home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
Text File | 2004-04-02 | 59.1 KB | 1,357 lines |
- Volume 6, Issue 14 Atari Online News, Etc. April 2, 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:
-
-
-
-
- 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 #0614 04/02/04
-
- ~ Making One Spammer Pay ~ People Are Talking! ~ Longhorn In 2006?
- ~ Google Brings On Gmail ~ Gateway To Close Shops ~ MS, Sun Buddies?!
- ~ Overseas Swappers War! ~ E-Mail Spam Contest! ~ Xbox Price Is Cut!
- ~ IBM After SCO Jugular! ~ Free Web Mail To Stay? ~ PS2 10-Year Life?
-
- -* We're Winning the Spam War?? *-
- -* EU Orders Legislation On Spam, More *-
- -* File Sharing Is No Threat To Music Sales! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Over the years, we've pulled off some pretty interesting April Fools jokes
- with our readers - both here at A-ONE and during our days with STReport. I
- had a few interesting ideas for a "hoax" this year, but thought better of
- it. Not that I was concerned about writing them, but of the timing.
- There's nothing worse than trying to fool people right after April Fool's
- Day! It just won't get pulled off, no matter how convincing one might be!
- So, we'll file these ideas away for another year!
-
- What dreadful spring weather we're having! I swear that we're going to just
- pass spring by and end up with summer. It's been raining for two days now.
- The report earlier this evening was that we've already had seven inches of
- rain, with another 24 hours of rain to go. I don't mind the rain too much
- as long as I can put a jacket and hat on, and grab an umbrella if I need it.
- But try having to take out two dogs for their hourly jaunt - and they're
- just crazy enough to stay out a little longer than they need! Buffy, the
- double-coated long-hair, is like a sponge! She soaks up that rain like
- there's no tomorrow. Drying her is an adventure! Butkus is the short-
- haired one; and he likes to rub up against you to get dry, rather than allow
- you to effectively dry him off with a towel. We end up as wet as if we went
- out without any rain protection at all! I guess that if there's any
- positive side to all of this, if it had been snow, we'd be buried in about
- three or more feet of it by now.
-
- As you'll read on further in this week's issue, the war is still raging
- globally against spam. I think that we'll win a number of major battles,
- but I'm not sure if we'll ever really win the war. It's going to take some
- really tough worldwide legislation to attack this menace; and even then, I'm
- not sure it's going to be enough. We'll see. Meanwhile, I continue to
- delete about 30-50 spam messages from my various e-mail accounts on a daily
- basis. It's almost become an expected daily routine. I think that my
- delete function is going to burn out from overuse soon!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. It's been rainy for what seems like a
- month (it hasn't really been a month, it just seems like it), and I'm
- starting to understand those people who complain about their joints
- aching when it rains out. I mentioned once or twice... or more... that
- I've got a herniated disc and arthritis in my neck. Well, this wet
- weather is proving to me that rain DOES antagonize arthritis. All I can
- do is hope for some sun and warmth sometime soon.
-
- On another note, my wife mentioned to me last week that she got a kick
- out of seeing one of the contestants from 'American Idol' on TV. "He was
- one of the first ones cut", she said. Instantly, I knew who she meant.
-
- I did some searching around and found an MPEG of the guy, William Hung.
- He's the one that sang Ricky Martin's "She Bangs" for his audition. As I
- played the MPEG, I was amazed that I couldn't stop laughing. The kid (I
- don't mean anything derogatory here, he's a youngster by my standards)
- sang for all he was worth and even attempted some form of choreography.
- Unfortunately, he showed very little talent in either area.
-
- At first, I thought I was laughing just because he wasn't what one would
- expect to see on a singing-and-dancing show. But it was more than that.
- The guy was enjoying himself. He was singing for all he was worth, and
- rockin' to beat the band, regardless of what anyone else was going to
- think or say about it.
-
- And now, despite the fact that he got 'cut' from the show, regardless of
- the fact that he's not 'the idol type', he's got a record deal and a
- string of concerts.
-
- Now why would there be so much interest in someone who "can't sing and
- can't dance" as that mean Simon put it? I've thought about it quite a
- bit, and I keep coming back to one thing... he's the every-man. He
- represents all of us who sing in the shower or 'bust a move' when no one
- is looking. Those of us who lead average lives and would like to be
- noticed for something exceptional just once.
-
- Most of us will never get the chance that William Hung got. And even if
- we did, there's only a very slight chance that we'd handle negative
- feedback with the grace and upbeat mood that he did.
-
- William, should you happen to see this, keep on enjoying yourself!
-
- Now let's get to the news, hints, tips and info available from the
- UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- Joakim H?gberg posts this news about NEWSie:
-
- "The sources for NEWSie has been released under GPL.
-
-
- >From www.atari-users.net:
- =========================
-
- Yes, that is right: NEWSie! This application has probably been the
- first internet application for many Atari users through the years,
- offering support for usenet and pop-mail as well as ftp. Even though
- NEWSie has not been updated in ages, it has been put to good use by
- many users that are active on usenet. As any application that has not
- had an update for years and years, there are things that isn't working
- as smoothly as one might wish. And also bugs that would need to be
- squashed.
-
- For anyone interested in either doing a major rehaul, fixing bugs or
- perhaps just learn more about how to do FTP/USENET/POP-MAIL, the
- sources are now available."
-
-
- Mark Duckworth tells Joakim:
-
- "Congrats joakim! Congrats atarians! As cool as Troll is, it's not free
- and it doesn't work (for me)."
-
-
- Martin Byttebier tells Joakim and Mark:
-
- "Hm, Newsie is not my thing. For some reason I never loved it. In the
- past I tried to used it but ... no love at all. My favourite newsreader
- is Okami. Unfortunately the development of Okami seems to be stopped.
-
- Anyway, I'm glad to hear Troll doesn't work for you too. On my system I
- can't get Troll pass the authentication."
-
-
- Lonny Pursell adds his thoughts:
-
- "Awesome! Now if someone would just add usenet filtering it would be the
- biggest update newsie has ever seen."
-
-
- John Garone adds his thoughts:
-
- "My 2 cents is fix the bugs first!"
-
-
- Lonny replies:
-
- "That goes without saying."
-
-
- John continues:
-
- "Especially the one that corrupts files within the folder or drive that
- Newsie is located! For me, second would be being able to see ALL the posts
- and correct the # of posts available for download. If I set it for 999/9999
- I get only 650 (compatibility issue?)"
-
-
- Neil Roughley adds his thoughts:
-
- "It might be that your news server doesn't keep a large archive of
- previous posts, deleting them in order of age, let's say, after two
- months or so. The limit of each newsgroup, depending on how much traffic
- it gets, will vary too.
-
- As for all the current posts, again it might be your news server. Why
- not try a commercial service? I use NewsGuy (http://newsguy.com/). Cost
- is about 11 cents a day for a basic account. For comp.sys.atari.st they
- have about 2500 previous posts, but the important thing is that their
- feeds are reliable and comprehensive. Configuration is easy: just add
- their NNTP host and your username and password.
-
- As for the corruption problem (which I experienced), only a rewrite of
- NEWSie will cure that."
-
-
- Claude Bourgoin asks about upgrading the memory in his TT:
-
- "I have the Atari TT-RAM board (CA401058 ) and I removed the 1 meg simms
- and replaced them with 4 meg simms. It seems that the TT030 doesn't
- recognize the 4 meg simms. When I boot the TT it does the test on the STram
- and then does the test on the TTram but still only shows 4 meg of memory
- instead of 16 megs for the TTram. When I change jumper settings according to
- Funky=Ware TT030 web page the TT doesn't even run the TTram test. Has
- anyone run into this problem."
-
-
- 'Jean-Luc' tells Claude:
-
- "Yes : only 8 or 9 chips modules will run on to this board, though
- I don't remember if it must be EDO or FPM.
- A google search across the french NG will bring you to a thread I
- started 1+ year ago, in which I think you might find useful infos.
- You might do a search in this NG too, as I think the subject has
- been discussed more than once."
-
-
- David Wade adds:
-
- "Just check the jumpers on the card. The settings are a bit odd if I
- remember properly...:
-
-
- Bark Bedingfield tells Claude:
-
- "Found this for you.
-
- You may need nibble mode ram
-
- http://www.geocities.com/siliconvalley/peaks/6320/ard/help/ttram01.htm
-
- not easy to find."
-
-
- Jom DeClercq adds:
-
- "I have not [run into this problem], but that has never stopped anyone
- else.
-
- You might check the number of chips on those 4 meg simms. It may be that
- three-chip simm will not work, and four-chip will.
-
- If all else fails, I have one of those TT-RAM boards, and have no need for
- it, and am willing to send it, for the cost of packaging and postage, to
- any place in the world. Yes, I paid for it, but it needs a better home."
-
-
- Brandon Alexander asks about his Mega's hard drive:
-
- "I am not able to access the hard drive on my Mega ST. However the
- machine will boot up with regular TOS disks and behave much like an
- ST-1040.
-
- This started a while back. If I remember correctly there are certain
- boot programs it needs to boot. What I did was erase or rename those
- programs because I could not get GDOS programs to run. Once I did I
- could not get the hard drive back. It's there and purring but again
- will not boot, and does not show up on the desktop.
-
- At any rate if somebody knows how I can access the hard disk please
- advise."
-
-
- My old buddy Sheldon Winick tells Brandon:
-
- "Dig out the "Atari Hard Disk Utilities" floppy that came with your
- computer. You'll find the AHDI and HDX programs necessary to boot your
- hard disk and reinstall whatever you deleted."
-
-
- Brandon replies:
-
- "Thanks for the information.
-
- Appreciate the suggestion but I don't have any of the disk utilities.
- I bought this computer 2nd-hand. All that came with it was a Cubase
- disk.
-
- If you have those utilities I would like to have copies. "
-
-
- 'Tim' tells Brandon:
-
- "Yes do a search for AHDX on the net and you will find sites that have this
- for download. Then copy or unzip the files to a 720kb disk and run it on
- the Mega ST."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Until next time, keep your ears open
- so that you'll hear what they are saying when...
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Microsoft Cuts Xbox Price!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" PlayStation2 Lasts to 2010?
-
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Microsoft Cuts Xbox Price to Boost Sales
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. on Monday cut the price on its Xbox video game console in a
- move seen as a boost to the game publishing industry ahead of its biggest
- gathering of the year in May.
-
- The price cut boosted shares in game retailers and was hailed by analysts
- as a catalyst for more share gains in the coming weeks.
-
- Microsoft, based in Redmond, Washington, cut the Xbox price to $149.99 from
- $179.99 and also trimmed prices on software such as the karaoke game "Xbox
- Music Mixer," "Project Gotham Racing 2" and "Crimson Skies: High Road to
- Revenge."
-
- The Xbox price cut is effective Tuesday, while the software cuts take
- effect Monday and Tuesday.
-
- "Hardware price cuts should benefit video game publishers and retailers. A
- lower hardware price point should translate into higher hardware unit
- sales," Banc of America Securities analyst Gary Cooper said in a note.
-
- "In turn, a larger installed base of hardware should lead to higher sales
- of video game software. In particular, we believe that these price points
- will appeal to a more mass-market audience," he said.
-
- Shares in the specialty game retailers, Electronics Boutique Holdings Corp.
- and GameStop Corp., were up on the news. Both had built price cuts into
- their outlooks for the year, and other retailers said the move was good
- news as well.
-
- "We know price cuts have usually increased public interest in (gaming)
- products in the past and we expect that to happen in this go-round."
- Circuit City Stores Inc. spokesman Jim Babb said.
-
- The Xbox was released at $299 in November 2001. The price dropped to $199
- in May 2002 at the E3 industry trade show and to $179 in May 2003, at the
- same event. The new price was widely expected to come at some point before
- this year's E3.
-
- The 2002 price cuts led to a sharp upsurge in sales of game consoles and
- software in what otherwise would have been the relatively quiet summer
- months. However, the cuts in 2003 were smaller than many expected and had
- little effect.
-
- The move is a change in strategy for Microsoft, which previously cut the
- Xbox price only after similar pricing moves from industry leader Sony Corp.
- on the PlayStation 2.
-
- While many analysts expect Sony to eventually match Microsoft's latest
- pricing move, there was some doubt on Monday that the cut would come
- immediately. Sony executives said last week that their decisions on the
- future of the PS2 would not be determined by competitive pressure in the
- marketplace.
-
- "We believe that a price cut of consoles will be beneficial for video game
- publishers and could signal a price cut of the PS2 soon, although we
- believe that Sony faces a Japanese accounting hurdle if it cuts the price
- of the PS2 prior to April 16 (within two weeks following the close of its
- fiscal year)," Wedbush Morgan analyst Michael Pachter said in a note.
-
- Since early this year, analysts and publishers have called a move to $149
- necessary for the game industry to achieve its growth targets for the year,
- and some have even raised the idea of prices going to $129.
-
- "We doubt a $149 price point will be enough to drive (calendar 2004)
- hardware unit sales above 2003 levels," Piper Jaffray analyst Tony Gikas
- said in a note last Friday predicting the price cut.
-
- "We estimate that a $129 price point on (Xbox) and (PS2) would result in
- 1.5 million additional hardware unit sales during 2004 compared to the $149
- price point," he said.
-
- Shares in game publishers were broadly higher in afternoon trade. Shares
- of Microsoft, which loses money on Xbox sales but makes money on sales of
- video games, rose 20 cents to $25.23 on Nasdaq.
-
- Video game hardware and software sales come to $10 billion a year in the
- United States. A new generation of consoles to replace the Xbox and the PS2
- is expected in about the next two years.
-
-
-
- Sony Sees 10-Year Life for PlayStation 2 Console
-
-
- Sony Corp. believes that its market-leading PlayStation 2 video game
- console can continue to sell until 2010, twice as long as most in the
- industry had assumed was possible, an executive of Sony's U.S. video game
- unit said on Thursday.
-
- In a keynote address at the Game Developers Conference in San Jose,
- California, Andrew House, executive vice president of Sony Computer
- Entertainment of America, said the success of the original PlayStation,
- nearing its 10th anniversary, had convinced the company that two-thirds of
- its potential PS2 sales were yet to come.
-
- The PlayStation 2 was released in 2000 in the United States and game
- industry observers have expected Sony and rival Microsoft Corp to shift
- their marketing efforts to next-generation game machines in 2005 or 2006.
-
- "There are some huge potential gains for us later in the life cycle," House
- told a packed auditorium.
-
- But with the lengthening of the sales window for PS2, he said, Sony and
- the industry will also have to consider the advancing age of the people
- who own and buy the hardware.
-
- "We have to think very carefully about the type of audience we're reaching
- with our games," he said.
-
- House also sought to quash speculation that Sony might accelerate
- development on its next console, the PS3, to keep up with Microsoft Corp.,
- which many in the industry have speculated is preparing the successor to
- its Xbox console for 2005.
-
- "Competitive movement will not be a factor in determining our launch
- release plans," he said.
-
- But what drew the closest attention from the developers on hand was the few
- words House said about the PSP, a portable system expected to rival the PS2
- in power and capabilities.
-
- The device will have a wide-screen format, wireless Internet connectivity
- and a proprietary storage device, the UMD, with three times the capacity of
- a CD-ROM.
-
- House was joined on stage by a team from Backbone Entertainment, which
- showed a brief demo of its game "Death Jr." running on a PC with PSP
- emulation software. The game drew heavy applause from the crowd, with those
- who saw the demo admiring the platform's graphics capabilities.
-
- While "Death Jr." was popular, though, the star of the keynote was an
- unlikely American pop hero - William Hung, who gained fame as a talent-show
- contestant with limited talent on the TV series "American Idol."
-
- Hung, who has devoted legions of fans and a record deal, sang and danced to
- the song "YMCA" with Sony's EyeToy, a device that connects to the PS2 and
- translates the player's motion into on-screen action. He was using "EyeToy:
- Groove," an upcoming game for the system.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Spam-Busters Say They're Winning the War
-
-
- They're the scourge of the electronic age - the modern-day equivalent of
- the 19th century snake-oil salesmen hawking their miracle cures, love
- potions and get-rich-quick schemes.
-
- Like the rain in Ireland, there seems no escape from the tide of "spam," or
- junk e-mail flooding the Internet.
-
- But operating from the backstreets of the Irish capital, a small team of
- spam-fighters says it's winning the battle against unsolicited e-mail that
- costs big business billions of dollars a year.
-
- During the European day, employees at spam-filtering company Brightmail are
- engaged in a war of attrition against the propagators of unwanted e-mail
- all over the world before passing the baton to colleagues in San Francisco.
-
- Spam-filtering companies like Brightmail have their work cut out since
- figures show the amount of junk e-mail surpassed legitimate e-mail for the
- first time ever last year.
-
- And, police say, organized crime gangs are using spam to defraud online
- banking customers and distribute computer viruses capable of taking over an
- unsuspecting computer user's machine.
-
- To this end, they were given a recent boost by news that four of the
- biggest U.S. e-mail providers had sued hundreds of online marketers under
- a new federal law that bans the worst kinds of "spam" e-mail. And, the
- legal clampdown will intensify in Europe in the coming months, industry
- officials say.
-
- "A year ago people were scared that e-mail was going to stop being useful
- because the amount of spam was increasing so quickly but now it's starting
- to come under control," said Ken Schneider, Brightmail's chief technology
- officer.
-
- Brightmail filters 80 billion e-mails a month, blocks two billion spams a
- day and looks after 300 million e-mail boxes the world over.
-
- Since setting up in 1998, it has filtered spam for some of the world's most
- prominent service providers, ranging from telecoms giant AT&T, EarthLink
- and Microsoft Corp's MSN in the U.S. to BT Openworld and Demon Internet in
- Britain.
-
- The Dublin office has been up and running for two years, with Brightmail
- taking advantage of the relatively low-cost base and highly-skilled
- workforce on offer in Ireland.
-
- Part of the problem is deciding what does and doesn't constitute spam,
- which Brightmail estimates makes up around 60 percent of all Internet
- e-mail.
-
- "We all receive unsolicited messages on a daily basis from our boss asking
- us to do something," said Schneider. "You might consider it unwanted e-mail
- but it's not generally thought of as spam."
-
- The problem comes with unsolicited e-mail that is sent in bulk to random
- addresses with varying subject lines to disguise their true intent.
-
- Brightmail has two million decoy e-mail accounts in existence which attract
- unsuspecting spam e-mail and forward it to Dublin for analysis.
-
- Rules are then written about how to block particular types of spam and are
- sent out to Brightmail's customers to halt spam attacks in their tracks.
-
- "We prioritize our attacks and go after the biggest first," said Schneider.
-
- He estimated the number of spammers around the world to number under a
- thousand with many buying CDs containing millions of email addresses which
- they use to ply their trade.
-
- "You find some people who deny it's spam and tell you they bought the
- e-mail addresses and you have to explain to them that the recipients never
- agreed to receive it," Schneider added.
-
-
-
- Making One Spammer Pay
-
-
- Finally, some payback for all that spam.
-
- It's a 2002 Porsche Boxster S that will be the grand prize in an America
- Online sweepstakes starting Tuesday.
-
- AOL obtained the car in settling a lawsuit against "a guy who by our
- estimates made more than a million dollars from spamming," said Randall
- Boe, AOL's executive vice president and general counsel.
-
- Although the company has previously won cash judgments and destroyed
- computers used in spamming, Boe said the latest case "represents us moving
- beyond that to the toys, the fruits of spam. We'll take cars, houses,
- boats, whatever we can find and get a hold of."
-
- The sweepstakes is open until April 8. Adult AOL members living in the
- continental United States are eligible, and they can enter only online.
-
- The two-door, metallic silver gray Porsche with a leather interior has
- 18,000 miles on it and retails for $47,000, according to AOL.
-
- Boe said the spammer was sued last April and the car had California plates.
- He gave no other details, citing confidentiality terms of the settlement.
-
- In that round of five federal lawsuits, AOL targeted individuals and
- companies accused of sending a combined 1 billion junk messages to AOL
- members, pitching pornography, college degrees, cable TV descramblers and
- other products.
-
- Boe said seized assets are usually cash and are used to pay lawyers,
- develop anti-spam technology and expand the anti-spam team. He said
- spammers are often forced to sell houses or other tangible assets.
-
- AOL made an exception in this case and took the car because of its
- "symbolic value," Boe said. "Here was a spammer who made some money fast.
- He bought himself a Porsche."
-
- Boe said he hoped the publicity would deter spammers, though he
- acknowledged it wouldn't end spam.
-
-
-
- EU Orders Legislation on Spam, Cookies
-
-
- The European Union ordered eight countries Thursday to enact privacy
- legislation governing "spam" e-mail and Internet "cookies."
-
- It was the second warning sent to the countries, which have two months to
- comply or face lawsuits before the European Court of Justice.
-
- Since the initial warning was sent last November, Sweden has enacted the
- legislation, but Belgium, Germany, Greece, France, Luxembourg, the
- Netherlands, Portugal and Finland have not.
-
- "We are determined to keep up the pressure," EU Commissioner Erkki
- Liikanen said. "The directive is vital to ensure action can be taken and
- enforced at a national level in the fight against spam."
-
- Last July, the EU adopted a tough privacy regulation on electronic
- communications. It bans all commercial e-mail unless a recipient has asked
- for it. The regulation also sets strict rules for installing Internet
- "cookies," which hook a computer into a Web site.
-
- However, the regulation must be approved by each national parliament to
- become effective.
-
- The EU's difficulty enforcing its own regulations could undercut attempts
- to get other countries to join the fight against spam.
-
- About 53 percent of all e-mail in the 15-nation EU is unsolicited
- commercial bulk e-mail, according to statistics published by Brightmail
- Inc., an anti-spam technology company. About 80 percent of spam is believed
- to come from North America.
-
- Under U.S. law, no prior permission is required for sending commercial
- messages as long as the recipient is given a chance to "opt out" of
- receiving future messages from the same sender.
-
- The EU has called on the 30-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation
- and Development to step up international efforts to curb spam.
-
-
-
- N.Y. Board to Hold E-Mail Spam Contest
-
-
- It's called the "Spam and Bologna" contest.
-
- In an effort to expose e-mail scams, the state Consumer Protection Board is
- holding an international competition to find the most outrageous examples
- of these fraudulent notes on the Internet.
-
- "Advance-fee e-mails try to lure victims with fantastic tales of lost
- fortunes. But this spam is bologna," said Teresa Santiago, chairwoman and
- executive director of the board.
-
- Santiago hopes the contest - where the winner receives nothing and the
- second prize is bologna - will prevent more Internet users from falling for
- e-mail scams promising lost fortunes or hidden bank accounts to be shared
- with persons willing to put money up in advance.
-
- "Sadly many people, especially the elderly, have lost thousands of dollars
- to this scheme, which is one of the largest and oldest on the Internet,"
- Santiago said. Variations of the scam date back more than 100 years.
-
- The board said advance-fee e-mails, also known as "Nigerian" and "419"
- e-mails, are received weekly by millions. The sender often poses as the
- relative of a dead or jailed leader, a bank official or another fictitious
- person looking for help.
-
- To enter the "Spam and Bologna" contest, interested parties should forward
- the scam e-mails to the Consumer Protection Board at
- contest@consumer.state.ny.us. The contest ends May 2.
-
-
-
- Overseas Groups Take on Music Swappers
-
-
- The music industry's campaign of lawsuits and threats against song-swappers
- moved overseas Tuesday as trade groups went after 247 people in Europe and
- Canada they accused of piracy.
-
- The London-based International Federation of the Phonographic Industry
- (IFPI) said individuals in Germany, Denmark, Italy and Canada had been hit
- with lawsuits, criminal charges or threatening letters.
-
- The IFPI promised similar actions in other countries in the coming months.
- National music-industry groups in Sweden and Britain recently began warning
- users of online song-sharing networks by sending them online instant
- messages.
-
- "This is our first coordinated effort to take this campaign over the range
- of countries where file-stealing is a problem," said Allen Dixon, general
- counsel and executive director of the IFPI, which represents the recording
- industry worldwide.
-
- The group claims piracy is behind a five-year global decline in music
- sales. It said worldwide sales of recorded music fell 7 percent in 2002,
- with a similar plunge expected in 2003 figures.
-
- The Recording Industry Association of America began targeting individual
- file sharers last fall and has sued 1,977 people. The RIAA has settled some
- 400 cases, generally for a few thousand dollars each.
-
- The actions in Europe and Canada were taken by national recording industry
- groups affiliated with the IFPI. The targets were people who made at least
- hundreds of songs - 54,000 tracks in one Danish case - available for
- distribution and copying on free file-sharing services, Dixon said.
-
- The tactics differed in each country, but in each instance the IFPI hopes
- to wrest a few thousand dollars in fines or settlements.
-
- More than 120 people in Denmark were sent letters demanding that they stop
- illegal file-sharing and pay compensation - or face lawsuits. In Germany,
- 68 people were reported to law enforcement authorities, while 30 Italians
- were charged with copyright infringement.
-
- In Canada, 29 people were sued on copyright infringement claims.
-
- In most cases, the industry had the full cooperation of Internet service
- providers in identifying the defendants, except in Canada, where the
- recording industry filed its cases against unidentified people it hopes to
- unmask later.
-
- Analyst Phil Leigh of Inside Digital Media said he thought the actions
- probably would have a chilling effect, as the RIAA cases have. If people
- are scared into ceasing to share their music collections online, free
- downloading services like Kazaa will lose their value internationally.
-
- But Leigh pointed out that the U.S. lawsuits came as the industry began to
- provide strong alternatives to illegal song-swapping - commercial
- downloading services including iTunes, Napster 2.0, MusicMatch and
- Rhapsody. Those services have yet to work out the licensing and logistical
- issues needed to launch outside the United States.
-
- Leigh expects the music industry to come under fire in Europe and Canada
- for assuming the RIAA tactic without aggressively launching commercial
- services there.
-
- So far, licensed commercial download services in Europe are "small little
- operations," Leigh said.
-
- Cases against individual song swappers have been contentious in the United
- States, where Verizon Communications Inc. successfully challenged the
- industry's use of subpoenas to seek identifying information about Verizon's
- Internet subscribers.
-
- A U.S. appeals court ruled in December that the recording industry can't
- use the subpoenas to force Internet providers to identify file-swappers
- unless a lawsuit is first filed. In response, the music industry has sued
- "John Doe" defendants - identified only by their numeric Internet
- addresses - and expects to work through the courts to learn their
- identities.
-
- Jonathan Zittrain, co-director of the Berkman Center for Internet and
- Society at Harvard Law School, said it's unclear whether the RIAA's
- lawsuits in the United States have significantly reduced free music
- downloading.
-
- But he said the cases are part of a broader strategy for the recording
- industry.
-
- Zittrain believes the industry eventually plans to sue Internet service
- providers (ISPs) directly for failing to police piracy on their networks.
- If so, he expects the record labels will point to the individual lawsuits
- filed in the United States and now in Canada and Europe and say, "Look, we
- have been trying everything - it hasn't been effective," Zittrain said.
-
- "I think the ISPs are quietly worried about it."
-
-
-
- File-Sharing No Threat to Music Sales
-
-
- Internet music piracy has no negative effect on legitimate music sales,
- according to a study released today by two university researchers that
- contradicts the music industry's assertion that the illegal downloading of
- music online is taking a big bite out of its bottom line.
-
- Songs that were heavily downloaded showed no measurable drop in sales, the
- researchers found after tracking sales of 680 albums over the course of 17
- weeks in the second half of 2002. Matching that data with activity on the
- OpenNap file-sharing network, they concluded that file sharing actually
- increases CD sales for hot albums that sell more than 600,000 copies. For
- every 150 downloads of a song from those albums, sales increase by a copy,
- the researchers found.
-
- "Consumption of music increases dramatically with the introduction of file
- sharing, but not everybody who likes to listen to music was a music
- customer before, so it's very important to separate the two," said Felix
- Oberholzer-Gee, an associate professor at Harvard Business School and one
- of the authors of the study.
-
- Oberholzer-Gee and his colleague, University of North Carolina's Koleman
- Strumpf, also said that their "most pessimistic" statistical model showed
- that illegal file sharing would have accounted for only 2 million fewer
- compact discs sales in 2002, whereas CD sales declined by 139 million units
- between 2000 and 2002.
-
- "From a statistical point of view, what this means is that there is no
- effect between downloading and sales," said Oberholzer-Gee.
-
- For albums that fail to sell well, the Internet may contribute to declining
- sales. Oberholzer-Gee and Strumpf found that albums that sell to niche
- audiences suffer a "small negative effect" from Internet piracy.
-
- The study stands in opposition to the recording industry's long-held
- assertion that the rise of illegal file sharing is a major cause of
- declining music sales over the past few years. In making its case, the
- Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) points to data showing
- that CD sales fell from a high of more than $13.2 billion in 2000 to $11.2
- billion in 2003 - a period that matches the growth of various online music
- piracy services.
-
- The RIAA has fought illegal music swapping by filing a raft of lawsuits
- against hundreds of individuals suspected of engaging in music piracy, as
- well as suits targeting companies like Kazaa and Grokster that make
- software or run Internet downloading services.
-
- Wayne Rosso, president of the Madrid-based file-sharing company Optisoft,
- said he hoped the study would spur the RIAA to abandon litigation and look
- for ways to commercialize file sharing. "There's no question that there is
- a market there that could easily be commercialized and we have been trying
- for years to talk sense to these people and make them see that," he said.
- Rosso formerly ran the Grokster file-sharing service.
-
- Eric Garland, chief executive of Big Champagne, an Atlanta company that
- tracks file-sharing activity, said the findings match what his company has
- observed about the effect of file sharing on music sales. Although the
- practice cannibalizes some sales, it may promote others by serving as a
- marketing tool, Garland said.
-
- The RIAA questioned the conclusions reached by Oberholzer-Gee and Strumpf.
-
- "Countless well respected groups and analysts, including Edison Research,
- Forrester, the University of Texas, among others, have all determined that
- illegal file sharing has adversely impacted the sales of CDs," RIAA
- spokeswoman Amy Weiss said.
-
- Weiss cited a survey conducted by Houston-based Voter Consumer Research
- that found those who illegally download more music from the Internet buy
- less from legitimate outlets. Of respondents ages 18-24 who download, 33
- percent said they bought less music than in the past year while 21 percent
- bought more. Of those ages 25-34, the survey found 25 percent bought less
- and 17 percent bought more, Weiss said.
-
- Larry Rosin, the president of Somerville, N.J.-based Edison Media Research,
- said it was absurd to suggest that the Internet and file sharing have not
- had a profound effect on the music industry.
-
- "Anybody who says that the Internet has not affected sales is just not
- paying attention to what is going on out there," he said. "It's had an
- effect on everything else in life, why wouldn't it have an effect on this?"
-
- Edison Media Research has done a series of surveys for a music industry
- trade publication to track the effect of online file sharing on music
- sales. Rosin said while file-sharing networks can generate advertising
- value for some CDs, the net effect of file sharing on music sales has been
- negative.
-
- The Harvard-UNC study is not the first to take aim at the assertion that
- online music piracy is the leading factor hurting music sales. In two
- studies conducted in 1999 and 2002, Jupiter Research analyst Aram
- Sinnreich found that persons who downloaded music illegally from the
- Internet were also active purchasers of music from legitimate sources.
-
- "While some people seemed to buy less after file sharing, more people
- seemed to buy more," Sinnreich said. "It was more likely to increase
- somebody's purchasing habits."
-
- The 2002 Jupiter study showed that people who traded files for more than
- six months were 75 percent more likely than average online music fans to
- spend more money on music.
-
- Sinnreich, no longer with Jupiter, has appeared in court as an expert
- witness on behalf of Grokster, a popular music downloading site that was
- sued by the recording industry for facilitating music piracy. In that case,
- a judge ruled that Grokster and several other services that distribute
- peer-to-peer software could not be shut down just because the software was
- used to violate intellectual property rights.
-
-
-
- IBM Goes for Jugular in SCO Suit
-
-
- IBM is going for the throat in its fight with the SCO group, seeking
- dismissal of the copyright-infringement case that has stretched on for over
- a year.
-
- Big Blue late last week filed a series of counterclaims against SCO, in
- essence asking U.S. district court judge Dale A. Kimball to throw out the
- case. "IBM does not infringe, induce the infringement of, or contribute to
- the infringement of any SCO copyright through its Linux activities," the
- company claims, "including its use, reproduction and improvement of Linux."
- IBM also maintains that SCO's copyrights in Unix are invalid.
-
- IBM also is suing SCO for compensation for damages - based on the misuse of
- rights to the Unix OS and infringement of IBM's own copyrights and
- patents - in an amount to be determined at trial. In a countersuit it filed
- against SCO in August, IBM claims SCO violated Linux's General Public
- License (GPL), as well as a number of IBM patents.
-
- The latest legal volley could represent a turning point in the ongoing
- battle, with IBM landing a knockout punch if Kimball decides to dismiss the
- case. "It's not surprising that IBM would do this and try to end the fight
- early," Yankee Group analyst Laura DiDio told NewsFactor. "But it sure took
- them a long time to react to the threat."
-
- SCO, which has become public enemy No. 1 in the open-source world, launched
- the battle's first salvo last March, alleging that code from Unix System V
- software was integrated into Linux improperly, and that IBM bears ultimate
- responsibility for putting it there. SCO then filed a lawsuit seeking US$5
- billion in damages from IBM.
-
- Earlier this month, SCO brought its first suits against enterprise-Linux
- users, charging auto-parts vendor AutoZone and automaker DaimlerChrysler
- with copyright violations. Novell also has been named as a defendant in a
- legal action initiated by SCO. In response, Linux vendors Red Hat, HP and
- Novell are offering various types of indemnification to customers against
- copyright-infringement claims.
-
- As for the amended counterclaims submitted by IBM, DiDio said the company
- apparently feels confident in its position. But, she added, a favorable
- ruling is not a foregone conclusion. "The whole case has been blown out of
- proportion with claims and counterclaims, and Linux extremists have been
- fanning the flames."
-
- Still, the case has ramifications for IBM's reputation, which has suffered
- along with SCO's, during the length of the dispute, DiDio said. "This still
- has a long way to go," she predicts, pointing out that the discovery
- process alone is expected to take years.
-
-
-
- Sun, Microsoft Make a Billion Dollar Deal
-
-
- Sun Microsystems has entered into a "broad cooperation agreement" with
- Microsoft and settled all outstanding litigation, the company says.
-
- Microsoft will pay Sun $700 million to resolve all pending antitrust issues
- and $900 million to resolve all patent issues, the Santa Clara, California,
- company says in a release.
-
- Both companies have also agreed to pay royalties for each other's
- technologies with Microsoft making an up-front payment of $350 million and
- Sun making payments whenever it uses Microsoft's technology in its server
- products, Sun says.
-
- Declaring a new relationship between itself and Microsoft, Sun also says
- that the companies have agreed to enable their products to better work
- together and have entered agreements on patents and other issues.
-
- The agreement includes technical collaboration, giving access to each
- other's server technology, as well as Sun's licensing of Microsoft's
- communications protocols and Microsoft support of some Sun products.
-
- Sun also announced that it has promoted software head Jonathan Schwartz as
- the company's new president and chief operating officer.
-
-
-
- Count on Longhorn for 2006 - Maybe
-
-
- Bill Gates, Microsoft chairman and chief software architect, teased an
- audience of nearly 8000 Monday at Gartner's annual symposium, ITexpo, an
- event that focuses on emerging technologies, trends and opportunities. In
- his address, Gates acknowledged that the industry buzz placing the release
- of Longhorn in 2006 is "probably valid speculation."
-
- The on-again, off-again release date for the next version of the Windows
- operating system has fluctuated for more than year. At one time, Microsoft
- thought it would release Longhorn in 2004. As recently as last May - during
- the Windows Engineering Hardware Conference - Microsoft said it would
- release Longhorn in 2005.
-
- The release dates is still fluid, though: "Longhorn is not a date-driven
- release," Gates cautioned. There are many technological necessities to
- address before a firm date is set. However, a beta version is set for
- release sometime during the first half of 2004.
-
- Some have not had to wait for a peek at Longhorn. Software developers got
- to test drive an alpha version during the Professional Developers
- Conference in October of last year. Ivan Mayes, senior technical analyst
- for Humana, was one of the early Longhorn users. He told NewsFactor that
- this version of Windows is the "most impressive to date."
-
- "They've clearly done their homework," Mayes said. "It is easier to manage
- and has a lot of additional functionality, as well as loads of customizable
- options - they've obviously been studying their Linux."
-
- Gates also highlighted some of the fundamentals of Longhorn. He noted that
- essential security, such as personal firewalls and patch-management
- systems, will be enhanced to lock down Longhorn and make it easier to
- manage. There also will be a unified storage solution.
-
- "Some of you have heard me talk about unified storage for 10 years," Gates
- joked, adding that Longhorn will be the realization of his quest. WinFS
- allows users to search for data across the local system, the network and
- Web services.
-
- The design permits it to pull data from individual applications so that it
- can be stored in one central place and shared universally at the platform
- level. For example, contact and calendar information could be integrated
- with any number of applications.
-
- Gates focused on the client, saying little about plans for a server version
- of the operating system. He did mention that the OS will include new
- versions of the client, server and Office. He also emphasized that PCs in
- 2006 will have the power and storage requirements to support Longhorn's new
- presentation system, called "Avalon"; a file system, called "WinFS";
- Indigo, a Web-services communication bus built into the OS; and WinFX, the
- new programming model to succeed Win32.
-
- Avalon will be a unified presentation model for Windows applications, Web
- applications and media, graphics, and animation.
-
- Gates called Longhorn the "biggest release of the decade - the biggest
- since Windows 95." While excitement among developers and users builds
- towards a firm release date, it will be a team effort to achieve Longhorn's
- potential.
-
- "When Longhorn eventually ships in 2006, it will mark a major transition in
- the client OS market similar to the DOS-to-Windows migration of the last
- decade," MetaGroup analyst Steve Kleynhans told NewsFactor.
-
-
-
- Gateway To Close All Retail Stores
-
-
- Struggling PC maker Gateway (GTW) said Thursday that it plans to close all
- 188 of its retail stores and lay off 2,500 workers.
-
- The stores will close April 9, Gateway says. Its computers will still be
- sold on Gateway's Web site and via phone.
-
- "We're looking for any way we can to reduce our operating costs," says
- spokesman Brad Williams.
-
- Gateway plans to provide more details when it announces first-quarter
- earnings April 29.
-
- Gateway was the only major PC maker to run its own stores. That made it
- hard to compete with rivals, which didn't have the high cost of store
- employees and real estate. Gateway's overhead on PCs was often twice as
- high as rival Dell's, which sells mainly via phone and Internet, says
- Gartner Group analyst Martin Reynolds.
-
- "The stores were an albatross around Gateway's neck," says U.S. Bancorp
- Piper Jaffray analyst Ashok Kumar.
-
- Gateway has tried several times to remake itself since 2000. Attempts to
- boost sales by remodeling stores and adding more consumer electronics
- products failed.
-
- Gateway's shares rose 23 cents, or 4%, to $5.63 in after-hours trading on
- the news, released after the market closed. "This should get Gateway back
- in fighting shape," says independent technology analyst Rob Enderle.
-
- The closures were an expected part of Gateway's latest big restructuring.
-
- Gateway, the No. 5 U.S. PC maker, announced plans to acquire No. 4
- eMachines earlier this year. The merged company looks more like eMachines
- than Gateway.
-
- EMachines CEO Wayne Inouye has replaced Gateway CEO Ted Waitt, who remains
- chairman. The merged company is moving to Irvine, Calif., near eMachines'
- current headquarters. (Gateway is based in Poway, Calif., about 80 miles
- away.)
-
- EMachines sells mostly through third-party retail stores, such as Best Buy
- and Costco, which is cheaper than running its own. The method also shows
- off products to customers who are passing through to buy other products.
-
- Although Gateway has not announced plans to sell PCs alongside eMachines',
- analysts who cover the industry expect that to happen any day. That would
- increase competition on store shelves, likely lowering prices, Gartner's
- Reynolds says.
-
-
-
- Free Web Mail: Here to Stay?
-
-
- Web mail just wants to be free - unless you can be coaxed to pay, of course.
-
- Public providers of e-mail delivered via any Web browser would much prefer
- that you pony up for their fee-based services, and they are making
- increasingly compelling cases for you to do so.
-
- But Web mail is booming, with no less than 355 million accounts worldwide
- at the start of the year, estimates the Radicati Group, a market research
- company in Palo Alto, California. Two giants dominate the market:
- Microsoft's MSN Hotmail makes up 37 percent of the total and Yahoo Mail is
- 30 percent, says Marcel Nienhuis, Radicati senior analyst.
-
- Both leaders say they are committed to offering free versions of their
- services - largely to keep a full pipeline of potential customers for those
- paid services. Moreover, while the no-cost offerings suffer from tight
- constraints on storage space, they are gaining slick new features.
-
- "We've continued to make innovations in the interface and the
- infrastructure," says Larry Grothaus, MSN lead product manager. Most
- visibly, Hotmail rolled out usability improvements last fall, including a
- Today view that separates out the mail coming from your contacts. (To aid
- this process, you can import your contacts from Outlook or Outlook
- Express.) Behind the scenes, MSN is strengthening its efforts to improve
- measures against spam and viruses. Storage for a free Hotmail account
- remains limited to 2MB, however, and you can't send messages larger than
- 1MB.
-
- Yahoo Mail is a tad more generous, with free accounts offering 4MB of
- storage and messages up to 2MB. In February the service added the
- capability to autocomplete addresses after you type the first few letters,
- much as Outlook and other client mail packages can do. In the fight against
- spam and viruses, "we now scan every single e-mail attachment that comes
- in," says Brad Garlinghouse, Yahoo vice president of communications
- products. Calendar functions are also available for free.
-
- The two competing services have added a number of nice touches, such as
- printable views of messages and integration with their respective instant
- messaging software. Both also walk a thin line in terms of the
- obtrusiveness of the advertisements that support them. Last year Yahoo Mail
- reduced the number of ads it runs, which has worked out well for users and
- advertisers, Garlinghouse maintains. MSN's Grothaus, in turn, says that "we
- got rid of flashy, annoying ads because of customer complaints."
-
- Given their enormous audiences, the two Web mail providers live in the
- center of the spam hurricane, fighting a daily battle against billions of
- incoming junk messages.
-
- "The more spam we can keep off the network, the better performance will be
- for everyone," Grothaus notes.
-
- While spam is the top issue with users, defining spam is difficult because
- the definition varies with the recipient, Garlinghouse says. Yahoo Mail and
- Hotmail each encourage users to mark what they consider spam, generating a
- flood of data back to the providers, which can tune their filters
- accordingly. Also, the services allow users to block addresses and stop
- HTML images from loading before they know the images are safe.
-
- Among other steps, Hotmail works with Brightmail, a company that sets up
- dummy mail addresses and monitors what spam they collect. It adopted Human
- Interactive Proof technology (which makes you eyeball an image and pick out
- what it spells) to stop spammers from registering automatically via
- software.
-
- The paid Yahoo Mail Plus service offers another twist. You can set up
- multiple addresses that you can handle differently within your account -
- dedicating one to your EBay dealings, for instance.
-
- The Web mail giants won't disclose how many of their customers haul out
- their credit cards for e-mail. Industry analysts suggest the numbers are
- significant and growing.
-
- "They try to make it pretty irresistible for people who use it each day to
- sign up for paid service," says Robert Mahowald, research manager for
- collaborative computing at IDC. "To me, $20 a year for e-mail is a good
- price."
-
- "More and more people are opting to pay," agrees Radicati's Nienhuis. "Two
- megabytes of storage is almost nothing; you have to look at it almost daily
- to delete unnecessary messages." The paid services go far beyond basic
- e-mail, with group-collaboration features and other handy extras, he adds.
-
- Hotmail Extra Storage comes in various plans that start at $20 a year for
- 10MB of storage, the ability to send 3MB attachments, and access via
- Outlook or Outlook Express. At the high end, you can pony up $10 a month
- for MSN Premium, which provides up to 11 accounts, calendar functions,
- antivirus software, and a host of other goodies.
-
- Yahoo Mail offers plans starting with 10MB of storage (and 3MB attachments)
- for an annual fee of $10. Yahoo Mail Plus bundles in access to POP e-mail,
- local message backups, and other services at a cost of $30 yearly and up.
- Among other options, Yahoo also offers a Business Edition for small firms;
- at $10 a month, this gives you five e-mail accounts with 25MB of storage
- each and ownership of a domain name.
-
- Given the spread of broadband connections and the availability of powerful
- Web programming tools, "the lines between Web mail and client mail are
- increasingly being blurred," Garlinghouse says.
-
- And as it integrates more seamlessly with other applications, "e-mail is
- increasingly less about just sending and receiving messages, and more about
- life management," he adds. "It's a communications hub."
-
- This trend is expected to accelerate. For instance, Garlinghouse says, "a
- very large number of the attachments we handle are photos. We want to make
- a better experience to manage and share them, and to order a print."
-
- Web mail providers expect to continue investing heavily in measures for
- zapping spam and viruses. They'll push further into mobile devices, aiming
- to improve features and widen distribution on PDAs and smart phones.
- They'll watch for incoming technologies to integrate, such as the RSS (Real
- Simple Syndication) instant-notification standard.
-
- And they'll keep offering free versions, probably with the current level of
- storage limitations.
-
- "Web mail is a growing category," says IDC's Mahowald. "There will always
- be a market for Web mail, cheap or free."
-
-
-
- Google Introduces Free E-Mail Service
-
-
- Google Inc. is introducing a free e-mail service to send a blunt message -
- the maker of the world's most popular online search engine is pulling off
- the gloves in its clash with high-tech heavyweights Yahoo! Inc. and
- Microsoft Corp.
-
- The company unleashed the latest blow in a fierce fight for Web supremacy
- late Wednesday by promising to deliver 250 to 500 times more storage space
- than the market-leading e-mail services provided by Yahoo and Microsoft's
- Hotmail.
-
- But there's a catch to the e-mail. Hoping to turn a profit from the
- service - dubbed Gmail - privately held Google has programmed its computers
- to dissect the topics being discussed in the e-mails and then deliver
- text-based ads related to the subjects.
-
- For instance, an e-mail from one friend to another discussing an upcoming
- concert might prompt Google to include an advertising link from a ticketing
- agency.
-
- "I don't think (the ads) will be annoying at all," Google co-founder Larry
- Page said during an interview Wednesday. "We think this will give us a
- business model that will work and allow us to provide a high-quality
- service."
-
- Page said Gmail shouldn't raise serious privacy concerns because Google
- plans to closely guard the content of the e-mail messages. Ads are unlikely
- to accompany most e-mails, he said.
-
- Gmail will offer 1 gigabyte of storage space, roughly 500,000 pages of
- e-mail. Gmail users will be able to receive up to 10 megabytes in a single
- e-mail - more than the free services of Yahoo and Microsoft's Hotmail allow
- to be stored in an entire mailbox.
-
- Yahoo offers up to 4 megabytes of free e-mail storage while Hotmail
- provides 2 megabytes of free storage. Both services charge for additional
- space.
-
- Gmail also will enable its users to type a keyword into a built-in search
- box to find information contained in their e-mailboxes within a matter of
- seconds.
-
- For now, Mountain View, Calif.-based Google is only opening up the service
- to invited users but expects to make it accessible to everyone within a few
- weeks, Page said. People interested in signing up for an e-mail account are
- being encouraged to register at www.gmail.com.
-
- Google's e-mail expansion is likely to escalate its mounting competition
- with Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Yahoo and Redmond, Wash.-based Microsoft.
-
- While those two giants have been revving up their own search technology,
- Google has recently unveiled a series of improvements to protect its turf.
-
- By offering e-mail, Google is now invading a space dominated by Yahoo and
- Microsoft's Hotmail.
-
- Yahoo has 52.6 million unique users per month in the United States,
- according to a February survey by online research firm comScore Media
- Metrix. Hotmail is next, with 45.4 million users. AOL has 40.2 million
- users, but they pay monthly subscriptions.
-
- Officials at Yahoo and Microsoft's Hotmail division declined to comment
- specifically on Google's entry into the new category. Yahoo released a
- statement promising to "continue to be an innovative leader by integrating
- and delivering new features that add value to people's lives."
-
- Google had been testing its e-mail service for about a year internally
- before deciding to offer it to the general public.
-
- "We think e-mail is one of those things that is not as useful and as well
- organized as it should be," Page said. "People have been asking us to do
- this for a long time."
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
- 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.
-