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- Volume 5, Issue 52 Atari Online News, Etc. December 26, 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 #0552 12/26/03
-
- ~ Happy Holidays to All! ~ People Are Talking! ~ SainT Upgraded!
- ~ Tech IPOs To Rebound! ~ Space Harrier Update! ~ Fastest Geek Alive!
- ~ Domain Names Valuable ~ Britney Is Tops Again! ~ Star Wars Is Best!
- ~ Sober Worm Is Threat! ~ Online Photo Albums! ~ 'Voodoo Vince'
-
- -* Group Lambastes UUNet on Spam *-
- -* Netscape Readies Cheap ISP Service! *-
- -* AntiSpam Law's Effectiveness Is Doubted! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Well, I hope that you all had an enjoyable holiday! Hanukkah Harry and ol'
- St. Nick managed to find their way to our house, despite all of the rain and
- fog! All that remains of the morning mayhem are a few stray pieces of
- ribbon and wrapping paper. The gifts have been put away, the holiday visits
- are over, and we're preparing for a short night - there's a day of work on
- Friday.
-
- All in all, it was a nice day. We had a quiet morning opening up our gifts,
- and having breakfast. The dogs went "crazy" when we pulled out the huge
- bones that were left for them, as well as a few other gifts that they'll
- devour soon enough. Now if we can keep them from fighting with each other
- over everything! A quiet visit and meal with my in-laws, and back home to
- relax. The only thing that would have made the holiday better was an extra-
- long holiday weekend. Oh well.
-
- It's hard to believe, but this is our last issue for 2003! This will be our
- 5th year of publication. I really didn't think that we would be around this
- long, but the interest continues. The news pertaining to "all things Atari"
- remains slim, but the few items that grace our doorstep each week helps to
- perpetuate the hobby. And the technology news continues to remain
- interesting! So, here we are, getting ready to embark on our next new year.
- Thanks for taking the ride with us! And remember, New Year's Eve is
- rapidly approaching. Please, welcome in the new year responsibly - don't
- drink and drive!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- SainT Version 1.60 Released
-
-
- Version 1.60 of the Windows Atari ST emulator SainT has been released.
- There are lots of great changes in this version, including the ability to
- record movies complete with audio. There are also fixes to improve
- compatibility with demos, and SainT is now the first emulator to run the
- 3D full-screen interrupt demo by Ziggy Stardust. You can download the
- latest version of SainT and read the documentation at:
-
- http://leonard.oxg.free.fr/SainT/saint.html
-
-
-
- Atari800 Version 1.3.2 Released
-
-
- Version 1.3.2 of the Atari 8-bit/5200 emulator Atari800 has been released.
- Atari800 supports many computing platforms, including DOS, Windows, Windows
- CE, Amiga, Falcon, and more, as well as forming the basis for several other
- Atari 8-bit emulators. Improvements since the last release include:
-
- R: can now be hooked to a real serial port
- Various ANTIC and POKEY fixes
- Disk and cartridge info saved in the state files
- Casette handling greatly improved
- Even more cartridges supported (40 now!)
- Some rare buffer overflows fix
-
- You can download the latest version of Atari800 as well as the source code
- at the Atari800 Emulation Page.
-
- http://atari800.sourceforge.net/
-
-
-
- Space Harrier XL/XE Project Update
-
-
- Chris Hutt has posted a recent update to his Atari XL/XE Space Harrier
- Conversion Project page. This ambitious project aims to port the popular
- Sega arcade game Space Harrier (http://www.klov.com/S/Space_Harrier.html)
- to the Atari XL/XE computers. Chris'
-
- Recent work involves moving the game to work in a cartridge, as opposed to
- the original goal of making it available in disk format. Due to this
- change, Chris has had the opportunity to improve several aspects of the
- game, including more colors, faster draw routines, larger backgrounds, and
- more speech samples. Please visit Chris' Space Harrier Conversion Project
- page for complete details.
-
- http://www.sheddyshack.co.uk
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Well, Christmas has come and gone, and I sit
- here holding my stomach and wondering why it is that I always eat too much
- at holiday meals.
-
- At one time I had a good excuse for over-indulging. I used to have to visit
- three or four different households on Christmas day. Since my heritage is
- both Italian and Polish, and since both tend to place a lot of emphasis on
- food and holiday meals, I would end up having at least three dinners on
- Christmas day. I found that I could manage to make everyone happy if I had
- a small amount of food at each place.
-
- These days, I have only two places that I have to be on Christmas day, and
- one of them doesn't put a huge emphasis on the meal. But, nonetheless, I
- ate way too much.
-
- I think that a lot of my 'problem' has to do with the fact that it's a
- learned behavior now... It ain't Christmas without overeating and feeling
- uncomfortably full.
-
- Don't tell my sister-in-law this, but I just can't warm up to the idea of
- having lasagna for Christmas dinner. My traditional favorite is turkey, but
- I've also had goose and ham for Christmas dinners in years past. Lasagna
- just doesn't seem to fit in with the holiday feeling. Don't get me wrong, I
- like lasagna. But it's just not "Christmas food".
-
- My family also makes a big deal of Christmas Eve dinner. THIS meal is where
- I shine. <grin>
-
- It's a meatless meal consisting of several different types of fish, shrimp,
- and...
-
- Pierogies!
-
- Yeah, you've probably guessed that this is the Polish side of the family.
- <grin>
-
- There are several Polish concoctions that I don't care for, but pierogies
- aren't among them. Of course, I only had ONE meal that night, so I went
- home feeling happy and contented. The following day was, as I've mentioned,
- a different story.
-
- Perhaps it's a sign of advancing age, but I tend to center more on the
- holiday meals these days than the gifts.
-
- On another note, this issue finishes out our 5th year of publishing A-ONE.
- Dana will probably mention this as well, but we want to thank you for your
- support over the past five years. It sounds corny, but we really couldn't
- do it without you. Knowing that there's someone out there who reads this
- makes the effort worthwhile. Thank you.
-
- Well, I could talk all day about ethnic food, multi-session dinners, and
- digital publishing but I think it's time we get to the news, hints, tips
- and info from the UseNet, don't you?
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- 'Meffy' asks about the maximum hard drive space you can use on a Falcon:
-
- "Is there a limit? I have a nice IDE 2.1Gb drive from a laptop that I'd
- like to fit... any special s/w I need?"
-
-
- Adam Klobukowski tells Meffy:
-
-
- "The limit is the IDE standard limit, around 156GB if I remember correctly."
-
-
- Carey Christenson adds:
-
- "In theory there should be NO upper limit of the Hard
- Drive's storage capacity. You could have a 250 GB
- Hard drive and be running Magic with Jinnee or Mint
- and HDDriver and have 2 125GB partitions. BUT I
- believe Magic and MINT both have a 138 GB IDE limit.
- Remember this is under MAGIC or MINT running HDDriver.
- You will not be able to go past 1 GB using TOS and an
- older hard disk driver. But to answer your question a
- 2.1 GB should work fine under normal TOS conditions."
-
-
- Dr. Uwe Seimet, author of HD Driver, adds:
-
- "Why should they have such a limit? It is the hard disk driver that limits
- the capacity of the drives you can connect to an Atari. The operating
- system just limits the partition size, but not the drive's capacity.
-
- But you won't be able to profit from it (large drive capacity) without a
- hard disk driver supporting IDE drives of that size. HDDRIVER is known to
- work with drives up to 128 GByte. It should also work with larger drives,
- but so far this has not been tested as far as I know."
-
-
- Brian Roland adds:
-
- "2.1 gig will be no problem whatsoever....
- If you want access to all your partitions under the plain jane default
- desktop, just keep your partitions a gig or smaller.
-
- An advantage to smaller partitions is that you can use smaller sector
- sizes, which means less wasted space (a sector is the least amount of disk
- space any write operation can use...so even if you have a file with 2 bytes
- in it...it'll still take a full sector).
-
- The advantage to larger partitions...is that you don't run out of Drive
- letters as quickly
-
- At any rate...2.1 gig IDE on a Falcon....shouldn't be a problem at all."
-
-
- 'D.C.' asks about upgrading the RAM in a STacy:
-
- "I'm interested in upgrading a 1 MEG Stacy to 4 MEGS. How easy is it to
- do this? Can the Stacy accept STE (or equivalent) SIMMS? I've seen a
- hardware hack that allows PS/2 memory to be soldered onto a Stacy. Is
- there an easier way to do this?"
-
-
- Brian Roland tells D.C.:
-
- "Have you ever been inside this STacy?
- Mine has a memory board that takes 4 1X8 SIMMS.
-
- This was most likely an aftermarket board (I got the STacy used), but hey,
- ya just might be lucky and have this board in your Machine.
-
- If you do open the STacy...get someone to help you and be very careful...
- It's pretty straight forward, but an extra pair of hands will save you a
- lot of grief.
-
- If you do have to work it by yourself...it can be done...just use some sand
- bags, pin cushions, beanbags, or something along those lines to afford you
- some wedging/holding support.
-
- Once you get the screws out and 'carefully' pry the top and bottom apart
- (not too far!), you'll barely have room to get a hand in and disconnect the
- keyboard (this will be a tight maneuver)...the tricky part from here on is
- that there is a short set of wires that plugs onto the mother board and
- leads to the screen (top half of the STacy). These plugs are located on,
- and underneath a daughter card just forward of the MIDI and Monitor
- ports...carefully pull this card upwards and set it aside inside the
- machine (don't try to pull it 'out' of the chassis...there is a wire
- soldered to it). Next, unplug the screen wires and the top will finally
- come off so you can easily get at everything else.
-
- Once you get the shielding off...you'll see a large second level PCB nearly
- the full width of the STacy towards the front (under where the keyboard
- was). Lift that out of its sockets, flip it over, and see what ya got.
-
- Unless you, or someone you know is really good, and super patient with a
- soldering iron, I suggest you exhaust all your sources trying to find a
- prefab 4meg STacy board. If you can find a board...it's really easy to
- unplug the old one, and plug in the new one.
-
- Best (USA), ATY(USA), Wizztronics(USA), and Atari Workship(UK) come to mind
- as likely to have some memory boards in stock. Web searches on those names
- should provide contact information. No doubt there are more places in
- Europe (Namely Germany and France) to check as well...I'm just not familiar
- with them being an English speaker.
-
- If you can't find a prefab memory board....
- The Chips'n'chips and DoIt archives offer instructions on how to hack in
- various types of memory (SIMMS, DIPS, SIPPS, etc....). A lot of these hacks
- are described in German or French only.
-
- It might even be possible to strap in some of the regular ST memory
- upgrades...these usually connect somehow with the MMU chip (using a
- pingrid, clamping, or socket adaptor) and like to ride on a riser in the
- Video Shifter area (pull out the video shifter chip, plug on the board, put
- the shifter chip in the memory board). I don't know if there is space
- enough for these type RAM expansions...but I'd think hacking one of these
- in would be MUCH easier than trying to trace out a million and seven
- resister points and running wires into some kind of home-made SIMM
- adaptor. That would be the advantage to a kit like that...the resistors
- and such already be in place. With Schematics to the STacy's memory board
- pin-out...you might could even find a way to build a relatively simple
- adaptor to just plug the thing right on where your current memory board is.
- I dunno...just food for thought."
-
-
- Kenneth Medin adds:
-
- "Hm, I have dismantled mine the "other way round". By starting with the
- two screws under the _inside_ sticker that says " Stacy" (sorry you
- need a genuine Atari charset to see the Atari logo...) you can separate
- the screen part and then very carefully take it apart by lengthening the
- cables to the screen. They are quite delicate and easy to damage. People
- with little patience should definitely stay away from dismantling a
- Stacy...
-
- As I wrote in another post today I did put a Marpets Extra Ram
- Deluxe memory expansion in mine. Some soldering will be needed and a cut
- in the plastic to allow the SIMMS to sit in the battery compartment. Not
- too hard to do by a careful person. To get under the motherboard for
- soldering most of the computer has to be taken apart if I remember
- correctly."
-
-
- 'Tim' asks about getting a memory board for his TT running:
-
- "I just got this MagnumTT Ram card from Germany. It accepts 16, 32, 64,
- and 128MB PS/2 type SIMMs. I cannot get it to work and my lack of german
- is also complicating things! The manual is in German and it talks about
- jumper settings etc. I have been able to figure out the settings (I think)
- for the SIMMs but not sure what I am doing wrong. I tried 3 different
- SIMMs: two type of 16MB EDO's and some 32MB EDO's. None work. Any ideas
- or help would be most excellent!"
-
-
- Michael Schwingen tells Tim:
-
- "You need 5V SIMMs, either FPM or EDO. The modules must have a symmetrical
- RAS/RAS mapping - the manual lists numbers of RAM chips that o d/ do not
- work (see http://heisenberg.ccac.rwth-aachen.de/~michaels/files/magnum/),
- "richtig" means "correct type".
-
- 3.3V DRAMs may well not work - often, these have a "V" in the middle of
- the type number, or start with "HYB31", but to be sure, you have to look up
- the exact datasheet.
-
- When using different sized modules, the bigger module must be in bank 0.
-
- On old TT models with the CPU on a daughterboard, you may have to enable an
- additional wait state. In that case, change the jumper from 0WS to 1WS.
-
- If the presence detection pins on the modules are wired correctly, you need
- no jumpers on any of the PD jumper positions - these are just a fallback in
- case of badly designed modules, which shows as a module being detected with
- the wrong size."
-
-
- Tim asks Michael:
-
- "Do you know if I need 2k or 4k refresh SIMMs? AFAIK all 72-in pSIMMs are
- 5V. I have never seen a 3.3V one. I tried FPM, EDO, different sizes and
- not will work. These SIMMs work in my Amiga 060 card just fine. I am
- beginning to think that maybe my TT card is dead, or it is just really
- really picky about SIMMs!!!"
-
-
- John Blighe tells Tim:
-
- "I bought a card with SIMMS included but it isn't recognized by my TT
- either. I bought another card (larger ram) and THAT isn't recognized either
- even though all jumpers are definitely set the right way. No one seems to
- have any answers!"
-
-
- Jean-Luc Ceccoli adds:
-
- "It has to deal with the ram itself : not all are compatible with expansion
- boards. For instance, I bought a 32MB with 8 x 3 chips simms (4 MB each
- simm). I had 4 another 3 chips modules, but these caused random crashes.
- So, before thinking of trashing either your expansion board or your TT, be
- sure you can get the right type of memory. If I remember correctly, those
- of 4 MB in older Macs are (not quite sure however)."
-
-
- Jim DeClercq adds his experiences:
-
- "My experience has been satisfactory, but imperfect. I got a few Magnum TT
- boards. Posted a want list in alt.computer.memory, and two sellers
- responded. One had 128 MB SIMM, so I ordered some of those. Plugged two of
- them in, put it into a TT, and only 65 MB was recognized, by either the
- desktop or sysinfo.prg. For me, that is still more memory than I will
- ever use. If I want to take it apart again, I could try swapping slots, or
- swapping memory, or getting the JDEC standards and hacking the size bits,
- or at least reading what they say. Am not planning to do that.
-
- The worst that happens is that I paid 30 USD more than expected for that
- much memory.
-
- The SIMM have 16 rather large chips of one type, and 8 of another. The
- paper sticker on the SIMM says KMM53623000CK-6. On the board itself is
- SAMSUNG, 53632000AK2(#) and AD0823-01. What is the part number?
-
- Also have some 64 meg SIMM, with 36 chips on it, and some 32, with 18
- chips on it. They are untested. Should these work? Either number of chips
- is also divisible by three!"
-
-
- Djordje Vukovic posts this about TeraDesk3:
-
- "Version 3.0 of TeraDesk, the only open-source desktop currently existing
- for the Atari computers, is now available !!!
-
- Almost exactly a year ago, TeraDesk was made open source, Henk Robbers took
- over its maintenance and TeraDesk V2 appeared.
-
- In December 2002, after an exchange of ideas about possible upgrades of
- TeraDesk, Henk kindly invited me to participate in its further development.
- The first result of that cooperation TeraDesk V2.3 in March 2003.
- Since then, we have been working on TeraDesk 3.
-
- Our goal has been to maintain TeraDesk as a small, simple, fast and
- reliable desktop, which would be functional in the modern multitasking
- environments, and yet to keep, as much as reasonable, familiarity with the
- original TOS desktop, and keep it undemanding enough to be run on any Atari
- computer, even the one with the smallest amount of RAM and oldest version
- of TOS (currently TeraDesk is a little less than 129KB in size and uses
- about 200KB of memory). In my opinion, the cooperation has been a fruitful
- one, with an unspoken division of labor which suited both of us. Henk
- concentrated on memory and file management, new configuration file concept
- and also on multitasking-related issues, while I added some new functions,
- made some optimizations, and worked on improving the graphical appearance
- of the program.
-
- Lately, Henk decided to move on to other matters, and asked me to finish
- what was required to publish TeraDesk 3. I have tried to do that to
- the best of my abilities, but Henk's assistance is sorely missed
-
- Anyway, though there are still a few unsolved problems (i.e. bugs)
- in TeraDesk 3, it appears to be sufficiently good to be published
- and used. It is available at:
-
- http://solair.eunet.yu/~vdjole/atari
-
- and divided into three archives: the binaries, the complete source, and the
- V2-to-V3 configuration-file conversion utility.
-
- Many changes and optimizations were made, new features added or existing
- ones improved, a number of bugs removed- and hopefully not many new ones
- introduced
-
- A short (well, not so short) list of changes and new features:
-
- H. Robbers:
-
- - Configuration data now in text mode, in a new file teradesk.inf;
- Easy to keep compatibility. A set of routines for reading/writing
- configuration items and implementation of a concept which will make it
- very easy to add new configuration items.
- - Replacement or heavy modification of many routines to adjust to the new
- configuration file requirements.
- - Colour palette is saved in a separate (text) file teradesk.pal.
- - Program cfg2inf.prg for converting the binary cfg to the textmode inf.
- Source code adjusted so that it can be compiled for reading either the
- old binary configuration (cfg2in.pfrg) or the new text file (desktop.prg)
- - Replaced use of Malloc (Gemdos) to standard malloc.
- This reduces memory fragmentation on the Gemdos level considerably,
- especially important in multitasking environments.
- - Replaced Wout's memory allocator by mine (AHCM).
- AHCM allows memory leak detection and reduces fragmentation even
- more by always allocating Gemdos blocks in whole multiples of
- chunk size.
- - As a result of the above it wasn't possible anymore to shrink the
- start amount of 2000 directory entry structures (68 Kb).
- So I implemented a pointer array instead. It starts with 256
- entries (1 Kb) and is mildly exponentially expanded when needed.
- - cfg2inf.prg: The editor string in the old config is converted to a flag
- for the (installed) editor in the new config. So it is preserved if the
- editor was installed.
-
- Dj. Vukvioc:
-
- - Fixed a bug of not immediately refreshing a changed background
- pattern/colour in text windows;
- - Fixed a bug of not correctly setting and so corrupting type of desktop
- icon in desktop icons dialog;
- - Fixed some bugs which disabled printing of more than one file at a time;
- - Fixed some bugs in scrolling text fields (cursor placement, padding...)
- - Fixed a bug which swallowed the first char of command lines for .TTPs
- - Corrected enabling/disabling of some menu items depending on context;
- - Fixed bad redraw of animated colour icons;
- - Fixed several bugs related to memory (de)allocation and buffer overruns
- - Removed some overlooked fixed keyboard shortcuts from previous version;
- - Made some fixes which (hopefully) will correct improper window and dialog
- redrawing with XaAES only (V0.963).
- - A lot of source code cleaned up and size optimization;
- - Some optimization of desktop.rsc and the use of it;
- - Massive reorganization of dialogs which handle what are essentially filetype
- or filename lists (ie. .file masks, program types, document types, icons...)
- so that there is only one filetype-list dialog in desktop.rsc; significant
- reduction in executable code size because a lot of routines are made to
- work on all file/filetype lists. Same concept is used for entering/editing
- all lists: filetype masks, program types, window icon filetypes and
- applications.
- - Reorganization of "Install Application" function (see above); a dialog is
- shown displaying a list of installed applications. Further reduction in
- code size.
- - ALL dialogs now fit ST-low resolution. Some are reduced in size even more
- for faster redraws on low-end machines
- - Several small fixes and improvements in floppy formatting routines;
- floppy drives are locked during formatting/copying in Mint & MagiC;
- - Somewhat improved handling of overscan hack (tested with Lacescan);
- - Improved operation of the "fuller" gadget: a) fulled window is moved left
- until it is completely on the screen; b) in "hex" mode the window is made
- only as wide as needed;
- - Much improved graphical appearance of dialogs (proper background, colours
- and 3D effects in modern AESses, etc.) Significant reorganization and
- simplification of routines.
- - Added window iconify/deiconify capability in AESses which support it
- (AES4.1, Geneva, Magic, XaAES...)
- - Added checking for duplicate entries in filemasks, program types,
- window icons and applications lists;
- - Added possibility to start an application or program type in "no-multitasking"
- mode in Magic (not working very well yet);
- - Added possibility to limit memory available to a program type or application
- in multitasking environments.
- - Added capability to call a file selector in scrolled input text fields
- in dialogs upon pressing the [Insert] key
- - Added capability to mark an installed application as "autostart";
- - Added capability of "Search" to find text in files as well;
- - Added "touch" ((re)set time/date and/or file attributes) functionality;
- user interface implemented through additional button in the "Object info"
- dialog. Considerable reorganisation of that dialog(s). TeraDesk is now able
- to display DOS/Windows folder attributes (and respect them to a degree)
- though not able to change them.
- - While copying files it is possible to change date/time and attributes.
- - Added "Compare files" functionality; a nice knack is that it tries to
- resynchronize search positions after a found difference.
- - Improved "Open..." function; it now tries to figure out what type of item
- should be opened: a program, a folder/drive, a file assigned as a document
- to application, or an unassigned file. In case of a program/application,
- it is possible to enter a command tail after path+name;
- - Command line dialog for .TTP programs remembers last command if the same
- program is activated again.
- - Filename/filetype entry forms in dialogs appear in 8+3 length if there is
- no long-filename-capable OS present (i.e. without Mint or Magic);
- - [Shift][Help] calls ST-Guide(if available) to display TERADESK.HYP;
- - Nicer display of long window titles;
- - Improved recognition of TOS and AES versions and their capabilities
- and limitations;
- - Updated the .HYP documentation (not quite satisfactory yet)
-
- Some possible areas of further work - though I am not sure how probable;
- a lot of time needed ... some help might be useful
-
- - removal of bugs;
- - multiple column display of directory windows in text mode;
- - improved manipulation of file attributes for non-tos filesystems
- - integration a windowed, long-filename-capable fileselector reusing
- a number of TeraDesk's existing functions and capabilities to minimize
- code size;
- - documentation update.
-
-
- Sorry, a couple of links were wrong. Hopefully all is right now
-
- http://solair.eunet.yu/~vdjole/atari.htm "
-
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week, this issue, and this year. Please have
- a happy, healthy and safe New Year celebration and have the foresight to
- drink responsibly. If you're going to be driving, don't drink. If you're
- going to be drinking, don't drive. Remember: The life you save may be MINE!
-
- 'Till next year, keep your ears open so you'll be sure to hear what they
- are saying when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - 'Star Wars' Is Year's Best!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" 'Voodoo Vince' Is Clever!
- Madden Still A Force!
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- GameSpy Tabs 'Star Wars' Title as Game of Year
-
-
- Hobbits may rule the multiplex this year, but when it comes to the small
- screen, fans of video game fantasy want all Jedi, all the time.
-
- GameSpy.com, one of the Internet's leading video game sites, on Tuesday
- handed its Game of the Year honor to "Star Wars: Knights of the Old
- Republic."
-
- The role-playing game, developed by BioWare and published by LucasArts for
- the Xbox and PC, beat out titles like "WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Microgamer"
- for the Game Boy Advance and "Beyond Good & Evil" for the top award.
-
- Video game publishers typically use such awards for bragging rights,
- sometimes republishing their titles in "Game of the Year" editions.
-
- In that way, the $10 billion domestic U.S. video game industry has taken
- its cue from Hollywood, where the awards season is a crucial marketing
- window for films.
-
- "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King" chalked up more than $125
- million in ticket sales in the United States and Canada in its first five
- days of release, and its release so close to the end of the year has helped
- garner the tale of Hobbits and elves serious Academy Awards buzz.
-
- Other top game publications are expected to soon give out their 2003 kudos,
- including GameSpot.com, which will name its top game of the year on
- Christmas day; and 1UP.com, the Web site of Ziff Davis's game magazines,
- which will name its winners at a ceremony in Las Vegas in early January.
-
- Previously, football game "Madden NFL 2004" from Electronic Arts Inc. won
- "Game of the Year" honors at the Video Game Awards held by cable channel
- Spike TV.
-
-
-
- Voodoo Vince, a Clever Time
-
-
- In early brainstorming for "Voodoo Vince," creator Clayton Kauzlaric made
- a hasty sketch of what would become the main character, then scribbled a
- note nearby: "A game where getting hurt good."
-
- That sums up this $39.99 title, which may be the first game to feature the
- weird obverse of schadenfreude: You play a voodoo doll who takes pleasure
- in his own pain.
-
- Developed by newcomer Beep Industries for the Xbox, "Voodoo Vince" is a
- fairly standard entrant in the so-called "platformer" genre. We get lots of
- jumping from one platform to the next, killing monsters, and defeating
- bosses at the end of each level. There is some puzzle solving that, while
- not particularly difficult, can be clever.
-
- The hook here is a dry, snarky humor, and the numerous ways in which
- Vince's best offense is a good offense against himself. In an early level,
- he gains victory by lighting himself on fire and scurrying off to ignite
- an pair of no-good gasoline pumps. One of several special attacks has Vince
- climb into a guillotine to be sliced in half along with his enemies.
-
- This novel conceit accompanies a jaunty soundtrack and a caricature of New
- Orleans that makes Vince's task of rescuing his fortune-telling master,
- Madam Charmaine, an oddly soothing venture.
-
- Still, it's not quite enough to make "Voodoo Vince," published by
- Microsoft, worth more than a rental. The graphics can be tinny and the plot
- is straight out of Mad Libs: Unlikely hero takes upon his (insert
- adjective) shoulders the burden of saving (insert quasi-parental figure)
- from the clutches of the maniacal (insert villain) motivated by (insert
- wacky insecurity).
-
- "Voodoo Vince" won't quite fit into any one category, which isn't such a
- good thing. Its attempts to be cuddly with a macabre spirit derivative of
- - but not as effective as - Microsoft's masterful "Oddworld: Munch's
- Odyssee." There's not much gore, but images of scissors jabbing Vince in
- the eye feel more unsettling than funny.
-
- Beep Industries appears aware of this discord when it notes unconvincingly
- on its Web site: "This is more wholesome than it sounds. Honest."
-
- Cynics might see "Voodoo Vince" as part of Microsoft's bid to cultivate a
- stable of iconic Xbox characters like Nintendo did with Zelda and Mario.
- Could be. What I saw was a title best described as "a game where getting
- hurt unexceptional."
-
-
-
- Bam! Whap! 'Madden NFL' is a Force
-
-
- Like a durable running back, Madden NFL Football 2004 keeps plugging. This
- year, EA Sports has sold more than 4 million copies, making it the
- top-selling game for PS2.
-
- At any time, as many as 7,000 Madden maniacs may be facing off. Says EA
- Sports' Erik Whiteford: "There are a lot of people who need to feel that
- they are not just beating the computer. Now you can go online and see how
- good you really are."
-
- Sony has sold about 1.5 million PS2 network adapters ($39.99). Microsoft
- has sold about 500,000 subscriptions to its $49.95-a-year Xbox Live. Next
- year, market research firm DFC Intelligence expects, the number of online
- gamers will triple to 4.1 million.
-
- Sony has its 989 Sports lobby, a chat room where online gamers can meet,
- while Microsoft connects players on its XSN Sports network. Next week, the
- XSN Sports Championship begins. At stake: $25,000.
-
- Future vision: Says Whiteford: "You're going to see a lot more
- interactivity away from the game environment."
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE Gaming Online - Online Users Growl & Purr!
- """""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Atari Explorer Updates
-
-
- Atari Explorer (http://www.atari-explorer.com) has just posted some very
- interesting updates to their site, including new images of the Jaguar Duo,
- images of the "second" version of the Falcon Microbox (whose design hints
- at the Playstation 2), and new information showing the cost of Jaguar
- software and Atari's commitment to the platform late into 1995. You can
- find all this and a wealth of other great information at
- atari-explorer.com.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Antispam Law's Effectiveness Doubted
-
-
- An antispam bill that was poised to become law in the new year may do
- little to stem the barrage of junk e-mail, according to corporate
- information and technology officers who deal with the problem daily.
-
- The legislation, called the CAN-SPAM (Controlling the Assault of
- Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing) Act, was signed into law by
- President George W. Bush earlier in December.
-
- It requires senders of unsolicited commercial e-mail to let recipients opt
- out of future mailings, sets penalties for sending deceptive messages, and
- begins the process of creating a national Do Not Spam list. The measure
- requires all e-mail advertising - not just unsolicited messages - to
- include a valid reply-to address, a valid postal address, and accurate
- headers and subject lines.
-
- But CIOs say it won't work, since so much spam comes from outside the
- United States.
-
- Tod Ferran, CIO of Riverton Motor, an auto dealership based in Sandy, Utah,
- says you'd need "the authority of a world government" to enforce such a
- law. Instead, he favors a technological solution. The open-source Mozilla
- e-mail system he uses includes a junk e-mail filtering feature, he notes.
- He also recommends "education of the public" to not respond to spam
- solicitations.
-
- Matt Kesner, chief technology officer of the Fenwick & West law firm based
- in Mountain View, California, says he thinks legislating against spam is
- worth a try. Still, he questions why Congress would pass a bill that would
- trump a strong new California antispam law.
-
- That measure, passed in September but overruled by the federal law, would
- have required marketers to get permission from or have an existing business
- relationship with a recipient before sending e-mail. Without better
- technological and legal solutions, Kesner says he's afraid "we'll get to
- the point where we accept e-mail only from people we know."
-
-
-
- Group Lambastes UUNet on Spam
-
-
- When Virginia's attorney general announced the arrest of a man they alleged
- was a top e-mail spammer two weeks ago, an executive of UUNet - one of the
- country's largest Internet network providers - stood proudly nearby.
-
- The Northern Virginia-based company, a division of WorldCom Inc., had
- helped prosecutors build their case against the man listed by a leading
- anti-spam tracking group as the eighth-biggest spammer in the world.
-
- But that same group, Spamhaus.org, also monitors the world's Internet
- service providers, the companies that connect people and businesses to the
- Internet. In that category, Spamhaus lists UUNet as the ISP allowing the
- most spammers onto its network, based on the Internet addresses they are
- using.
-
- Britain-based Spamhaus lists 128 spammers with accounts on UUNet-controlled
- networks, although some of the listings were for the same organization
- operating under multiple names.
-
- Of the 128, 16 are among the most prolific spammers, according to Spamhaus.
- Only bulk mailers who have been kicked off at least three other ISPs for
- spamming are on the Spamhaus list.
-
- In the war against spam, ISPs play a crucial role. They are the gateways to
- the online world, and bulk e-mailers need them to send spam. As spam has
- grown to account for roughly 60 percent of all e-mail, many ISPs have spent
- heavily to beef up their spam-fighting efforts, often competing with one
- another over whose features are most effective.
-
- Many ISPs engage in daily combat with spammers, shutting down their
- connections only to see the spammers pop up again with new accounts under
- different names.
-
- Spamhaus lists more than 275 U.S.-based ISPs with spammers operating on
- their networks, many of them for as long as a year. The list includes some
- of the best-known ISPs, including those operated by telephone and cable
- companies.
-
- Craig Silliman, a UUNet network facilities director, said the Spamhaus
- ranking is unfair.
-
- UUNet, along with a few other firms such as AT&T bellsouth.net, a unit of
- BellSouth Corp.; and comcast.net, part of Comcast Corp.
-
-
-
- Netscape Readies Cheap ISP Service
-
-
- America Online is entering the low-priced ISP market with a service under
- the Netscape name that will be priced at about $10 monthly.
-
- Customers can get the Netscape unlimited Internet access service for just
- $1 per month until March 1, according to a registration page on the Web
- site of AOL, a division of New York-based Time Warner. After that, the
- price will go up to $10 monthly.
-
- The service includes nationwide access, personalized e-mail addresses for
- customers, and a search service powered by Google, according to the site.
-
- AOL today offers unlimited dial-up access for $20 monthly or $199 per year
- under the CompuServe brand. It also sells a $23.90-per-month unlimited
- dial-up service that comes with AOL 9.0 Optimized, a collection of
- enhancements such as e-mail, instant messaging, and exclusive content.
- Those enhancements are also available for $15, along with 5 hours of
- dial-up access, for customers who buy their own broadband connections. A
- package with a broadband connection, called the AOL for Broadband-Cable/DSL
- Plan, costs $55, according to AOL's Web site.
-
- The introduction of the Netscape service indicates that AOL recognizes the
- two basic kinds of Internet users: those who want high speed and those
- looking for the lowest price, says Marcel Nienhuis, an analyst at The
- Radicati Group, a consulting company in Palo Alto, California.
-
- "I think AOL is being slightly outmatched on their prices by MSN," Nienhuis
- says. Microsoft's unlimited MSN 8 Dial-Up Internet Service costs $10 per
- month for the first six months and $22 per month after that, according to
- the company's Web site. Microsoft also offers several alternate pricing
- plans, including a lower rate for members who access MSN via another ISP.
-
- Also available is a selection of free ISPs that are supported by
- advertising, but many users don't want to look at the ads, he added. And
- recently, a handful of inexpensive dial-up ISP services have drawn
- interest.
-
- Meanwhile, both Microsoft and AOL, as well as other ISPs, are trying to
- boost revenues by coaxing members to sign up 111770 for new services such
- as additional storage.
-
- Consumers, especially first-time Internet users, are looking for an
- easy-to-use portal to the Internet with personalized content, an area in
- which Netscape is well known, Nienhuis adds.
-
- AOL, on the other hand, has become better known for its communications
- tools, such as AOL Instant Messenger, he notes. The company probably didn't
- want to blur the AOL brand by adding another service, and with good reason:
- AOL leads in ISP market share in North America, according to the Radicati
- Group's research.
-
- Netscape was the name of the first widely commercialized Web browser,
- released in 1994. Netscape Communications, which distributed it, was sold
- to AOL in 1998.
-
-
-
- Domain Names Once Again Fetch Top Dollar
-
-
- One more sign the technology sector is rebounding: An Internet domain name
- is again commanding seven figures.
-
- Last week, a Florida man sold men.com for $1.3 million, a healthy profit
- over the $15,000 he paid for it in 1997.
-
- The buyers, largely entertainment industry folks who have opted to remain
- anonymous behind the acquiring company, men.com LLC, want to create a
- portal for men.
-
- "In the last couple of years, the domain names were selling for
- significantly less than what they did in '99, 2000," said Monte Cahn, chief
- executive of Moniker Online Services, which brokered the sale.
-
- He said the seven-figure price tag for men.com "is a big indicator of
- what's yet to come."
-
- At the market's height, a handful of domain names sold for millions of
- dollars, including $7.5 million for business.com in late 1999 and $3
- million for loans.com in January 2000.
-
- But countless others sat unclaimed, and the dot-com bust forced many domain
- name speculators to give them up when they came up for re-registration, at
- roughly $30 apiece.
-
- Ryan Levy, vice president of marketing for men.com, said the company also
- has purchased more than 1,000 other domain names over the past year at
- fire-sale prices to use in conjunction with the new portal.
-
- The seller, Rick Schwartz, believes he could have gotten much more for
- men.com by waiting longer.
-
- But Schwartz, who owns more than 4,000 other domain names, said he wanted
- the money now - so that he can buy others before prices really skyrocket.
-
-
-
- Fastest Geek, Again
-
-
- Over the past couple of months, PC Magazine took its Fastest Geek
- competition on the road. As always, contestants raced against one another
- and the stopwatch to see who can build a PC the fastest from a table full
- of parts. We held regional events in New York, Boston, and San Jose, and
- we invited our regional winners to the Comdex show in Las Vegas for the
- final showdown and the right to be called America's Fastest Geek.
-
- Each contestant built a 1.8-GHz AMD Athlon-based PC, provided to us by ABS
- Computers and equipped with an Asus A7V600 motherboard, a 250GB Maxtor SATA
- hard drive, and an ATI Radeon video card. The winner of each regional event
- won an ABS system with a 2.2-GHz Athlon 64 FX-51, two 250GB Maxtor SATA
- hard drives, 512MB of RAM, and an ATI Radeon 9800 graphics card. Similarly
- configured systems have clocked some of the fastest times we've ever
- recorded on our benchmark and gaming tests.
-
- Each heat drew a big crowd. PC Magazine Labs director Nick Stam, associate
- editor Jeremy A. Kaplan, staff editor Daniel S. Evans, and I emceed, and
- we enjoyed the repartee with PC Magazine readers. Audience members cheered
- on their favorites and even helped us spot problems in the contestants'
- assemblies, such as an upside-down floppy disk drive cable, which caused
- the drive light to stay on.
-
- We held heats throughout the first two days of Comdex, and the fastest
- person from each day competed against our regional champions in the grand
- finale on Wednesday. Twenty-one-year-old Jeremy Bergen, an information
- technology manager from Boulder, Colorado, was victorious, just seconds
- ahead of his closest competitor. We added time penalties for missing or
- misplaced screws, improper connections, mislocated drives, and the like,
- but Bergen's work was perfect-in a mere 5 minutes 11 seconds.
-
- A few of our contestants were, shall we say, a bit less handy than others
- or less knowledgeable about how PCs are put together. When they clearly
- had little hope of finishing their heat, we allowed audience members to
- come up and assist them. This didn't improve their chances, but it was
- great fun. We kidded some of the slower contestants about timing them with
- a sundial or a calendar, but they took our joking in stride. (We used
- dnSoft Research Group's XNote Stopwatch for our big-screen timer. It's
- shareware; check it out.)
-
- As happened at our summer Fastest Geek competition, held at CeBIT New York,
- some of the contestants managed to destroy equipment when the Red Mist
- descended on them and turned caring, sensitive people into
- hypercompetitors. I guarantee that twisting a mouse or keyboard connector
- while inserting it will bend pins and will not earn you a fast time.
- Likewise, cross-threading a screw and twisting so hard that you break off
- the head is a very bad idea. One regional contestant did just that-on one
- of those lovely Maxtor 250GB hard drives! I had to take it home and drill
- it out on the milling machine.
-
- We also lost a couple of motherboards in Las Vegas, probably to static
- electricity caused by the dry air. The other components held up pretty
- well, except for the SATA cables. The ones in the machines were definitely
- not up to the rigors of continual insertion and removal, especially by
- contestants who were unfamiliar with them. We replaced several cables in
- the course of the event, and a SATA header on one of the motherboards bit
- the dust, too. I gave the remains to the heavy-handed contestant as a
- keepsake.
-
- I don't think SATA connectors are inferior to parallel ATA connectors, by
- the way. In the vast majority of systems, the cable will be plugged in just
- once, and gently at that. And the speed increase over parallel ATA is most
- welcome.
-
- Later in the week, the tables were turned. I was a contestant in AMD's
- Build Your Own PC Race for Charity, an annual event in which journalists
- compete to build machines, which are then donated to the schools of their
- choice. The builders with the top three finishing times also win cash
- prizes for their schools. Sadly, I finished fourth (but I did have the
- fastest time a few years ago). PC vendor Systemax provided the machines,
- NEC donated the monitors, and a number of other peripheral vendors
- contributed as well.
-
- Building a PC from parts may not be a life-saving skill, but it sure can
- be fun-and even profitable if you're the Fastest Geek!
-
-
-
- Tech IPOs Will Be Back with a Vengeance in 2004
-
-
- Investors, brace yourselves - 2004 is gearing up to be the year of the
- technology IPO.
-
- After a lengthy drought, investment banks are making bold predictions that
- as many as a dozen European companies will go public in 2004, ranging from
- software and Internet to mobile phone firms.
-
- The successful initial public offering (IPO) of Scotland's Wolfson
- Microelectronics, trading some 33 percent above its October issue price,
- has helped make bankers confident there is pent-up demand for new
- technology stocks.
-
- And, a recent frenzy for Chinese dot-coms and speculation mounting about
- the IPO ambitions of Web icon, Google, and U.S. circuit mobile operator,
- Cingular, has only upped the ante.
-
- "I think the industry can do a dozen European technology IPOs next year,"
- one London-based technology sector banker said. "Investor appetite is
- certainly there. If 2003 was the year of the convertible, 2004 will be the
- year of straight-equity such as IPOs and follow-on offerings," said a
- European technology sector adviser at a major London investment bank.
-
- Since early 2000, when the technology bubble began to deflate, few IPOs
- have been done in Europe. Companies have quietly grown and are now ready
- to float in an upbeat market.
-
- They include a large number of Internet companies, testimony to the fact
- that not all the promises made in the Internet bubble were pie-in-the-sky.
-
- Price comparison sites such as Kelkoo, and online financial advisers
- Moneysupermarket.com are being mentioned as potential first-half flotation
- candidates.
-
- "We will be observing the various flotations planned in the tech market,
- and, as the market strengthens this year, this is a question we will be
- asking ourselves," said Dorothea Arndt, marketing director for UK arm of
- Kelkoo.com.
-
- In no way do these companies resemble the cash-hungry vehicles of the late
- 1990s which acquired customers at huge losses in a landgrab that was paid
- for with cheap capital provided by eager investors and venture capitalists.
- Unlike ISP World Online or online travel group Lastminute.com, some of the
- new Internet companies are profitable at flotation.
-
- Price comparison Web Sites hold no inventory and see strong earning
- potential. Gross margins, the percentage of profit after deducting the raw
- operating costs, can be as high as 80 percent. Such firms can be valued at
- hundreds of millions of euros.
-
- That is the kind of profile investors like.
-
- "Every IPO will have to prove that it offers more than the stocks that are
- already out there. It's not like the year 2000 when we were almost forced
- to buy, because the shares would soar on the first day," said Philippe
- Kiewiet de Jonge, coordinator of the technology, media and telecoms
- analysts team at ABN Amro Asset Management which oversees 30 billion euros
- of investments.
-
- French telecoms and Internet service providers Iliad and LDCom have both
- said they are looking to float next year. Iliad, part owned by Goldman
- Sachs and advised by SG, may be valued at one billion euros.
-
- More speculative are two are other large IPOs that may happen in the second
- half of 2004. Birmingham-based mobile phone maker Sendo, which shelved its
- flotation in 2001 when the market tanked, is again looking at an
- opportunity to raise money for expansion plans and to realize the value for
- managers and staff.
-
- No mandate has been given and the firm has yet to make its aggressive 2004
- plan to at least treble sales to $750 million and produce over five million
- handsets. Although profit margins are small in this consumer
- electronics-related business, the firm could be valued at many hundreds of
- millions of euros.
-
- Symbian, the mobile phone software maker - owned by Britain's Psion,
- Finland's Nokia, Sweden's Ericsson and other phone makers - may also float.
- However, as its software is often combined with that of Nokia's Series 60
- applications, Nokia may also want to own Symbian outright.
-
- Encouraged by the Wolfson offering, other semiconductor companies are also
- expected to come to the market. Software is an area where bankers also
- expect action. They tip firms that provide multi-media messaging services,
- and security firms that specialize in defense of computer worms, viruses
- and spam.
-
- "I have one IPO nearly on the shelf and a follow-on offering ready to go,
- one in software and the other in semiconductor equipment," a second
- London-based banker said.
-
- A second technology specialist banker says he has two IPOs waiting to go
- and expects to do a total of five during 2004.
-
- The banks that will battle for the mandates include CSFB, UBS, Morgan
- Stanley, Goldman Sachs, Lazard and Merrill Lynch. For some, there is more
- at stake than just revenues after the numerous IPO implosions of the 1990s
- and 2000: their reputation.
-
-
-
- Guide to Online Photo Album Sites
-
-
- The holidays are ending. Now you've got all those digital photos of kids
- opening presents, teenagers on skis, and Aunt Edna passed out from too much
- eggnog. You need a way to share those pictures with your friends and
- family.
-
- Here's where photo album Web sites come in. In hopes that you and your
- loved ones will buy prints, these sites let you post your photos free of
- charge for anyone to view.
-
- It's amazing how many of these sites are out there. To name just a few,
- you'll find Sony's ImageStation, Kodak's Ofoto, Slug's PBase, PictureTrail,
- Shutterfly, Snapfish, and Yahoo Photos.
-
- Here's an introduction to what to expect when you pick an album site, what
- to look for, and what to look out for. Luckily, it's not a major
- commitment; you can always try a different site with your next album. Many
- others are available.
-
- Not all album sites are free. PBase and PictureTrail give you limited,
- temporary free accounts, but then expect you to pay for something
- longer-lasting or more powerful. The price isn't high - less than $25 a
- year for either - but it's more than you'd pay at a free site.
-
- It's a bit surprising that free album sites have survived when so many
- other free Internet services have not. It seems amazing that companies can
- still give away server space and bandwidth in hopes of selling a few
- prints. It's possible they won't last, which is why you should be cautious
- about depending on one as a form of archival storage for your photos (CD-Rs
- are a better choice). But they're around now and you may as well use them
- for sharing and for prints.
-
- Speaking of prints, and of freebies, these sites often offer free prints
- as a bonus when you first sign up - which is a pretty good argument for
- using more than one site. Shutterfly's current bonus appears the best,
- offering 15 free prints to new members. Well, they're almost free: You pay
- for shipping. But that can change, so look around before picking a site.
-
- Once you've picked a site, you'll have to sign up. Most require your name,
- e-mail address, and a password. If you have a Yahoo account, you already
- have a Yahoo Photos account.
-
- Then you can create an album and start uploading your pictures. With
- ImageStation, though, you upload the pictures first, then create an album.
- The easiest way to upload pictures is to drag and drop them from Windows
- Explorer to a box on a Web page, an option that all of these sites
- offer - after you've allowed the site to install a small browser add-in.
-
- The sites all let you to rearrange the order of the pictures, as well as
- add titles and captions. Rearranging is an easy, drag-and-drop job. Titles
- and captions certainly make your pictures more understandable, but not all
- of us have the patience to add them.
-
- You want to share your pictures with family and friends, and the Web sites
- want you to share them: The more people who look at them, the better the
- chance of selling prints.
-
- But the sites typically make sharing pictures "easy" in a way that actually
- makes it difficult. They want you to enter e-mail addresses into a Web form
- so they can send announcements to your loved ones. This means you have to
- type or paste in addresses that you already have in your regular e-mail
- address book; if you could use your own e-mail program, you could just
- click them.
-
- What's more, not everyone you know may want these sites to have their
- e-mail address. Finally, these notices tend to be highly formatted e-mail
- messages, complete with photos, buttons, and a subject like "Enjoy my
- photos" - not the sort of thing that always gets through spam filters.
-
- You're better off just copying the URL from the album page and pasting it
- into an e-mail message you write yourself. But that doesn't always work.
- Some sites, such as Shutterfly, use one URL to display an album to its
- creator and another for everyone else.
-
- A more certain work-around is to use the site's Web form to send one
- invitation - to yourself. Once you get that, you can copy the URL the site
- provides in the e-mail message, and pass it along to your friends and
- family.
-
- Of this assortment of sites, Yahoo Photo is the only one that offers a more
- reasonable way to invite friends. The site provides an option that gives
- you an easy-to-type URL.
-
- If you don't want your friends and family to have to sign up just to look
- at your online album, consider that when you choose your photo site. This
- restriction is key to ImageStation and Snapfish.
-
- Of course, the sites hope you and your loved ones will order plenty of
- prints - which is more expensive than using your own ink-jet printer.
- However, if you consider the costs of ink and good photo paper, the
- difference isn't substantial. Besides, the print quality is generally
- excellent and you don't have to mess with scissors.
-
- In addition to prints, these sites sell all sorts of photo-oriented gifts
- to make your kids' grandparents happy. These include coffee mugs,
- calendars, T-shirts, and greeting cards.
-
- But Sony's ImageStation offers what must be the strangest photo gift of
- all: chocolates, cookies, and candies with your photos glazed on. The Web
- site does not list the ingredients.
-
-
-
- Spears Reigns Again on Internet
-
-
- Just as Internet users were beginning to lose interest in longtime Web
- wonder Britney Spears, a few sexually provocative magazine covers and a
- famous smooch with Madonna propelled the pop princess back into favor.
-
- Yes, it's that time again - when Lycos, America Online and Yahoo! each
- weigh in with their end-of-year statistics and, as was the case last year
- and the year before, Spears managed to claw her way near the top of the
- lists of the most searched-for celebrities.
-
- Until Spears started promoting her new album with a flurry of
- attention-getting stunts, highlighted by her Sapphic excursion at the MTV
- Video Music Awards in September, the singer actually fell off Lycos' top-10
- list of search terms for several weeks, spokesman Aaron Schatz said.
- Ultimately, though, she finished in the No. 2 spot overall at Lycos for the
- year, right behind song-swapping service Kazaa.
-
- At Yahoo! she finished sixth on the overall list of searched-for terms,
- with one celebrity ahead of her: Eminem.
-
- Yahoo! also reports that the search term receiving the biggest percentage
- gain year-over-year is, no surprise, Paris Hilton, she of online sex-tape
- fame. Yahoo! says searches for her went up a mere 212,000%.
-
- Over at AOL, the biggest topic online was the war in Iraq, judging from
- activity at the Internet service provider's many message boards.
-
- Following the war was politics in general and, in particular, the
- Democratic party primaries, the California recall election and "The
- Reagans" miniseries. Celebrities and their scandals also were hot, with
- Rush Limbaugh, Kobe Bryant and Michael Jackson leading the way.
-
- Reality TV also was popular on AOL message boards, led by "American Idol"
- and followed by "Survivor," "Paradise Hotel" and "Big Brother."
-
- Apparently, threesomes are quite popular on the Internet, according to
- Yahoo! The company's list of the most-searched movies is led by the Harry
- Potter soon-to-be trilogy, and more. It's followed by "The Lord of the
- Rings" and "The Matrix" trilogies, with "Spider-Man" and "8 Mile" rounding
- out the top-five searched-for movies.
-
- And Lycos is predicting, based on its growing number of searches, that the
- movies "The Passion of the Christ," "Troy" and "Catwoman" will be hits.
-
- Speaking of feature films, "Finding Nemo" has the dubious honor of being
- probably the year's most downloaded movie at peer-to-peer file-sharing
- services, according to the firm BayTSP. And surprisingly, BayTSP reported,
- the Miramax film "Shaolin Soccer," which hasn't even been released in the
- United States, was hugely popular.
-
- Garnering an immense amount of short-lived attention was Al-Jazeera, the
- Arabic cable news network, which generated three times as many search
- queries in April than did the word "sex." Driving the interest in
- Al-Jazeera in March and April was the fact that its Web site featured
- video of American prisoners of war, Schatz said.
-
- The top TV shows searched for, according to Lycos, were "American Idol,"
- "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," "The Simpsons" and "Survivor." The top sports
- stars were Bryant, Anna Kournikova, Michael Jordan, David Beckham and Allen
- Iverson.
-
- Nielsen//NetRatings is reporting that the top online brand, judging from
- statistics culled from the first 10 months of the year, will probably be
- AOL, narrowly outscoring MSN and Yahoo!
-
-
-
- Sober Worm Threatens Holiday
-
-
- A self-e-mailing worm is threatening to impose a Sober holiday on
- individuals and companies alike.
-
- The worm created havoc in October by getting into systems and e-mailing
- itself to every e-mail address it could find. Then a second variant,
- Sober.B, popped up at the end of last week, attempting to intrigue people
- with subject lines referencing George W. Bush.
-
- The B variant was given a low-risk status as it is relatively easy to stop
- and remove, and it seemed to have been stopped in its tracks. However, the
- weekend saw the German writers release the same worm but with different
- subject lines.
-
- Just prior to Christmas, it seems that people don't want to open a file
- about George Bush's militancy. But "Sorry, that's your mail", "Hi, it's
- me", "Thankyou very very much", "you are an idiot" and "I hate you" seem to
- have captured the post-party alcohol-addled workers across the globe who
- are stuck at work when they'd rather be at home eating mince pies.
-
- As such, the attachments are getting opened, the worm is spreading. Most
- antivirus vendors have given Sober.C a Medium risk simply because of its
- acceleration. However, those major antivirus vendors also have updated
- virus definitions that detect and block the pest.
-
- There is a risk that within the next day, the virus could go
- haywire - especially if staff eyeing the calendar are not updating their
- antivirus files. Rather fortunately, little work is being done at the
- moment and companies will benefit from employees not being at work over the
- holiday break so it is not going to disrupt anyone all that much.
-
- Except of course the IT staff who may yet receive the dreaded phone call on
- Christmas or Boxing Day inviting them to spend the whole day cleaning up
- the network rather than watching movies and drinking too much wine. Bah
- humbug.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
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