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- Volume 6, Issue 48 Atari Online News, Etc. November 26, 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:
-
- Kevin Savetz
-
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
- log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
- and click on "Subscriptions".
- OR subscribe to A-ONE by sending a message to: dpj@atarinews.org
- and your address will be added to the distribution list.
- To unsubscribe from A-ONE, send the following: Unsubscribe A-ONE
- Please make sure that you include the same address that you used to
- subscribe from.
-
- To download A-ONE, set your browser bookmarks to one of the
- following sites:
-
- http://people.delphiforums.com/dpj/a-one.htm
- http://www.icwhen.com/aone/
- http://a1mag.atari.org
- Now available:
- http://www.atarinews.org
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphiforums.com/atari/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #0648 11/26/04
-
- ~ AntiSpyware Is Lacking ~ People Are Talking! ~ Fast Web Use Rises!
- ~ Zview Is Now Available ~ Google Sues Over Fraud ~ Pasti Is Ready!
- ~ Philips Back Into PCs! ~ Happy Thanksgiving!! ~ EU Rules Next Month
- ~ Next Opera Resizes ~ Phishers Are Automated ~ New 8-bit Site Open!
-
- -* Next Opera Resizes On the Fly *-
- -* Firefox Breathes Life In Browsers! *-
- -* Cyber Cops Warn Shoppers: Be Holiday Wary! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- All I gotta say at this point is: Burp! What a day. What a feast!
- Everything turned out great today. None of the usual problems during
- preparation of the meal. Everything was done on time, and turned out
- delicious. The only problem that I encountered was not having any more
- holes in my belt to loosen up! But the after-feast nap helped! I'm almost
- ready to start nibbling on the leftovers!
-
- I hope that your holiday celebration was enjoyable - a great time to spend
- with family and friends. That's what it's really all about. With that in
- mind, I'll end this week's comments, and give everyone an opportunity to
- relax (and grab some leftovers!).
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- Atari ST Imaging and Preservation Tools
-
-
- PASTI
- Atari ST Imaging and Preservation Tools
-
- Pasti is a package of software tools for imaging and preservation of Atari
- software. The two major components are the imaging tools and the emulation
- helper tools. The imaging tools produce a disk image file from an original
- disk. It works very similarly to standard imaging tools like Makedisk, but
- they can image virtually any ST disk including copy protected disks. Imaging
- tools are available for different hardware setups, including a plain Atari
- ST computer. Capabilities vary depending on the hardware. Specialized
- hardware is required for writing back images to a floppy disk.
-
-
- SOFTWARE PRESERVATION
-
- Our main goal is the preservation of Atari software in its original
- unmodified form. Original software is normally stored on diskettes with
- custom format or copy protection. Standard tools cannot back up or image
- them. But floppy disk recording have a limited life time. It won't take too
- long until all original Atari disks will be damaged and lost.
-
-
- PASTI.DLL
-
- Pasti.Dll is the emulation helper tool for Windows. It extends Atari ST
- emulators, adding support for extended disk images. These disk images
- support exotic, custom, and copy-protected formats. You can now use
- emulators to run ST software in its original uncracked form.
-
- http://pasti.fxatari.com
-
-
-
- Zview Beta 3
-
-
- Hi,
-
- New version of zview available.
-
- First, I want to make a big thanks at Arnaud Bercegeay and Dominique
- BΘrΘziat for their work on the gemlib, mem.ldg, libshare and windom.
- GREAT WORK MEN !
-
- So, what news it this version?
-
- - zView goes to LGPL.
- - TGA read plugin added( 15, 16, 24, 32 bits normal and compressed).
- - BMP read plugin added( 1, 4, 8, 24 bits non compressed).
- - JPG read plugin with DSP added. ( move JPG.LDG from '/dsp'
- to '/plugin/decoder' and install jpgd.prg in your auto folder).
- - Option panel for the jpg encoder added... with this one, you can
- set the image quality wanted, progressive and grayscale mode.
- - The image viewer provides now a Info bar with basic information like
- resolution, color bits and image type.
- - Add delete function in the menu bar.
- - MEM.LDG from dominique Bereziat is now used for memory allocation
- ( more safe for MagiC system).
- - The dithering routine is now better for 8 and 4 bits resolution.
- - Handle of multi-pages Image format; first step for the fax and PDF
- reading.
- - Menu "history" activated.
- - the "jpe" image are now decoded with the JPG plugin.
- - And a lot of bugs fixes!
-
-
- This version is "normally" bugs free, if you meet one, please, send me a
- little report!
-
- A last thing: Many thanks to all the persons who sent me a user report
- with the first version, thanks again !
-
- http://the.zorro.free.fr/zview.html
-
- A+
- Zorro
-
-
-
- atari.fandal.cz Opens
-
-
- Nils Feske has announced:
-
- A new site dedicated to Atari XL/XE machines recently opened. It features
- probably the hugest (and also very well sorted) archive of Atari 8-Bit
- games and demos! You can get there about 3.000 games and 1.500 demos
- including screenshots and information, which is just an incredible
- collection!
-
- http://atari.fandal.cz/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho, friends and neighbors. I'm sitting here on Thanksgiving night,
- holding my stomach and promising myself that I'll never eat that much at
- one sitting again... just like I promised myself last year... and the
- year before. You get the idea.
-
- Thanksgiving dinner was, as usual, wonderful. The turkey was tender and
- moist, the stuffing was flavorful, the potatoes were fluffy yet firm.
- Yes, everything was top-notch. Of course, I had nothing to do with the
- preparation of the feast. That might have had something to do with the
- positive results. We had dinner at my sister-in-law's, so all of the
- food was lovingly made by her.
-
- Of course, I had already 'made the rounds' to my family in the late
- morning and was, therefore, already pretty full of turkey. Okay, okay, I
- had some stuffing, potatoes, cranberry sauce and apple pie too. The
- point is that I already had a medium sized base under my belt
- (literally) by the time we got to my sister-in-law's.
-
- After too much turkey and all the associated fixings, we sat and talked
- and allowed our meal to 'settle'. It's usually at about this time that I
- begin to reflect upon exactly what it is that I've got to be thankful
- for. What I've got to be thankful for is, in a word, everything. Living
- where I do... and even WHEN I do... is high on my list of things to be
- thankful for. So is family. I'm afraid that, in this day and age, family
- is highly undervalued. Sure, you get together for holidays and the
- occasional summer cookout, but it's not the same as 'the old days'.
- While you'll never ever hear me say that my family is perfect, or that
- they never get on my nerves, we are a close-knit group.
-
- What I'm the most thankful for though is the fact that I've been blessed
- with friends. I've never really had a lot of friends, but the ones I do
- have are all very special people. I can remember watching Seinfeld and
- thinking "what the hell is wrong with these people? I wouldn't have any
- of them as friends".
-
- I think that what surprises me most, even after all these years, is that
- my online friends are as dear to me as 'local' friends that I've known
- for years... some of them going all the way back to grade school.
-
- My online friends never fail to keep me grounded. They also provide me
- with the support that we all need from time to time. For these friends,
- I am truly and eternally thankful.
-
- Most of them, of course, I met in the various online services that I've
- frequented over the years. Since I mostly frequented the Atari areas of
- Delphi, CompuServe and GEnie, the online friends I made were also Atari
- users. So we automatically had something in common. Over the years some
- of them have come and gone, but I still chat with a lot of them now and
- then. That's another indicator of a good friendship... the fact that you
- can go without contact for a long period of time and pick up pretty much
- where you left off when you finally get back in touch.
-
- What does any of this have to do with Atari computing? I'm not sure. But
- I do know that the Atari arena is really the only place I've encountered
- it. That says a lot. Not about the computer, but about the users.
-
- Thanks.
-
- Now let's get to the news, hints, tips and info available from the
- UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- Mark Duckworth posts this about why he thinks we should use MiNT and
- Magxnet:
-
- "I notice that some people are still using STing, and even using it under
- MiNT. I thought it would be beneficial to point out the reasons not to
- use it. Pure and simple, Sting has ridiculous internal latency. In
- upwards of 25ms pinging the loopback interface on an ST. Under
- MiNTnet/Magxnet you do not have this problem. Latency is much lower.
-
- If you are a CT60 and ethernec user, mintnet and magxnet begins to be the
- only sane decision. With mintnet you can perfectly emulate stik and run
- all those apps but you can't do vice versa. There's lots of mintnet
- internet apps you would miss out on. Like... ftp ;) or telnet.. or
- anything. You'll miss out on Sparemint Update Manager too. It assumes
- Mintnet. But that's not the real reason. With mintnet you can get
- upwards of 400KBytes/sec through your ethernec using ozk's driver. With
- sting you won't have anywhere near that kind of performance and things
- will probably be a bit more stable.
-
- I understand the text config files can look a bit daunting, but if any
- Sting under MiNT users need help setting it up, ask here and I'll answer.
-
- PS: Magxnet offers the same benefits under MagiC too! And it can run
- gluestik for stik apps too.
-
- I mean think about it. Once you have an ethernet card, how often do you
- go into those stik cpx's? Thought so ;) So is text mode really that
- bad for setting up your ethernet... once?
-
- Not trying to bash on anyone or anything, I just see spectacular
- performance and reliability and I think others should see it too if they
- want that sort of thing."
-
-
- 'Coda' adds:
-
- "Besides, If your NIC is (soon to be) a CTLINK or ETHERNAT and you want
- a proper USB implementation too, then it looks like MiNT/Mintnet is
- what you will need."
-
-
- Janez Valant adds his own thoughts:
-
- "I would just like to add that most text configs files are as easy or
- easier to setup as GUI setup. They are usually quite well documented and
- explained within the config text (check mint.cnf for example) some even
- contain too much explanations so they are quite big :) Of course, "i
- will do all instead of user" installer IS easier, but in case of even
- simple problem, user is in dark, while in case of text configuration
- files, one can read cfg file and in case that it is well explained fix
- many stuff without special knowledge.. and even learn a lot.
-
- Main reason is I think that many ppl use MultiTOS like setup (aka
- kernel+AES only) and don't have required unix FS structure so they have
- either to install full MiNT or fiddle with cripple MiNT (i think) or
- similar... But benefits are worth of end result."
-
-
- Rade Knezevic asks for help in finding a particular game:
-
- "Is there any link to Atari ST game Vroom. I can't find it on net..."
-
-
- Edward Baiz tells Rade:
-
- "There is a demo on the web somewhere which is just awesome. The
- commercial game does not play as good as the demo version."
-
-
- 'Oes' adds:
-
- "The original company that put this great game out still has a website
- where you can download Vroom and other great ST and Amiga games:
-
- http://www.lankhor.net/jeux/jeux.php3?jeu=32&menu=presentation
-
- Telechargement is download in French but click on the English flag and
- you can get English version of the games."
-
-
- Mark Bedingfield jumps in and posts:
-
- "Bloody awesome, thanks mate. I played Vroom to death, when I was
- younger. I will have to see if it works on the TT. "
-
-
- Raoul Teulings asks for help with his CDWriter:
-
- "Since a couple of days I connected a LaCie CDwriter to my TT. At
- first it all seems to work: the writer was recognized by HDDriver and
- I could use CDPro to make a few burns. But then after a restart the
- next morning it was all 'gone': the writer was not recognized anymore
- and CDPro did not work any longer.
-
- Same thing happened with my Pioneer CDplayer who used to work
- in previous times.
-
- Does somebody know what goes wrong? Has it got something to do
- with a program that changes the order of the proggies in the
- autofolder? Or should I have reinstalled HDDriver after connecting
- the writer? (Due to a move of studios I am not able to quickly find my
- manual of HDDriver)
-
- Has somebody similar problems? I made two backups and the last
- one during the night and this one froze. What might cause that?
-
- When I turn my TT on now I get the message that 'drive c may be
- damaged' and after disconnecting the writer this message is gone; so
- I guess it has to do with the termination?
-
- I hope that someone can give me a hand here because making CD
- backups is very necessary for me because I still work on a daily
- basis with the TT...."
-
-
- Coda tells Raoul:
-
- "My TT acts very strangely in this respect too. I took the Termination
- resistors out of the motherboard and connected a JAZ drive, and a CD
- drive (in that order) to the external scsi socket. Termination of JAZ
- was OFF, and Termination of CD drive was ON. When booting the system,
- the hard drive would not be found most of the time. When it did boot,
- it screwed the partition up and I had to re-install everything.
-
- What I had to do in the end was turn on the Termination on the JAZ
- drive which is in the middle (I know, its not correct), and then the
- hard drive booted and the CD was found also. I checked the disks often
- and there's no problem. I think what it needs as a permanent measure is
- an active terminator after the CD drive."
-
-
- Alexander Beuscher tells Raoul and Coda:
-
- "In the TT usually the resistor networks in the main board socket are the
- only terminators on the SCSI-bus. The internal HD usually is not
- terminated. So when you plug external SCSI components to the bus you
- should remove the resistor networks from the TT board, turn on the
- internal HD's termination (by jumper or by putting in the appropriate
- resistor networks), ensure that the TermPWR on the SCSI bus is driven
- (the TT does not do this by default) and then terminate the outermost
- external component.
-
- In your case it might be that the JAZ is close enough on the bus to your
- HD so that its termination can do a similar job as the TT's internal
- termination - damp reflections to an acceptable level although the
- internal HD is not terminated."
-
-
- Jim DeClercq jumps in and adds:
-
- "I differ, and not just for the purpose of differing. First, both ends
- of the bus need to be terminated, so there is no reason to unplug
- the TT terminator packs. The TT cannot provide TERMPWR because it
- has a 25-pin connector, and TERMPWR is on pin 26 of a 50-pin connector.
- There can be no connection at the TT end of that cable. Something
- external has to provide TERMPWR.
-
- On why the bus with the JAZ drive on it works, I agree, for the purpose
- of agreeing. Iomega stuff seems to have good terminators, and uncertain
- termination selection switches. My ZIP has an external active terminator,
- hanging on the end of a 25-pin to C-50 adapter."
-
-
- Greg Goodwin clarifies some things:
-
- "This is not entirely true. While it IS true that both ends of the bus
- need to be terminated, the TT is wired as follows:
-
- Internal hard disk -- the host adapter -- internal terminators --
- external connector.
-
- Thus the internal hard disk should ALWAYS be terminated on a TT and the
- internal terminators should ONLY exist if you have nothing externally
- connected. (Note that most PC and Macintosh computers are wired
- differently.)
-
- The TT does not provide TERMPWR. (Some Macs do,
- on pin 25 of their 25 pin connector). Therefore, any external drives
- must be set to provide TERMPWR and MUST BE ON WHENEVER THE TT IS ON!
-
- I have seen working SCSI busses completely out of
- compliance with the "terminate both ends" rule. For instance, my own
- Falcon required a "pass-through" terminator in addition to the
- terminator on my scanner before it was stable. I have no idea why."
-
-
- Jim tells Greg:
-
- "The underlying idea is pullups wherever they seem to be needed.
-
- My experience is that the resistor packs stay, and the internal drive is
- terminated with its own terminators.
-
- That is working right now, with a scsi bus that has one opening left. But
- what do you do with an internal drive of the latest type, with an
- appropriate adapter that provided neither terminators or termination
- power? Or, for that matter, an external drive that provides neither
- terminators or term power?
-
- I think we are picking nits. Pin 25 TERMPWR needs a way to get to pin 26
- of a cable. Special and custom cable required.
-
- Following mindless rules is not important. Making a bus work is
- important, and that sometimes mean pullups in odd places, or allows
- pullups in odd places, or even requires pullups in odd places. Drives do
- have capacitance problems, particularly Seagate drives, and may need
- extra pullup current. It is probably better to think in terms of pullup
- voltage where is is useful than in terms of termination. Nothing
- terminates.
-
- While your take on the internal arrangement of a TT is correct, I have
- yet to hear of a TT that had a SCSI bus which did not work because the
- passive resistor banks were missing. I leave them there, if only because
- I would probably misplace them otherwise."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. I need a little time to recover from
- my gluttony. I mean, after all, we won't be cooking our turkey until
- Saturday, and I need to recover some measure of my taste for turkey.
- <Grin>
-
- So tune in again next time, same time, same station, and be ready to
- listen to what they are saying when...
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Nintendo DS: Doubly Good
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Advocacy Groups Attack Games!
- And more!
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Nintendo DS: Doubly Good
-
-
- If Nintendo's new DS - short for "Dual Screen" - (* * * 1/2 out of four,
- $150) was designed to bring innovation to the portable video game market,
- so far only developer Sega has completely caught on.
-
- Of six games released with the hardware over the weekend, only Sega's Feel
- the Magic: XY/XX, a collection of hilarious and bizarre mini games, will
- leave players feeling as if they are trying something they have never seen
- before.
-
- Nonetheless, DS is clearly the most powerful and versatile handheld game
- system on the market today, with two 3-inch backlighted screens (one of
- which is touch-sensitive) and built-in wireless communications.
-
- Nintendo executives say playing the same old games is getting stale, so
- they've created this system to bring new life to games. Analysts and
- industry insiders speculate that Sony's upcoming PSP (short for
- "PlayStation Portable"), due early next year, may be another motivating
- factor. The PSP represents the first major challenge in years to Nintendo's
- domination of the market with its Game Boy line.
-
- Technologically, DS stands out as a huge improvement. Its graphics may not
- be high art, but they look far better than anything on Game Boy, Nokia's
- N-Gage or other current systems. With 256-by-192-pixel resolution screens
- and a processor that is roughly as powerful as the one in the Nintendo 64
- console, DS is a vast advance over Game Boy Advance.
-
- DS' wireless networking makes head-to-head play fast and convenient. The
- system comes with an embedded communications program called PictoChat that
- lets players send notes and doodles to one another. A demo game, Metroid
- Prime Hunters: First Hunt, is included.DS plays games on postage-stamp-size
- wafers that sell for $29, but it also runs Game Boy Advance cartridges.
-
- The system's rectangular shape is fine for conventional games but feels
- awkward when you use the stylus - forcing players to hold the system in
- their left hand while gripping the stylus and hitting buttons with the
- right.
-
- Among the initial games:
-
- Feel the Magic: XY/XX (* * * 1/2, Sega) Boy meets girl. Boy falls in love
- with girl. But boy is too shy to introduce himself. Fortunately, the "Rub
- Rabbits" - men with bunny ears - lead the player through tasks guaranteed
- to earn her true love, including fighting bulls; saving sky divers by using
- the stylus to type in numbers rapidly; rescuing people from a sand monster;
- and causing an unlucky pedestrian to regurgitate goldfish by using the
- stylus to massage his stomach. The games are fun, fast and challenging.
-
- Super Mario 64 DS (* * *, Nintendo) One of the best adventure games of all
- time returns with new levels, new playable characters and new mini games.
- The goal of the original Mario 64 was to collect 120 stars; the DS version
- has 150 stars. The bad news is that the DS' stylus and 2-D gamepad control
- are not well suited for maneuvering through Mario, a game that defined 3-D
- adventure.
-
- Spider-Man 2 (* * * 1/2, Activision) Spider-Man tangles with Dr. Octopus,
- Mysterio and others in a challenging side-scrolling adventure that makes
- little use of the touch-sensitive screen. The game focuses on solid
- old-school action, web-slinging and slugging through 14 chapters, some
- quite large.
-
- Asphalt Urban GT (* * *, Gameloft) There are 25 cars, nine tracks and three
- kinds of gameplay - arcade, evolution (career mode) and multi-player.
- Unlike most racing games for portables, Asphalt does a good job of
- conveying the illusion of speed, though the cars could be a bit more
- responsive. Asphalt also makes little use of the two screens and
- touch-sensitive features.
-
-
-
- "Game Off" Urged
-
-
- An assortment of politicians, religious leaders and social advocacy groups
- lashed out Tuesday at the video-game industry and retailers, saying they
- make violent and racy games too accessible to children.
-
- In a press conference that featured an annual "report card" from the
- National Institute on Media and the Family, publishers were given a B-minus
- for the accuracy of games' content ratings and retailers were given a D for
- voluntary enforcement of age-based sales restrictions.
-
- In another event - a conference call led by the Interfaith Center on
- Corporate Responsibility - a number of successful games were denounced for
- moral "depravity," as well as insufficient ratings safeguards.
-
- Doug Lowenstein, president of the Entertainment Software Association,
- dismissed the attacks as grandstanding.
-
- "These groups are driven by what they need to do to get attention," said
- Lowenstein, whose organization represents computer- and video-game
- publishers.
-
- Both groups offered lists of games that families were urged to avoid giving
- to children as holiday gifts. Four of the first five on both lists were the
- same: "Doom 3" and "Half-Life 2" for PCs, "Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas"
- for PlayStation 2 and "Halo 2" for Xbox.
-
- The "Grand Theft Auto" series is often singled out for glorifying crime and
- the killing of police officers.
-
- Retailers were lambasted for allowing sales of Mature-rated games -
- suggested for people 17 and older - to children as young as 7.
-
- But a retailers' trade group said in a statement that improved enforcement
- programs were still being implemented.
-
- Members of Congress supporting the report-card event included Sen. Joseph
- Lieberman (news, bio, voting record), D-Conn. On the conference call,
- speakers included New York City Council member Eric Gioia.
-
-
-
- Group Cites Video Games for Violence, Sex
-
-
- Video games that have players shoot rival gang members, watch bare-breasted
- women and recreate the assassination of President Kennedy were criticized
- Tuesday by advocacy groups that said, at the least, they should be kept
- away from children.
-
- In issuing its annual report card on video games, the National Institute on
- Media and the Family urged the industry to educate parents better about
- ratings and asked retailers not to sell such games to younger teenagers.
-
- "This segment of games keeps getting more realistic, and they keep pushing
- the envelope," David Walsh, the institute's president, said at a news
- conference. "The problem is that these games are the ones that are
- particularly popular with kids, particularly teenagers."
-
- Another group of church and civic leaders, the Interfaith Center on
- Corporate Responsibility, also urged video game makers to place tighter
- restrictions on the sale of violent video games to children, including
- having retailers place them in locations less accessible to children.
-
- The video game trade association said its games carry appropriate ratings
- and recommended that parents police the activities of their children.
-
- Among those listed as the worst games of the year was "Grand Theft Auto:
- San Andreas," a game in which the hero vows to avenge his mother's murder
- and restore glory to his neighborhood gang. Players rack up points by
- gunning down police, committing carjackings, burglarizing homes and dealing
- in other underworld activities.
-
- The game debuted in October and instantly became the year's best seller,
- part of a series of "Grand Theft Auto" games that has sold more than $32
- million over the past few years. The institute's list also includes "The
- Guy Game," which features video of women exposing their breasts.
-
- Like others on the group's list, the games are rated "M" for mature, which
- means retailers are not supposed to sell them to people under 17. Walsh
- said some of the games should be rated "AO" or "adults only," which would
- limit purchase to those 18 and over. Many stores will not carry games with
- that rating.
-
- The institute blamed game retailers for lax enforcement, citing a survey
- it conducted this year. The survey found that half of underage boys and 8
- percent of girls who tried were allowed to buy M-rated games, the group
- said.
-
- A trade group that represents game retailers said it is premature to
- criticize stores because they already are putting a new enforcement policy
- into place. The Interactive Entertainment Merchants Association has pledged
- to create tougher standards by December to forbid the sale of mature games
- to children.
-
- Doug Lowenstein, president of Entertainment Software Association, said all
- the games on the institute's objectionable list are rated M, which he said
- shows the industry is doing its job.
-
- "The reality is that most of the time when kids get these games, they get
- them from an adult or a parent, and that is a failure of parenting,"
- Lowenstein said. He also cited a survey that showed that most parents agree
- with the rating system.
-
- Sen. Joe Lieberman, D-Conn., credited the industry for creating many good
- games but said the small percentage of games with extremely violent or
- pornographic content is "worse than ever."
-
- "The fact that the assassination of President Kennedy, which broke our
- hearts and altered our history, could become the subject of a video game
- from which people are making money is just outrageous, it is despicable,
- it's unbelievable," Lieberman said.
-
- The "JFK Reloaded" game, released Monday to near universal condemnation, is
- available only by downloading from the Internet. Lowenstein said the game
- does not come from a mainstream company and agreed that its subject matter
- was inappropriate.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Firefox Excites Web Browser World
-
-
- Firefox 1.0 appears to have sparked new activity in the Web browser market.
-
- The release of the open-source Web browser by the Mozilla Foundation last
- week prompted Microsoft to break the silence about Internet Explorer.
- Meanwhile, America Online is breathing more life into the Netscape brand
- with a preview of a new Firefox-based browser scheduled to be unveiled on
- November 30.
-
- Microsoft has no plans to release a new version of IE until the next
- version of Windows, code-named Longhorn, due out in 2006. Still, the
- Redmond, Washington-based company says it has the option to add features
- to IE by way of the browser's add-on technology, says Gary Schare, director
- of Windows product management at Microsoft.
-
- "It is an option for the Internet Explorer team to add functionality in
- between releases. We do not have specific plans at this point to use it,
- but it is an option," Schare says. Microsoft's MSN group already uses the
- add-on mechanism for its MSN Toolbar.
-
- Microsoft has not released a completely new version of IE in years. Windows
- XP users recently got a browser upgrade with Service Pack 2 (SP2) for
- Windows XP. SP2 included features such as pop-up blocking and security
- enhancements, but those updates won't be made available for IE on earlier
- Microsoft operating systems, Microsoft has said.
-
- While some people working on IE at Microsoft are maintaining the current
- version of the browser, most of the team members are focused on IE for
- Longhorn, Schare says. The Longhorn browser will include new features,
- improved security and privacy features, and better support for third-party
- developers, he says.
-
- For end-user features, Microsoft is looking at better ways to manage
- favorites and tabbed browsing, a feature to improve the browsing experience
- by consolidating multiple Web pages into a single window organized with
- tabs, Schare says. "Basically making IE a more functional and feature-rich
- browser," he says. Firefox and other browsers that compete with IE already
- offer tabbed browsing.
-
- Meanwhile AOL's browser unit Netscape Communications is preparing to
- preview a new browser based on Firefox. "It is based on Firefox, but will
- be Firefox Plus, it has got improvements beyond Firefox," AOL spokesperson
- Andrew Weinstein says.
-
- The preview, a so-called alpha release, is due on November 30. The new
- browser and a new e-mail client will eventually replace the current
- Netscape offering, Weinstein says. He declines to detail product details.
-
- AOL released Netscape 7.2 in August, but that product is based on Mozilla
- 1.7, a suite of products that includes a browser, e-mail client, Internet
- Relay Chat client, and Web page editor.
-
- Riding a continued high, the Mozilla Foundation keeps counting Firefox
- downloads, which hit 4.7 million last Friday morning, a spokesperson says.
-
- The rise of Firefox, first introduced in February this year when Mozilla
- renamed its Firebird project, has been remarkable. The browser held 3
- percent market share at the end of October, according to WebSideStory. The
- Mozilla Suite, Netscape, and Firefox together held 6 percent of the market
- at the end of October, up from 3.5 percent in June. Though losing share, IE
- still dominated with 92.9 percent of the market, according to the San Diego
- Web metrics company.
-
- Firefox is the Mozilla Foundation's stand-alone browser. The Mozilla
- open-source project was started in early 1998 by Netscape, which was
- acquired later that year by AOL. Last year, the people behind Mozilla
- created a foundation, largely funded by a $2 million pledge from AOL, to
- build, support, and promote Mozilla products.
-
-
-
- Next Opera Browser Will Resize on the Fly
-
-
- Opera Software ASA wants to make horizontal scrolling a thing of the past
- in the Web browser.
-
- The Oslo, Norway, company announced Tuesday that its new browser release
- will include a feature for rendering a Web page to fit a screen regardless
- of the screen size. Called ERA (Extensible Rendering Architecture), the
- feature is available in the latest test version of Opera 7.60.
-
- Most Web pages are designed for display on desktop or laptop computer
- screens with a width of 800 pixels or more, forcing users with smaller
- window or screen sizes to scroll across pages to fully view them, Opera
- said. ERA dynamically resizes pages to fit any screen size.
-
- "Opera's vision is to enable people to access their favorite Web sites on
- any device, and ERA means that users can have a great Internet experience
- on any screen regardless of a Web page's width, tables or frame," CEO Jon
- von Tetzchner said in a statement.
-
- Opera plans a full release of Version 7.60 in January, slightly behind its
- original target of late this year, a spokesman said. The new release also
- will include new voice browsing capabilities, performance improvements and
- a revamped user interface.
-
- Opera makes the third most-popular Web browser after Microsoft Corp.'s
- Internet Explorer and the open-source browsers from the Mozilla Foundation.
- It supports multiple platforms including Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.
-
- With ERA, Opera is bringing together earlier rendering technologies that
- fit pages on the screens of mobile devices and televisions into a single
- architecture for its desktop browser.
-
- The technology also solves a common printing problem, where part of a Web
- page is cut off because it did not fit a screen. ERA can resize a page to
- fit the paper's width, according to Opera.
-
- Voice browsing is a key addition to Opera 7.60 and is available in the
- latest technology preview. Opera in March announced a partnership with IBM
- to combine IBM's Embedded ViaVoice technology with the browser.
-
- Speech-enabled browsing lets users speak commands to navigate Web pages as
- well as to have the content of pages read through text-to-speech
- technology. Opera initially is targeting the speech technology to English
- speakers and to its Windows browser.
-
-
-
- After a Decade, Philips Makes PCs Again
-
-
- After an absence of a decade, Philips Electronics is making personal
- computers again, the company said on Thursday. The Netherlands-based
- electronics conglomerate, which abandoned the PC business in the early
- 1990s after suffering big losses, quietly introduced six models together
- with British retailer Dixons earlier this week.
-
- The Dutch company said it had not wanted to draw attention to a "soft"
- launch of products that would only be available in a limited number of
- shops in six European countries, including Britain, Ireland, Spain, Italy
- and Nordic countries. "It is a tactical decision to take an opportunity
- that came along," a spokesman said.
-
- The deal with Dixons means Philips has found another retail outlet for the
- Internet-connected products it has co-branded Streamium. The PCs, branded
- Philips-Freeline, have been preconfigured to work with other Streamium
- products, so consumers can simply stream music from their PCs to their
- Hi-Fi set or television over a wireless connection.
-
- Until now, Philips aimed to sell Streamium products through telecoms
- companies as part of a broadband Internet bundle.
-
- Otherwise the Philips computers are standard items that run the same
- hardware and software as other PCs. Philips itself is already a major
- supplier of displays and CD and DVD drives to computer makers such as Dell
- and Hewlett-Packard, with whom it will now also compete.
-
- The PC business is still a cut-throat industry where profit margins are
- thin or absent, except in the case of a few top players including Dell,
- Windows and Office software maker Microsoft and Pentium microprocessor
- producer Intel.
-
- Philips is the world's biggest lighting maker, a top three hospital
- equipment maker, Europe's biggest consumer electronics producer and the
- region's number three in semiconductors.
-
-
-
- Tools Let Spyware Slip Through Cracks
-
-
- With the threat of a sophisticated spyware attack looming, a renowned
- security researcher says the most popular detection and removal tools "fail
- miserably" at addressing the growing spyware/malware scourge.
-
- Just days after hackers seized control of a banner ad server and used it to
- load malicious programs on vulnerable machines, researcher Eric Howes
- issued failing grades on all anti-spyware scanners he tested during a
- two-week stretch in October.
-
- Howes, a graduate student at the University of Illinois at
- Urbana-Champaign, found that the best-performing anti-spyware scanner
- failed to detect about 25 percent of the "critical" files and registry
- entries installed by the malicious programs.
-
- "One thing I found out for sure is that no single scanner removes
- everything," Howes said in an interview with eWEEK.com.
-
- "I had an inkling before doing the test that the results would come back
- like this. But it still is disappointing to find that the tools, in many
- cases, are basically useless."
-
- "The anti-spyware tools missed things that simply reinstalled what was
- deleted," Howes said, likening it to a cat-and-mouse game being won by the
- bad guys.
-
- The results rated the Giant AntiSpyware detection tool as the best of the
- 20 scanners tested, but even then, Howes said the software detected only
- 100 out of 134 "critical" files and registry entries.
-
- "Some of them are just terrible. In some cases, there were only 18 critical
- detections. What's the point of missing critical files? It's all going to
- come back anyway," he said.
-
- "Critical" detections include executable files (.EXE or .COM), dynamic link
- libraries (.DLL), BHO-related registry entries, toolbar-related registry
- entries and auto-start Registry entries.
-
- Howes said companies that stealthily load spyware are using elaborate
- tricks to hide component files on computers. "They hide the files very well
- on the system and use complicated techniques to detect and replace
- component parts. If you rip out one or two parts, the undetected parts will
- come in and replace the files that you took out," he said.
-
- During the tests, which pitted the top 20 anti-spyware scanners against
- spyware that comes embedded with peer-to-peer programs such as Grokster,
- Howes said he discovered that the malicious applications were capable of
- blocking the scanners.
-
- "In the second and third group of tests, one of the installed programs
- prevented the anti-spyware scanners from running on reboot," he said,
- noting that reboots are a common method used by anti-spyware scanners to
- remove stubborn spyware and adware that remain in memory on a PC.
-
- During the first round of tests, Howes found that McAfee's AntiSpyware
- rated very poorly, picking up only 56 of 134 critical detections.
- InterMute's SpySubtract (72/134), Aluria's Spyware Eliminator (42/134),
- Lavasoft's Ad-Aware (82/134) and the popular Spybot Search & Destroy
- (40/134) also scored very low on detecting "critical" files.
-
- Howes said things go so bad that, at one point during the tests, he found
- that he had missed a single executable file. "When I started the test box
- the next day, the next set of tests was compromised because of that one
- executable. Within a couple of minutes, the box was completely loaded again
- with spyware," he said.
-
- Howes, who maintains a privacy and security page, recommends that users
- infected with spyware use two or more scanners in combination, as one will
- often detect and remove things that others do not.
-
- Benjamin Edelman, an anti-spyware advocate who researches the methods and
- effects of spyware, said he was not surprised by the test results. "Eric's
- work proves that paying more for spyware detection doesn't mean getting
- more. He found that the more expensive programs aren't necessarily better
- than the free versions."
-
- Edelman, a Harvard Law School student, has been monitoring spyware
- installations and chronicling the research findings on his Web site.
-
- "We're very, very far from having a magic bullet solution. We're not
- dealing with fly-by-night operations," Edelman told eWEEK.com. He also
- warned that many bogus anti-spyware programs are circulating and
- exacerbating the problem for consumers.
-
-
-
- Cyber Cops Say 'Tis the Season to Be Wary
-
-
- As the holiday shopping season ramps up, cyber cops warned on Wednesday
- that online fraudsters are working over time.
-
- Analysts from the Global Threat Command Team at Web and e-mail filtering
- company SurfControl (SRF.L) said phishing attacks - spam e-mails in which
- scammers lure people into divulging personal or financial information - are
- becoming increasingly sophisticated and growing at a month-over-month rate
- of 20 percent to 25 percent.
-
- Prior phishing scams were somewhat easy to spot. Either the lure was rife
- with misspellings, or potential victims clicked on links that routed them
- to ersatz sites that tried to appear legitimate but didn't look quite
- right. But new scams are more sophisticated and harder to identify as
- phishers employ spammers, hackers, virus writers, and Web designers.
-
- "'Tis the season when people will be most vulnerable to such scams," said
- Susan Larson, SurfControl's president of global contacts.
-
- In one of the latest attacks, a phishing e-mail claimed to be confirming
- an eBay purchase made through the Web auctioneer's PayPal online payment
- system. The e-mail, which requested information that could be used to steal
- money from the victim's bank accounts or credit cards, was fraudulent.
-
- Others look more innocuous but contribute to the problem.
-
- One offers to send children a Christmas greeting from Santa in exchange for
- home or e-mail addresses.
-
- Another asks for similar personal information and promises participants a
- $200 gift card from Macy's department store.
-
- Larson said the latter cases are probably examples of groups that are
- harvesting live e-mail addresses to sell.
-
- "There is no Santa Claus coming to you this season on e-mail," she added.
-
- Larson said consumers should continue to be very wary of unsolicited
- e-mail. She and others reiterated their recommendation that consumers never
- give out personal or account information by e-mail.
-
- If consumers need to respond to an e-mail information request, Larson
- recommends that they go directly to the site themselves and that they avoid
- following links provided in e-mail.
-
-
-
- Phishers Getting Automated, Report Says
-
-
- The Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) has released a report that shows
- disturbing trends in phishing activity, including greater use of automation
- and more potency in fraud campaigns.
-
- In October, the APWG witnessed massive increases in the number of phishing
- sites, most of which were being operated outside the U.S. This spike in
- phishing activity most likely is an indication that new and powerful tools
- have been deployed, the group said.
-
- "Phishing has been increasing in seriousness for some time," APWG chairman
- Dave Jevans told NewsFactor. "It's cause for concern. We need to be
- focused on this problem."
-
- Besides the increasing number of phishing sites, it also is notable that
- the sites are being hosted on what appear to be compromised broadband PCs,
- the APWG noted.
-
- This is an indication that some automation is involved, and phishers are
- using a bot network to either send e-mail, host more sites, or both.
-
- Also notable is the finding that the number of brands subjected to the
- largest phishing attacks rose from four to six in October.
-
- Usually, Citibank is the prime phishing target, but the increase in brands
- indicates a broadening of attack subjects.
-
- Because of sophisticated tactics, phishing has been garnering a great deal
- of attention lately.
-
- In early November, a new technique was reported that showed users were
- being duped by blank e-mail and self-launching software.
-
- Only a week before, the Secret Service arrested 28 individuals suspected
- of being part of a global organized cybercrime network that used phishing
- for identity theft and credit card fraud.
-
- With the APWG report, it would appear that law enforcement tactics have
- limited effect. There is some hope in anti-phishing technology, some have
- noted, and browsers like Firefox are trying to beef up their anti-phishing
- features.
-
- For now, though, the best antidote for the problem seems to be user
- education.
-
- "There are many different approaches to stopping phishers, but what we need
- first is better knowledge on the part of users," Jevans said. "They have to
- understand not to click on URLs in e-mail, for example."
-
- While the word is being spread, it is possible that a greater level of
- automation will make for more numerous victims. "It takes time for user
- education to take hold, but hopefully it will decrease the number of
- incidents eventually," Jevans said.
-
-
-
- Google Sues Over Click Fraud
-
-
- Google has filed a lawsuit against an Internet marketing firm, claiming the
- company defrauded Google's advertising network with false ad clicks.
-
- The lawsuit alleges that Texas-based Auctions Expert International signed
- up to display Google's text advertising on its site, and then fraudulently
- clicked on ads to exploit Google's pay-per-click payment system.
-
- According to Google's filing, Auctions Expert created its site and signed
- up for Google's programs with the sole intention of collecting advertiser
- fees through false clicks.
-
- Filed November 15th in California, Google's civil case is one of the first
- involving click fraud, although the subject has been discussed frequently
- over the past few years by search engine marketing firms and others in the
- industry.
-
- In March 2004, click fraud was brought into the spotlight when a California
- man was arrested and charged with extortion and wire fraud in connection
- with developing Google Clique, software designed to automatically click on
- paid ads.
-
- In its SEC filing a month later, Google noted that the company was at risk
- of fraudulent clicks on its ad network, adding that it has regularly paid
- refunds related to the practice. Google also reported that it expects such
- refunds to increase.
-
- Beyond taking fraudsters to court, as it has with Auctions Expert
- International, Google may find it has a tough job ahead in stopping click
- fraud.
-
- "As long as there are marketers, there will be interest in gaming the
- system, especially around advertising," Meta Group analyst Tim Hickernell
- told NewsFactor. "Google is going to have to constantly stay ahead."
-
- For every tweak and new feature that search engine vendors make, there will
- be a set of marketers trying to figure out how to exploit it, Hickernell
- added.
-
- Although this may cause pain for Google, such difficulties could have a
- bright side, in keeping search technology advancing forward.
-
- "Problems like this keep search engine companies fresh, and force them to
- review their algorithms," said Hickernell. "Ultimately, that benefits
- users."
-
- Some in the marketing community are not so convinced that Google's motives
- in the lawsuit are as straightforward as they seem.
-
- "I'm glad this is being pursued in court, because it absolutely should be,"
- said Jessie Stricchiola, president of Alchemist Media, a company that has
- been handling click fraud for a number of years.
-
- "However, I think this particular action by Google is a strategically
- political move within the industry that deflects attention from how the
- company isn't as proactive with their advertiser relationships as they
- should be," she told NewsFactor.
-
- Taking Auctions Expert to court is important, said Stricchiola, but in her
- opinion, Google should be spending more time on resolving issues with
- refunds and technology for its advertisers.
-
- "This lawsuit is a deflection from the fact that their technology is not as
- good as they say," she said. "They're putting their attention in the wrong
- place."
-
-
-
- EU Ruling On Microsoft Due In mid-December
-
-
- The European Union's second-highest court will rule in mid-December on
- whether to suspend EU sanctions against Microsoft pending an appeal by the
- US software giant.
-
- Bo Vesterdorf, president of the Court of First Instance, gave the dates of
- December 18-20 for the ruling after convening parties to the case including
- Microsoft and the EU's executive commission for a meeting.
-
- The meeting was called to determine whether testimony from software firm
- Novell and the Computer and Communications Industry Association should be
- scratched from the record after they reached a settlement with Microsoft.
-
- It was agreed that the prior testimony of the two former supporters of the
- European Commission's case would remain on the record, clearing the way to
- a mid-December ruling, sources present at the meeting said.
-
- "I can confirm that the prior testimony of Novell and the CCIA remains on
- the record," a Microsoft spokesman said.
-
- The Seattle-based company has asked for a stay of the European Commission's
- anti-trust sanctions - a hefty fine and enforced product changes to its
- Windows operating system - until the court can eventually rule on its
- appeal.
-
-
-
- Software-Based Radio Gains Support
-
-
- A technology that could transform wireless communications got a boost last
- week when the U.S. Federal Communications Commission announced its first
- approval of a software-defined radio.
-
- The Vanu Software Radio GSM Base Station from Vanu can support multiple
- cellular technologies and frequencies at the same time and can be modified
- in the future without any hardware changes, according to Vanu Chief
- Executive Officer Vanu Bose.
-
- Software-defined radios like Vanu's could lower costs and provide new
- flexibility in wireless networks, says IDC analyst Shiv Bakhshi.
-
- Traditional radios are hardware components built for a particular
- frequency range, modulation type, and output power. Software-defined
- radios, or SDRs, consist of a flexible radio controlled by software running
- on a computer or device. The concept goes beyond cellular base stations to
- other types of radios, such as handheld devices that can switch from one
- network to another to suit a particular application or environment.
-
- The FCC applauded the technology in a statement on the approval.
- Software-defined radios can help users share limited airspace and prevent
- interference, the FCC says.
-
- Vanu's GSM (Global System for Mobile Communications) base station is a
- Hewlett-Packard ProLiant server running Linux, coupled with an ADC
- Telecommunications Digivance radio subsystem. Using an off-the-shelf server
- and standard operating system allows Vanu to ride the declining cost curve
- for processing power, Bose says. Though the price of the current product is
- close to that of conventional base stations, according to Bose, the
- equation is expected to change.
-
- "It is going to change the entire cost structure over time," IDC's Bakhshi
- says. In fact, the new approach is so revolutionary that it's hard to know
- what benefits will come of it, he says, comparing it to the change from
- analog to digital cellular networks. Though large operators will not make
- the switch quickly from their conventional radio networks, some have
- signaled interest in the technology, Bakhshi says. Cingular Wireless,
- Orange PCS, and NTT DoCoMo all are members of the SDR Forum industry group,
- along with Intel, Motorola, and other infrastructure companies.
-
- Vanu, based in Cambridge, Massachusetts, is first targeting small, rural
- operators, Bose says. Those carriers want to support multiple cellular
- technologies so they can secure roaming agreements with more than one major
- operator, he says. Software-defined radios let them do that without
- investing in new hardware each time they add a new technology. For
- customers of the major operators, that should mean better coverage, Bose
- says. Vanu launched a trial with Mid-Tex Cellular last year and is now
- installing its base stations on the De Leon, Texas-based operator's
- network. Bose believes the company is two years away from a direct sale to
- a top-tier U.S. carrier.
-
- The FCC was supportive during the approval process, according to Bose. Its
- main concern was ensuring that software-defined radios don't cause harmful
- interference, he says.
-
- Outside the U.S., software-defined radios could be a boon to mobile
- operators in less-developed countries, Bose says. The technology provides
- the flexibility to combine different grades of hardware and software to
- strike the right balance between cost and network resiliency. Most cellular
- systems today ensure 99.999 percent, or "five nines," reliability, he says.
-
- "For certain areas, such as rural or developing areas, five nines is
- overkill because it prices the network right out of the market," Bose says.
- "Now they can make a choice."
-
-
-
- Fast-Internet Use Doubles in U.S.
-
-
- The number of Americans using fast Internet connections doubled from 2001
- through late 2003, still below some expectations and especially low among
- minority groups and people in rural areas, according to a report by the
- Bush administration.
-
- During the election campaign, President Bush advocated affordable access to
- high-speed Internet services for all Americans by 2007.
-
- The Commerce Department report, prepared in September but undisclosed until
- after the election, said use of fast Internet connections grew dramatically
- through October 2003 to 20 percent of U.S. households. The report praised
- such services for fueling online banking, entertainment and commerce.
-
- Some experts said growth was disappointing, far behind countries that
- include South Korea, Taiwan and Canada. The report also identified
- troubling figures for use or availability of high-speed Internet services
- among blacks, Hispanics and people in rural areas.
-
- "It shows we continue to have a significant divide between urban and rural
- America in the infrastructure for the economy of the 21st century," said
- Gregory L. Rohde, who was top telecommunications adviser under President
- Clinton.
-
- Only one-in-seven blacks and fewer than one-in-eight Hispanics lives in a
- household with fast Internet service, said the report, titled "A Nation
- Online: Entering the Broadband Age."
-
- One in four white Americans used high-speed connections at home. In urban
- areas, 40.4 percent of households used fast connections; only 24.7 percent
- of rural users did.
-
- Significant numbers of rural Americans said they couldn't subscribe to
- high-speed services because none was available. Most Americans who did not
- use fast connections said service was either too expensive or they did not
- need it.
-
- "This is lousy," said Harris Miller, head of the Information Technology
- Association of America, a leading industry trade group in Washington.
- "We're just not keeping up with our competitors. We're not even keeping up
- with countries we don't consider competitors. It's not acceptable."
-
- The government's report was prepared in September. But the Commerce
- Department's National Telecommunications and Information Administration did
- not disclose its findings - based on the Census Bureau's population survey
- of 57,000 U.S. households - until Friday, when it published the report on
- its Web site.
-
- "It takes us awhile to get these reports prepared and compiled and
- published," Commerce spokesman Clyde Ensslin said. "We are occasionally
- questioned about the timing of reports. That comes with the territory. The
- review and approval process was not complete in September."
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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- Atari community. Reprint permission is granted, unless otherwise noted
- at the beginning of any article, to Atari user groups and not for
- profit publications only under the following terms: articles must
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- each article reprinted. Other reprints granted upon approval of
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- the expressed consent or permission from the Publisher or Editor of
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-
- Opinions presented herein are those of the individual authors and do
- not necessarily reflect those of the staff, or of the publishers. All
- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
-