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Volume 5, Issue 4 Atari Online News, Etc. January 24, 2003 Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2003 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: Kevin Savetz 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.delphiforums.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.delphiforums.com/atari/ =~=~=~= A-ONE #0504 01/24/03 ~ ISPs Must Trace Piracy ~ People Are Talking! ~ HighWire News Update! ~ Atari++ Emulator News! ~ Apple's Safari Browser ~ Judge Bars Spam! ~ Nintendo Next-Gen Plan ~ ASMA Archive Updated! ~ Coming Soon: eBay-TV ~ MS Told to Carry Java! ~ FreeBSD Available! ~ Lindows Suit Is On! -* Mitnick Is Unleashed, Online *- -* Microsoft Reveals Code to Russia! *- -* Total Information Awareness Project Curbs? *- =~=~=~= ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!" """""""""""""""""""""""""" Up until these past couple of weeks, I was willing to give Joe some slack in his belief that it's easier to deal with the cold than the heat. Last week, that slack decreased. This past week, forget about it! This past week has seen the coldest temperatures in this area in quite some time. And, to make matters worse, the ferocious winds that we were getting made it even colder. And even more worse than that, so far this week, we've lost our heat three times! Early last Saturday morning, we woke up because it was so cold in the house; the furnace shut down in the middle of the night. A call to our oil distributor had that resolved - after about 4 hours more. We don't know what went wrong - everything seemed okay but a furnace re-set failed to get it going, initially. Sunday morning, same thing. This time, the lines from our outside oil tank to the house were frozen. It took an acetylene torch to thaw them out. Knowing that the temperatures were going to drop even more during the next few days, I stocked up on dry gas for the oil tank, and insulating tape for the lines. We made it through the next few days with no problems; I thought we were all set - until Thursday. We got home from work and walked into a frigid house. This time, the re-set fired up the furnace. We may be fortunate in the days to come, as we're expecting a heat wave here in New England - temperatures in the 20's!! It's usually mid- to late-February before I start to really get sick of the winter. Not this year! I'm more than ready for Spring and some warm temperatures. I was joking this past week with one of our vendors who works with us on some projects. He lives down on Cape Cod, in a condo on a golf course (gorgeous area, by the way!). Usually, people down there can play golf all year round. Yes, it gets cold, but bearable. Every time I see him on-site, I ask him why he's not home playing a few holes - knowing quite well that it's been frigid down there too! He laughs and said that he spotted a few idiots out on the course the other day! Yes, they're crazy because there's snow on the ground even down there! And the wind off of the ocean has to be brutally cold. Me, I'll pretend to be patient, and wait for the temperatures to rise another 50 degrees or so. Until next time... =~=~=~= HighWire 0.1.1 Is Released The HighWire Development Team releases HighWire 0.1.1 Following HighWire 0.1.0 (downloaded 238 times so far) the new version offers a good deal of stability improvements as well as some typical bug fixes. Work have also been put into the experimental online support, making HighWire connect faster and also allowing it to work with a lot more servers than 0.1.0 did. You could say that the unofficial online support has been officially improved ;) What's new in HighWire 0.1.1? - Overworked recognition of link areas, still not perfect yet but much better now. - HTTP protocol layer reworked, is faster now and works for much more servers now. - The problem of files with long names not loaded at some Magic versions (eg. *.html) is solved now. - Added a workaround to have it working under Geneva again. - Fixed several remaining bugs related to "LI" tags. - Implemented <nobr> and <wbr> tags, also <td nowrap> is working now. - Table cells with percentage width are working now. - Images that has not more than 1 pixel width and/or height don't get a place holder anymore. That makes pages looking nicer if some spacer gifs couldn't be loaded. - Fixed some oddities related to transparent GIFs. - Reworked code to avoid flickering mouse pointer when moved over window's title or info bar or being exactly over a frame's border. - Bugs #0020, #0022, #0080, #0086, #0087 resolved. For more information and downloads, please visit the web page: http://highwire.atari-users.net Atari++ Emulator Version 1.14 Released Version 1.14 of the Atari++ Emulator has been released. The Atari++ Emulator is a Unix-based Atari 8-bit emulator, and can be compiled on a variety of systems (Linux, Solaris, Irix). New features in the 1.14 release include: Extended emulation of various cartridge types (SDX,XEGS) Emulation of the 5200 BountyBob cartridge. Improved sound quality for Oss and ALSA. Highly improved sound emulation for SDL http://www.math.tu-berlin.de/~thor/atari++ ASMA 2.6 Music Archive Released The biggest Atari XL/XE music archive was updated with 93 new songs and several credits fixes. Now the collection contains unbelievable 1647 tunes dating from early '80s till Christmas 2002. Get the archive and player at the homepage. http://asma.atari.org =~=~=~= PEOPLE ARE TALKING compiled by Joe Mirando joe@atarinews.org Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I'd like to say thanks to the folks who emailed me with suggestions for getting rid of migraines. Unfortunately, I've already tried most of the suggestions, although I draw the line at boring a hole in my skull to let the demons out. <grin> If you've never had migraines, all I can say is, "good for you". They're not something that I would wish on anyone. In my quest to rid myself of them, I've tried everything from diet and exercise to chiropractic and acupuncture, to injecting myself with substances that could conceivably cause a stroke or heart attack. No, it's not a big risk, but it is a possibility. It's kind of amazing that this 'thing' has the power that it does. I count myself lucky because I only get migraines once a month or so, on average. I've talked to people who get two or three a week. And when you're talking about something that can last two or three days each, that's nothing to minimize. In the grand scheme of things, I've got it easy. Anyway, thanks to those of you who emailed your well-wishes and suggestions. I appreciate it. I guess that the Atari community is pretty much like any other community. No, not everyone pitches in every time someone needs something, but it seems that there's usually someone there to help out, even if only in a small way. Hell, odds are that the Atari community probably isn't going to change the world... again, but it's still nice to have a network of people who like some of the same things you do without necessarily having to be ideological clones. There have always been, and probably always will be disagreements in our little community, but even the most combative among us keep coming back to be part of the community. And that's probably as it should be. We only grow or progress when we have to, it seems. Hey, if nothing else, dealing with others is good practice for the real world. <G> Let's get to the news and stuff from the UseNet. From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup ==================================== Peter Slegg asks about HD Driver: "I have recently fitted a 20Gb Hd into my Milan on IDE2 in addition to the original 2Gb that I boot from. What I want to do is boot from the new HD so I partitioned it with a 1Gb partition, then some 5Gbs and a 4Gb using hd Driver 7.71 Each HD is a master on its own IDE cable that they share with a CD ROM and a CD-RW. I thought that I could simply swap the 2 HDs or just swap the IDE cables on the motherboard and that HD-Driver would now boot from the first partition on the 20Gb drive. The Milan boots and TOS detects both IDE drives then HD Driver starts, detects the first drive and then locks-up. I also tried leaving things as they are and pressing CTRL during the device check. TOS then asks if I want to boot from IDE 2 (the 20Gb). I enter Y and then HD-Driver starts and locks-up. I also tried booting from a floppy and then running HD-Driver but get the same problem. I think that the boot partition may be too big (954.6Mb according to HDRUTIL) but I thought 1 Gig was ok with TOS 4.0x or does it have to be smaller for boot partitions? Typical isn't it. Just after I sent this I realised what I had done wrong. I will go to the bottom of the class for this one. I stupidly made the first partition on the new disk a BGM type instead of GEM. I think I got it into my head because it is fairly big at 1 Gbyte. Next question. Why does the boot partition have to be of type GEM ?" Dr. Uwe Seimet, author of HD Driver, tells Peter: "It doesn't have to be of type GEM. BGM as boot partition type is perfectly legal. Otherwise it would be impossible to have boot partitions larger than 32 MB. HDDRIVER should never lock up, even with partitions too big for TOS. Your version of HDDRIVER is quite old. I recommend to check whether the current version behaves differently. You can use the demo version for that (http://www.seimet.de/hddriver_english.html)" Jean-Luc Ceccoli asks about networking his TT: "Did someone succeed in connecting a TT / Magic / Sting / Ethernec to another machine ? If so, could I be explained how to do ? I connected my TT to a laptop running XP, and used Sting to ping the PC. But, after a few seconds, there happened to be dropped packets, which went increasing more and more, until there was not any received packet anymore, though the PC could detect data coming from the TT. As if data became corrupted after some time... I'm feeling more and more sceptical, and would appreciate any kind of help." 'Roger' tells Jean-Luc: "It seems to work for some people, but not for others (including me). I have a suspicion that it's some kind of timing problem on the cartridge port, but haven't had time recently to investigate further. Kenneth Medin found it worked only if there was a particular sequence of drivers in his STinG folder." Kenneth Medin chimes in and tells Jean-Luc: "I have used the Ethernec/STing setup now for some time and it works very good. Still havn't had the time to investigate the strange routing behaviours, though." Lonny Purcell adds: "I have an EtherNEC on my TT but with MiNT-Net and Odd's driver. Works great, I've let it sit on IRC for some hours and moved some files back and forth from my other machines with no problems. Perhaps I am very lucky." Martin Tarenskeen asks about his Falcon's LAN connector: "Forgive if this is a stupid question, but what can I do with the LAN connector on my Falcon030 ? It's the only part of my Falcon that I have never used yet, and it makes me curious." Greg Goodwin tells Martin: "The answer is ... not much. The LAN connector, if I recall, is wired to your serial port. Some people have attached their modem to the LAN connector using wires intended for a Mac. This then leaves the serial port free for a null modem cable or a serial mouse or an older digital camera. Of course, you can't use both at the same time, but it keeps you from having to switch the connectors of two devices back and forth all the time." Mark Duckworth asks for help with his Matrix video card: "First I'd like to say thank you to everyone who helped out with my original question regarding my Matrix video card. I believe to have properly identified it as a Mico with a truecolor memory expansion. Now I want to very carefully attempt to power it up. This question, to boris as well, is are the wires attached to the small thing on the expansion board SUPPOSED to be soldered somewhere on the original vme board? http://pikachu.atari-source.com/~mduckworth/matrix1.jpgI just want to be very careful with this thing before attempting to power it up. There is also some sort of power connector as well as an expansion connector of some sort... looks to be about IDE sized. Any other information would be helpful too. Can this card be powered up without the ram expansion? If it's a Mico does that mean it will work on the mega ste (mega ste would be much easier for testing and repair for me)." Boris Cahan tells Mark: "YES! sadly they were clipped off without labeling! And thus I have NO IDEA which wire went where. Also, IIRC, the stack of sockets separating the two boards was originally brass posts that got clipped and replaced with the socket stack, which MAY BE VERY unreliable for connection." Rob Jenkins asks about Atari's Multi-tasking system, MiNT: "I've tried to improve the software capability of my Falcon (standard case with no speed improvements if that helps - though 16mb of mem). I installed the multiTos app off the system disk that someone kindly sent me, only problem is, It's kindly locked up Cubase for me (It can't find MROS, and won't run without it).I've been looking at alternative operating systems / desktops (as I do like the improvements that MultiTos gave me) and one of the things I've noted is that when booting up, the computer says Mint is now TOS.I'm thinking since 1992 / 1993, there must have been improvements to the version that was distributed with the falcon, so having searched the net for "Mint AND atari", I find a lot of (what looks like complex) information about Mint, about installing it and about programming for it, but no simple, "this is what Mint does" (in Newbie-language).So, can anyone tell me if this is what I'm after - or is there something better I can use (A new, colourful, "different" sort of desktop, that I can run Cubase and Logic from)? Brian Roland tells Rob: "MiNT is a preemptive multitasking kernel.The major differences between this and the TOS that is built into your Falcon are:The MiNT kernel itself provides the ability to load several programs into memory and give them each a 'timeslice' of processor time. These timeslices'cycle'. In many cases (using a utility called nice) you can even set priorities for which program(s) should get more CPU time. With some know-how, you can also get really fancy with MiNT and make it a multi user system that designates a maximum amount of RAM and processor time that particular users can use, and that applications can grab for themselves.MiNT also allows various drivers and plug-ins to be booted with the kernel. For instance...one can install MiNT-Net sockets, device drivers, or the intelligent bits to deal with various hard disk partitions (such as EXT2).Common drivers are PPP, Plip, ext2, minix, serial devices, alternate consoles, mouse drivers, ethernet boards, virtual consoles, and more.MiNT is as POSIX compatible as possible. This is mostly of interest to those who program, or wish to compile standard ANSI C sources (usually written with unix based machines in mind). This means that given the right compiler and libraries, one can compile a plethora of code targeted to unix (the hardware itself doesn't matter). One example is the ability to download sources for something like IRC (Internet Relay Chat), Pine (Email and News Group clent), or TinyFugue (A glorified telnet client designed for text based multi user games/chats) from the net and compile it right away with few to no changes to the code.MiNT is just the base of things and in and of itself only supports basic disk operation and vt52 screen manipulation.Other aspects of a complete MiNT setup include the AES, and the GEM routines. This is the part of your Atari OS that involves drawing and manipulating windows, icons, dialogues, and dealing with the data inside them.One Example is the GEM/AES that is built into the Falcon. You see it almost immediately when you boot up your Falcon upon the desk-top. The built in GEM/AES/Desktop of the Falcon can indeed run with MiNT, but, it lacks the ability to launch more than one application, and also has limits as to how many windows can be open at once, etc.Notice, when you installed MultiTOS... You put a file called mint.prg into the auto folder. You put a file called MINT.CNF into a folder called MULTITOS or MINT. You put a file called GEM.SYS into a folder called MULTITOS or MINT. You put a file called GEM.CNF into a folder called MULTITOS or MINT.mint.prg is the kernel. MINT.CNF is a text file that sets user-defined parts of MINT. GEM.SYS is the GEM/AES/Desktop part of things. GEM.CNF is a text file that sets user-defined parts of GEM, such as paths and file extension information.Now, when you boot your Falcon, mint.prg is one of the first things to load...and once all of your auto folder programs get loaded it usually looks for GEM.SYS (you can address what mint will load, and how it loads at boot-time inside the mint.cnf file). If mint.cnf does not contain the line exec file.prg or gem file.prg, or these programs don't exist as stated, it will load the built in GEM/AES/Desktop.One common misconception about MiNT is that it requires a unix partition and all sorts of complicated set-up files. This is not entirely true. Really, it depends upon what you wish to do, the set of tools you intend to use, and how important security is. The reason most people go ahead and install a complete set of unix tools is because so many clients and things already exist that were written with unix in mind. I.E. The ncurses screen driver makes it a breeze for a program to compile and not worry about if it should use VT52, VT102, etc., or lynx can compile and use standard calls to MiNT-Net for it's http access. Also, many of the already existing programs intended for unix will want to check up on security issues with files...like ownership and permission. It's easier to just install it all than it is to try to strip out unneeded stuff.Since Atari released the commercial version of MultiTOS (shipped with Falcons, and also sold separately for ST use), Atari itself did one major improvement to the GEM/AES/Desktop part that eventually made it out to the FreeMiNT community. This is known as AES 4.1.AES 4.1 does offer some advantages over the initial MultiTOS release, though I can't name any from the top of my head. Most of the improvements, if I recall correctly involve the AES part of things. This is dealing with how GEM applications get multi-tasked and windows and such are kept up with so the system doesn't get confused about what GEM objects belong to what application(s).Since MultiTOS and AES4.1... Several improvements and enhancements have been made by others. Geneva for instance, works with some mint kernels. It replaces the AES and gives the Atari a new, faster, look and feel. N.AES (commercial) was next on the scene with a more complete AES designed to properly take advantage of more mint offerings. The latest AES replacement to date is called XAAES and is free/opensource.All of these AES changes give GEM the ability to more properly and efficiently multitask GEM applications. They all give the system a slightly different look and feel. One example of things you begin to see with these newer AESes would be more gadgets in the windows, like iconify, hide, or even the mac-like ability to double click the top of a window and see it shrink into something like a toolbar. The ability to drag a window halfway off the left edge of a screen. Real time window scrolling in the back ground. The ability to define what fonts get used where and their sizes. Common pipes, and clipboard standards. New file selectors that offer more options, and support for long (fat32,ext2) filenames. The list goes on...but this should give you a basic idea of what a multi-tasking GEM and AES is all about.The desktop.MultiTOS and AES 4.1 both come with desktops that look and act very similar to that built into the Falcon. The major difference being the ability to launch more than one GEM application at one time. Neither of these desktops recognize long filenames.Geneva, N.AES, and XXAES all treat the desktop a bit differently. By default, they don't have one at all. You define an alternate desktop that hopefully is multitasking friendly. Or, you can run them without a desktop. Tara Desk is free/opensource. It's a small and fast bare bones DeskTop, but is reported to exist quite happily under MiNT as a multitasking aware desktop. Thing is shareware, and is also packaged with N.AES (tho' the version that comes with N.AES only works with N.AES). Jeenie is yet another very powerful desk-top, commercial, that is reported to get along very well with MiNT. NeoDesk and Ease aren't bad either, but neither of these will notice long filenames, and have lagged behind in some protocol advances such as the AVSERVER (a desktop protocol that assists in having one program, or the desktop launch another and send along instructions or pass files).The file selector is another thing to consider.The one that comes with MultiTOS, AES 4.1, and Geneva is very basic, and is unable to deal with long filenames. XXAES and N.AES both have newer, more advanced file selectors. In any case, you can replace the file selector with one of your choice, such as Freedom or BoxKite.GDOS and the Vdi This is a part of the Atari OS that deals with Screen draws, fonts, and driving printers. GDOS can be used for other things as well, but these are the most common uses.NVDI is commercial, quite good and quite common. It speeds up screen draws considerably, and can also support some graphics cards. 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