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- Volume 6, Issue 9 Atari Online News, Etc. February 27, 2004
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2004
- 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:
-
- Norbert Simon
- Kevin Savetz
- Nick Harlow
-
-
-
- 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 #0609 02/27/04
-
- ~ New MyDoom Outbreak! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Sony PSP Delayed!
- ~ Windows XP Reloaded?! ~ Tempus-Word NG Beta! ~ HotMail On Phones?
- ~ AOL Blocks ICQ Worm! ~ Microsoft Spam Tactics ~ Space Battle Out!
- ~ ITT Tech Investigated! ~ Panther Update Primed! ~ JagFest '04 UK!
-
- -* Pols Push Net Tax Ban Limits *-
- -* Microsoft's Japanese Office Raided! *-
- -* Senate to Introduce SpyWare SPYBLOCK Act! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Well, here it is, just about the beginning of March, finally! We can almost
- start to feel the weather changing for the better here in New England. It's
- been one helluva winter! The good news is that the snowfall totals didn't
- reach the predicted levels, fortunately. But, the cold temperatures more
- than made up for that. However, we've managed to reach some more seasonal
- temperatures this past week. Enough so that I've been receiving numerous
- gardening seed and bulb catalogs that have me looking at them more fervently
- the past few days. Spring is just around the corner.
-
- I had to take today off as a "mental health" day. I actually took yesterday
- off also because my wife had to have test performed and I needed to drive
- her in and back due to the nature of the test (results were good!). But I
- needed a full day to just unwind. This past few weeks, we've been putting
- together performance appraisals for our staff, and that always seems to be a
- stressful period around here. This year was definitely better then past
- years - fewer people nitpicking over various comments or evaluations. I
- don't know why this task always seems to be stressful, but it always does.
- But, it's over for another year! I think it's time for a celebration.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- New Beta of Tempus-Word NG
-
-
- A new Beta of Tempus-Word NG (V5.22∞) is available:
-
- http://www.tempus-word.de/en/download/index.htm
-
- Please note, that you can choose a small update-file instead of the full
- install.
-
- The description of the keyboard shortcuts is available in a
- separate file (on the same page, see "Shortcut-Manual")
-
- Major changes:
-
- - First release of adjusted English keyboard reference
- (documentation and keyboard-driver TWKEYUK.TAS)
-
- - Smarter looking skin (3D-buttons in the information
- panels)
-
- - Accessing of several dialogs with shortcuts improved
- (replacement of multiple used characters)
-
- - Preparations for the coming version of ST-Emulator Runtime
- (English)
-
- Please tell us your impressions of the new release in our
- forum (now English skin available with this link):
-
- http://49743.rapidforum.com/selskin=i1
-
- Norbert Simon
- Tempus-Word Project
-
-
-
- Game 'Space Battle' by Paradize Released
-
-
- Paradize proudly releases our first 2004 production.
-
- A small two player game called "Space Battle" featuring a vector rotator in
- GFA BASIC. The game offers an AI mode and optional joystick control.
-
- It should run on STFM, STe, Falcon 030 and TT in normal TOS.
-
- URL: http://paradize.atari.org/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. It's gonna be short and sweet this week.
- Well, more short than sweet, but you get the idea.
-
- I don't remember if I've mentioned this before, but I've got a herniated
- disc and minor arthritis in my neck. I've had it for quite a while now,
- and I originally thought it was 'just a stiff neck'. I attributed it to
- stress due to things in my personal life, but when the stress lessened
- and the pain didn't, I finally got it checked. That's when the doctor
- gave me the news.
-
- Now, I don't want to give the impression that I'm an invalid or that I'm
- in an incredible amount of pain. That's simply not the case. But it IS
- quite annoying and I'm finding that I have to change certain things. I'm
- getting physical therapy to try to minimize the problem, and I'm hoping
- for a full recovery.
-
- Anyway, that's why my intro is short this week and probably why I
- haven't got anything either deep or annoying to say (I find that I make
- a point best when I'm both somewhat deep and somewhat annoying. The
- exact percentage and degree of each keeps changing, but that's the
- general formula.)
-
- By the way, I don't usually do this, but I ran across a story on the
- 'net about Jeff Minter... remember Llamasoft? You can check it out here:
- http://www.wayoftherodent.com/bob_yak2.htm
-
-
- Well, let's get to the news and stuff from the UseNEt.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- 'Sam F' asks for help with his hard drive:
-
- "Hellllppppppppp!! My scsi cd is last device. I have the sci terminator
- 'plug', and the scsi cable. 2 ports on back of external case. Which port
- does the cable go to and which does the terminator plug go to?"
-
-
- Dave Glish tells Sam:
-
- "If you are going from the SCSI controller to an external device (with
- 2 SCSI plugs on the back) you can plug the cable into either plug and
- the terminator into the other. SCSI needs termination at the end of
- both an internal chain and an external chain. The second plug on the
- external device allows you to either terminate or daisy chain another
- device onto the external chain. Hope this helps."
-
-
- Sam tells Dave:
-
- "Helps a great deal Dave, now I just need to get either a working scsi
- cdrw, or re-case my Falcon and get an IDE cdrw."
-
-
- Dave replies:
-
- "They are getting hard to find. If you have any second-hand type
- computer stores in your area you could try there."
-
-
- Edward Baiz jumps in and posts:
-
- "Actually the drive can be terminated with the SCSI terminator
- plug. Just read it's manual."
-
-
- 'Jon' adds:
-
- "I have a similar setup and it doesn't matter where you plug the cable as
- long as it is terminated on the other end."
-
-
- Neil Chester asks for help setting up STiK2:
-
- "I have managed to use Stik2 without trouble with my Freeserve address but
- the amount of junk emails is driving me to distraction, so much so that I
- am trying to migrate to my other ISP accounts, with UKFantastic and
- FreeOla. All 3 were a breeze to setup on Iconnect. But with Stik2 only
- Freeserve and UKFantastic connect correctly.
-
- FreeOla fails on PPP connection, can anyone help me on this? Or provide
- some pointers as to what to look for as I seem to have put the Username
- and Password correctly into the CFG file.
-
- Unless there are some TCP settings to change I am fairly clueless as to
- why Iconnect should work OK and yet Stik2 fails on the first hurdle."
-
-
- Derryck Croker tells Neil that he has....
-
- "Only the usual advice on connecting using a terminal such as Connect! and
- manually entering your details to see if you can start a PPP connection.
-
- Usually you don't need any scripts at all, so make sure that your StiK2
- setup matches what's set in IConf (there, the startup script dialog should
- be empty aside from "Done" IIRC.
-
- Why do you want to move away from IConnect and its clients, by the way?"
-
-
- Neil tells Derryck:
-
- "Seems odd that Iconnect should work but not Stik2 as all you have to put
- in is the passwords and usernames and the Tel No. I noticed that my
- username for the email address has a -001 after it, so I didn't use that
- bit for the login on Stik2. This one is used in Newsie.
-
- I haven't done a script in Stik2, as I was relying on PAP etc. But I may
- try it with this one (if I'm desperate). I haven't used Connect before
- are there instructions for using it somewhere?
-
- I am tempted to use Iconnect for the UKFantastic and FreeOla accounts but
- I am worried that they will get overloaded with junk emails eventually
- like this Freeserve account! I use Stik2 with Newsie to use "Get Selected
- Emails" option in Newsie to delete off the server the 150 rubbish emails I
- get every 2 days!! Emailer wasn't very good for doing this as it didn't
- display the header line for them, so I ended up deleting genuine ones!
-
- If there was a POPGEM client for Iconnect then that would suffice? But
- actually the Web access with Dan's OVL is far faster than Iconnects which
- is welcome."
-
-
- Derryck adds:
-
- "You might take a look at MagxNet instead. It's fairly complex to set up,
- but there was a thread in here some time back that had a step by step. If
- you ask Vassilis nicely you could have an IConnect gateway to go along with
- the GlueStik supplied with it, and then you can freely mix and match
-
- It's faster than the other stacks as well, in my humble opinion.,
-
-
- John Oakes asks about re-casing his TT030:
-
- "Are there details on recasing a TT030 into a desktop case."
-
-
- Janez Valant gets cute and tells John:
-
- "Hm, TT _IS_ in a desktop case. <grin>"
-
-
- John tells Janez:
-
- "True. I would like to try and contain my cd player and my 4gb scsi barracuda
- ethernec card, etc, etc, etc."
-
-
- Greg Goodwin adds:
-
- "Something you might want to consider is to put your items into a 4 bay
- SCSI case. Then you would have just two 'boxes'."
-
-
- Dave Glish adds some info about good old fashioned PC-style cases:
-
- "If you want to use a standard PC type case, look for an older style
- "AT" type of case. The newer "ATX" type power button connects to the
- motherboard and you need to do some extra wiring to make it work with
- an Atari. The "AT" just turns the computer on or off. I cased an
- older MegaST and it works great. Put an internal ICD SCSI adapter in
- it and have it hooked up to a hard drive and CDrom. I also did
- something a little different. Since the SCSI adapter is all internal I
- brought the last SCSI plug on my cable to the back of the machine and
- attached it to an external SCSI adapter type plug. Now I can use an
- external terminator or take it off and add external devices on to the
- chain."
-
-
- Philippe Cousson joins the growing number of people who want to network
- their Falcons and posts:
-
- "I'd like to tie may falcon to an ethernet network (microsoft client).
- Is it possible ? How is it done?"
-
-
- Maurits van de Kamp tells Philippe:
-
- "Yep. Use an ethernec adapter (http://hardware.atari.org) to connect it to
- the ethernet. As for Microsoft networking, you'll need Samba. I'm not sure
- if Magicnet or STiK/STiNG support that, but MiNTnet does."
-
-
- StΘphane Smirnow asks about the availability of games for the ST:
-
- "After more than 12 years in a box, I decided to give a second life to my
- old Atari 1040 ST...when I discovered that half of my disks haven't
- survived the "time travel". So I'm looking to buy (again) some original
- games from that time (+-1990). Would anyone have any idea where I could
- find some (I'm located in Belgium, if that could be of any use)?"
-
-
- John Miskinis tells StΘphane:
-
- "Well, I'm in the USA, but would be happy to "restore" any of
- your games that I own, and that still work. I have not powered
- on my ST in a couple years, but will soon, if I can get a
- working HD system from the pieces I have.
-
- If you make a list of what games no longer work, maybe others
- and myself can help you..."
-
-
- StΘphane replies:
-
- "thank you very much for your answer. Actually I seem to have more luck
- than you, as I still have my internet AND external drive perfectly working
- About the original games I'm looking for (and should I say that I'm
- prepared to pay well for them!), here is the very important one I'd like to
- retrieve (in importance order):
- -Dragonflight (from Thalion, 1990)
- -Ring of Medusa (army-control game, but don't know the editor nor the
- release year (probably around 1990 also))
- -Captive
- -Dragon Breath
- -Dungeon Master (of course) and Chaos Strikes Back
- -Drakken
- -Full Metal Planet
- If you have any news about those original games (still working of course),
- or if you have one yourself (and would like to sell it for a good price),
- please contact me!"
-
-
- Alesander Holland tells StΘphane:
-
- "Dragonflight (from Thalion, 1990)
-
- http://thalion.atari.org
-
- Dragonflight is going to be released soon as Udo Fischer, original
- author is going to produce a non-copy protected version which also
- runs from hard disk.
-
-
- Dungeon Master (of course) and Chaos Strikes Back
-
-
- Dungeon Master and Chaos Strikes Back even
-
- http://dmweb.free.fr "
-
-
- Nick Harlow adds:
-
- "Check out this web shop for ST games ... both shrink wrapped (new) and
- second-hand. http://www.1632-sales.zenwebhosting.com/acatalog/ "
-
-
- Mark Bedingfield asks about a PC emulator for the Falcon:
-
- "I just picked up a Falcon speed 286 card and was wondering if anybody had
- a copy of the install disk floating around? I know it is ancient but what
- the hell, it's worth playing with. Just like the idea of a dos prompt on my
- desktop. Also I seem to recall it was possible to get win 3.11 to work in
- 256 colour mode in a later version of the software, is this correct?"
-
-
- Greg Goodwin tells Mark:
-
- "I don't have the details of Falcon speed I fear, but I've discovered
- that SoftPC is compatible with the CT60. 66Mhz 286 anyone?"
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this time around. Tune in again next week, same
- time, same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when...
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Sony PSP Delayed Until 2005!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Smaller Publishers Pressure!
- Beyond the Joystick!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Sony Delays U.S. Launch of PSP Game Device to 2005
-
-
- Japan's Sony Corp. on Wednesday said it has pushed back the U.S. launch of
- its all-in-one handheld gaming device called PSP until early in 2005, from
- its original planned launch date in late 2004.
-
- Sony, one of the world's largest consumer electronics makers, said the
- portable version of its best-selling PlayStation game machine, which is
- anticipated to include a digital music and video player, will still be
- released in Japan in 2004.
-
- Sony Computer Entertainment of America spokeswoman Molly Smith said that
- Sony was now looking to launch the PSP in North America by the end of the
- company's next fiscal year, which ends in March 2005.
-
- "So, basically, the U.S. launch is scheduled the quarter following the
- Japanese Launch," said Smith, who confirmed that the Japan launch was on
- track for the year-end holiday season of 2004.
-
- Sony said that it wanted to make sure that the PSP would launch along with
- enough games to drives sales.
-
- "We want to ensure that the product launch is really well supported and
- that the development community will have time to optimize content," Smith
- said, "The portable space is a new domain ... and we want to ensure that
- when this thing is launched that we are able to demonstrate what this thing
- can do."
-
- The PSP, which in a prototype featured a bright, 4.5 inch (11.4 cm) color
- screen, sports the familiar box, circle, cross and triangle buttons of the
- PlayStation controllers.
-
- Analysts have seen the PSP as a potential rival to Nintendo Co. Ltd.'s
- dominant Game Boy handheld player, Nokia's N-Gage wireless gaming device
- and Apple Computer Inc.'s iPod and iTunes music download service.
-
- "It's not all that big of a surprise," said Stewart Halpern, analyst at
- RBC Capital Markets. "It doesn't really do a lot of good to put the
- platform out there if you don't have a sufficient amount of software."
-
- Halpern noted that Sony development kits, which game developers need to
- create games for the PSP, had been delivered late, leading to the PSP's
- delayed launch date.
-
- The PlayStation 2, which launched in Japan in March 2000 and in North
- America in October 2000, was besieged with production problems when it
- first launched.
-
-
-
- Smaller Video Game Publishers Under Pressure
-
-
- For the smallest U.S. video game publishers there is bad news and worse: it
- is getting harder and more expensive to reach game buyers, and harder still
- to reach potential investors to stay afloat.
-
- As the $10 billion games business becomes increasingly competitive and
- games grow more expensive to produce and market, analysts following the
- industry say smaller publishers are trying to just hang on while their
- larger rivals use their earnings power to buy up rights to the hottest
- games.
-
- "I would say there's not strategic interest" in the smallest players, said
- one investment banker who has worked on deals involving game publishers of
- various sizes. "None of these guys are even on the page."
-
- Last week Acclaim Entertainment Inc. sold $15 million in convertible notes
- backed by a second mortgage on its headquarters, having already received an
- amendment to its credit agreement in December allowing it to borrow
- additional funds through the end of April.
-
- The company's auditors have for years questioned its ability to continue as
- a "going concern," and Electronic Arts Inc., the world's largest game
- publisher, recently picked up the rights to publish future versions of
- "Burnout," the racing game that had been Acclaim's top franchise.
-
- Bam Entertainment Inc. has fared little better, disclosing recently that it
- has failed to repay a $250,000 promissory note from one of its directors,
- and that its deal to acquire Scottish developer VIS is contingent on
- raising more than $12 million in new capital.
-
- The company said in its quarterly report that it needs to raise new capital
- and that it may not have sufficient funds for operations for more than the
- next six months.
-
- Interplay Entertainment Corp. is also in a similar predicament. In its
- September quarter, the last period the company publicly reported, it had
- net revenue of $4.7 million and a loss of $2.2 million, with a
- stockholders' deficit of almost $16 million.
-
- According to Reuters Research, a unit of Reuters Group Plc, there are no
- financial analysts covering Bam or Interplay, and just five following
- Acclaim, all of whom rate it "hold" or lower.
-
- One who follows Acclaim said there were no strong prospects on its upcoming
- release schedule, leaving it at a disadvantage.
-
- "In our view, the company is not in a good position to capitalize on the
- growth trends that we expect for video game software in 2004 and beyond,"
- Harris Nesbitt Gerard analyst Edward Williams said in a note.
-
- The smaller publishers have struggled to gain market share, and with the
- exception of Interplay's "Baldur's Gate: Dark Alliance 2," which was a
- top-10 title in January, they have struggled to make an impact on the sales
- charts.
-
- "It's a vicious cycle," said Dan "Shoe" Hsu, editor-in-chief of leading
- games magazine Electronic Gaming Monthly. Small publishers, he said, have
- difficulty attracting attention for their games, which hurts sales, which
- leaves them with less money to promote their titles.
-
- "Part of the problem there is these guys are trying to bring out games
- during the holiday season with the mind-set that holiday sales mean more
- sales no matter what," he said.
-
- Another important factor, Hsu said, was having the capital for art
- direction, given the increasing premium put on cutting-edge graphics.
-
- "If a game looks really good ... it does really change your perception,"
- he said. "You can make the exact same game, but if one company can make it
- look better then they sell more products."
-
-
-
- Researchers, Game Makers Go Past Joystick
-
-
- There's not much use for a keyboard or joystick in the video game "The
- Journey to Wild Divine: The Passage." All the action is controlled,
- literally, through your fingertips.
-
- You can dump the game pad with Sony Corp.'s EyeToy, too. You'll succeed
- only by prancing around in front of a video camera.
-
- Increasingly, game makers and researchers are offering alternatives to the
- joystick with products that listen to your voice, watch your movement and
- even monitor your pulse.
-
- The hope is these devices, which tout everything from better health to
- inner peace, will lure people who wouldn't ordinarily consider video games.
-
- "What we're seeing is graphics have gotten better and better in games, but
- the input hasn't really improved," EyeToy inventor Richard Marks said.
-
- Video game makers have long attempted an alternative spin.
-
- During the 1980s, target practice games like Nintendo's "Duck Hunt"
- included the "Zapper Light Gun," which had to be aimed at just the right
- part of the television screen to blast away ducks and clay pigeons.
-
- Later, the Japanese game "Dance Dance Revolution" had breathless dancers
- spinning, jumping and tapping their feet on a plastic dance mat.
-
- But for the most part, these alternative input devices were just heavily
- modified keyboards, joysticks or mice, said Kurt Smith, one of the creators
- of "Wild Divine."
-
- "Wild Divine" and a few others are fundamentally different. There are no
- keyboards to press or mouse buttons to click.
-
- With "Wild Divine," players attach three plastic biofeedback clips called
- Magic Rings to a small device that plugs into the computer's Universal
- Serial Bus port.
-
- The $160 game, attachments included, monitors a player's heart rate and
- perspiration. Users who enter the game's decidedly new-age setting must
- accomplish a series of tasks, such as juggling balls, by trying to relax
- and thereby lowering their heart rate. Tense up and the balls will drop.
-
- Mastering the game means learning how to control your breathing and to
- cycle between emotional states of excitement and relaxation.
-
- "We're able to keep a really close eye on what's going on in your body,"
- said Smith, who spent 15 years in the health care industry before forming
- his company, The Wild Divine Project. "They're pretty flabbergasted that
- `Oh my God, I'm really controlling this with my mind.'"
-
- In the upcoming "Lifeline" from Konami of America Inc., players shout
- commands into a microphone to direct their on-screen persona. Creators say
- the game will respond to a lexicon of 5,000 words and about 100,000 phrases
- like "dodge and reload."
-
- Powergrid Fitness, based in Laurel, Md., is taking a heart-friendly
- approach with its $695 kiloWatt controller. Due in June, it resembles a
- fitness machine and works with existing video games on the PlayStation 2,
- Xbox and Windows-based computers.
-
- In a racing game, for example, the harder players push on the kiloWatt's
- mounted controller, the faster the race car will go.
-
- "Video games are addictive," co-founder Greg Merril said. "To be able to
- leverage that addiction in a healthy way was a very compelling idea for
- us."
-
- Sony's $50 EyeToy camera, first released last year in Europe, records a
- player's movement and translates it into action on screen.
-
- Most EyeToy games are simple diversions that last only a few minutes, such
- as "Keep Ups," where you have to keep moving around carefully to bobble a
- soccer ball on your head.
-
- Ultimately, these gaming devices have potential applications beyond
- entertainment.
-
- Smith foresees adapting special software expansion packs for his "Wild
- Divine" game to manage pain or quit smoking.
-
- Researchers at Sandia National Laboratories' Advanced Concepts Group
- recently began using games to gauge reaction to stress, boredom and other
- psychological situations.
-
- In their test, four people playing the tense military game "Tom Clancy's
- Rainbow Six 3: Raven Shield" were hooked up to off-the-shelf parts:
- accelerometers to measure motion, face-recognition software, EKGs to
- measure heart beat and a respiration monitor to measure breathing depth
- and rapidity.
-
- Sandia officials believe their ongoing analysis will show a correlation
- between the physical feedback and a person's feelings. However, the
- $200,000 research project remains preliminary, and they have yet to draw
- any conclusions.
-
- Lead researcher Peter Merkle said computers, despite their power, are still
- bad at recognizing humans' complex physical and emotional patterns.
-
- "We give off so much information, but our only current way of interacting
- with a computer is very limited - through, essentially, a keyboard and
- mouse," he said.
-
- Avid gamer Stephen Smith, 15, of Four Oaks, N.C., said the EyeToy is fun,
- but he's not about to toss his joystick just yet.
-
- "It has potential, but it gets boring after a while," he said. "I think
- that products like EyeToy show us what the future of gaming could be like.
- ... It lets you interact with a game that stars you."
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE Gaming Online - Online Users Growl & Purr!
- """""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- JagFest'04 UK
-
-
- WHAT
-
- A second festival of Atari featuring Jaguar, Lynx and ST, TT and Falcon..
- Here you will be able to play all the great Jaguar games, link your Lynx's
- and show off those ST's/Falcons. We want to include as many of you as
- possible, and this time we have more room, well 1 more actually. There will
- be dedicated Jaguar, Atari Computer, and 8 Bit areas.
-
- Do you have a pet project on Atari, then come and show it off, do you want
- to play games then we plan to have at least 4 video screens available for
- Jaguar games not including the tournaments and people showing what their
- Jaguars do.
-
- You want to trade/swap some of Jaguar/Lynx or Atari software? Brilliant,
- this is going to be the place to do it. 16/32 Systems will obviously
- provide some of the retail but if you've got it come along and do it.
-
- Do you run or are you part of an Atari group, then you should be here!
- If you are a company or group and what to support us by giving a prize for
- one of our Tournaments, let us know!!
-
- When
-
- June 12/13 2004 - Setup and Start for Attendees on the Friday 11th June
- Afternoon late into the night
- Opening Hours 10am - 6pm for Visitors
- ALL DAY AND ALL NIGHT FOR WEEKEND PASS HOLDERS!! ( massive game sessions!! )
-
- Where
-
- Medway Manor Hotel, Rochester Kent UK
- More details can be found at http://www.uk.jagfest.org.uk/
- Discussion web pages can be found at http://bbs.jagfest.org.uk/phpBB2/
-
- --
- Nick Harlow
- 16/32 Systems
- Webshop: http://www.1632-sales.zenwebhosting.com/acatalog/
- Web Site: http://www.1632systems.co.uk
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Governors Press for Limits on Internet Tax Ban
-
-
- Several U.S. governors said Monday they would seek to scale back a
- congressional effort to ban taxes on Internet access, saying it would cost
- them billions of dollars in annual revenue.
-
- At a conference in Washington, three U.S. governors said their budgets
- could be devastated by a bill that would prevent them from taxing the
- monthly fees that Internet providers like EarthLink Inc. charge customers.
-
- Though few states currently tax Internet access, the bill could end up
- eating into revenues from telephone service, music sales and other
- activities that are already migrating to the Internet and could be bundled
- with access fees in the future, they said.
-
- The bill amounts to "putting a federal stop sign onto a state road," said
- Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, a Republican.
-
- Huckabee was joined by Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle and Pennsylvania Gov. Ed
- Rendell, both Democrats, who said the ban could force them to raise other
- taxes and fees.
-
- A better approach would be to simply extend the more limited, temporary ban
- that expired last year so policymakers can figure out how to handle new
- services like Internet telephony, they said.
-
- Congress sought to make a temporary ban on access taxes permanent last year
- and widen it to include high-speed cable and DSL service.
-
- That version, backed by a long list of business groups, would also
- eliminate access taxes that were in place in some states before the
- temporary ban first took effect in 1998.
-
- The bill passed the House of Representatives last year but stalled in the
- Senate, and the temporary ban expired in October.
-
- Aides said any action in the Senate was unlikely for several weeks.
-
- Two former governors now serving in the Senate, Tennessee Republican Lamar
- Alexander and Delaware Democrat Tom Carper, said they were picking up
- support for a renewal of the temporary ban.
-
- Virginia Sen. George Allen, a sponsor of the permanent tax ban, would be
- willing to consider ways to focus the ban exclusively on access fees, an
- aide said.
-
- But opponents are seeking to make the issue more complicated than it needs
- to be, said Allen aide Heidi Frederickson.
-
- "This is an issue that deals with consumers, and that's where Sen. Allen's
- focus is," Frederickson said. "Sen. Alexander is clearly focused on the
- governors, as this press conference today reveals."
-
-
-
- Latest MyDoom Outbreak Spreading, Deletes Files
-
-
- Security experts issued fresh alerts over a new, file-deleting version of
- the MyDoom e-mail worm that was targeting computer users with greater
- ferocity on Wednesday.
-
- The new outbreak, known as MyDoom.F, emerged late last week and has been
- gathering steam ever since.
-
- The virus is programmed to infect personal computers and use them to
- unleash a crippling digital barrage known as a denial-of-service attack on
- select Web sites belonging to Microsoft Corp. and the Recording Industry
- Association of America.
-
- The attacks failed to bring down the sites, though access to the Web site
- for the RIAA was hampered slightly on Wednesday, security firms reported.
- The RIAA, a lobbying group for the music industry, has drawn the ire of
- computer users since it began suing American online song swappers last
- year.
-
- While it was not spreading as fast as its MyDoom predecessors nor as
- rapidly as last week's Netsky.B outbreak, MyDoom.F is considered a growing
- risk as it deletes random Microsoft Word and Excel files, plus photos and
- movies stored on an infected computer.
-
- "MyDoom.F has been picking up pace since Monday and Tuesday," said Mikko
- Hypponen, manager of Finnish anti-virus research firm F-Secure. "The
- disturbing thing is that it has a destructive payload. We haven't seen a
- destructive virus like this in a while," he said.
-
- Computer viruses rarely destroy files these days. They have instead evolved
- over the years to turn unsecured computers into "zombie" machines capable
- of carrying out the virus writer's commands.
-
- Typically, this army of commandeered machines is used to send out torrents
- of e-mail spam messages, unleash digital attacks on targeted Web sites and,
- in some cases, host Web sites that sell everything from vitamins to
- pornography.
-
- The first MyDoom worm surfaced in January and is considered the most
- virulent outbreak ever, infecting millions of computers around the globe.
-
- Security firms were again advising computer users not to open
- mysterious-looking emails or click on their attachments if they are not
- certain of the sender's identity.
-
- The latest outbreak arrives in e-mail in-boxes carrying a variety of
- subject header lines including: "Approved," "Your Credit Card" and "You use
- illegal File Sharing...Your IP was logged."
-
-
-
- Anti-Spyware Law Proposed
-
-
- A handful of tech-savvy senators are tackling the growing problem of
- spyware with a proposed law that would make it harder for sites to inflict
- the invasive programs on unwitting users, and easier for the recipients to
- remove them.
-
- The Software Principles Yielding Better Levels of Consumer Knowledge
- (SPYBLOCK) Act would "give consumers control over the programs that are
- downloaded onto their computers," says cosponsor Barbara Boxer
- (D-California). The measure was introduced Thursday by Boxer and Senators
- Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) and Conrad Burns (R-Montana).
-
- The bill tackles three aspects of spyware. It imposes new rules that would
- make it more difficult for companies to slip software onto users' systems
- surreptitiously; require easy directions and options for removal; and
- prohibit harmful spyware.
-
- Under the proposal, if a company needs a user to install certain software
- to view Web site components or advertising, it would have to explain the
- reason and nature of the download in a pop-up window or another clear
- notice. This explanation would remain on the computer screen until the user
- either consents or declines to install the software. The act would make
- illegal the practice of downloading and installing software without
- alerting the user - a growing practice among some companies.
-
- If a user decides to install that software, it must be easily removable,
- according to the legislation. The application must appear in the Add/Remove
- Programs menu; be completely removable using normal, reasonable procedures;
- and, if it is an advertisement, it must include a link that tells the user
- how to turn off the ad feature or uninstall the software.
-
- Some spyware is nearly impossible to remove once installed.
-
- "[Some] consumers have been downloading and saying that they can't remove
- [the software]," says Ari Schwartz, associate director of the Center for
- Democracy and Technology. "Individuals should have the ability to enter
- into a contract and leave that contract if they want to."
-
- The Federal Trade Commission and the state attorneys general would enforce
- the law, if enacted. However, some industry experts think more enforcement
- is needed.
-
- Chris Hoofnagle, the associate director of the Electronic Privacy
- Information Center, says consumers' lack of legal rights on the spyware
- issue is a serious problem.
-
- He criticizes the bill for not including a provision that lets individuals
- take legal action against spyware companies that stalk computer users.
-
- "It's a serious problem, because you want users in the enforcement loop,"
- Hoofnagle says.
-
- Schwartz agrees, saying enforcement needs to be improved and "the most
- effective piece that this bill can bring is more attention to this issue
- and greater enforcement for the worst practices out there."
-
- Robert Bagnall, director of focused intelligence at IDefense, a
- Virginia-based security intelligence company, expresses concern over the
- international threat of spyware.
-
- "The legitimate companies in the United States who currently place spyware
- [on retail computers] will have a tougher time doing it... but
- [legislation] will not help with the international factors at all," Bagnall
- says.
-
- An anti-spyware bill has a good chance of passing Congress this session,
- Hoofnagle says. He cites the recent interest in cybersecurity as another
- boost. However, even legislation that sounds good can be eviscerated
- through "tinkering with definitions."
-
- The proposed legislation follows a similar earlier effort, House Resolution
- 2929, introduced in July 2003 by Representative Mary Bono (D-California).
- That bill, which is still being debated at the committee level, also
- requires explicit user consent before the installation of software and
- orders enforcement by the FTC.
-
- The bill introduced Thursday by Boxer, Burns, and Wyden is still in an
- early stage. It has not yet been assigned a number or been referred to
- committee, though it is expected to go to the Senate Committee on Commerce,
- Science, and Transportation, of which all three senators are members.
-
- The FTC plans a workshop on spyware in mid-April.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Set to Show Spam Strategy
-
-
- Microsoft Chairman and Chief Software Architect Bill Gates will use the RSA
- Conference in San Francisco to unveil a proposed open technology standard
- that Microsoft hopes will make it harder to fake the source of unsolicited
- commercial e-mail.
-
- On Tuesday, the company will release a specification for an antispam
- technology called Caller ID, a Microsoft-developed take on sender
- authentication technology that tries to validate the source address
- associated with an e-mail message, according to John Levine, co-chairman
- of the independent Antispam Research Group, part of the Internet
- Engineering Task Force.
-
- A Microsoft spokesman could not confirm the information about Caller ID,
- but said that Gates will be talking about spam in a "variety of different
- contexts" in his keynote speech at the RSA security show, and that
- Microsoft's internal Anti-Spam Technology & Strategy Group will be making
- an announcement as well.
-
- Sender authentication is rapidly gaining acceptance among e-mail experts
- and Internet service providers as a weapon in the fight against spam. On
- Monday, Sendmail announced that it will develop and distribute sender
- authentication technologies to its customers and the open source community
- to combat spam, viruses, and identity fraud in e-mail.
-
- Sendmail will incorporate a "selection of sender authentication
- technologies" into its open source Mail Transfer Agent, including a
- technology called DomainKeys that is championed by Yahoo and "proposals
- put forward by Microsoft and others," Sendmail said. A Microsoft spokesman
- confirmed reports that the company will be releasing a sender
- authentication plug-in along with Sendmail.
-
- Caller ID is akin to other sender authentication proposals circulating
- among leading ISPs and e-mail security experts, Levine said. In particular,
- it is similar to a nascent technology called Sender Policy Framework,
- developed by independent antispam researcher Meng Wong of e-mail forwarding
- service Pobox.com.
-
- Instead of analyzing the content of messages to spot spam, the SPF protocol
- allows Internet domain administrators to describe their e-mail servers in
- an SPF record that is attached to the Domain Name System record using a
- special SPF description language. Other Internet domains can then reject
- any messages that claim to come from that domain but weren't sent from an
- approved server, Wong said.
-
- Caller ID also relies on administrators adding lists of published e-mail
- servers to the DNS record for their Internet domains. Whereas SPF uses its
- own syntax for listing the domain addresses, Microsoft's Caller ID uses
- Extensible Markup Language to describe the valid e-mail servers, Levine
- said.
-
- Also, SPF allows e-mail gateways to analyze the e-mail envelope, a wrapper
- for the message that is transferred between mail servers before the full
- message is sent. Messages that do not come from a valid server at the
- domain are dropped before any message content is sent. In contrast, Caller
- ID analyzes the sender IP address information stored in the e-mail message
- header, which requires the whole message to be downloaded by the receiving
- e-mail server before it can be accepted or rejected, he said.
-
- Microsoft has been developing Caller ID internally for the last year and
- consulting with antispam researchers in private for the last month, Wong
- and Levine said.
-
- The Caller ID technology has both strong points and weaknesses, according
- to experts.
-
- On the one hand, it requires mail servers to download the entire content
- of bogus messages before rejecting them, which could put a drag on e-mail
- servers. And, once it downloads a message, it only checks for it for the
- sender IP address, as opposed to running the message content through
- filters and other antispam tools, Levine said.
-
- Caller ID also requires knowledge of XML, which makes implementation more
- complicated. And the added length of the XML content required by Caller ID
- may exceed the 512-character limit for response messages to DNS requests,
- Wong said.
-
- According to the DNS specification, messages that exceed that limit require
- DNS information to be sent through a separate Transmission Control Protocol
- circuit, instead of using User Datagram Protocol. While that is technically
- possible, it is rarely used, introducing an element of uncertainty into the
- implementation of Caller ID, Wong and Levine said.
-
- "This is a feature that has been specified for 25 years, but never used,"
- Levine said.
-
- However, the technology could do a better job of determining the actual
- source of an e-mail message than SPF, especially since envelope e-mail
- addresses don't have to correspond to the e-mail header address, he said.
-
- Microsoft's dominance of the e-mail client market may allow it to extend
- sender authentication technology to smaller Internet domains and the masses
- of Internet users, Wong said.
-
- Levine also supports the release of the Caller ID specification and
- Microsoft's decision to develop Caller ID as an open standard.
-
- "This is an important step. It's the way you get standards to work. You
- have people pick at them, but implement them," he said.
-
- Caller ID could eventually work alongside SPF, Domain Keys, and other
- sender authentication technologies, he said.
-
- "Solving the spam problem is like curing cancer. It's not one disease but
- 100 diseases, each with their own issues," he said.
-
-
-
- AOL Blocks ICQ Worm
-
-
- America Online has taken steps to stop the spread of a worm that began
- attacking ICQ instant messaging users this week.
-
- The fix, which was implemented on Wednesday, was applied to ICQ's servers
- and does not require any action from ICQ users, according to an AOL
- spokesperson.
-
- Virus researchers first detected the worm Tuesday. Dubbed "Bizex," the
- program spreads through instant-messaging exchanges, a less common method
- for viruses than e-mail transmission.
-
- Kaspersky Labs, which initially disseminated information about the worm,
- notes that it only affected users running ICQ through the ICQ client
- application, not those tapping the ICQ network through outside applications
- such as Trillian. AOL says that only ICQ Pro users were affected. Those
- running other versions of ICQ, including ICQ Lite, were not vulnerable.
-
- A spokesperson says AOL is working toward a solution for ICQ Pro users
- whose computers were affected and are now having trouble running ICQ. The
- company recommends that its users run and maintain antivirus software, she
- says.
-
- Instant messaging is attracting increasing attention from those spreading
- malicious and deceptive applications. A virus-like game that installs a
- program to serve advertisements on a user's PC tore through the ranks of
- AOL Instant Messenger users earlier this month.
-
-
-
- Apple Secures Mac OS X, Preps 'Panther' Update
-
-
- Apple Computer Inc. this week released a security update to Mac OS X,
- beefing up a variety of system components for both client and server users.
- The release comes as the company primes Mac OS X 10.3.3, its third free
- update to the "Panther" OS, sources said.
-
- Apple recommends that all Mac users download the security patch, which the
- Mac maker posted to its Web site on Monday. An update for the client
- version of Mac OS X 10.3, Panther, offers updates to IPSec, PPP, tcpdump
- and DiskArbitration; a variant for users of the older "Jaguar" release,
- Version 10.2, provides many of the same tweaks but also updates Safari,
- Apple's Web browser.
-
- Security updates for the server releases of 10.3 and 10.2 update the same
- components as their client counterparts but also fine-tune QuickTime
- Streaming Server, according to Apple's Web site.
-
- Apple is already looking ahead to the next minor update to Panther, which
- shipped Oct. 24 for $129 per user. Last week, the Cupertino, Calif.,
- company provided developers with an advance seed of Version 10.3.3, which
- it designated build 7F32 of Mac OS X.
-
- Mac OS X 10.3.3 will include updates to printing and USB, as well as
- changes to some of OS X's base components and frameworks-Cocoa, Carbon,
- graphics and imaging, Core OS, and the High Level Toolbox-sources said. The
- update will also include a variety of bug fixes for the Unix-based OS.
- Apple reportedly told developers to focus their testing efforts on the
- update's audio, graphics, USB and FireWire functionality.
-
- Apple rolled out its last Panther update, Version 10.3.2, in December. The
- service release enhanced cross-platform file sharing, PostScript printing,
- font management and a variety of other OS X features.
-
-
-
- Rumors Build over 'Windows XP Reloaded'
-
-
- Speculation is rampant that Microsoft will be unable to maintain its grip
- on the OS market between now and the expected 2006 release of Longhorn and
- is planning to put out an interim version of Windows XP.
-
- The company has denied this. It is clear, though, that something is
- underfoot at Microsoft to help it maintain its momentum - an effort
- reportedly dubbed "Windows XP Reloaded."
-
- Microsoft already has announced it would release a service pack with better
- security measures this fall. Windows XP Reloaded appears to be separate
- from such a routine release.
-
- Whether the current rumors are nothing more than a marketing ploy or,
- indeed, advance information on an interim release, it is clear that market
- forces are propelling Microsoft to take some kind of action. Linux is
- becoming a viable alternative to the desktop operating system, despite
- Microsoft's 90-percent share of the market.
-
- Also, Microsoft must take into account customers that have signed up for
- its enterprise agreements, or EAs, which often cover the Windows OS system.
-
- "Many customers signed up for Microsoft's enterprise agreement primarily to
- get new versions of covered products," a Gartner report points out.
- "Microsoft may need an interim version of the Windows client to deliver the
- value its customers thought they were buying."
-
- Indeed, Gartner believes there is a good chance Microsoft will announce an
- interim version of Windows targeted for the second half of 2005. "If that
- happens, Longhorn will not be available until at least the second half of
- 2007," the firm predicts.
-
- This would not be the first time Microsoft pushed back its release data,
- Gartner analyst Michael Silver told NewsFactor. For example, the
- much-ballyhooed unified file system that will be part of Longhorn's
- flagship product first was meant to be part of a release called
- "Blackcomb," which was planned for this year.
-
- In fact, Silver says, many of the new features in Longhorn are slideware
- and subject to change.
-
- On paper, Longhorn certainly is looking exciting with a wealth of increased
- productivity enhancements. The principal upgrade is WinFS, a file system
- that ties together the broad array of Windows applications and is
- compatible with earlier systems, Yankee Group analyst Laura DiDio told
- NewsFactor. It would be a significant enhancement, analysts say, because it
- would offer a seamless transition to Longhorn while allowing the new OS to
- work with older Windows systems.
-
- It is difficult to speculate on what Microsoft might be planning for
- Windows XP. Guesses range from a high-energy marketing campaign to a new
- release with glitzy add-ons, possibly available for free.
-
- The appearance of adding significant value will be essential to keeping
- Microsoft's user base happy. Gartner estimates that large enterprises have
- enrolled 20-25 million seats in its EAs.
-
- "The cost for the client-OS component is approximately (US)$42.50 to $54
- per PC per year on a newly signed EA, and $26.35 to $33.50 on an EA
- renewal," Gartner says in a recent research note. "All of the products
- contained within an EA are covered under Microsoft's software-assurance
- program, which gives customers the right to run new versions of the
- applications on their PCs."
-
- Microsoft came out with this licensing program about two years ago, Gartner
- research analyst Alvin Park told NewsFactor. And given the relatively long
- period between releases, it has become a significant revenue stream.
-
- Last September, Microsoft added more components to its SA, in some part to
- still client unrest over the matter. These enhancements included the
- addition of WinPE for PC deployment, home-use rights, corporate error
- reporting, and training and support benefits, Gartner says. However, "we
- believe that most enterprises that signed up for SA perceived the primary
- value of SA to be upgrade protection, and most expected to get a new
- version of each product during the term of their contract," the firm
- maintains.
-
- Given the costs plowed into those agreements, 2006 no doubt is looking
- awfully far away for this particular user population.
-
-
-
- Japanese Officials Raid Microsoft Offices
-
-
- Eight officials from Japan's Fair Trade Commission entered the Japan's
- offices of Microsoft Thursday morning as part of an investigation into
- possible anti-competitive practices by the U.S. software giant, the company
- confirms.
-
- "The FTC officials are conducting an investigation regarding provisions in
- Microsoft licenses with PC manufacturers," says Aki Araki, a Microsoft
- Japan spokesperson. "We are confident that our practices are consistent
- with Japanese law."
-
- A team from Microsoft is continuing to help the FTC officials with their
- investigations, Araki says.
-
- Microsoft has allegedly forced Japanese PC makers to accept a contractual
- clause stipulating that they can't bring a case to court even if the
- software giant's technologies are very similar to those developed by
- Japanese firms, the Kyodo news agency reported Thursday, citing sources
- close to the action.
-
- Microsoft licenses its patented software - most crucially the Windows
- operating system - to PC manufacturers. Previous probes in the U.S. and
- Europe have focused on whether Microsoft illegally maintains its monopoly
- in PC operating systems through restrictive licensing agreements with PC
- makers.
-
- Local media sources quoted unnamed officials as saying that the current
- investigation focuses on the licensing for Windows XP. In 1998, Microsoft
- was warned by the FTC to stop engaging in anti-competitive business
- practices, but the company escaped punishment.
-
- Japan is the world's third-largest market for PCs after the U.S. and China.
-
-
-
- Feds Serve Warrants at ITT Tech Campuses
-
-
- Federal agents on Wednesday searched the headquarters of ITT Technical
- Institutes and some campuses of its chain of technical schools in eight
- states. Shares of its parent company, ITT Educational Services Inc.,
- plunged 33 percent.
-
- ITT Educational Services said the investigation involved grand jury
- subpoenas of records concerning student placement, retention, graduation,
- attendance, recruitment, grades, graduates' salaries and tranfers of
- students' credits to other colleges.
-
- Law enforcement officers did not allow students, staff and faculty to enter
- about 10 of ITT's 77 campuses in 30 states, ITT spokeswoman Nancy Brown
- said.
-
- Classes elsewhere were unaffected, and ITT hoped to resume all classes
- Thursday, she said.
-
- "They've given us no idea specifically what they're looking for," said
- Brown, who was shut out of her offices in the 150-employee headquarters in
- Carmel. "They told us they believed we'd be back in our offices tomorrow
- (Thursday). It's difficult, because no assurances have been given."
-
- About 68 percent of the company's 2003 revenue of nearly $523 million came
- indirectly from federal education aid programs, according to a company
- regulatory filing. And most ITT students pay a substantial portion of their
- tuition and other expenses with money received under federal programs.
-
- Brown said she did not know whether the federal aid was the focus of the
- probe.
-
- Rene R. Champagne, the Indianapolis-based company's chairman and chief
- executive, said in a prepared statement that the company was cooperating
- with investigators.
-
- "We have not been informed of any specific allegations or charges at this
- time," he said.
-
- The U.S. Attorney's Office in Houston, which was leading the investigation,
- issued a statement by U.S. Attorney Michael Shelby saying "no conclusions
- should be drawn from today's activity."
-
- Shelby said law enforcement officers were investigating at ITT's
- headquarters and at campuses in Indiana, Texas, Virginia, Florida,
- Louisiana, Nevada, California and Oregon.
-
- ITT's Brown and federal authorities declined to say in which cities the
- campuses that were searched are located. Brown said investigators did not
- tell the company why the search involved only some ITT schools.
-
- At ITT's 1,300-student Indianapolis campus, arriving students, staff and
- faculty were greeted by law enforcement authorities as federal postal
- inspectors searched inside buildings. Students were turned away, and
- faculty and staff were questioned and asked to fill out forms and share
- contact information.
-
- ITT operates schools in 30 states and provides postsecondary, year-round
- courses to about 37,000 students, according to the company's annual
- regulatory filing. The company, which employs about 3,000, began operations
- in 1969, and offers courses primarily leading to associate's and bachelor's
- degrees with an emphasis on technical fields. Study programs vary from
- campus to campus. The company began offering online education in 2001.
-
-
-
- Openwave to Put MSN Hotmail, Messaging on Phones
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. said on Tuesday that Openwave Systems Inc., a maker of
- software for cell phones, would begin offering a feature allowing mobile
- phone users to access Hotmail and MSN Messenger while on the go.
-
- The world's largest software maker said that it had joined with Openwave to
- jointly develop software to be featured on the smaller company's latest
- version of specialized software for cell phones.
-
- Both companies declined to say how soon Hotmail and messaging would be
- available to users. They said the decision to offer such features was in
- the hands of wireless network operators. The new software platform, called
- Openwave Phone Suite V7 Platform, will be offered beginning in March.
-
- "This really does introduce a much richer concept of messaging to the
- mobile user," said Don Listwin, chief executive of Openwave.
-
- Microsoft has been developing software for mobile phones and devices for
- the past several years, pitting it against companies such as Symbian and
- Finland's Nokia, but has chiefly marketing its software to handset makers
- and operators as a high-end business tool.
-
- Although access to Hotmail and other e-mail systems has long-been available
- to mobile phone users through software provided by companies such as
- Openwave, the deal extends such capabilities to a wider range of phone
- models.
-
- Brian Arbogast, a vice president at Microsoft's MSN Internet division, said
- many current data-enabled cell phones would be able to access Hotmail and
- messenger.
-
- Such phones would also be able to alert other users of MSN Messenger to
- detect whether a cell phone user was online and able to receive messages,
- a feature that is currently limited to higher-end cell phones and handheld
- computers.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
- Atari Online News, Etc. is a weekly publication covering the entire
- Atari community. Reprint permission is granted, unless otherwise noted
- at the beginning of any article, to Atari user groups and not for
- profit publications only under the following terms: articles must
- remain unedited and include the issue number and author at the top of
- each article reprinted. Other reprints granted upon approval of
- request. Send requests to: dpj@atarinews.org
-
- No issue of Atari Online News, Etc. may be included on any commercial
- media, nor uploaded or transmitted to any commercial online service or
- internet site, in whole or in part, by any agent or means, without
- the expressed consent or permission from the Publisher or Editor of
- Atari Online News, Etc.
-
- Opinions presented herein are those of the individual authors and do
- not necessarily reflect those of the staff, or of the publishers. All
- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
-