special
- sunglasses, and you look at a billboard advertising Coca-Cola--but through
- the sunglasses it says 'Drink 7-Up.' Is that an act of unfair competition?
-
- "I think it depends upon on what the consumer understood when they
- received the sunglasses. Or in the case of a pop-up ad that covers another
- ad, did the consumer understand this was going to occur when they
- downloaded the program. If the consumer understood and consented there may
- not be a claim," Overing said.
-
- "This is the kind of stuff that gets to the nitty-gritty of what the Web
- can and can't do," he added.
-
- Similar issues arose with a news publisher TotalNews, which framed the
- content of other Web publishers in order to retain readers and sell
- advertising within the frames. After several publishers took the company
- to court, it settled the case by giving consumers the right to prevent the
- frames.
-
- Industry experts say that what Gator is doing is even more egregious
- because it in effect is tampering with a Web site's source of revenue.
-
- "I can't see anyone sitting around and saying that's OK," Paul Grabowicz,
- new media program director at the U.C. Berkeley Graduate School of
- Journalism.
-
- "It's pretty clear that in the name of the consumers they are now
- hijacking the advertising of a Web site. Obviously somebody is going to
- strenuously object to that and probably in court."
-
- In addition, the strategy could threaten an already hobbled Web advertising
- market.
-
- "I would have some real problems" with an advertiser intruding on
- inventory sold to Sony, said Bob Gruters, director of media at Sony.
- "These types of pop-up units don't engage anybody; don't bring the
- consumer into my family, they're extremely intrusive and
- are...counterproductive to what we would do."
-
- Gruters said that because banners are becoming "like wallpaper." Sony
- looks to tap opportunities where it can create a relationship with the
- consumer. "I would be very upset if I know a competitor could come into an
- area that I were branding," he said. "It's like you and I having a
- dialogue and the operator cuts in on the line."
-
- According to Scott Eagle, chief marketing officer for Gator, the company's
- tactics are justified because consumers invite the company to serve
- pop-ups when they install its software. In addition, he said advertisers
- are gravitating toward it because the results are much better than
- traditional banners.
-
- Because Gator can monitor a person's surfing habits across the Web, the
- technology can learn a person's tastes and deliver related advertising on
- any site, rather than serve ads based on general site demographics.
-
- For example, if a Gator user visited the Volkswagen Web site in the past
- day, the service might show him a banner ad for car insurance while
- surfing on the ESPN Web site. Gator's banner would appear over the banner
- space on ESPN's site "two seconds after the page loaded," Eagle said.
-
- Consumers can move the banners to view the original site's ads or click on
- a tiny X to close it.
-
- "The technology is not targeting a given site. It's targeting sites that
- do have banner ads," he said.
-
- "We have much greater insight into what consumers do across the Web (than
- Yahoo and others). Yahoo has no visibility and Gator does," Eagle said.
-
- Despite such claims, many media executives say they have mixed feelings
- about the benefits and potential minefields inherent in such marketing.
- Some say they are familiar with other companies attempting to cannabilize
- banner space from others, but many say they would be reluctant to do so.
-
- "Not only do I have to consider the ramifications from the legal
- perspective for my clients but I also have to pay attention to my
- relationships with the publisher of the site," said Adam Gerber, media
- director for the DigitalEdge.
-
- "If I'm known as an agency that ambushes Web publishers' pre-existing
- advertising, it could put the relationships we have with mainstream
- publishers at risk and that could be a detriment to my clients."
-
- Others are stuck on the ethical problems of such advertising.
-
- "People like me buy Yahoo thinking that when that page is loaded, people
- have seen my ad," said Charles Pinkerton, senior vice president of
- interactive marketing and media for Martin Interactive, which plans and
- places advertising for such clients as UPS, Olympus and Coca-Cola.
-
- "At a minimum, it's a bit of an ethical problem."
-
- Nevertheless, many companies are seeking to attract advertisers with tools
- that insert ads into Web pages without the consent of Web publishers.
-
- The maker of TopText, an application bundled with popular file-sharing
- programs such as iMesh and Bearshare, sells advertising that links to text
- on Web pages across the Internet. San Francisco-based eZula sells the
- rights to more than 7,000 keywords, such as real estate and travel, and
- then links those words to an advertiser's site on any Web page that the
- consumer visits.
-
- Microsoft has developed similar technology, called Smart Tags, which link
- keywords to pages of Microsoft's choice. The software giant had plans to
- include the tags in the browser that will be bundled with the upcoming
- release of Windows XP, but reversed course after facing a wave of
- criticism.
-
- Companies such as Gator say that because consumers agree to install the
- software on their computers, it's perfectly legal to deliver advertising
- superimposed on other Web sites.
-
- However, some consumers have complained about software such as Gator
- because it often comes installed with little notification. For example,
- plug-ins that piggyback on downloads may bury such disclosures deep within
- dense licensing agreements.
-
- Yahoo representatives declined to comment on Gator-s ability to block ads
- on its network of sites, which consistently ranks as the Web's most
- popular destination.
-
- Gator software has also been criticized because it can be difficult to
- uninstall. For example, when consumers want to remove Gator from their
- computers they must uninstall two programs: Gator and Offer Companion, the
- program that controls the advertisements.
-
- Some media executives say they are concerned that such tactics will
- undermine efforts in the industry to focus on online advertising's
- positives.
-
- "Is that a good thing? Somehow I'm not so sure. It's clever, if it gets a
- response. But is that what we should be doing as an industry?" Keck said.
-
- For his part, Gator's Eagle said he believes the service fills a gap in
- online advertising that has proved frustrating for both advertisers and
- consumers.
-
- Marketers are already feeling cheated by banner advertising because it
- doesn't deliver qualified results, he said, while consumers are hit with
- ads that do not interest them. His company's technology seeks to improve
- those results by targeting consumers with ads for products that are more
- likely to get a particular individual to respond.
-
- "Advertisers feel that they're getting gypped by a 0.2 percent success
- rate for banners anyway," said Eagle, adding that "the amount of pop-up
- banners were doing juxtaposed to the gazillions of banners on the Web is a
- tiny fraction."
-
-
-
- House Panel Passes Web-Tax Ban, Avoids Sales Tax
-
-
- A House of Representatives panel voted Thursday to bar states from taxing
- Internet access and extend for five years a ban on other Internet-specific
- taxes, declining to approve legislation that would help states tax online
- commerce.
-
- Democrats on the subcommittee and other supporters of the sales tax effort
- who had hoped to tie the two issues together said they would try again
- when the full committee takes up the matter in the fall.
-
- As the clock runs out on a temporary ban on Internet access taxes and
- other Internet-specific taxes, state and local governments have sought
- congressional support for an initiative that would allow them to tax
- online sales.
-
- But the House Judiciary subcommittee on commercial and administrative law
- opted not to consider the two issues together when it approved the
- moratorium extension.
-
- The bill, as approved by the panel, would permanently ban taxes on
- Internet access, and extend for five years the current ban on "multiple
- and discriminatory" taxes on E-commerce.
-
- An amendment that would have included support for the sales-tax effort was
- defeated when subcommittee chairman Bob Barr ruled it was not relevant to
- the bill being considered.
-
- Barr, a Georgia Republican, said his priority was to renew the extension
- before it expired in October.
-
- ``I think that any effort to encumber a clean moratorium right now would
- slow it down and possibly kill it and I think that would be irresponsible,"
- Barr told reporters after the session.
-
- North Carolina Rep. Mel Watt, the committee's top Democrat, said he would
- reintroduce his sales-tax amendment when the full Judiciary Committee
- takes up the bill after the August break.
-
- Watt and other supporters of the sales-tax effort said they would likely
- find more allies on the full Judiciary committee.
-
- "This is a minor-league trial period. We get to go to the major leagues
- next," Watt said.
-
- Under a 1992 Supreme Court decision, states cannot require out-of-state
- retailers such as catalog companies to collect sales taxes unless they
- have a physical presence in the state.
-
- Many state and local officials fear a loss of revenues as constituents
- increasingly shop online, while Internet retailers say it would be
- impossible to comply with the maze of state and local tax codes across the
- United States.
-
- A coalition of states is in the process of simplifying their tax codes
- with the hope that Congress would then allow them to collect sales taxes
- on remote sellers.
-
- Several bills introduced in Congress would give states the green light to
- collect sales taxes once enough of them sign up.
-
- But the details of such a plan have proven difficult to sort out. In the
- Senate, sponsors of rival bills have failed to come up with a compromise
- after months of negotiations.
-
- Barr pointed to the slow pace of the Senate negotiations as a reason why
- he wanted to keep it separate from the moratorium. The sales-tax issue
- could be considered on its own merits, he said.
-
- "There's nothing at all stopping us from moving forward with consideration
- of other legislation, it just doesn't have to be tied to this
- legislation," Barr said.
-
- The Direct Marketing Association released a statement applauding the
- moratorium's passage.
-
- "This rightly creates two distinct legislative agendas that are not held
- hostage to one another," said DMA president H. Robert Wientzen.
-
- Lisa Cowell, executive director of the E-Fairness Coalition, a retail
- group that supports the states' effort, said she was not disappointed that
- the subcommittee did not approve sales-tax language.
-
- "This was barely a skirmish in the fight. Everything went as we expected
- it to go," Cowell said.
-
-
-
- Dot-Info Domain Manager Will Boot Cybersquatters
-
-
- The company in charge of the new ".info" Internet domain says that it
- will seek to recover Internet addresses from dishonest applicants who
- grabbed hundreds of desirable names before they were made available to the
- public.
-
- But Afilias, a consortium of 18 domain-name companies, said on Tuesday it
- would not take action until December, after trademark holders have first
- had a chance to win domain names from cybersquatters who used fraudulent
- applications.
-
- The Newtown, Pennsylvania, firm's decision came after a week of criticism
- from Internet users who fear they may not have a chance to control
- addresses like ``www.computer.info" and "www.bank.info" after trademark
- holders -- both real and fraudulent -- get first crack during a month-long
- preregistration period. The general public will be able to sign up for
- ``.info" addresses on September 12.
-
- The ``.info" domain is one of seven selected last November by the Internet
- Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to introduce as an
- alternative to the established domains like ``.com."
-
- Afilias began taking applications from trademark holders on July 27, and
- made its database available for public scrutiny early last week.
-
- Internet users quickly noted that many addresses, such as
- "www.sports.info" and ``www.finance.info," had been snapped up by
- registrants who did not hold legitimate trademarks, and demanded that
- Afilias fix the problem.
-
- Afilias chief marketing officer Roland LaPlante said Tuesday that trademark
- fraud has been an issue, and that the company planned to tackle the problem
- in December.
-
- ``We have had some registrations that look like people have tried to
- circumvent eligibility requirements and sneak in under the wire," LaPlante
- told Reuters.
-
- The ``.info" domain is not the only one to run into difficulties. On
- Tuesday, NeuLevel Inc., which is overseeing the roll-out of the ``.biz"
- domain, filed a lawsuit to defend against charges that its process is in
- effect an illegal lottery that violates trademark law.
-
- Under Afilias' existing rules, anyone may challenge a domain-name holder he
- believes to be fraudulent. After both parties put up fees totaling $295
- each, the dispute is taken to the World Intellectual Property Organization,
- known as WIPO.
-
- If the challenger wins, it gets all but $75 of its fees refunded and, if it
- holds the trademark, the rights to the domain name. A defender who wins
- retains the rights to the domain and gets all of its fees returned.
-
- The system provides little incentive for challengers who do not own a
- trademark on the disputed name, as it cannot win the right to the name.
-
- Afilias will wait to step in until the established challenge period ends on
- December 26, with the hopes that trademark holders will weed out many of
- the offenders.
-
- At that point, Afilias will comb its database and bring all applications it
- suspects to be fraudulent before WIPO in one large batch.
-
- LaPlante said he expected that many of those challenged would put up little
- resistance.
-
- But that presents Afilias with another problem: how to make the recovered
- addresses available to the public again in the face of pent-up demand.
- LaPlante said the company could release them on a random basis or in one
- large batch, but had not decided yet.
-
- ``We have a little time to think this through ... we don't actually know
- how we're going to it," he said.
-
- The move disappointed at least one Internet user who said he has spent ``a
- lot" of money hoping to reserve .info addresses.
-
- ``They've done such a great job so far, I'm not really sure why I'd want
- them doing that for me in December," said Tucson, Arizona lawyer Gary
- Korn, his voice dripping with sarcasm.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
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