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- Volume 5, Issue 36 Atari Online News, Etc. September 5, 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 #0536 09/05/03
-
- ~ Symantec Raises Prices ~ People Are Talking! ~ SC68 Is Released!
- ~ Lycos E-Mail Glitch! ~ New Eudora Upgrade! ~ NetHack Is Updated!
- ~ Dogpile Gets Better! ~ MS Issues New Warnings ~ Downloaders Amnesty!
- ~ AvP Author Site Launch ~ Targeting Web ID Theft ~ Anti-Spam Resources!
-
- -* Second Virus Suspect Busted! *-
- -* Colossal Computer Cartoon Book Live *-
- -* New Internet Worm Targets UK's Tony Blair! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Well, it's back to school for most, as well as back to work for summer
- vacationers - myself included. At least it's been a short week due to the
- Labor Day holiday! The weather this past week has been unseasonably cooler,
- but I'm certainly not complaining! I prefer these temperatures over the
- 80's and 90's that we had for most of the summer. While it's been somewhat
- overcast and damp, I can live with it. Still, it's difficult to believe
- that the summer is all but over already! We even closed the pool up this
- past weekend, doubtful that we'd use it again this year.
-
- There's been a lot of news this week surrounding the arrests of a couple of
- the alleged virus/worm creators that have plagued the world's computers
- recently. After reading some brief information regarding these suspects, it
- doesn't appear that these suspects are the vile hackers that one would
- imagine, but copycats who managed to alter the worms somewhat and re-release
- them in our midst. Phrases like "good kids" and "never had a problem with
- the law before" really amuse me! Sure, they just never got caught before!
- They had to realize what the damage could be! "Harmless pranks" are only
- harmless when they don't hurt anyone or any thing. Whatever happened to
- really harmless pranks like phoning people and asking "Do you have Prince
- Albert in a can?" Oh yeah, I forgot - tobacco jokes aren't politically
- correct any longer!
-
- Well, before I depress myself any more, let's wrap it up for this week.
- These short weeks make for a tighter deadline, so I'll get back to putting
- the finishing touches together for yet another issue.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- Nethack 3.4.2 Released
-
-
- Nethack is a free overhead view Dungeons & Dragons-style adventure game.
-
- It runs on several different platforms and has both graphical and text
- interfaces.
-
- 3.4.2 is a bugfix release for Nethack 3.4, fixing several fatal and piles
- of smaller bugs.
-
- TOS/GEM binaries are available from the download page.
-
- http://www.nethack.org/
-
-
-
- AvP Author Launches Website
-
-
- Andrew Whittaker, author of the award winning "Alien Vs Predator" for the
- Atari Jaguar and a string of hit games on the Atari ST has launched a
- website based upon his work.
-
- There is still much more to add, but already today a major series of game
- tips for AvP went live online! with more information being added on a daily
- basis.
-
- There is also a link to ask your game queries direct to Andrew by email.
-
- http://andreww.atari-users.net/
-
-
-
- SC68 2.0.0 (YM-2149 Emulation Library) Released
-
-
- SC68 is a YM-2149 emulation library. Recently version 2.0.0 has been
- released. Additional packages include Winamp and XMMS plugins.
-
- For more see: http://sashipa.ben.free.fr/sc68/
-
-
-
- Colossal Computer Cartoon Book
-
-
- The Colossal Computer Cartoon Book is now on the Web at AtariArchives.org.
-
- Published in 1977 by Creative Computing, the Colossal Computer Cartoon Book
- includes more than 250 cartoons and comics about computers and technology.
- The cartoons in the book stand the test of time - despite being first
- published 26 years ago, they remain as funny and relevant as the day they
- were drawn.
-
- http://www.atariarchives.org/cartoon/
-
- This is the 20th classic computing book to be made available at
- AtariArchives.org.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I've got nothing really interesting to talk
- about this week... unless you want to talk about my migraine. Nah, I
- didn't think so. Hell, it's MINE, and _I_ don't want to talk about it.
-
- If you've never had a migraine, count yourself lucky. I've tried to
- explain migraines to friends and family over the years, and never had
- much luck conveying anything but the most superficial explanation.
- Imagine someone hammering a red-hot railroad spike or knitting needle
- into the center of your head while flashing a strobe light in your eyes
- and blaring the most irritating, distorted sounds imaginable in your
- ears. Add to that a punch-drunk kind of consciousness, and an inability
- to discern color or gauge time and you've got a little bit of an idea of
- what an average migraine is like. It's hard to believe that I don't look
- forward to them, ain't it? <grin>
-
- Anyway, I started with a migraine during dinner tonight. I can count on
- anywhere from 8 to about 30 hours before it lets up. No, I'm not looking
- for sympathy. I've dealt with migraines for almost 25 years now, and I've
- evolved my own way of dealing with them. With things like biofeedback and
- meditation the pain can be controlled to an extent, but don't let anyone
- fool you... telling yourself that there IS no pain just doesn't work.
- I've found that, for me, the key is to accept the situation and deal with
- the symptoms. Once I started accepting the symptoms and stopped trying to
- fight them, I found that I could cope with them with less trouble. There
- are times when a migraine comes on too quickly or too strongly to do
- anything but hide from any stimuli that "hurts", but for the most part I
- can cope for one major reason... I accept it.
-
- There's probably a lesson in there somewhere, but damned if I can see it
- through the "neon amoeba" and tunnel vision.
-
- Let's get to the news, hints, tips, and info from the UseNet.
-
-
- >From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- 'Gilian' asks for help with a lazy 520:
-
- "My Atari 520 STfm did manage to boot on couple of occasions at first (the
- usual stuff, some "ticking" noise from empty internal floppy drive and
- green OS screen appears). But now, when I try to boot it up, the only
- thing I hear is the same usual "ticking" noise from the floppy drive
- which goes on forever (was waiting for over 30mins) but nothing happens,
- no green screen, no cherry bombs, nothing. I did try to boot up with
- floppy drive disconnected, didn't make any difference. Just was wondering
- what was going on, didn't have any luck in FAQ, so you guys is my last
- hope ;)
-
- Moreover, when I did manage to boot up at first I was trying to format DD
- disk (3 to be precise) but failed every single time at around 80% format,
- OS was saying that there is some disk error. Not sure whether it is
- related to the above problem in any way.
-
- My gear: Atari 520 STfm (internal floppy + modulator)
- No internal Hard Drive and no other external/internal mods.
- Just plain 520 STfm."
-
-
- Steve Sweet tells Gilian:
-
- "The quickest way to boot an ST is with a blank formatted diskette in the
- drive but it seems you have other problems."
-
-
- Tom McEwan adds:
-
- "The eternal disk check on bootup sounds a lot like loose ROM chips to me.
- You can open up the case and straighten them out, maybe clean the contacts
- with some methylated spirit, or you could just try the controversial
- "Universal 10.16cm (4 inch) Drop". On a stock Atari, everyone swears it
- can do no harm, but given I've made some structural mods to mine
- (replacing the FD mount pillars to fit a larger drive, to be exact, cos
- some moron had glued the disk eject button in on the old one), so I
- haven't risked trying it on my machine.
-
- As for the format problems, I'm not sure what could be wrong. First
- thing, make sure you're using genuine low density disks (they don't have
- the extra hole on the opposite side to the write protect tab). Atari's
- generally don't like HD disks. Next, make sure the drive itself is
- connected and working properly (you can take it out of the atari and test
- it by plugging it into a PC, though I have a feeling you need to turn the
- cable upside down or something strange like that) Other than that, I
- can't think of much else."
-
-
- Gilian takes Tom's advice and then replies:
-
- "it helped! ROM chips did become loose, so pushing them down did do the
- trick. After I've solved this problem, formatting problem has gone away,
- nice. What do you need to do, for RAM chips not to get loose again?
-
- It looks like you know what you're talking about (with all your mods,
- etc). Where can I get new roms (with new OS, I've got 1.2) at reasonable
- price (i'm in the UK)?
-
- Thanks again for all your help, much appreciated!"
-
-
- Barrie at Keychange tells Gilian:
-
- "Unless you specifically need the later TOS 1.04 roms the 1.02 will do
- most of what you need. Changing will be waste of money unless e.g. you
- want to use a hard drive."
-
-
- Stephen Moss adds:
-
- "The main advantages of TOS 1.04 over 1.02 is Control+Alt+Delete
- keyboard reset and DOS compatible disk formatting, although the latter
- is only of importance in doing PC to ST file transfers and even then
- you can format the disk on a PC.
-
- TOS 1.04 in the last TOS version that can be fitted directly to ST's,
- if you want a higher version than that you will have to install an
- upgrade board. IIRC these usually involve an external switch that
- allows you to select either the original TOS version or TOS 2.06 as
- necessary because some software may not function with one of the TOS
- versions.
-
- Although hard drive communication my prove slightly faster I'm not
- sure you would notice the difference between using a hard drive with
- TOS 1.04 and TOS 1.02."
-
-
- Paul Babb asks about emulators:
-
- "I am searching an easy to use emulator which enables me to play the
- famous Oxyd or Bolo game under Win2000. Currently there is a DOS resp.
- Win95-Dos-Box Version of Oxyd but it doesn't run under Win2000 (or
- WinXP). Does anyone know how to let Oxyd most conveniently run under
- Win2000 with which emulator ?"
-
-
- Matthias Arndt tells Paul:
-
- "STEEM should fit for that purpose. Check http://steem.atari.org/ for
- details."
-
-
- Al Ferrier asks about connecting with STiNG:
-
- "As an online Atarian, I am keen to access my mail etc from either my STE
- 1040 or my PC and have been able to do so until recently via a
- pay-as-you-go account I had with Freeserve (my Atari was unable to access
- my usual paid-up WH Smith account). However, I think Freeserve have
- called time on that PAYG service as the number no longer connects.
-
- Is there a dial script available for STinG for Tesco.net, my new ISP? Is
- there any site where I can download a template one so I can add my
- details? I seem to remember one for an early provider of mine, Zetnet."
-
-
- Derryck Croker tells Al:
-
- "A fellow club member reported that he wasn't able to connect to Freeserve
- with STiNG any longer - they claimed though that nothing had changed in
- their login.
-
- Don't get hung up about scripts. Try the default cfg file with your
- details added but don't bother adding anything into the dial.scr section.
- It's been a while since I've done this, but there's usually no need to
- enter anything in that section unless you really have to and the way to
- find out what to add is to log in using a terminal prog and make notes on
- what it's asking and what you have to respond with."
-
-
- David Wade adds:
-
- "The freeserve web page still lists anytime as being available. I am sure
- there used to be two numbers but they now only list 0845 079 6699 as the
- number. Also has your account expired?
-
- If you don't use it for 90 days you need to do "Retrieve account" from the
- freeserve home page. (top left, internet access panel)"
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Tune in again next week, same time,
- same station... and maybe I'll have recovered from my migraine... and be
- ready to listen to what they are saying when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Luring Video Gamers Online!
- """""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Sony, Microsoft Look To Lure Video Game Players Online
-
-
- Are you ready for some online football?
-
- Sony Corp. and Microsoft Corp. hope so. The two video game console rivals
- are counting on thousands of armchair quarterbacks to kick their fledgling
- online services into gear this fall.
-
- Though online gaming brings in little revenue for the companies today, they
- hope that changes soon - as soon as this month, in Microsoft's case.
-
- Sony's PlayStation 2 online service and Microsoft's Xbox Live service went
- live last year, with the free services led by military games. Now
- mainstream sports games, especially football, are taking the spotlight.
-
- Electronic Arts Inc.'s "Madden NFL 2004," the leading sports game, is
- available for offline users of all the main console platforms. But it saw
- a surge of players taking the game online when it debuted the online
- version Aug. 12. For now, the online version can be played online only
- using Sony's PlayStation 2 machine.
-
- Meanwhile, Sony released its own online-enabled football game, "NFL
- GameDay 2004," from its in-house developer 989 Sports on Aug. 26. And
- Microsoft released its "NFL Fever 2004" for Xbox Live on Thursday, as part
- of its new XSN Sports lineup.
-
- Sony, Microsoft and EA want to sell lots of regular, offline football game
- software this season. But they're also scrimmaging for the lead in the
- fledgling online game field.
-
- "Online gaming is going to be quite big," said David Cole, president of
- researcher DFC Intelligence. "It's going to be where it's at five years
- down the road."
-
- The number of online users is relatively small. Sony has about 800,000
- online console gamers and Microsoft more than 500,000. But the numbers are
- expected to rise steadily.
-
- Online will play a bigger role with the next-generation consoles from Sony
- and Microsoft, due out in 2005 or 2006, Cole says.
-
- The video game business generated about $27 billion in sales of hardware
- and software worldwide last year, according to Wedbush Morgan Securities.
- Of that figure, nearly a third, or $8.6 billion, was from consoles and
- other hardware. Sales of video game software totaled $6.9 billion in the
- U.S. alone last year, says the Entertainment Software Association.
-
- Industry officials believe the market will expand as game play moves from
- the living room into cyberspace. Instead of playing by themselves or with
- buddies who drop by their homes, online gamers can challenge friends and
- strangers worldwide.
-
- Sports games appeal to mainstream players, and they're the industry's
- target now that the hard-core gamers are already online.
-
- "Sports gaming probably has the highest percentage of online interest of
- any of the genres right now," said Jack Tretton, executive vice president
- of Sony Computer Entertainment America. In particular, EA's "Madden NFL
- 2004" has been a "juggernaut" that's helping to drive PlayStation 2 users
- online, he says.
-
- EA has been "pleasantly surprised" by the interest in online console
- gaming, says EA spokesman Jeff Brown. "We underestimated the intense
- enthusiasm shown by hard-core gamers - that crucial group of people who buy
- 10 to 15 games per year," he said.
-
- But he says EA doesn't think online console gaming will be a serious
- business until PlayStation 3 comes out in a couple of years. For now, it
- falls short of a true mass-market audience, Brown says.
-
- While Sony and EA don't charge extra for their online gaming services
- today, users have to buy a $40 network adapter and an online-enabled game.
- And Microsoft charges $50 for an Xbox Live Starter Kit, which includes a
- headset and microphone and a year's worth of service.
-
- But Microsoft takes the big step this month. That's when initial Xbox Live
- users will have to pay either $49.99 a year or $5.99 a month to renew what
- had been a free subscription.
-
- Microsoft believes the fees are low enough to keep the great majority of
- users, says Peter Moore, corporate vice president of retail sales and
- marketing for Microsoft's Home and Entertainment Division.
-
- "We're talking Big Mac and fries here," Moore said about the monthly cost.
-
- Analysts expect Sony and its game publisher partners to start charging for
- online service once PlayStation 3 comes out. Sony now considers the online
- aspect just another feature of its games, which generally cost $40 to $50.
-
- Microsoft sees online console gaming as a way to leapfrog market leader
- Sony. In North America, Sony has sold 20 million PlayStation 2 consoles to
- Microsoft's 6.2 million Xbox consoles.
-
- Sony beat Microsoft to market with its new console by more than a year.
- PlayStation 2 debuted in the U.S. in October 2000. Xbox followed in
- November 2001.
-
- But Microsoft's Xbox has several built-in functions for online gaming that
- Sony's PlayStation 2 doesn't have. Xbox comes with an ethernet port for
- broadband-only online gaming.
-
- Sony sells a network adapter that lets PlayStation 2 owners play games
- online using dial-up or high-speed broadband links.
-
- Next year Sony will sell a hard disk drive for storing downloadable game
- content, but Xbox already includes that.
-
- In recent weeks, Sony, Microsoft and EA each have launched Web sites where
- sports gamers can track their scores and rankings, challenge other players,
- and create leagues and tournaments.
-
- "This is the year that sports (gaming online) hits it big," said Kevin
- Browne, studio manager for Microsoft's Xbox sports games.
-
- The online element is turning sports gaming from a mostly solitary activity
- into a social activity, he says.
-
- The growth of online console gaming has been "a big wake-up call for Sony,"
- says IDC analyst Schelley Olhava. Sony lost ground to Microsoft among
- hard-core gamers by not pursuing online capabilities as aggressively as
- Microsoft, she says.
-
- "The perception is that Microsoft is a bit ahead of Sony" in online gaming,
- Olhava said. "Sony is working hard to catch up."
-
- Video games are a huge profit maker for Sony, a media and electronics
- company.
-
- For Microsoft, video games present an opportunity to expand beyond its
- strength in personal computers into consumer electronics.
-
- Both companies see their game devices as future systems for delivering
- entertainment and other digital content to living rooms.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Online Sellers, Security Companies Target Web ID Theft
-
-
- Internet retailers and security companies have formed a group to battle
- online identity theft, the Information Technology Association of America
- (ITAA) said on Tuesday.
-
- The group, called the Coalition on Online Identity Theft, includes such
- founding members as Web retailer Amazon.com Inc., online auctioneer eBay
- Inc., software giant Microsoft Corp., security software company VeriSign
- Inc., and credit card provider Visa U.S.A. ITAA is the administrator for
- the coalition, which is not part of the technology trade group, an ITAA
- spokesman said.
-
- The coalition will focus on four main goals: expanding public education
- campaigns; promoting technology and tips for preventing and dealing with
- online theft; documenting and sharing nonpersonal information about
- emerging online fraudulent activity to prevent future scams; and working
- with the government to ensure effective enforcement of criminal penalties
- against cyber thieves.
-
- During 2002, just over 75,000 complaints were posted on the Internet Fraud
- Complaint Center (IFCC) Web site.
-
- The IFCC, a partnership between the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the
- National White Collar Crime Center, said it referred more than 48,000 of
- those complaints of fraud and that the total dollar loss from those cases
- was $54 million, up from $17 million in 2001.
-
-
-
- Second Suspect Arrested for Internet Virus
-
-
- Police in Romania on Wednesday arrested a 24-year-old former student in
- connection with a computer-crippling Internet worm, according to a computer
- security company that aided police.
-
- The company, Bucharest-based BitDefender, identified the student as Dan
- Dumitru Ciobanu, a 24-year-old graduate of the Technical University of
- Iasi, in northeastern Romania.
-
- Police detained Ciobanu in connection with a modified and milder version
- of the Blaster worm, said Patrick Vicol, a virus analyst at BitDefender.
- Dubbed MsBlast.F, it was unleashed on computers of the Technical
- University, Vicol said.
-
- Last week, Minneapolis high school senior Jeffrey Parson, 18, was charged
- with letting loose a different variation of the Blaster worm.
-
- Authorities said Parson admitted during an interview with FBI and Secret
- Service agents that he tinkered with the original "Blaster" infection that
- made computers attack the Microsoft Web site last month. Prosecutors said
- Parson's worm affected at least 7,000 computers.
-
- In Romania, Vicol said BitDefender had responded to a police request to
- track down the author of MsBlast.F.
-
- Company analysts traced Ciobanu through some Romanian-language text inside
- the virus that eventually led them to a Web page containing Ciobanu's home
- address and telephone number, Vicol said.
-
- "We tracked him using the bulletin boards. He actually gave his name - not
- a very smart thing to do," Vicol said in a telephone interview.
-
- The Romanian-language message in the virus "says something not very polite
- about a teacher" at Ciobanu's former university, Vicol said.
-
- Vicol stressed that both Ciobanu and Parson are suspected of merely
- modifying the text of the original Blaster, not of authoring the virus
- that snarled computer networks worldwide beginning Aug. 11 by exploiting a
- flaw in Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating systems.
-
- Unlike the original Blaster that experts say infected at least half a
- million computers, Vicol said he doubted the "F" version had spread beyond
- Romania.
-
- Police seized computers from Ciobanu's home and workplace - at a photo
- developing lab - that BitDefender will analyze for evidence of the worm,
- Vicol said.
-
- Ciobanu could face up to 15 years in prison under a new law in Romania,
- according to BitDefender's Web site.
-
- Parson faces one count of intentionally causing damage to a protected
- computer. Conviction could bring a maximum 10 years in prison and a
- $250,000 fine.
-
-
-
- Repent Downloaders and Get Amnesty
-
-
- Internet users who promise to stop illegally copying music will be able to
- avoid prosecution under an amnesty program to be unveiled by the recording
- industry next week, a source close to the matter said Friday.
-
- Users would sign a notarized affidavit promising to stop using "peer to
- peer" programs like Kazaa to download copyrighted music for free and to
- delete all songs they may have acquired illegally, said the source, who
- spoke on condition of anonymity.
-
- The Recording Industry Association of America is expected to file lawsuits
- early next week against hundreds of peer-to-peer users suspected of
- engaging in widespread copyright violations.
-
- Those facing lawsuits would not be eligible for the amnesty program, the
- source said.
-
- An RIAA spokesman declined to comment.
-
- The amnesty program is one of several recent moves by the industry to
- reach out to digital-music users and soften the impact of an aggressive
- legal fight that has incurred the wrath of many music fans.
-
- Earlier this week, Universal Music Group announced that it would slash the
- retail cost of its CDs by 30 percent, and analysts expect other labels to
- follow suit.
-
- Industry-authorized download services have been gaining in popularity as
- they offer improved features, and some such as buymusic.com have been
- negotiating discount packages with colleges and universities.
-
- Copyright expert Gigi Sohn, who has frequently clashed with the industry
- in the past, said the amnesty program sounds like a good idea, but
- participants should not be forced to renounce all forms of song copying.
-
- "This is a heck of a lot better than just going out and suing the daylights
- out of people," said Sohn, president of the Washington-based advocacy group
- Public Knowledge. "My concern is that people may give up rights they may
- have, such as the right to limited sharing."
-
- Internet users who continue to copy music online after signing the
- affidavit could face possible criminal charges for willful copyright
- infringement. It was not clear what information participants would have to
- provide to the RIAA, or how they could obtain the form.
-
- In addition to Universal, a division of Vivendi Universal, RIAA members
- include AOL Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Music; Sony Corp.'s Sony Music;
- Bertelsmann AG; and EMI Group Plc.
-
-
-
- Symantec Raises Subscription Rates
-
-
- Symantec quietly increased subscription renewal rates for its entire line
- of security products last week, citing the rising cost of fighting viruses
- and other malicious code worldwide.
-
- The company is upping subscription renewal rates by $5 on all of its
- products. That means users of the company's popular $50 Norton AntiVirus
- software will pay $19.95 for each additional year they download virus
- definitions.
-
- While previous rate increases have drawn the ire of users, Symantec
- executives say they are confident customers will understand why they're
- increasing prices. The hike comes just days after the company announced it
- would include piracy-fighting product activation technology in all of its
- 2004 consumer products.
-
- Symantec has employees on duty around the clock watching for the next
- virus to appear, and that costs money, says Del Smith, a product manager
- for the company.
-
- "We have research centers in North America, Asia, Australia, and Europe,"
- he says. "As soon as they see a new threat they begin delivering new
- protections."
-
- And the volume of threats is ever increasing, he says. For example, in
- August 2002 Symantec received 90,000 files from Norton AntiVirus owners
- running the software's Scan and Deliver service, which sends suspected
- viruses to the company for analysis. Just one year later, in August 2003,
- the number of suspect files will top 130,000. Symantec's software currently
- protects users from more than 60,000 known viruses, Smith says.
-
- Detecting new viruses is only the first step. When the company identifies
- a new virus or worm, staffers quickly begin developing a new definition
- file so that Norton AntiVirus software can detect the threat. Owners of
- the software download the new definitions via the subscription service.
-
- The company's other security products, including utilities and firewall
- products, also require frequent updates, Smith says. Symantec staffers are
- constantly beefing up their products with everything from new URLs for
- Internet Security's Parental Control features to new updates for various
- firewall packages.
-
- Over the years the company has also made significant investments to
- improve the way it creates these updates and then gets them to customers,
- he says. Today, most Symantec products automatically download and install
- these updates behind the scenes, without bothering the customer at all.
-
- "To fund these services, and to allow us to continue to invest, we're
- raising prices," Smith says. The price increase impacts buyers in all
- countries except India, Japan, China, Taiwan, and Korea.
-
- All of Symantec's products include an initial subscription. If you buy the
- product at retail or online, a year's subscription is included. Versions
- that ship on a new PC or other hardware usually include a three-month
- subscription.
-
- While each program will continue to operate after the subscription period
- ends, it won't work as well without the latest updates. "It's important
- for users to keep up those subscriptions because it protects them against
- the latest threats," Smith says.
-
- The cost of renewing the subscription for Norton AntiVirus standard moves
- from $14.95 to $19.95. The Pro version includes two licenses, so its
- renewal fee jumps to $39.90. Renewal fees for Norton SystemWorks (regular
- and Pro) jump from $14.95 to $19.95; Internet Security (regular and Pro)
- fees increase from $24.95 to $29.95; and Norton Personal Firewall goes
- from $9.95 to $14.95.
-
- This is the third subscription price increase in as many years for some
- Symantec products. In November 2001 the company upped the fee for Norton
- AntiVirus from $3.95 to $9.95 (and vocal PC World readers complained). In
- Sept 2002 it increased the price again, to $14.95.
-
- Those increases may sound exorbitant, but the threat has also increased
- exponentially, says Rob Enderele, principal analyst with the Enderle Group.
- In the end, most people will grumble but pay, because it costs more to move
- to a competing product, he says. For example, Symantec competitor Network
- Associates' newly released McAfee VirusScan 8.0 sells for $60. (A company
- spokesperson notes, however, that there are no immediate plans to raise
- VirusScan's $14.95-per-year subscription rates.)
-
- Antivirus software and subscription renewals can be pricey, but most users
- now understand it can cost even more to go without it, Enderle says. Losing
- your hard drive to a virus will cost you considerably more than $20, he
- adds.
-
- Symantec isn't likely to lose many customers over the price increase, but
- combined with the decision to include product activation on all of its 2004
- products, the company risks aggravating it customers one time too many.
-
- "Now that Microsoft is moving into antivirus, this process of continuing
- to aggravate the customer may come back to haunt this company," he says.
- Microsoft announced in June plans to offer antivirus protection in future
- products. Most likely this will be included in future versions of Windows,
- such as Longhorn, due in 2005, he says. Users irritated by Symantec's
- pricing and product activation decisions may decide Microsoft's protection
- is good enough.
-
- Symantec executives aren't worried, however. "We believe our pricing is
- competitive with what others are offering, and we also believe that the
- technology we provide offers the best protection in the market today,"
- Smith says.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Issues Warning Over New Software Flaw
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. warned on Wednesday that users of its Office software were
- at risk of having their computers taken over by an attacker unless they
- applied a patch to correct the problem.
-
- The world's largest software maker said a "critical" flaw in its Visual
- Basic for Applications software, used to develop applications for Windows
- and Office, could enable a malicious programmer to create documents that
- would launch attacks on unsuspecting users.
-
- Microsoft has vowed to improve security and reliability of its software,
- which has been hit by several high-profile flaws this year. The Slammer
- worm nearly brought the Internet to a halt in January while the Blaster
- worm and its variants crippled hundreds of thousands of computers in
- August.
-
- Redmond, Washington-based Microsoft urged users in a security bulletin
- (http://www.microsoft.com/security/) to apply the software fix.
-
- At risk were recent versions of Microsoft's Access, Excel, PowerPoint,
- Publisher, Visio, Word and Works applications, which are part of the Office
- family of software used in a range of tasks such as creating databases,
- documents, spreadsheets and presentations as well was publishing documents
- and Web pages. Some applications from Microsoft's Great Plains business
- software division were also affected, Microsoft
- said.
-
- A user could trigger an attack by opening a document for any of those
- programs that contain Visual Basic components, the company said.
-
- Microsoft credited eEye Digital Security, a security software provider in
- Aliso Viejo, California, for reporting the flaw.
-
-
-
- Internet E-Mail Worm Targets Tony Blair
-
-
- A new Internet worm has surfaced that criticizes British Prime Minister
- Tony Blair and launches an attack attempting to knock a U.K. government Web
- site off the Internet, anti-virus software provider Sophos Plc said on
- Thursday.
-
- The worm, dubbed "Quaters," spreads via e-mail using a variety of subject
- lines, such as "Your Account Information," and spreads in Internet chat
- relay systems posing as an attempt to break an Internet chain mail world
- record.
-
- It overwrites files on a user's computer and displays a message that
- accuses Blair of wasting taxpayer money on immigrants instead of spending
- it on the national health service and schools.
-
- "Think about it Mr. Blair. Your career depends on it, we've had enough,"
- the message says in part.
-
- Quaters also tries to launch a denial-of-service attack on the Web site of
- the prime minister's office, http:/www.number-10.gov.uk, Sophos said.
-
- There have been few reports of the worm circulating on the Internet,
- British-based Sophos said.
-
- The malicious program is not the first to target a British prime minister.
-
- In the 1990s, the Fu Manchu virus replaced the name of former Prime
- Minister Margaret Thatcher with an expletive whenever it was typed, said
- Chris Belthoff, a senior security analyst at Sophos.
-
-
-
- Better Searching Through Dogpile
-
-
- While the Web's two biggest search engines were busy debating who has the
- biggest index last week, a "meta" search service called Dogpile quietly
- launched a revamped Web site that makes it easier to search all the top
- engines at once.
-
- Dogpile (www.dogpile.com), owned by InfoSpace Inc., is the only meta-search
- service to sign business deals with all the top search sites, allowing it
- to combine their results and sort them with the service's own relevancy
- algorithms to weed out duplicates and elevate the most promising ones.
-
- "What we do, in effect, is bring you page one from every search engine,"
- said Leslie Grandy, vice president of the search and directory business
- for InfoSpace.
-
- Dogpile ranks results from many search services - including Google,
- Overture, Yahoo, AltaVista, Teoma, Ask Jeeves and About - using a formula
- that analyzes, among other things, the popularity of each engine, the
- number of click-throughs a site receives on Dogpile, how many other engines
- a site is listed in and its various rankings.
-
- Searchers can also choose to sort results by search engine, which will
- present Google results first, then listings from the commercial service
- Overture, then the others.
-
- You can also click on the "yellow pages" or "white pages" tabs to perform
- directory searches on your query. Dogpile's limited shopping feature
- defaults to offering only a version of the PriceGrabber.com
- comparison-shopping tool, but Grandy said Dogpile eventually will expand
- it.
-
- In its previous version, Dogpile didn't differentiate well between
- advertising and regular results. Now paid results are tagged with a
- "sponsored" label, although they're still mingled in with regular results
- and sorted by various relevancy factors.
-
- The search industry has been consolidating over the past year, with two
- companies now leading the pack: Google and Overture, which Yahoo has
- announced it is buying. Overture last week said that its search service
- Alltheweb had indexed roughly 3.2 billion Web pages. Google has long touted
- its index as having more than 2 billion pages, but it updated the fine
- print at the bottom of its home page last week to say, "Searching
- 3,307,998,701 web pages."
-
-
-
- First Look at Eudora 6.0
-
-
- If you're shopping for an e-mail client, you might want to consider an old
- friend: Eudora is releasing version 6.0, its first significant upgrade in
- almost three years.
-
- The newest version of the longstanding e-mail program provides new tools to
- help you stop the onslaught of spam, deal with long e-mail threads, and in
- general get organized.
-
- Eudora 6.0 is available in three versions: The full version costs $50 per
- year ($40 as an upgrade from earlier versions); a sponsored version is free
- but includes ads; and a light version, also free, doesn't contain ads, but
- offers fewer features. For example, it lacks an automatic spelling checker.
- The full version also includes tech support and free upgrades within 12
- months.
-
- "With this launch, we're hoping to put the flag back in the mountain," says
- Bill Ganon, vice president of the Eudora products group at Qualcomm, of the
- long-awaited refresh.
-
- Key among the new features is Eudora's SpamWatch tool, which is available
- only to users of the paid version. It was added based on user feedback,
- Ganon says.
-
- "SpamWatch presents a fairly automatic and efficient way to handle spam at
- the client level for users without an IT department behind them," he says.
-
- For users with an IT department - or an ISP with spam-blocking tools -
- SpamWatch provides an additional layer of protection against unsolicited
- e-mail. It incorporates a Bayesian plug-in that searches messages for
- spam-related words or phrases, and a Header plug-in that reads headers
- inserted by any other spam-fighting programs in use. SpamWatch scores each
- message based on the likelihood that it is spam.
-
- Mail with high scores is delivered directly to your junk mail folder, where
- it self-deletes after 30 days. The default threshold for junk mail is 50,
- but you can adjust the score for your needs. In my tests, SpamWatch's
- default settings sent all of the unwanted messages to the junk mail folder,
- but it also banished a few newsletters and some automated e-mail. Setting
- the score slightly higher worked well, although SpamWatch did let a few
- stray unwanted messages slip into my in-box.
-
- Also new in Eudora 6.0 is the Content Concentrator, a feature designed to
- transform long e-mail threads into manageable messages. It works as a sort
- of visual aid, stripping out redundant text in the preview pane.
-
- For example, if three coworkers reply in succession to my long message,
- Content Concentrator removes the repeated text, such as signatures, the
- distribution list, and my original message. This way, I can glance at the
- preview pane and see their replies quickly. To view the entire content of
- a message, I simply open it to full view (this is the default setting - you
- can also apply Content Concentrator to open messages, not just those in the
- preview pane).
-
- Another new feature is Format Painter, which lets you copy styles and
- formatting from one place to another. The new Contextual Filing feature
- enables you to file messages into designated mailboxes by selecting a
- particular keyword. Also, Eudora's user interface is entirely redesigned.
-
- The revised look is one of the update's few drawbacks: I found it somewhat
- cluttered, especially when I was testing the ad-supported version, even
- though it had only a few small ads. The icons are large and bright, but
- their purposes are not apparent at first glance.
-
- Also in need of improvement: The program forces you, when replying to a
- message, to you adjust the formatting. If you neglect to do so, Eudora
- leaves no space between your text and the message you're answering when
- you start typing. It may sound minor, but the extra step took some getting
- used to.
-
- Nevertheless, Eudora remains as easy to use as any other e-mail
- application, and it lives up to its good reputation.
-
- "We want to reinforce to users that Eudora is established and our products
- are in development," says Qualcomm's Ganon. Especially with such timely
- features as its spam management, Eudora continues to be a player worth a
- look.
-
-
-
- Glitch Shuts Down Lycos E-Mail
-
-
- Users of the Lycos Web portal have been unable to access their e-mail this
- week following a glitch during an upgrade. The system was expected to
- remain frozen until at least Friday, the company said.
-
- The problem began Tuesday when the company was applying new software to its
- database servers to improve back-up procedures, Lycos spokesman Brian
- Payea said.
-
- "In the process of applying that new software we ran into a problem," Payea
- said. "Right now we are rebuilding those databases."
-
- Payea stressed that no messages sent before or after the event have been
- lost, but said they cannot be accessed by users until the problem is
- resolved.
-
- "When those databases have been rebuilt, we estimate (Friday) afternoon,
- people will be able to log in and get all of the e-mail that has been
- stored," Payea said.
-
- Payea declined to say how many Lycos e-mail addresses there are, but
- comScore Media Metrix figures show Lycos as the seventh-most visited e-mail
- Web site, with just over 1 million unique visitors in July. Overall, Lycos
- is the No. 4 Web portal, behind Yahoo!, MSN and AOL.com, in terms of unique
- visitors.
-
- The glitch was a major headache for Pete Glasser, a Pittsburgh litigation
- consultant who said he had been told several times by the company that the
- problem would soon be fixed.
-
- "I probably have 100 business e-mails and I have no idea which customers
- need urgent attention," he said.
-
-
-
- Links To Anti-Spam Resources
-
-
- Resources exist to help companies and individuals fight spam. Here's a
- list of anti-spam organizations and groups:
-
- www.cauce.org - CAUCE, Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial Email
-
- www.irtf.org/charters/asrg.html - The Internet Research Task Force's
- Anti-Spam Research Group
-
- www.spamcon.org - A public benefit corporation that advocates for the
- mitigation of spam
-
- www.spamhaus.org - Anti-spam organization that tracks spammers
-
- www.abuse.net/spamtools.html - Lists anti-spam tools
-
- www.spamconference.org - MIT's annual anti-spam conference
-
- directory.google.com/Top/Computers/Internet/Abuse/Spam/Blacklists -
- Google's blacklist directory
-
- www.spamfaq.net - A useful spam FAQ with links to other spam FAQs
-
- www.spamarchive.org - A database of known spam to be used for testing,
- developing, and benchmarking anti-spam tools.
-
- www.howtofightspam.com - Lists anti-spam resources
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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- 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
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-
- 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.
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