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- Volume 7, Issue 36 Atari Online News, Etc. September 2, 2005
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2005
- 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
- Roger Burrows
-
-
-
- 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 #0736 09/02/05
-
- ~ Anti-Spam Indictment! ~ People Are Talking! ~ CCAG 2005 Update!
- ~ New ExtenDOS Available ~ Microsoft Thief Pleads ~ Easy Yahoo Search!
- ~ JayMSA Free Edition! ~ Atari800WinPlus Final! ~ Loverspy On the Run!
- ~ MSN Toolbar Upgraded! ~ More Swappers Get Sued ~ Facebook At College
-
- -* Zotob Bust Breaks Fraud Ring *-
- -* Google Branches Out With Print Ads! *-
- -* States Expanding Push for Internet Taxes! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Words can never express the true thoughts, especially in light of the recent
- devastation in the gulf states, but I wanted to express our concern and best
- wishes to those affected by Hurricane Katrina. I know that we have some
- readers and friends in that area; we hope that everyone is healthy and safe.
- It's terrible to feel so helpless, unable to do much to help. And we're on
- the outside, looking in. Whatever you can do to help - a donation to the
- relief effort seems appropriate - will somehow do something to help
- alleviate the hardships of our southern neighbors.
-
- Well, Labor Day weekend is upon us once again. It's hard to believe, but
- here we are at the unofficial end of the summer. Where did it go? Our
- vacation is winding down, as well. We had a number of plans, but due to the
- lack of commitment from a couple of local contractors, some of those plans
- are still unfulfilled. We're still waiting for some siding to be replaced,
- as well as having our heating oil tank replaced. We wasted a number of days
- waiting around for phone calls that never materialized. And when we called,
- we got empty promises. Naturally, I'm sure that both will schedule the
- actual work at the most inconvenient time.
-
- However, all was not totally lost. I finally decided to get my act in gear
- and go through my study and do some cleaning out. As most of you can
- probably sympathize with me, we never seem to have enough space for
- everything. I've been saving stuff for years - I'm a packrat. I've had
- stuff in boxes, tucked away since we moved into our house eight years ago!
- Well, I finally started going through some of that stuff. Reluctantly, I
- tossed away old Atari magazines, old newsletters, software that I'll never
- look at or use, and more. For the software that I wanted to save, I tossed
- the boxes and just kept the disks and manuals. Heck, I'm not even sure if
- these disks are still readable! Once the new oil tank is in, I'll go
- through some of the boxes in the basement and clear some of that stuff out
- too! I'm still working on the clean-up, but things are getting better. I
- can almost get at the two huge wall unit bookcases that I have here. Once I
- get most of the "junk" out of here, I should be able to rearrange things to
- create more room. Certainly not what my wife would consider appropriate,
- but better for the moment. I guess once I can see and get at everything, I
- can make some improvements later.
-
- Well, I know this is all trivial compared to what is happening to our
- southern friends, but perhaps it's easier to get a handle on. Enjoy the
- rest of your long holiday weekend, and please celebrate responsibly.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- JayMSA 1.08 Free Edition Released
-
-
- Jan Krupka has announced:
-
-
- We are happy to announce that our floppy image tool JayMSA is freeware now.
-
- JayMSA is utility to view and depack files from MSA archive directly to
- hard disk without writing a floppy. Beside that JayMSA can create MSA
- archives the same way as original MSA program does.
-
- You can download new version 1.08 which is working in MiNT from Jay
- Software's website.
-
- http://jaysoft.atari.org/
-
-
-
- Atari800WinPLus 4.0 Full
-
-
- Vasco/Tristesse has announced:
-
- Jaskier/Taquart has just finished and published the final version of our
- beloved emulator Atari800WinPLus - version 4.0. "This is the final of my
- year's work on perfecting the emulator" - as the author says.
-
- http://www.atari8.info/dodajkomentarz.php?news=249&lang=en
-
-
-
- New Version of ExtenDOS Available
-
-
- The new release of ExtenDOS, ExtenDOS 4, is now available. It features
- DVD support, improvements to the audio CD player (including use of a
- local copy of the freedb database) and a fully-integrated version of
- UNIMINT.XFS for use with freemint. Further information is available
- from the ExtenDOS 4 page at:
-
- http://www.anodynesoftware.com/e4/main.htm
- or:
- http://www.cyberus.ca/~anodyne/e4/main.htm
-
-
- Roger Burrows
- Anodyne Software
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE User Group Notes! - Meetings, Shows, and Info!
- """""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- CCAG Show
- October 22, 2005
-
-
- Dear Classic Computing and Gaming Enthusiast,
-
- Buy, sell, trade, play, and see classic video games, computers,
- peripherals, memorabilia, and more at the Classic Computing and Gaming Show
- (CCAG) on Saturday October 22, 2005 from 2:00 P.M. until 7:00 P.M. at the
- National Guard Armory, 3520 Grove Ave. Lorain, Ohio. Vendors, clubs, and
- collectors will be displaying and selling their retrogaming and
- retrocomputing goods, from Pong and Atari to Nintendo, Apple and IBM to
- Commodore and everything in between with many set up for you to play with
- and explore.
-
- And once again, it's free, that's right absolutely *FREE*, for attendees
- and dealers!
-
- We have 5000+ square feet of space. Help us fill it all up! (The price
- certainly can't get any better. :)
-
- Get the latest information on our website, www.ccagshow.com, or write us at
- i...@ccagshow.com. And don't forget to spread the word!
-
- We'll see you there. It's gonna be great! :)
-
- - The CCAG 2005 Committee
- Link: http://www.ccagshow.com/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. You've heard me say it before (although
- probably not in these words), and you're going to hear me say it
- again... Mother... Nature... is... a... bitch.
-
- The thought that, in this day and age and in this country, with all our
- technology and supposed wisdom, we are still at the mercy of the
- weather, is a tough thing to come to terms with. We tend to think of
- ourselves as masters of our own destiny, and that we have advanced
- enough to control our own fate. But along comes Katrina, and everything
- is shot to hell.
-
- Although I and my family are safe and sound here in the northeast, there
- are a few people that I know who are down in the
- Louisiana/Mississippi/Alabama/Florida area. I see the images of the
- carnage in New Orleans and in Gulfport and in several other places that
- no doubt will fade from my memory as life goes on and wonder how many
- lives have been destroyed or changed forever by something as basic and
- primal as a rainstorm. Granted, with New Orleans situated 12 feet below
- sea level, we probably should have expected it, but there again, Mother
- Nature had her way, and there was precious little we could do about it
- other than to just get the heck out of the storm's way with the few
- possessions that you could carry and stick in the back of your car.
-
- But anyway, despite the warzone feel (I heard one reporter say: "New
- Orleans is NOT Baghdad. You can GET food and water in Baghdad!"), help
- is on its way. Already the Red Cross has taken in more than 70 million
- dollars for relief efforts. Much more will be needed, of course, with
- entire counties, parishes, cities, towns, neighborhoods, families and
- lives simply washed away, it's not hard to imagine the cost of this
- storm rising to multiple billions of dollars without being able to
- restore things to normal.
-
- And amidst this carnage, there is strife. Heat and humidity sap the
- strength of those remaining, food and clean water are hard to come by,
- gasoline is a distant memory, and something as simple as a clean, dry
- shirt takes on the aura of a trophy or a holy icon. And yes, there is
- looting, but my guess is that in the days to come we'll begin to hear
- more about WHAT was being looted. I'm betting on things like clean
- clothes and footware, bottled water and waterproof tarps. I would have
- loved to see Walmart Central (or whatever they call the control center
- of their empire) say, "Hey, we're gonna open up these stores. Come and
- get what you need. We've got clothes and shoes and some non-perishable
- food. We're not going to let you drag multiple shopping carts full of
- wide-screen televisions out the door, and if we catch you selling the
- stuff we gave you for free, we're going to send our evil drones after
- you to suck your brain out, but you need stuff and it just so happens
- that we've got some stuff." I guess not, huh?
-
- I don't want to turn this into a sermon, but please consider giving
- whatever you can to the Red Cross or one of the other organizations
- that will be helping out. If you can't make a donation, then thoughts
- and prayers couldn't hurt. Hey, we're not in school here... I can ask
- you to pray if I want to. <grin>
-
- Well, let's get to the news, hints, tips and info available from the
- UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- Jerome Vernet asks for help in troubleshooting a MegaSTe:
-
- "I've just gotten a Mega Ste, unfortunately, it seems to be dead,
- because of our great postal services.......
-
- http://perso.wanadoo.fr/jerome.vernet/specs/atari.htm
-
- It was working before sending...
-
- After little work (!) to make it more presentable, it won't boot...
-
- When powered on, fan and hard drive spin, but no front LED, nothing on
- the monitor (just a little 'crack' from the SM124 speaker).
-
- I've checked internal connection, seems to be ok."
-
-
- Mark Duckworth tells Jerome that it...
-
- "Looks like two different possibilities. 1 being one rail of the power
- supply is damaged but not the other. Like the 5V rail but the 12V rail
- is okay. Additionally, the power supplies in these things have 4 metal
- legs. They sit in these grooves. If proper screws aren't in and even
- if they are, the legs can pop out of these grooves. Since the psu
- section of your case is... well.. smashed, it's completely reasonable
- to assume that the leg popped out and is shorting all kinds of stuff.
- You should not have powered this machine on without a detailed inspection.
- It could be too late now. Though if you were going for insurance money,
- your course of action was probably best."
-
-
- Jerome tells Mark:
-
- "Yes, that's right, some legs (the left one) pop out - no screw at
- all.... But doesn't seem to short anything. I didn't put a screw, as
- it's for ground purposes and the two others are in place. I will check
- that.
-
- The main board is powered by +5V, I suppose. I will check the power unit,
- I've just found the pinout on the net."
-
-
- 'Techie' Alison tells Jerome:
-
- "Completely and utterly dismantle it. Power the motherboard while out of
- the case to do your diagnosis. Press all of the chips in. Also, plonk
- the plastic case into a hot-hot bath for a few hours to get the plastic
- malleable again, the metal can be straightened out. Toothpaste and a
- nail brush/tooth brush work wonders... Those keys should hopefully
- press back in... just removing some of mine... mmm, see what you mean,
- the plastic stumps have broken off of the bottom of some of the keys..
- Use 24hour araldite glue as seems less brittle than the rapid stuff..
-
- Really feel for you, I can imagine how upset you must be after the
- anticipation of getting it. Had an STE turn up like that from eBay,
- although I suspect the seller had under-exaggerated it's rubbish
- condition,
- http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=38597&item=8195
- 234732 Actually, there was A LOT of damage to the casing, and it was
- very horrible yellow. The one in the picture I don't think is the one I
- had...
-
- You'll get it to work."
-
-
- Ronald Hall asks for info on the EtherNEC networking card:
-
- "Okay, I've got the EtherNEC installed. I installed version 1.26 of
- STing. I have the following files setup in on my C drive:
-
- AUTO - STING.PRG and STING.INF
- CPX - STINGPORT.CPX and STING.CPX
- STING - ENEC.MIF and ENEC.STX
-
- I went into the STINGPORT CPX and followed the instructions from these 2
- places:
-
- http://www.dwade.freeserve.co.uk/atari/main.html
- http://hardware.atari.org/sfl/index.htm
-
- My ROUTE.TAB file looks like this:
-
- #
- # This is the routing table, to be used by the router to route IP
- datagrams
- #
- # Format of routes comprises four entries, separated by TABs :
- # - First the network (subnet number) which can be reached by using this
- # route.
- # - Next the subnet mask associated with that network.
- # - Then the port name follows. This is the name as listed by ConfSTinG
- or
- # STNGPORT.CPX.
- # - Last entry is the IP address of a host on the attached network that
- # can act as a gateway.
- #
- # The network specified can be directly attached to the specified port, in
- # that case no gateway is needed, as the datagram can be routed directly.
- # For a route to a network that is directly attached therefore the gateway
- # entry should be set to 0.0.0.0.
- #
- # For an attached Ethernet the gateway entry specifies the gateway out of
- # the Ethernet, for a serial line it is simply the host at the other end.
- #
- # It is advisable to finish the table by a default route. This route is
- most
- # easily obtained by specifying a network 0.0.0.0 with a netmask 0.0.0.0.
- #
- # Routes with invalid addresses or absent ports are ignored.
- #
- # 192.68.0.0 255.255.255.240 Modem 1 192.68.0.1
- # 130.75.75.0 255.255.255.128 Ser.2/LAN 0.0.0.0
- # 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 Ser.2/LAN 130.75.75.16
- #
- 192.168.0.104 255.255.255.0 EtherNet 0.0.0.0
- 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 EtherNet 192.168.0.1
-
- My DEFAULT.CFG file looks like this:
-
- #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- # File name: DEFAULT.CFG (for STinG) Revision date: 2000.07.05
- #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- #
- # First we have settings used by STinG and its distributed CPX and STX :
- # ======================================================================
- # (Read STING.HYP for info on how to use them to improve performance.)
- #
- # Used by the STinG kernel :
- #
- ALLOCMEM = 100000
- #
- ACTIVATE = TRUE
- THREADING = 10
- FRAG_TTL = 60
- #
- #
- # Used for ICMP protocol :
- #
- ICMP_GMT = -60
- ICMP_AD = 10
- ICMP_FLAG = 0
- #
- #
- # Used for UDP protocol :
- #
- UDP_PORT = 1024
- UDP_ICMP = 1
- #
- #
- # Used for TCP protocol :
- #
- TCP_PORT = 1024
- MSS = 1460
- RCV_WND = 10000
- DEF_RTT = 1500
- DEF_TTL = 64
- TCP_ICMP = 1
- #
- #
- # Used by the DNS resolver :
- #
- # Note that the first one of these three will not normally be used.
- # It will only be used when an address consisting of a single word
- # is used in a URI. The DOMAIN value is then appended to complete
- # the URI as needed for the nameserver request packets.
- # (I still recommend using full URIs instead, to avoid confusion.)
- #
- DOMAIN = sting.org
- DNS_CACHE = 64
- DNS_SAVE = TRUE
- #
- #
- # The three following are not really used by the kernel anymore, as the
- # dialer redefines these for each dialup, as they can vary when you have
- # more than one ISP dial script. They should be defined here anyway,
- # with the values you normally use online, as some offline clients may
- # expect to find them, and also for use in local networking.
- #
- USERNAME = darklord
- HOSTNAME = darkforce4.ky.org
- FULLNAME = Ronald J. Hall
- #
- #
- # The one following is also redefined by the dialer, and you only need to
- # define it here if you use a local network, so all machines in that net
- # can find the nameserver (the dialer only defines it on one machine).
- # Note that the value of NAMESERVER variables should always be a numeric
- # IP address, since another nameserver would be needed to resolve a URI.
- # You can specify more than one address, separated by ", " .
- # (eg: "NAMESERVER = 193.45.240.2, 193.45.240.4")
- #
- NAMESERVER = 192.168.0.1
- #
- #
- # Here starts the stuff used by external clients and servers :
- # ============================================================
- #
- # Used by the Dialer :
- # --------------------
- #
- # The setting below is not used by the dialer itself, but by any other
- # client in a local network that wishes to contact the dialer which is
- # resident on a machine equipped with a modem. (By UDP command packets.)
- # If you have no local network, leave it as it is, since that is an IP
- # address reserved for the local machine.
- #
- DIALER = 127.0.0.1
- #
- #
- # The setting below is used by the dialer, but only if you have chosen
- # to activate the DIAL.SCR setting to use a dialup batch file. The path
- # specified below will then be used to find the batch file.
- #
- LOGIN_BATCH = C:\DIALER\LOGIN.BAT
- #
- #
- # Used by mailers :
- # -----------------
- #
- EMAIL = dark_lord@charter.net
- SMTP_HOST = smtp.charter.net
- MAILER = mymail
- #
- POP_HOST = pop.charter.net
- POP_USERNAME= dark_lord
- POP_PASSWORD= tenchi13
- #
- #
- # Used by TIME and DAYTIME clients and servers:
- # ---------------------------------------------
- # (Values used by me, in Sweden in the year 2000.)
- #
- TIME_ZONE = +60
- TIME_SUMMER = 03.26.10.29
- TIME_SERVER = time.demon.co.uk
- #
- #
- # Used by MIDI_EMU server (for some netgames) :
- # ---------------------------------------------
- #
- MIDI_EMU_OUT = next_IP_in_emulated_Midi_ring
- #
- #
- # Add more here as/when needed by other clients and servers
- # that you install in your system. (Read their docs...)
- #
- #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- # End of file: DEFAULT.CFG
- #----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- I set the values in the STINGPORT.CPX module, saved to C, and rebooted.
- All comes up with no errors. The MAC address shows up in the CPX. I can
- use the ping program to ping the localhost at 127.0.0.1, and from the ST I
- can ping 192.168.0.104. I can't ping out to anything else on the network
- though, nor can any machine on the network ping -in- to 192.168.0.104.
-
- Keep in mind that this is the LAN address I use for my BBS, so the
- hardware router 'n stuff is correctly setup for 192.168.0.104. With the
- Lantronix device in place, I can ping 192.168.0.104 from any other comp on
- the LAN. All my comps point to the routers default gateway address of
- 192.168.0.1, so I dunno.
-
- Anyone have any ideas?"
-
-
- Jean-Luc Ceccoli tells Ronald:
-
- "Er... someone correct me if I'm wrong, but it'd rather have to look
- like this :
-
- 192.168.0.0 255.255.255.0 EtherNet 0.0.0.0
- 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 EtherNet 192.168.0.1
-
- Assumed that your gateway should be 192.168.0.1, else replace by the
- value it is set to."
-
-
- David Wade adds:
-
- "I don't think it should make any difference, because only the first
- three bytes should be compared. However perhaps you should correct.
- Also have you run the HE-xxx.tos test programs first to check
- everything is ok?"
-
-
- Edward Baiz adds his thoughts:
-
- "I think possibly it is your ROUTE.TAB file. I had problems until I got
- it straight. You MUST make sure you do not change the spaces between
- values. Here is your Route.tab:
-
- # Routes with invalid addresses or absent ports are ignored.
- #
- # 192.68.0.0 255.255.255.240 Modem 1 192.68.0.1
- # 130.75.75.0 255.255.255.128 Ser.2/LAN 0.0.0.0
- # 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 Ser.2/LAN 130.75.75.16
- #
- 192.168.0.104 255.255.255.0 EtherNet 0.0.0.0
- 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 EtherNet 192.168.0.1
-
- And here is mine:
-
- # For an attached Ethernet the gateway entry specifies the gateway out
- of #
- the Ethernet, for a serial line it is simply the host at the other end.
- #
- # It is advisable to finish the table by a default route. This route is
- most
- # easily obtained by specifying a network 0.0.0.0 with a netmask
- 0.0.0.0.
- #
- # Routes with invalid addresses or absent ports are ignored.
- #
- 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 EtherNet 192.168.1.1
- #192.168.1.201 255.255.255.0 EtherNet 192.168.1.1
- #
- 192.168.1.1 255.255.255.0 EtherNet 0.0.0.0
-
- See the difference.
-
- It is the only thing I can see that is way difference from my setup. I
- use Sting 1.25 on a STe."
-
-
- Ronald tells Edward:
-
- "Yes, I've copied/saved your file, and will try to work with it a little
- bit later (time as always!)...
-
- I've not had a chance to try any software to actually access the 'Net yet,
- like CAB/Highwire, ftp programs, Newsie, mymail or whatever...but, using
- the above in my route.tab file, I was able to ping the other computers on
- my LAN and other comps on my LAN could ping this comp at 192.168.0.104.
-
- That's the good news.
-
- The bad news (so far) is that when I try to telnet into that comps ip
- address (192.168.0.104), the connection is refused. This is with my BBS
- software up and running, which works fine with the Lantronix device.
-
- Anyone have any ideas how I can make my BBS software recognize the
- "incomings" from the STing/cartridge port combo?"
-
-
- Edward now asks Ronald:
-
- "Did you check all the settings in STING? I would think that may have
- to do with your problem. What modules do you have in the STING folder?"
-
-
- Ronald messes around a bit and posts:
-
- "I had to reverse part of my ROUTE.TAB files settings, but once I did
- that, CAB and NEWSIE both work. I was able to load up the Google search
- site in CAB. Hurrah!"
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. I know it's short, but I'm
- exhausted. It's been a tough week on several levels, and I need some
- R&R. Hopefully you'll act responsibly over the holiday weekend and not
- drink and drive. Thanks. The life you save may be mine! 'Till next
- week, keep your ears open so you'll hear what they're saying when...
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Namco Museum Battle Collection!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" PacMan World 3 - 25 Years!
- Europe Gets the PSP!
- And much more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Namco Museum Battle Collection Ships For Playstation Portable
-
-
- Global video games publisher, Namco Hometek Inc. today announced that
- "Namco Museum Battle Collection" has shipped to North American retail
- outlets exclusively for the PSP (PlayStation Portable) system. "Namco
- Museum Battle Collection" features updated 3D versions of Namco's greatest
- and most beloved arcade hits, as well as all-new wireless multiplayer
- capabilities for competitive or cooperative fun.
-
- "Namco Museum Battle Collection" brings together arcade favorites such as
- "Pac-Man," "Ms. Pac-Man," "Galaga," "Galaxian," "Rally-X," "New Rally-X"
- and "Dig-Dug" for the most comprehensive handheld compilation of Namco
- classics ever. Originally released earlier this year in Japan, the U.S.
- version will feature 10 additional games including "Xevious," "Bosconian,"
- "Mappy," "Tower of Druaga," "Dragon Buster," "Grobda," "Dig Dug 2," "King &
- Balloon," "Motos" and "Rolling Thunder" bring the total to more than 20
- fun-filled titles.
-
- "We have prepared the ultimate collection of more than 20 classic arcade
- games for the PSP system with 'Namco Museum Battle Collection,'" said Yoshi
- Niki, business unit director at Namco Hometek Inc. "The new versions of
- Namco arcade favorites, along with the PSP system's wireless and game
- sharing capabilities, make this the 'must-have' PSP system title for all
- types of gaming fans."
-
- Taking full advantage of the PSP system's wireless connectivity, "Namco
- Museum Battle Collection" allows up to four gamers to battle it out or play
- together in the game's remixed titles. Players will also be able to share
- the great nostalgic gameplay of the original titles with their friends in
- the Game Sharing Mode by wirelessly transferring a portion of the game to
- another PSP system.
-
-
-
- Pac-Man World 3
-
-
- One of gaming's oldest heroes is celebrating his 25th birthday this year,
- and if the intro movie from his upcoming game is to be believed, Pac-Man
- was planning to spend his special day celebrating with his spherical family
- and a particularly tasty-looking cake. The forces of evil have other ideas,
- though, and before Pac-Man is able to take his first bite of birthday cake,
- he's mysteriously and unceremoniously teleported from the idyllic
- Pac-Village to the far less picturesque Spectral Realm. An evil genius
- named Erwin has created a machine that can penetrate this realm of the
- ghosts, and as a result, the realm has started to collapse into the real
- world. Your mission in Pac-Man World 3, then, is simply to save the world.
- We recently had an opportunity to spend some time with a work-in-progress
- PlayStation 2 version of Pac-Man World 3, and although we encountered a few
- problems with camera angles and game crashes (as is often the case with
- unfinished games), we can report that Pac-Man's next adventure is looking
- quite promising.
-
- In the 25 years since he first appeared in arcades, Pac-Man has evolved
- from a pill-popping 2D negotiator of mazes into a pill-popping 3D
- negotiator of levels that incorporate all manner of obstacles and hazards.
- Pac-Man's enemies have also evolved, and in addition to ghostlike spectral
- monsters, you'll battle with plenty of different bad guys who can only be
- beat using some of the numerous new moves that Namco's spherical hero has
- at his disposal. Most of the enemies that we've encountered to date can't
- be chomped after swallowing a power pill, so we've had to resort to
- punching them, butt-bouncing them, or just rolling into them like a bowling
- ball. The punch is the least powerful of these attacks, but it can be used
- against enemies who are immune to the butt-bounce attacks, and it's far
- easier to control than the rolling attack. The butt-bounce feels pretty
- overpowered in the early levels of the game, particularly after you realize
- that you're able to string together three of them for a devastating combo
- quite simply. It didn't take long for us to encounter enemies against whom
- the attack was useless, though--we invariably came off worse any time we
- tried to butt-bounce an enemy with spikes on its back. The rolling attack
- is also very powerful; when used correctly, it can take out four or five
- enemies simultaneously. Controlling Pac-Man when he's curled up into a
- fast-moving ball is quite tricky, though, and there are plenty of platforms
- and ledges around for you to fall from if you're not careful.
-
- Most of Pac-Man's enemies can be defeated without the aid of a power pill.
-
- If the few levels that we've played through are any indication, falling
- from ledges and platforms will be the least of your worries in many of
- Pac-Man World 3's locales. It's not the falling that hurts, after all; it's
- whatever you hit when you stop falling. In Pac-Man World 3 you'll find that
- landing in pits of spikes or lakes of green goop is a bad idea and that
- other hazards, such as jets of poisonous gas, are also best avoided. Not
- everything in the Spectral Realm is deadly to the touch, of course, and in
- addition to the pills that you'll be munching for points (which are laid
- out in patterns that do a good job of leading you through each area),
- you'll find plenty of power-ups, bonus items, and fruit to collect. Our
- favorite items to date are undoubtedly the "power ribbon" weapon that lets
- you kill enemies by simply running around them in a full circle and the
- pickup that instantly transports you to a 3D version of the original
- Pac-Man maze, where you can earn bonus points before getting back to the
- game proper. We're told that the original 1980 arcade version of Pac-Man is
- somewhere in Pac-Man World 3, incidentally, but to date we've not been able
- to find it.
-
- Another promised feature of Pac-Man World 3 that we've not seen for
- ourselves just yet is the ability to play certain levels as the ghosts
- Pinky and Clyde. Quite how Pac-Man's archenemies fit into the storyline of
- the upcoming game isn't clear at this point, but the possibility that
- they'll join forces with Pac-Man to combat the evil genius Erwin certainly
- can't be ruled out. We'll bring you more information on Pac-Man World 3 as
- soon as it becomes available.
-
-
-
- PSP Launches Across Europe
-
-
- Sony Computer Entertainment Europe (SCEE) today launched its eagerly
- anticipated PSP (PlayStation Portable) handheld entertainment system across
- the European market and throughout Australia and New Zealand.
-
- Following the success of the PSP launches in Japan and the USA, and with
- over 5 million PSP systems already shipped worldwide, PSP launched in a single version Value Pack, priced at ?249 (?179). The PSP Value
- Pack contains an added-value package of accessories and entertainment
- content, including the PSP system with a pouch, 32MB Memory Stick Duo,
- Battery Pack, Headphones with Remote Control, AC Adaptor, Wrist Strap,
- cloth and a video/music/game sampler Universal Media Disc (UMD) including
- several game demos.
-
- A copy of Spider-Man 2 on UMD Video will be available free of charge to
- early purchasers of PSP, who register their PSP through www.yourpsp.com.
- The official SCEE web portal for PSP, www.yourpsp.com allows PSP owners
- to view trailers and screenshots from a wide selection of PSP Game, UMD
- Video and UMD Music titles, as well as accessing the latest software
- updates and a host of regularly updated competitions, news and features
- about PSP. Consumers will also be able to download exclusive content to
- their PSP.
-
- PSP in Europe will launch with over 30 game titles, all of which have been
- developed especially to exploit PSP's stunning high resolution TFT
- widescreen display. Featuring classic PlayStation brands that have been
- re-invented for the new format, alongside some all-new properties, the
- games catalogue offers something for everyone. For speed demons, there's
- the new turbo-charged Ridge Racer; sport fans can showboat their skills in
- World Tour Soccer and Everybody's Golf; there's madcap monkey madness in
- Ape Academy with mini-games ranging from monkey hockey to the '1m Dash';
- and the legendary MediEvil: Resurrection delivers action, humour and an
- adventure that will challenge all levels of gamer.
-
- A key feature of the PSP is its Wireless LAN capabilities, enabling users
- to connect to the internet via a 'WiFi hotspot' and play online across a
- Wireless Network. In the wireless Ad Hoc Mode, up to 16 PSP systems can
- also be connected to each other directly, allowing for head-to-head
- competition with other players in the immediate vicinity.
-
- Wireless functionality is also cleverly exploited in many of the game
- titles available at launch; GameSharing allows owners of games such as
- WipEout Pure and Fired Up to share levels of their game with other PSP
- users, whilst with WipEout Pure gamers can download new crafts, tracks and
- other content to Memory Stick to further enhance their enjoyment of the
- game. FORMULA ONE fans will be able to expand their gameplay with a
- downloadable end of season pack for F1 Grand Prix, including all the grid
- line-ups for the season and a bonus historic car.
-
- PSP has also received incredible support from third party game publishers,
- and there will be over 20 third party game titles available during the
- initial launch period from the world's top publishers, and over 50 before
- the Chrisas peak selling season gets under way.
-
- The resounding success of the UMD Video format in the USA is further proof
- that PSP offers an all embracing entertainment experience. PSP will launch
- with 30 movies from a variety of top Hollywood studios including Sony
- Pictures, Twentieth Century Fox, Buena Vista and Universal. With studios
- now planning to release 'Day and Date' with DVD releases, and an extensive
- catalogue of some 100 movies scheduled for release on UMD Video by
- Christmas, European PSP owners can look forward to an unmatched choice of
- entertainment.
-
- The enjoyment of listening to music is a key part of the PSP's exciting
- entertainment offering and, in addition to playing music stored on the
- Memory Stick in MP3, ATRAC 3plus and MPEG-4 AAC format, music videos on UMD
- Music Videos will also be available. During the initial launch period,
- three classic music videos will be available from Sanctuary Visual
- Entertainment; Iron Maiden - Rock in Rio, INXS - Live Baby Live and Bob
- Marley- Live from Santa Barbara. Along with eight titles from Sony BMG
- including compilations from Usher, Outkast and The Offspring, and live
- concerts from Foo Fighters, Rage Against The Machine, Good Charlotte and
- Incubus, with many more music videos scheduled for release in the run up to
- Christmas.
-
- "PSPs for the European market will also benefit from the latest system
- software upgrade", explained David Reeves, President of SCEE. "The European
- PSPs will contain the latest and most up to date software available. With
- the introduction of an internet browser to ease the downloading of game
- trailers and video content from WiFi hotspots, a new codec for optimising
- the quality of video content on Memory Stick, and a wealth of other
- improvements to enhance the user experience, European consumers will not
- only be receiving the most sophisticated and exciting portable
- entertainment device ever made but will be able to upgrade their PSP's
- continually as new functionality is announced".
-
- Retailers throughout Europe beganopening their doors at midnight on
- Wednesday 31st August to satisfy the enthusiasm of fans, keen to get their
- hands on one of the first European PSPs.
-
- PSP (PlayStation Portable) Games Available During Launch Period:
-
- Archer Macleans Mercury Ignition Ape Academy Sony Computer Entertainment
- Europe Burnout Legends EA Coded Arms Konami Colin Mcrae Rally 2005 Plus
- Codemasters Darkstalkers Chronicles Capcom Dynasty Warriors PSP Koei
- Everybody's Golf Sony Computer Entertainment Europe FIFA 06 EA F1 Grand
- Prix PSP Sony Computer Entertainment Europe Fired Up Sony Computer
- Entertainment Europe Ghost in the Shell Stand Alone Complex Bandai Grand
- Theft Auto:Liberty City Stories Take 2 Lumines Ubisoft Midnight Club 3:
- DUB Edition Take 2 MediEvil Resurrection Sony Computer Entertainment
- Europe Metal Gear Acid Konami NBA STREET Showdown EA Need for Speed
- Underground Rivals EA NFL STREET 2 Unleashed EA Pro Evolution Soccer 5
- Konami Ridge Racer Sony Computer Entertainment Europe Spider-Man The
- Movie 2 Activision Tiger Woods PGA TOUR 06 EA TOCA Race Driver 2
- Codemasters Tony Hawk Underground 2 Remix Activision Untold
- Legends:Brotherhood of the Blade Activision Virtual Tennis:World Tour
- Sega WipEout Pure Sony Computer Entertainment Europe World Snooker
- Challenge 2005 SEGA World Tour Soccer Sony Computer Entertainment Europe
-
- UMD Video Available During Launch Period:
-
- A Knights Tale Sony Pictures Home Entertainment 13 Going on 30 Sony
- Pictures Home Entertainment Bad Boys Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
- The One Sony Pictures Home Entertainment xXx - The Next Level Sony
- Pictures Home Entertainment Ghostbusters Sony Pictures Home
- Entertainment You Got Served Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Hitch Sony
- Pictures Home Entertainment Spider-Man 2 (softbundle) Sony Pictures Home
- Entertainment Charlie's Angels Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Resident
- Evil Apocalypse Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Hellboy Sony Pictures
- Home Entertainment Hollow Man Sony Pictures Home Entertainment xXx Sony
- Pictures Home Entertainment Once Upon A Time In Mexico Sony Pictures
- Home Entertainment The Punisher Sony Pictures Home Entertainment SWAT
- Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Anacondas : Hunt For the Blood Orchid
- Sony Pictures Home Entertainment Van Helsing Universal 8 Mile Universal
- The Bourne Supremacy Universal The Mummy Returns Universal I Robot
- Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainmentv Alien Twentieth Century Fox
- Home Entertainment Alien v. Predator Twentieth Century Fox Home
- Entertainment The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Twentieth Century
- Fox Home Entertainment Dodgeball Twentieth Century Fox Home
- Entertainment Robots Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment
- Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy Buena Vista Home Entertainment Pirates
- of the Caribbean Buena Vista Home Entertainment King Arthur Buena Vista
- Home Entertainment Sin City (UK and Italy only) Buena Vista Home
- Entertainment
-
- UMD Music Videos Available during Launch Period
-
- Iron Maiden - Rock in Rio Sanctuary Visual Entertainment Bob Marley -
- Live from Santa Barbara Sanctuary Visual Entertainment INXS - Live Baby
- Live Sanctuary Visual Entertainment Usher - Rhythm City Vol. 1 Sony BMG
- Outkast - The Videos" Sony BMG Coheed & Cambria - Live at the Starland
- Ballroom Sony BMG The Offspring - The Complete Music Video Collection
- Sony BMG Foo Fighters - Live - Everywhere But Home Sony BMG Rage Against
- the Machine - Live at the Grand Olympic Auditorium Sony BMG Good
- Charlotte - Live at Brixton Academy Sony BMG Incubus - Alive at Red
- Rocks Sony BMG
-
-
-
- Game Boy Micro Misses the Mark
-
-
- Nintendo Co.'s new Game Boy Micro handheld could have been so much more
- than a tiny hunk of plastic that plays video games. Less than a year after
- the innovative Nintendo DS arrived with dual screens, a microphone and
- wireless multiplayer capability, the company is set to release the
- diminutive Micro on Sept. 19.
-
- But I'm still searching for a compelling reason to spend $99 on this
- machine, the smallest portable gaming system I've ever used, when Nintendo
- itself already offers better products for not much more money.
-
- Is it for tech-savvy fashionistas who can't afford Sony Corp.'s sleek but
- pricey PlayStation Portable? Collectors who insist on owning every flavor
- of Game Boy ever made?
-
- Perhaps grown-ups who think they'll somehow look more professional playing
- "Astro Boy" on a Micro?
-
- Well, that last one is at least plausible. But if you wanted to really grab
- that market, why not integrate cell phone functionality, wireless
- connectivity for multiplayer gaming or even a digital audio player?
-
- As it stands, the Micro is nothing more than a redesigned Game Boy Advance
- SP reduced to a palm-sized rectangle akin in dimensions to a candybar cell
- phone.
-
- The Nintendo faithful already have a pretty small system in the Game Boy
- Advance SP - and it costs $20 less. Likewise, for $50 more than a Micro,
- you can buy a snazzy DS and play new interactive games exclusively for that
- system, as well as Game Boy Advance games.
-
- That said, the Micro includes several improvements over the aging Game Boy
- Advance SP (which itself is a retooled, enhanced version of the plain-old
- Game Boy Advance). Instead of a flip-open, side-lit 32,000 color liquid
- crystal display, the Micro uses a backlit screen that's much brighter and
- sharper. But at only 2 inches diagonal, the flat screen strained my eyes.
-
- At 2.8 ounces, the Micro has almost half the heft of the square-shaped Game
- Boy Advance SP. It measures just four inches long and under an inch thick.
-
- One thing that has long bugged me about my SP is that you have to buy a
- separate adapter to use headphones. The Micro remedies that annoyance with
- a standard headphone jack included.
-
- As with the SP, battery life is excellent on the Micro, with about 10 hours
- between charges. And the Micro uses the same 32-bit processor and can play
- the hundreds of games in the Game Boy Advance library.
-
- But it isn't compatible with new DS titles.
-
- On the fashion front, the Micro comes with swappable faceplates available
- in camouflage and other patterns. And though it felt a bit cramped in my
- hands, I prefer it to my SP because its tiny size makes it incredibly easy
- to take with me.
-
- Still, I can't get rid of the nagging feeling that the puny Micro is a
- giant missed opportunity.
-
-
-
- Court KOs Online Game Bypass Program
-
-
- Three men illegally bypassed anti-piracy controls when they developed free
- technology to let computer users play some games against each other online
- without using the gamemaker's own system, a federal appeals court has
- ruled.
-
- Attorneys for Tim Jung, Ross Combs and Rob Crittenden had argued that the
- trio engaged in allowable "fair use" because they had legally bought the
- games and were not profiting from the bypass technology, called BnetD.
-
- Although the trio could have used Blizzard Entertainment Inc.'s Battle.net
- game service for free, they found it frustrating and preferred the dozens
- of additional features available through the BnetD technology they had
- developed, their lawyers said.
-
- Blizzard claimed that BnetD, which the trio also distributed to others over
- the Internet, disabled controls meant to ensure that players used a
- non-pirated copy of the game.
-
- Thursday's ruling by a three-judge panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of
- Appeals here upholds a lower court's finding that the trio violated the
- 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act as well as software license
- agreements by helping people bypass Blizzard's system for playing
- multiplayer games like Diablo and StarCraft online.
-
- The defendants were barred from further distributing the technology.
-
- Combs and Crittenden are identified in the ruling as computer programmers,
- and Jung was listed as a systems administrator who also heads Internet
- Gateway, an Internet service provider based in the suburb of St. Peters.
-
- According to the ruling, the Battle.net service has nearly 12 million
- active users who spend more than 2.1 million hours online per day.
-
- Blizzard, which did not return messages Friday seeking comment, had lauded
- the earlier ruling last October by U.S. District Judge Charles Shaw for
- "sending a clear message that creating unauthorized servers which emulate
- Blizzard's Battle.net servers is without question illegal."
-
- "We have worked hard to provide gamers with a free, safe, secure, reliable
- environment on Battle.net, and this ruling is a strong validation that we
- are justified in protecting and ensuring the integrity of our game
- service," said Mike Morhaime, Blizzard's president and co-founder.
-
- The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based civil liberties
- group that helped represent the trio, said the ruling could dampen the
- market for performance-enhancing innovations called "add-ons" and limit
- the consumer to whatever the manufacturer of the purchased item decides to
- provide.
-
- "This ruling threatens competition to offer new services, new features,"
- said Jason Schultz, an attorney for EFF.
-
- Schultz said the foundation would talk to his clients before deciding
- whether to appeal.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Don't Get Ripped Off by Hurricane Cyberscams
-
-
- Online con artists have launched at least a dozen scams preying on people
- donating to Hurricane Katrina relief efforts or seeking news, federal
- authorities and anti-spam experts say.
-
- The FBI is looking into suspicious Web sites and phishing spam messages
- that attempt to filch personal data such as credit card numbers, spokesman
- Paul Bresson says.
-
- Some e-mails with fake news alerts include links to sites loaded with
- computer viruses designed to steal or destroy personal information, says
- computer-security firm Sophos. It also has spotted e-mails with links to
- "spoofed" Web sites that look like valid charities.
-
- Separately, individuals are seeking thousands of dollars on eBay for the
- rights to Internet domain names containing Katrina and hurricane, says
- Johannes Ullrich, chief research officer at Sans Institute, a
- computer-security company.
-
- "Any time there's a tragedy, cybercriminals attempt to cash in. It's like
- clockwork," says Stephen Canale, an independent spam analyst.
-
- The Internet's emergence as a major fundraising tool also has ushered in a
- wave of online scams designed to fleece consumers, as was the case with the
- tsunami disaster last year and 9/11.
-
- Hurricane scams are the latest example of Internet fraud by individuals and
- organized criminals in the USA, Eastern Europe and Africa, says Alfred
- Huger, senior director of engineering at computer-security giant Symantec.
-
- Bogus charities and scams divert money from legitimate charities that need
- all the money they can get, watchdog groups say. Many hurricane victims
- will be homeless for months, putting a strain on social service
- organizations such as the American Red Cross, says Daniel Borochoff,
- president of the American Institute of Philanthropy.
-
- After the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, the American Red Cross came under
- sharp criticism for diverting money donated for the victims to other
- programs. Since then, the charity has made changes that will prevent that
- from happening again, Borochoff says. "They really are making quite an
- effort to be clear with the public and not continue raising more than they
- need" for a specific disaster, he says.
-
- Cybersecurity experts have several tips for consumers who want to help
- hurricane victims without getting ripped off. They urge donors to ignore
- e-mail asking for money and contribute to organizations they are familiar
- with.
-
- "Given the nature of what has happened and the urgency with which Americans
- want to act, I would caution to give with your head as well as your heart,"
- says Bennett Weiner of the Better Business Bureau's Wise Giving Alliance.
-
-
-
- AP Offers Satellite Image of New Orleans
-
-
- The Associated Press is offering Internet access to a satellite image that
- covers most of New Orleans, detailed enough that viewers can zoom in to
- check on particular neighborhoods and streets.
-
- The image's resolution is high, at 2.4 meters per pixel. It is posted in a
- format that allows quick viewing of any area a user zooms in on. Users can
- quickly see what areas are under water and what structures are still
- standing.
-
- The initial image was taken Wednesday and supplied by the company
- DigitalGlobe. AP will offer updated satellite images as as they become
- available.
-
- The image is available at:
-
- http://hosted.ap.org/specials/neworleanssatellite/index.html
-
-
-
- Opera Software Gives Away Browser for 24 Hours
-
-
- Oslo, Norway-based Opera Software ASA on Tuesday announced that it's giving
- away complimentary registration codes for its Opera Web browser for 24
- hours on Tuesday, August 30, 2005. The giveaway is to celebrate Opera's
- 10th anniversary.
-
- Opera costs nothing to download and use, but unless a registration code is
- entered, the software displays advertisements. By filling out your e-mail
- address on the 10-Year Online Anniversary Web site, you get registration
- codes for each of the desktop operating systems opera supports, including
- Mac OS X, Windows, FreeBSD, Solaris, and three flavors of Linux.
-
- Opera features pop-up blocking, tabbed browsing, integrated searching on
- Google, Amazon and eBay, e-mail, RSS newsfeed support and IRC chat. The
- browser's interface can be customized with new skins as well.
-
- The current version of Opera works on Mac OS X v10.2 or later.
-
-
-
- States Expanding Push for Internet Taxes
-
-
- Going online to buy the latest bestseller or those photos from summer
- vacation may be tax free for most people today, but it won't last forever.
- Come this fall, 13 states will start encouraging - though not demanding -
- that online businesses collect sales taxes just as Main Street stores are
- required to do, and more states are considering joining the effort.
-
- Right now, buyers are expected to pay sales taxes on Internet purchases
- themselves directly to the state when they pay their income taxes. But it's
- not widely enforced, and states say it costs them upwards of $15 billion a
- year in lost revenues, collectively.
-
- "Taxes that it was difficult to collect before will now be collected. And
- consumers will pay that," said David Quam at the National Governors
- Association, helping lead the five-year effort that brought together state
- revenue officials, legislators and business leaders.
-
- The question of taxing Internet sales has been in limbo since the dawn of
- the computer era, when the only issue was catalog sales across state lines.
-
- A 1992 U.S. Supreme Court ruling forbids states from forcing a business to
- collect their sales taxes unless the company has a physical presence in the
- affected state. The court noted the dizzying array of tax jurisdictions and
- widely varying definitions of taxable goods, such as fast food versus
- groceries.
-
- Organizers of the states' effort, known as the Streamlined Sales Tax
- Project, sought to unify tax rules and definitions among the states. They
- hope to persuade federal lawmakers to pass a new law to overcome the
- Supreme Court ruling and allow states to take the next step - demanding
- online companies levy the taxes.
-
- But many businesses are skeptical. Some worry about the complexity of tax
- rates that vary from city to county to state, others the cost of collecting
- the taxes. The states' project attempts to answer those worries, but it
- hasn't eased all doubts.
-
- "Certainly at Amazon, we have no plans to volunteer," said Rich Prem, top
- tax official at Amazon.com Inc., the online giant with $7 billion in annual
- sales. The company will work with state and federal leaders, but will only
- start collecting state taxes "if you make it simple, if you make it fair,"
- he said.
-
- The Direct Marketing Association, a trade group that represents many
- Internet and catalog sellers, says the effort is far too complex to work.
-
- The project organizers say they have taken significant steps to help
- businesses get on board.
-
- They created software that will automatically calculate the different taxes
- for different states and for different items. They promised to pay for
- special "service providers" that could bill customers, file and pay taxes
- to the states, and free companies from audit liabilities.
-
- To be accepted as part of the project, a state must change its tax laws to
- match up with the others. So far, 13 states have come far enough to be part
- of the project. Five more are approved to join within the next few years,
- and others have made partial steps.
-
- The process wasn't easy. Among the issues to be answered: If candy is taxed
- but food isn't, what is candy? And what is food? Is a Twix cookie bar candy
- or food?
-
- The solution: anything with flour is food, not candy.
-
- "We had to come up with a bright line," said Diane Hardt, Wisconsin's tax
- administrator and a co-chair of the project. They had originally considered
- defining all candy as food - but that would have caused a loss of about
- $20 million a year in Wisconsin sales taxes and closer to $200 million in
- Texas, she said.
-
- There were a host of other questions affecting state budgets, manufacturers
- and buyers. Decisions ran across a huge assortment of goods, from fruit
- juices to tea, to cloth diapers, to mobile classrooms and farm equipment.
-
- The states are offering businesses a promise - and an implicit threat. If
- businesses register and start collecting taxes this year, they're given a
- yearlong amnesty from the possibility that states may seek back taxes for
- online purchases.
-
- "I wouldn't be surprised if the biggest effect comes at the end of the 12
- months when businesses say `I better take this opportunity while I can,'"
- said Hardt.
-
- The 13 states are Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan, Minnesota,
- Nebraska, New Jersey, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota,
- and West Virginia. Five that will be added in the next few years are
- Arkansas, Ohio, Tennessee, Utah and Wyoming.
-
-
-
- MSN Toolbar Upgraded To Fight Phishing
-
-
- Microsoft has introduced two additions to the MSN toolbar designed to
- protect users from phishing attacks and make it easier for them to access
- the company's online gaming site.
-
- The phishing filter, currently offered as a beta addition to the toolbar,
- scans Web pages visited by users and prevents customers from entering
- personal data on known phishing sites. When users access a page that might
- be a phishing site but is not on the known list, the software issues a
- warning to users.
-
- Phishing is recognized widely as a growing problem that often results in
- online identity theft. Phishers typically create bogus Web sites that
- resemble those of legitimate businesses, financial institutions or
- government agencies to convince visitors to provide sensitive personal
- information.
-
- MSN's new toolbar automatically compares addresses of Web sites a consumer
- attempts to visit with a list of reported legitimate sites. In addition to
- the toolbar's automatic checks, users can send questionable Web sites to an
- online service run by Microsoft to check URLs against a frequently updated
- list of reported phishing sites.
-
- Noting that consumers are increasingly focused on online security and
- threats of identity theft, Yankee Group analyst Su Li Walker said the
- phishing filter offers some peace of mind that could draw more people to
- the MSN portal.
-
- "There is fierce competition among MSN and competitors like Google and
- Yahoo, and this is one more way that Microsoft can differentiate itself,"
- she said. "Users want a protected experience online, and they may feel more
- secure surfing the Web with a tool like this."
-
- The new games add-in for the toolbar offers one-click access to the MSN
- Games portal and provides a pull-down menu of links to that day's
- most-played games. Players also can see how many other gamers are
- participating online.
-
- Microsoft claims to have some 30 million registered gamers who use the site
- and says MSN Games currently is the top channel accessed from the MSN home
- page.
-
- The gaming site is one place Microsoft can generate revenue through the MSN
- portal, given the large number of people using that site, said Walker. "The
- company is doing all it can to draw MSN users to different parts of the
- portal, including putting an emphasis on games."
-
- Toolbars have become critical offerings for MSN, Google and Yahoo, all of
- which are trying to be as user-friendly as possible to help people quickly
- access their search pages and other services on each portal.
-
-
-
- Google Branches Out With Print Ads
-
-
- Google rocked the advertising world Wednesday when it started selling print
- ads - a sign its impressive lead in online advertising isn't enough for the
- ambitious, fast-paced search engine company.
-
- Google's foray into offline advertising came in the form of full-page ads
- in PC Magazine and Maximum PC. Google bought the space for the ads, divided
- it up, and depending on the page, sold it to four or five companies that
- wanted to advertise.
-
- In this latest move, Mountain View-based Google is betting it can exploit
- its relationship with hundreds of thousands of small businesses that
- already advertise online by its search results. The idea is to help
- advertisers gain exposure in the offline world at cheaper rates, or with
- less effort, than they otherwise could have.
-
- Google is "sharing the savings with the smaller guys," says Premsyl Pech,
- president of a small business, Software602.com, of Jacksonville, Fla., that
- helps people create Adobe "PDF" files. Pech participated in the PC Mag
- test.
-
- The terms of Google's future offerings remain unclear, but some believe it
- might be able to obtain discounted advertising rates by offering publishers
- a steady volume of advertisers. And some say Google's logo on top of the
- ads might entice advertisers to pay more than they otherwise would.
-
- Jeff Witkowski, president of AHS Systems, which makes online content
- management software, was one of five advertisers who split a page in this
- month's PC Magazine. He paid $2,200 for his fifth - not much compared with
- PC Magazine's regular charge of $72,497 for a full-page ad, or $14,499 when
- divided by five.
-
- It's not clear who is paying for the discount. Analysts assumed PC Magazine
- might have offered lower rates, or that Google agreed to pay full rates in
- order for the companies to obtain publicity.
-
- Randy Zane, director of public relations for Ziff Davis, owner of PC
- Magazine, would not say what sort of deal it cut with Google. He said only
- that the two companies had a "strategic" relationship aimed at building
- each other's brands.
-
- Google wouldn't comment on the terms of the deal either.
-
- For at least two years, Google has extended its empire by moving beyond
- simply placing advertisements beside its online search results. It has
- recently moved to create larger online display ads for companies. And in a
- dizzying array of other recent deals, Google has invested in a
- communications infrastructure - for example, Current Communications, a
- broadband Internet service; and partnered with television network
- CurrentTV. And there are rumors it is building out a WiFi network in
- multiple cities.
-
- All of this will help Google act as a conduit for content and advertising
- delivery and distribution, analysts said. They said the deal reflects
- Google's strategy to offer a one-stop shop for advertising.
-
- "It's funny, on the one hand this was initially a head-scratcher," said
- Scott Kessler, an analyst at Standard & Poor's, referring to the widely
- held assumption that continued online growth offers more immediate
- opportunity for Google. "But for folks who don't want to advertise
- separately online and offline, this would give them a unique option."
-
- Depending on how Google plays the game, the move could be seen by
- publishers as either competitive or complementary. But it also might be a
- way for Google to pre-empt moves by traditional publishing companies to
- head in its direction, Kessler said.
-
- Major media companies have been buying up online properties: Dow Jones,
- owner of the Wall Street Journal, bought MarketWatch; New York Times
- acquired About.com, E.W. Scripps scooped up Shopzilla, and a trio of
- companies, including Knight Ridder, owner of the Mercury News, bought a
- stake in Topix.net.
-
- In any case, there's evidence that Google's popular branding might entice
- advertisers. Advertiser Witkowski, of AHS, said one of the reasons he
- participated in the print ad with PC Magazine was to get a boost by being
- associated with Google.
-
- Text at the top or bottom of the ads said "Ads by Google," but the plain
- text wasn't as strong as Witkowski would have liked it. "We would have
- loved to have seen the Google logo," said Witkowski. "We'd hoped to get a
- bit more of a punch."
-
- As part of the deal, Witkowski has also taken out an ad in next month's
- edition. He's waiting until October before he decides whether to continue,
- he said.
-
-
-
- Three Indicted For Violating Anti-Spam Law
-
-
- Three people accused of running a huge computer spam operation have been
- indicted on charges of violating a law aimed at cracking down on
- unsolicited e-mails, prosecutors said.
-
- James R. Schaffer, Jeffrey A. Kilbride, and Jennifer R. Clason were each
- charged on Thursday with two counts of fraud and one count of criminal
- conspiracy under the U.S. law known as CAN-SPAM, short for Controlling the
- Assault of Non-Solicited Pornography and Marketing Act.
-
- The law, in effect since January 2004, is meant to diminish unsolicited
- e-mail messages, commonly known as spam.
-
- Kilbride and Schaffer also were charged with transportation of obscene
- material using a computer service and one count of money laundering.
-
- Money laundering charges could result with prison sentences of up to 20
- years. The obscenity charges carry a maximum sentence of up to 5 years in
- jail.
-
- Over four months in 2004, more than 600,000 complaints were made to America
- Online about e-mails sent by the spamming operation, prosecutors said.
-
- Authorities said a fourth person involved in the conspiracy, 31-year-old
- Andrew Ellifson, had pleaded guilty to a spamming charge and a criminal
- conspiracy charge. Ellifson's guilty plea, made in February, was unsealed
- Thursday. Ellifson allegedly assisted in creating and operating the network
- used to send the spam.
-
-
-
- Zotob Arrest Breaks Credit Card Fraud Ring
-
-
- Turkish officials have identified 16 more suspects this week in a
- continuing crackdown on illegal online activity that stems from the arrest
- of two men in connection with the Zotob Internet worm.
-
- The 16 individuals are believed to be connected to a credit card theft and
- identity theft ring, but not directly involved with the creation or
- dissemination of Zotob, according to Paul Bresson, an FBI spokesperson.
-
- The action followed the arrest of Atilla Ekici, 21, in Adana, Turkey on
- Aug. 26 in connection with the recent Zotob Internet worm and with Mytob,
- another wide-spreading worm that first appeared in February.
-
- Little information was available on the arrests Tuesday, which was a
- holiday in Turkey. Officials contacted by eWEEK at the U.S. Consulate in
- Adana and at the U.S. Embassy in Ankara said they had no information on the
- additional arrests.
-
- However, links between Ekici, who used the online handle "Coder," and
- co-conspirator Farid Essebar, an 18-year-old resident of Morocco who was
- known online as "Diabl0," would not be surprising, security experts said.
-
- Both men are believed to have controlled large networks of compromised
- computers, or "botnets," according to Joe Stewart, a senior security
- researcher at managed security provider LURHQ Corp.
-
- Bot networks are frequently used to harvest information or intellectual
- property from compromised machines, as well as for distributing spam,
- advertising and viruses.
-
- Microsoft Corp. and the FBI were cooperating in an investigation of botnets
- before Zotob was released, said Tim Cranton, a senior attorney at Microsoft
- and director of the company's Internet Safety Enforcement team.
-
- Cranton declined to comment on whether Microsoft's investigators were on
- to Diabl0 before Zotob, but said the company had "developed a lot of
- intelligence" about the botnets Diabl0 operated prior to Essebar's arrest
- and that the information "helped inform" the actions of law enforcement.
-
- The 16 new suspects may be operating their own botnets using variants of
- Zotob or the earlier Mytob worms, which Essebar is believed to have
- created.
-
- According to Stewart, each member of the group would probably be given a
- copy of the source code by Essebar and would compile it into a unique Mytob
- or Zotob variant, with its own IRC (Internet Relay Chat) server and channel
- details, then release the variant on the Internet and build a botnet out of
- hosts the worm compromises.
-
- "There would be no reason for them not to have their own botnets," he said.
- In fact, a sizeable botnet is almost a requirement for those who move in
- the Internet underground, where the slightest online provocation can invoke
- a denial-of-service attack from another botnet operator.
-
- While the other suspects in the case may be acquainted with Diabl0 and
- Coder, Stewart said it's wrong to think of the botnet operators as a
- tightly coordinated group.
-
- "It's really just individuals and small groups of botnet owners who get
- together," he said.
-
- While Diabl0 and Coder were not the largest botnet operators, they were
- very successful and their creations generated a lot of "noise" on the
- Internet, he said. Virus researchers at Sophos PLC's SophosLabs said that
- Diabl0 is believed to be behind about 20 other virus variants, including
- Mydoom-BG and versions of the Mytob worm.
-
- Together, the variants accounted for six of the top 10 viruses and more
- than 54 percent of all viruses reported to Sophos in August, the company
- said.
-
- "It will good to see them go," Stewart said.
-
-
-
- 'Loverspy' Spyware Creator Indicted, On the Run
-
-
- The creator of Loverspy, software to surreptitiously observe individuals'
- online activities, has been indicted for allegedly violating U.S. federal
- computer privacy laws.
-
- If convicted, Carlos Enrique Perez-Melara, could face a maximum sentence
- of 175 years in prison and fines of up to $8.75 million. His current
- whereabouts are unknown.
-
- Four individuals who purchased Loverspy to illegally spy on others were
- also indicted.
-
- "This federal indictment - one of the first in the country to target a
- manufacturer of "spyware" computer software - is particularly important
- because of the damage done to people's privacy by these insidious
- programs," John Richter, acting assistant attorney general of the U.S.
- Department of Justice's Criminal Division, said in a statement. "Law
- enforcement must continue to take action against the manufacturers of these
- programs to protect unsuspecting victims and seek punishment for those
- responsible for wreaking havoc online."
-
- Perez-Melara, 25, was indicted last month on 35 counts of manufacturing,
- sending, and advertising a surreptitious interception device (the Loverspy
- program), unlawfully intercepting electronic communications, disclosing
- unlawfully intercepted electronic communications, and obtaining
- unauthorized access to protected computers for financial gain. Each count
- carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a maximum fine of
- $250,000.
-
- His indictment was returned on July 21 by a federal grand jury sitting in
- the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California in San
- Diego, but the indictment was unsealed only Friday.
-
- Perez-Melara advertised and sold Loverspy and EmailPI software over the
- Internet for $89 a copy to people looking to secretly monitor an
- individual's e-mail, passwords, chat sessions, and instant messages, as
- well as the Web sites they visit. Purchasers of the program could log into
- a Loverspy Members Area on the Loverspy and EmailPI Web sites and choose
- an e-card and greeting that would be sent to the victim. Loverspy would
- arrive hidden inside the e-card and would launch when the victim opened
- the card. After being installed, Loverspy would send regular reports
- collating the victim's online activities either directly to the purchaser
- of the spy software via e-mail or to Perez-Melara, who would then forward
- the reports to the purchaser. The spyware also enabled the purchaser to
- remotely control the victim's computer to the extent of altering and
- deleting files, and surreptitiously turning on any Web camera hooked up to
- the victim's computer.
-
- From around July 1, 2003, until October 10, 2003, approximately 1000
- individuals in the United States and abroad bought Loverspy and sent
- e-cards containing the application to around 2000 people, according to the
- authorities. Around half of those 2000 are known to have had their
- computers compromised and their communications intercepted, the indictment
- stated. The antivirus software of the day didn't identify Loverspy as
- dangerous, so it didn't block the program's installation, the indictment
- noted. Perez-Melara's operations were shut down after the FBI executed a
- federal search warrant for his San Diego apartment on October 10, 2003.
-
- The victims named in the indictment are located in California, Hawaii,
- Missouri, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Texas.
-
- The four other individuals indicted with Perez-Melara by the federal grand
- jury in San Diego are John Gannitto of Laguna Beach, California; Kevin
- Powell of Long Beach, California; Laura Selway of Irvine, California; and
- Cheryl Ann Young of Ashland, Pennsylvania. They are each charged with two
- counts - unauthorized access to protected computers (via Loverspy) in
- furtherance of other criminal offenses and illegally intercepting the
- electronic communications of their victims. Each of the two counts carries
- a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a maximum fine of $250,000.
-
- Other purchasers of Loverspy have been prosecuted by federal authorities
- in Charlotte, North Carolina, Dallas, and Honolulu. Prosecutions are going
- ahead in Kansas City, Missouri, and Houston. All known Loverspy victims
- have been notified by e-mail that they were targeted by the program,
- according to the authorities.
-
-
-
- Man Pleads Guilty to Microsoft Source-Code Theft
-
-
- A Connecticut man on Monday pleaded guilty in federal court to selling
- proprietary Microsoft source code in a case that has the potential to take
- the issue of software piracy to a higher level.
-
- According to the U.S. Attorney's office in Manhattan, William Genovese Jr.
- entered the plea in a pending indictment that charged him with the unlawful
- sale and attempted sale of the Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 and Windows 2000
- source code, which had previously been stolen by other individuals.
-
- Prosecutors said the code in question, comprising key components of the
- operating-system software, apparently was stolen in February 2004 and
- illegally distributed over the Internet. Genovese, who used the Web aliases
- "illwill" and "xillwillx@yahoo.com," posted a message on his Web site
- saying that that he had a copy of the stolen source code and was offering
- it for sale.
-
- A private investigator hired by Microsoft downloaded a copy of the code
- from Genovese's site, as did an FBI agent, after sending him electronic
- payments.
-
- Genovese subsequently was charged with unlawfully distributing a trade
- secret in violation of the Economic Espionage Act. He faces a maximum
- sentence of 10 years in jail and a $250,000 fine. Sentencing is expected
- this fall.
-
- The case is noteworthy in that, unlike those who sell bogus copies of
- Windows OS, Genovese was trying to push source code that could have allowed
- someone to repurpose the program or detect and exploit vulnerabilities in
- the software.
-
- Yet it is difficult to imagine how he expected to avoid detection while
- finding a buyer for the highly sensitive information. "The proliferation of
- illegal copies of software is hard to control, but in this case the
- individual was trying to market a very visible thing," said Philip H.
- Albert, a partner in the law firm Townsend and Townsend and Crew LLP. "It's
- like fencing a stereo versus selling a stolen artwork."
-
- While source code potentially is worth considerably more than a copy of
- Windows, he noted, most people have little use for the code. Albert
- suggested that most malware practitioners are able to launch their attacks
- without the code. "There's a very thin market for it," he said.
-
- Still, the fact that someone with legitimate access to the code could
- distribute it and offer it for sale represents a problem for Microsoft and
- other software vendors, said Albert.
-
- Microsoft has stated that it supports the U.S. Justice Department's efforts
- to protect software intellectual property rights and will continue to
- support efforts "to address the protection of intellectual property rights
- as those efforts are critical to the sustained development of the software
- industry."
-
-
-
- Recording Industry Sues More U.S. File-Swappers
-
-
- The recording industry on Wednesday filed its latest round of copyright
- infringement lawsuits, targeting 754 people it claims used online
- file-sharing networks to illegally trade in songs.
-
- The lawsuits were filed in federal district courts across the country,
- including California, Colorado, Georgia, Missouri, New York, Pennsylvania,
- Virginia and Washington, D.C.
-
- The world's major record labels, represented by the Recording Industry
- Association of America, have filed more than 14,000 such lawsuits since
- September 2003.
-
-
-
- Yahoo Offers Easier E-Mail Search
-
-
- Yahoo has developed an improved search technology for users of its Web mail
- service, including the capability of searching the full text of message
- attachments, the Sunnyvale, California, company plans to announce Tuesday.
-
- The new search system will enhance the existing capabilities, which are
- very basic and only allow users to search for content in a message's
- subject and sender lines and its body, a Yahoo executive says.
-
- Starting Tuesday, the improved search function will be rolled out in phases
- over the coming months to users worldwide, says Drew Garcia, a senior
- product manager on the Yahoo Mail team.
-
- Yahoo Mail's new search function can index the full text of about 20 common
- types of attachments, including Microsoft Word, Excel, and PowerPoint
- files, as well as Adobe Systems PDF files, he says.
-
- Another improvement is that, along with each search result, Yahoo Mail also
- delivers a snippet of the content in which the searched-for term appears.
- This is intended to give users an idea of the context in which the term is
- found.
-
- Users don't have to do anything to enable the new search function. Yahoo
- will index, in the background and automatically, all the existing contents
- of each Yahoo Mail account, as well as all future messages received, once
- the search function is enabled for a user, Garcia says.
-
- The new search function applies to Yahoo Mail messages stored on Yahoo's
- servers, not locally on users' hard drives. However, Garcia says Yahoo is
- likely to integrate it into other products and services, including possibly
- Yahoo's desktop search software.
-
- Another new Yahoo Mail search feature is the ability to see thumbnail
- images of pictures and documents attached to e-mail messages, Garcia says.
- Users can also open the actual documents from the thumbnail images, he
- says.
-
- The new search also matches the first letters of search terms, something
- which comes in handy when the user isn't sure of the correct spelling of a
- word, he says. For example, a user could search for "rob" and the system
- will return matches that begin with those letters, such as "robbie" and
- "robin," he says.
-
- Yahoo Mail's new search function will also let users refine searches and
- drill down on results to help them find the information they are looking
- for faster, he says.
-
- Users also will be able to view photos or attached documents in a list of
- search results by themselves, in thumbnail form, Garcia says. Each
- thumbnail will be labeled with the subject line of the associated message.
-
- The new search capabilities were developed in-house by Yahoo and prompted
- by the realization that users are increasingly storing a wide variety of
- information in their e-mail accounts, making it necessary to provide them
- with more robust search capabilities, Garcia says. The search system was
- developed from the ground up to work in an e-mail setting, he says.
-
- The improved search will also be part of a major revamping that Yahoo Mail
- will undergo as Yahoo incorporates into the Web mail service technology it
- acquired when it bought Oddpost in July 2004, a Yahoo spokesperson says.
-
- The fruits of that overhaul, such as a significantly redesigned user
- interface that looks and feels more like a desktop e-mail client than like
- a Web mail interface, will begin to appear when Yahoo starts an open beta
- test of the upgraded Yahoo Mail in the coming months, she says.
-
-
-
- Facebook Takes Plugged-in Colleges by Storm
-
-
- When college student Valerie Wang meets a cute guy, she goes right to her
- dorm and calls up a Web site called Facebook.
-
- She looks at what fraternity he's part of. She finds out if he plays
- sports, if he's in a relationship and, if so, if his girlfriend is pretty.
-
- "It's an easy way to figure out information about someone without talking
- to them," said Wang, 18, from Palo Alto, a sophomore at the University of
- Michigan.
-
- Facebook, based in Palo Alto, is one of a handful of Silicon Valley
- start-ups that have tried to crack the hyped but elusive world of online
- "social networking." But while some others are either foundering or still
- working toward success, Facebook is seeing steady - even surprising -
- growth.
-
- It has become so addictive that some students find themselves browsing it
- for hours.
-
- "I wake up and check my e-mail, then I go to Facebook," said Tiffany Chang,
- 17, from Palo Alto, who goes to the University of California-Davis. "At
- night, I do the same thing. . . . Facebook is like an ice cream sundae
- because you can do anything with it, and no matter what, it's still fun."
-
- It's still too early to tell whether Facebook, founded in February 2004, is
- here to stay or is more like the flavor of the year. But for now, it's on a
- roll.
-
- Facebook has 3.65 million users. In March, while school was still in
- session, Facebook had about four times as many visitors as Friendster,
- another social networking site, according to Comscore.
-
- And these are loyal users: Even during the slow days of summer, more than
- half signed in every 24 hours. Facebook is now the top-ranking Web site for
- the hard-to-reach college demographic: The 18- to 24-year-old future - and
- in some cases current - spenders.
-
- Not surprisingly, advertisers have caught wind of Facebook's attractive
- audience. Companies like Victoria's Secret, Apple Computer and Electronic
- Arts have formed sponsored groups where students can discuss their
- products. Between 75,000 and 100,000 users have participated in each of
- these groups, according to Matt Cohler, the 28-year-old who runs daily
- operations.
-
- And they're paying enough money that Facebook became profitable earlier
- this year, according to Cohler.
-
- That was before the venture capitalists arrived. In May, Palo Alto's Accel
- Partners pumped $13 million into Facebook, and encouraged the company to
- focus on further expansion before stressing too much about profits.
-
- The magic recipe: Facebook has firmly rooted itself in the offline lives of
- its members. Facebook fans go to the site for daily activities like
- planning parties, finding the room numbers of classmates and just gawking
- at the lives of others.
-
- Here's how. You fill out a profile, listing your favorite music, books and
- hobbies, for example. You can form or join groups, which may represent
- real-life clubs or may simply bear cheeky names such as "Ridiculously
- good-looking people." Each person's page has a "wall" where friends - and
- enemies - get to write what they think of you. And Facebook lets students
- know which of their colleagues is up for "dating," or maybe even "random
- play."
-
- Facebook has become so pervasive on college campuses that if two students
- begin dating, their "coupledom" is only considered official once they 'fess
- up on Facebook.
-
- "One of my friends had been dating someone for awhile, and then one day I
- went on Facebook, and it said they were together," said Tim Pittman, 21, a
- senior at Harvard University and one of the site's first users. "And then I
- was like, wait a second, this is serious!"
-
- Even the campus police in East Illinois recently used the site to shut down
- plans for some beer-bout parties.
-
- Facebook works partly because its community is focused, said Dave Edwards,
- Internet analyst at American Technology Research in San Francisco. It's
- also an Internet-savvy community.
-
- "It's catering to a demographic which is much more used to online
- interaction," he said.
-
- One limiting factor to Facebook's growth is the requirement that users have
- a university (.edu) e-mail address. That helps provide some shelter from
- the outside world, and it's part of why people open up, said Chief
- Executive Mark Zuckerberg, 21.
-
- "More information is available to less people," he said.
-
- When 21-year-old Sushu Xia from Palo Alto, a senior at the University of
- Chicago, desperately needed a book, she asked the university's librarian
- who had borrowed it, then looked his room number up on Facebook. Minutes
- later, she was knocking on his dorm room door.
-
- But she is also aware that this information could be used in the wrong way.
-
- "Facebook is helpful for stalking," Xia said. "You think that only friends
- care enough to look you up, but sometimes creepy people do."
-
- Some say Facebook can offer valuable clues about a person.
-
- 'Better for red flags'
-
- "The Facebook is better for red flags than for reasons to be somebody's
- friend," said 18 year-old Becca Tisdale, a freshman at Stanford University,
- adding that she is wary of people who have lewd Facebook photos.
-
- Of course, not everybody sees the point of Facebook. Tali Manber, a
- 21-year-old senior at Stanford University, said she rarely logs in.
-
- "If I was spending that much time online, I'd rather use that time to
- actually see people in person," she said.
-
- The company's visionary is its founder, Harvard student Zuckerberg. He
- launched the site last February with two of his roommates, Dustin Moskovitz
- and Chris Hughes. It now employs 40 people, though that includes some
- outside contractors.
-
- It wasn't Zuckerberg's first foray into the online world. In late 2003, as
- a prank, he created facemash.com, a site that popped up two student photos
- and asked people to choose who was more attractive. For that, Harvard's
- administration put him on probation.
-
- And it hasn't all been smooth sailing. A competitor, ConnectU, sued
- Zuckerberg for allegedly stealing code. Zuckerberg denies the accusation.
- He has counterclaimed.
-
- The management structure is "still relatively fast and loose," admitted
- Cohler, who at 28 was until recently the company's oldest employee.
-
- Napster co-founder and former Plaxo Chief Executive Sean Parker, 25, is
- heading the business side. Parker introduced Zuckerberg to Peter Thiel, the
- founder of PayPal, who invested seed money into Facebook.
-
- Meanwhile, the company continues to expand. It hopes to reach 6 million
- college students by the end of the year, and make Facebook available at
- every four-year college in the United States by fall.
-
-
-
- Robot Dog - Man's Best Friend or a No-fat Nag?
-
-
- It could be a dream or a nightmare - scientists have created a robotic dog
- that tells you when it's time for your daily walk.
-
- Researchers at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in the United
- States plan to recruit Sony's "canine entertainment robot" Aibo into the
- obesity police.
-
- The dog would be connected by radio to the bathroom scales, a pedometer and
- a personal organizer in which the owner would note his daily food intake,
- New Scientist magazine reported on Wednesday.
-
- Asked "How am I?" the robot would either jump excitedly, play funky music
- and flash colored lights, or flop down and play a dirge, according to
- whether its owner has followed his or her diet.
-
- "It is promising to look at mobile robots for defining behavioral change,"
- computer scientist Tim Bickmore at Boston University's School of Medicine
- was quoted as saying.
-
- The plans for the robotic dog - which need never be let out or fed - are
- due to be presented to a conference in Tokyo on September 11, the magazine
- said.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
-