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- Volume 8, Issue 3 Atari Online News, Etc. January 20, 2005
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2006
- 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 #0803 01/20/06
-
- ~ GPL 3 Public Release! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Word Perfect Office!
- ~ More Compute Mags Up! ~ Russian Tycoon Scam! ~ Playstation Twitch!
- ~ UK Student Site Hacked ~ IE 7 Flushes History! ~ Google, US Clash!
- ~ Fed Spammer Pleads! ~ Adult Rating System! ~ New eBay Service!
-
- -* Hard Drive Capacity Boosted! *-
- -* Phishing Attacks Hit All-Time High! *-
- -* Maine Touts Recycling Computer Monitors! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's been an interesting week. The weather has been unusual for this time
- of year. Temperatures above normal, reaching close to 60 degrees for a couple
- of days. The worst, however, was one day in which we had wind gusts of over
- 60 mph. We got home from work and I noticed that the power must have gone
- out for awhile while we were away. You know, we had the the telltale signs:
- the VCR was blinking, my alarm clock was flashing, and the monitor attached
- to my Falcon was displaying a low resolution screen (I've been leaving the
- cup and monitor turned on because both pieces of hardware have been acting
- up for quite some time now.
-
- Anyway, when I went to re-boot the machine, it wouldn't work. I've known that
- the external hard drive has been on its last legs for quite some time. The
- Falcon's internal hard drive has been dead for a couple of years. If the
- machine went down, I would have to boot from a pre-made floppy disk so my
- typical AUTO programs and accessories would load. Well, not this time. I
- tried numerous times before I gave up.
-
- About three hours later (I still had to work on putting this week's issue
- together!). I tried a number of things until finally I decided that either
- the monitor was bad, or it was the Falcon. I had a spare "bad" Falcon in
- the closet which I managed to dig out. I say bad because I had swapped it
- out a couple of years ago because the spacebar and keypad Enter keys no
- longer worked. You wouldn't believe how much you rely on those two keys
- until they no longer work! So, I hooked that machine up, turned it on, and
- it started to boot - yea! Just as all of the AUTO folder programs loaded,
- I got two bombs, the busy bee, and that's as far as the boot process went.
- I tried numerous times with the same result.
-
- I tried shutting down my external drive that contained a Syquest-44 drive
- (the only working hard drive still connected), and then booting the machine.
- I figured that if the cpu booted, I could run the ICD boot program from a
- floppy (after powering up the Syquest again), running the relog program, and
- then getting my usual desktop back. That worked, but I no longer had my
- AUTO programs and desk accessories because I bypassed the normal boot
- process. Ack, no Warp 9!! So, I'm currently able to run a few of the
- programs needed to put A-ONE together every week. But, try typing and
- editing without a spacebar! I have to use the TAB key and backspace within
- Flash, or set the tabs in WordWriter to individual single spaces! And the
- lack of speed is killing me! So, I'm managing to get this week's issue out,
- but I really have to figure out something quick before I start next week's
- issue. It may mean putting aside the Falcons, and digging out an older
- machine and setting everything up all over again. I think I still have some
- old hard drives laying around. As long as I can attach my ICD tape drive to
- put my programs and data back together, I'll be in business. For now, I
- have to stop typing because I can't stand doing so without a spacebar!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- AtariMagazines.new: RSS Feed, More Compute!
-
-
- AtariMagazines.com has added the full text of 16 issues of Compute!
- magazine:
-
- January 1982, April 1982, May 1983, July 1983, April 1984, May 1984,
- June 1984, July 1984, August 1984, September 1984, October 1984,
- November 1984, January 1985, June 1985, December 1985, and December
- 1989.
-
- In addition, we've added an RSS feed that tracks the latest happenings
- at the AtariMagazines.com What's New Page:
- http://www.atarimagazines.com/new.rss
-
- Enjoy!
- Kevin
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Another week has come and gone already,
- and the weather has taken another strange turn. Having disc problems in
- my neck, I find that I'm much more sensitive to weather changes than I
- used to be. It's really quite annoying.
-
- But, in the words of one of my favorite artists, "That's not what I came
- to tell ya about". <grin>
-
- If you're anything like me, you've got interests in a lot of different
- areas. That's what makes us each unique. One of the things I'm
- interested in is the space program. You know... rocket ships to the
- Moon, rovers on Mars, probes to the outer planets... things like that?
-
- Well today NASA finally got the New Horizons mission off the ground. I
- watched the liftoff via the web. It was nice to see that Atlas-5 take
- off and reach for the sky.
-
- We are, after all, explorers. Just about every nation on Earth can trace
- its history back to a point where they were settled by explorers from
- elsewhere. True, for some countries you have to go back a long way, but
- the history is there.
-
- New Horizons will look at the farthest-flung "planet" of our solar
- system, Pluto. I put the word planet in quotes because there is
- currently some debate as to whether or not we should consider it a
- planet.
-
- Planet or not, it's out there, it's three billion miles away, it's cold
- as all get-out, and it's just waiting for us to visit. And what do we
- get for our 700 million dollars? We get to be explorers again. We get to
- rediscover the emotional and intellectual joy of learning things that we
- didn't even know that we didn't know. As is always the case with human
- beings, we are at our best when we are challenged not by others, but by
- ourselves.
-
- Well, this mission will surely challenge us. 3 billion miles, almost ten
- years in transit, speeds never before sustained by a man made object,
- and the cold... the near absolute cold of deep space are all things that
- we've never really contended with before.
-
- I, like many others, am somewhat uneasy about the use of radioactive
- material. I mean, come on, putting 24 pounds of plutonium on top of what
- is basically a massive controlled explosion to propel it into space is a
- bit daunting to most of us. Where the hell is all this anti-matter stuff
- they kept talking about on Star Trek? <g>
-
- Well, let's get to the news, hints, tips and info from the UseNet. Maybe
- THEY'LL know what happened to all the anti-matter.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- Mikael Larsson asks about hard drives for the ST:
-
- "About 15 years ago I had an Atari ST 512 which I upgraded to a the crazy
- 1024 mb ram.
-
- I remember dreaming about getting a hard disk for it. What different hard
- disk were there??
-
- If I want to get a new used Atari ST, what different hard disk should I
- look for?"
-
-
- 'Techie Alison' tells Mikael:
-
- "Exxos and I have some things Atari hard disk related in the pipeline.
- Time, enthusiasm, and other commitments being the main stumbling block
- at the moment.
-
- We're aiming for a transparent IDE interface to begin with. The IDE/CF
- coding is firmware/hardware complete, and the ACSI side is mostly
- hardware completed, the firmware coding still has to be finished. The
- SCSI bit comes next but is relatively straightforward. Most of the
- IDE/SCSI implementation is quite straightforward as once the electrical
- side of getting the commands/data back and forth is established, it's
- literally just a case of getting things in the right places at the right
- times and converting responses between the differing standards. Data is
- easy, the responses are a little more involved. The one I'm stuck on at
- the moment with standard ACSI (not hosted SCSI Uwe) is how the drive
- size and specs are determined, I'm guessing this is coded into the boot
- block. Time is the limiting factor as well as moving house atm.
-
- Once we have finally developed the skills here the original project can
- be expanded upon.
-
- There are things happening out there Mikael but with stumbling blocks and
- lack of hardware side documentation, as well as
- lots-of-enthusiastic-brains on the job, it's slow progress.
-
- eBay is definitely the place to watch for the time being though."
-
-
- Uwe Seimet adds:
-
- "Remember what (I think) I mentioned about determining the size of drives
- connected to the ACSI bus: The hard disk driver will take care of this,
- and it is not the concern of the ACSI-related hardware to provide any
- special functions for this.
-
- All you have to do is implement the ACSI/SCSI command set, anything else
- will be handled by the hard disk drivers."
-
-
- Alison replies:
-
- "Yes but there is no ACSI command for determining drive size. Let's
- assume that we're not going to be using your drivers for a moment, so no
- SCSI support, just a plain old RLL on the end of the controller running
- with Atari's bog standard implementation. Bug free or not it can still
- determine the size of that drive when there is no documented
- electrical-sequence-of-1's-and-0s to do it.
-
- I can't implement a 3rd party hardware solution if the computer throws
- something at it and it doesn't respond correctly. With most of these
- hardware things a lot of it is trial and error as manufacturers will fall
- back on their drivers at every turn. ie, Implementing a wireless
- solution with the custom chips out there has to be one of the hardest
- things to do as the manufacturers insist that you pay exorbitant
- investment fees to their name, and then the documentation you receive is
- non-existent, read the sci.electronics groups. The corporate market is
- not open and is highly protective of it's internal interfacing and
- source code. If I was a gigantic manufacturer I'd have paid Atari
- ,000 for detailed hardware documentation and would have finished
- this 3 months ago.
-
- It's a bit like putting a teenage driver in a car with no wheels on it.
-
- I'm at the point now where I just couldn't care less after banging my
- head against a wall, hence, no interface. If it's that simple then I'd
- be grateful if someone else would do it and I'll pay them for a
- little retail box which requires no soldering, programming of GAL chips
- and fiddling about. Just something which plugs into that ACSI port and
- gives me mass storage without third party drivers and specialist hacks.
-
- I have no enthusiasm to do this anymore when all that ends up is argument
- without facts.
-
- To add to this, <calms down>, if the Atari drivers issue a command of '1'
- for example, then I have to tell my interface what to do. It's more that
- for each of the ACSI/SCSI commands I have to 'interface' these to
- whatever mass storage device is on the other end. So I need to know
- EXACTLY what data and commands are going back and forth, and I have to
- entirely understand those commands explicitly. If I can't calculate
- every possible eventuality or possible blip then the interface will be
- unreliable with some byte at some point amongst billions of transferred
- bytes. This is not acceptable."
-
-
- Mikael Larsson asks about connection different monitors to his ST:
-
- "I have been looking for a ATARI ST/E to buy and they almost always sells
- with a monitor. But monitors are heavy and therefore the shipping is
- expensive, now I wonder can you connect a PC monitor to the ATARI and
- still get high resolution?"
-
-
- Greg Goodwin tells Mikael:
-
- "Here's some instructions from a well known Atarian (lightly edited) on
- how to make a cable. It is also possible to purchase these from
- several sources as has been previously noted.
-
-
- - - - - -
- Atari ST to VGA adapter
- -----------------------
- Claes Holmerup
- 17 Aug 1998
-
-
- You can use an SVGA monitor with an adapter cable (which is rather easy
-
- to assemble) to get a monochrome picture. Some old VGA monitors may
- work, but all SVGA should work as far as I know.
-
- Here's how you make your adapter:
-
- Atari (13-pin DIN) SVGA (15-pin HD D-type)
- ------------------ -----------------------
- 11 (Monochrome output) 1,2,3 (Red, Green, Blue inputs)**
- 12 (Vertical sync) 14 (Vertical sync)
- 9 (Horizontal sync) 13 (Horizontal sync)
- 13 (Ground) 4,5,6,7,8,10,11 (Various grounds)
- 4 (Monochrome detect) short to ground (pin 13 on ST)
-
-
- The trick here is that the monochrome signal is fed to all the inputs on
- the SVGA-monitor, which gives you a very nice monochrome picture. Even
- though the monitor in fact is a color monitor, you won't be able to see
- a color picture because of the construction of the computer (and the
- monitor). If you get your hands on a monitor which handles frequencies
- down to 15kHz, it's a whole new deal - then you should be able to build
- yourself a cable with a switch between mono and color (a little more
- complicated, involving a 4-way switch, but possible all the same). Just
- about no modern monitors go lower than 30kHz, so in most cases there is
- no other choice than mono - but since most useful programs (IMHO) run in
- monochrome, it's the best alternative anyway...
-
- Good luck!
- Claes
-
- **Editor's Note: The ST output is a bit higher than the 0.7V expected
- by the VGA monitor, so some sets of instructions call for an inline 4K7
- resistor. If your monitor can handle 1V input (most modern ones can),
- the resistor is not needed."
-
-
- David Wade adds:
-
- "As others have said yes, you can get hi-res fairly easily.. However if
- you want to play games then a CRT based PC monitor is no good on its
- own. What you really need is something that runs TV type Video,
- preferably via RGB.
-
- You can then get (or make) an Atari Video to "scart" lead. I use an
- Phillips CM8833, but there are several other monitors available. I guess
- something like this
-
- http://www.microdirect.co.uk/ProductInfo.aspx?ProductID=9359&GroupID=420
-
- not sure to watch the response .......
-
- Other options are are an external TV RGB to VGA converter, but these seem
- both rare and expensive.You can also use a video capture device to route
- the video through a PC. Whilst these work, you don't always get a good
- picture...."
-
-
- Stephen Moss adds his thoughts:
-
- "Yes you can, you will need an ST-VGA adaptor and you will only be able
- to use High resolution.
- Several Atari outlets stock them, the first one that comes to mind is
- Atari Workshop http://www.atari-workshop.co.uk or check with you usual
- Atari supplier."
-
-
- Edward Baiz adds:
-
- "Yes, it is possible to connect an Atari ST(e) to a PC VGA monitor. For
- use in color, I use an old piece of Atari hardware called Video Key. It
- connects to the ST and has a composite-video out port on it. I just
- connect that to a video converter and from there to a PC monitor. It
- works fine for low and med res, but for high res there is a simple
- adaptor that plugs right into the ST that goes directly to the PC
- monitor. That works great also."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. Tune in again next week, same time,
- same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when...
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - 'Lord of the Rings' To Expand!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Playstation "Twitch"!?
- Ape Escape Academy!
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- 'Rings' World Expands With 'Battle II' Game
-
-
- Electronic Arts is expanding its "Lord of the Rings" video game franchise
- beyond the scope of Peter Jackson's Oscar-winning trilogy.
-
- The company said Friday that "The Lord of the Rings: The Battle for
- Middle-earth II," a sequel to the best-selling PC game, will become
- available for Xbox 360 in the summer.
-
- "Battle II" is the first game to blend the literary source material with
- the actors, music and sets from Jackson's films. This was made possible by
- licensing deal last year that gave EA the literary rights to J.R.R.
- Tolkien's original books through an agreement with rights holder Saul
- Zaentz.
-
- The real-time strategy game was developed at EALA, EA's Los Angeles studio.
- Hugo Weaving reprised his role as Elrond, the Elven leader, from the New
- Line Cinema films. Weaving also serves as narrator of the game, and his
- likeness is featured.
-
- The title will allow multiplayer gaming through Microsoft's Xbox Live
- online subscription service. It is the first "Rings" game for Xbox 360,
- though its development was built using the PC version as a starting point
- instead of being created specifically for the new console from the ground
- up.
-
- Additional games also are in the works based on the literary and film
- "Rings," including additional next-generation titles. Sources close to the
- project said that a new role-playing game is in development at EA with the
- working title of "The Lord of the Rings: The White Council."
-
- EA picked up the movie rights to "Rings" late in the property's life and
- had to combine sequences from "The Fellowship of the Ring" and "The Two
- Towers" into one game with its first release. But the publisher has been
- able to explore all of the films more thoroughly since then and continues
- to find new game genres. Next-generation graphics open up a new opportunity
- for these games because they will offer a more vivid depiction of the film
- universe.
-
-
-
- Doctor Diagnoses 'Playstation Twitch'
-
-
- A 9-year-old boy in California who suffered from uncontrollable head
- jerking movements after long hours of video game playing stopped the
- twitching after his doctor banned him from playing his Playstation.
- Nicholas Lavin said that he played PlayStation constantly over the holidays
- at his home in San Diego and began to notice that his head would jerk back
- and forth.
-
- "I would do funny things with my head," Nicholas said.
-
- Lavin's mother said her son began to twitch so badly that she took him to
- the family's pediatrician.
-
- The doctor told her he was not allowed to play PlayStation anymore. Once he
- stopped playing PlayStation, the twitching stopped, according to the
- report.
-
- "All the head jerking is gone and his eyes are completely back to normal,"
- Barbara Lavin said. "I think it's a direct connection to the PlayStation
- and the amount of time he spent on it."
-
- The San Diego Epilepsy Foundation said some video stimulation at certain
- frequencies can cause epileptic-type seizures or body jerks.
-
- Doctors said to set time limits for games, keep lights on in the room so
- it's bright, and make sure children stay at least two feet way from the
- screen.
-
-
-
- Ape Escape Academy For PSP and Ape Escape 3 For Playstation 2 Ships
-
-
- Sony Computer Entertainment America Inc. today announced the release of
- Ape Escape 3 designed exclusively for the PlayStation 2 computer
- entertainment system and Ape Escape Academy for the PSP
- (PlayStationPortable) system. Created by Sony Computer Entertainment
- Inc., these new additions expand the well-known Ape Escape franchise
- first made popular on the PlayStation game console. With a mischievous
- tone and colorful style, Ape Escape 3 marks the return of the troublesome
- pipo monkeys that are on the loose and intent on world domination. Complete
- with a hilarious plot, enhanced monkey AI, a new transformation feature,
- inventive mini-games and clever pop culture parodies, Ape Escape 3 will
- impress fans old and new of the franchise. As one of the first party games
- for the PSP system, Ape Escape Academy is an ideal pick-up-and-play game
- with a varied collection of more than 40 original mini-games including
- hockey, dodgeball, karate, rhythm dancing and more.
-
- "The latest installments to the Ape Escape franchise are sure to deliver
- to fans exactly what they want -- fresh storylines, enhanced features,
- and unique gameplay," said John Koller, senior product manager, Sony
- Computer Entertainment America. "Retaining all of the humor and fun of
- the previous games, Ape Escape 3 and Ape Escape Academy give players the
- sheer creativity and endless gameplay variety certain to make these madcap
- monkeys a favorite for gamers of all ages."
-
- Pop culture parodies accent every aspect of the game as Ape Escape 3
- features the returning evil villain Specter who has enlisted his army of
- monkeys to take over the world by creating mind-numbing television
- programs that turn viewers into couch potatoes. Two new heroes, Kei and
- his sister Yumi, are determined to takedown over 400 monkeys on television
- sets just as their outrageous shows are about to air. Players can choose to
- take on the role of either sibling, and for the first time have the ability
- to transform into seven imaginative characters each with different skill
- sets. Character transformations include the Miracle Ninja, Wild West Kid,
- Fantasy Knight, Genie Dancer and more. In addition, through collaboration
- with SCEI and KONAMI, Ape Escape 3 takes parody to a new level with an
- extensive unlockable mini-game modeled after the Metal Gear Solid franchise.
- Players also can test their movie-making skills in the "Simian Cinema" which
- will give them the opportunity to cast and create their own 15-second short
- with captured monkeys as their star actors. Family-friendly and perfect for
- gamers on-the-go, Ape Escape Academy for the PSP system also extends the
- humorous tone of the title with a wide variety of wacky mini-games filled
- with frantic fun that enables players to create apes ready and willing to
- take over the world. Players will have the opportunity to challenge
- themselves in one of the three mini-game areas: Mind, Body and Technique.
- Gamers will aim to achieve head of the class status in the Academy mode, the
- primary mode, where players progress within the school system as they win
- various mini-games. After a player attempts a mini-game within the Academy
- mode, it will be entered into the Game Collection where it can be replayed
- for practice or to achieve a higher score.
-
- Ape Escape Academy also features ad-hoc wireless connectivity allowing two
- players to battle in head-to-head competitions on their PSP systems. A
- number of the mini-games also are available in the innovative Share mode
- where two players can take on one another simultaneously using one PSP
- system.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- New Technology Boosts Hard Drive Capacity
-
-
- Seagate Technology LLC has started shipping a notebook PC hard drive that
- overcomes an obstacle many feared would be a major roadblock to the further
- expansion of disk capacity - and the overall growth of the storage
- industry.
-
- The new approach that aligns bits of data vertically rather than
- horizontally enables Seagate - and other drive vendors - to further boost
- the density of drives without increasing the risk of scrambling data.
-
- Since the first hard drive was introduced 1956, bits have been arranged in
- a flat, horizontal fashion on the spinning platters. To boost capacity,
- engineers reduced the size of the particles whose magnetic state is what
- actually remembers data.
-
- But with some drives now topping out at 500 gigabytes, the miniaturization
- is nearly at its limit. Made any smaller, the particles can begin to
- interfere with the magnetism of their neighbors. The result is disastrous
- for data.
-
- By storing bits in a vertical, or perpendicular, arrangement, engineers are
- able to boost capacity by taking advantage of the real estate that is freed
- up.
-
- It's a major change that all drive makers are in the process of
- undertaking, said John Donovan, vice president at the research firm
- TrendFocus.
-
- "It a whole new way of doing things," he said. "Not only do you have to
- change the thinking, but the tooling, the way the heads and disks interact
- with each other."
-
- Seagate's new drive, the Momentus 5400.3, was being shipped as of Monday,
- the Scotts Valley, Calif.-based company said. The shift to perpendicular
- recording allows it to bump up the maximum capacity of its notebook drive
- to 160 gigabytes from 120 gigabytes.
-
- The 2.5-inch drive costs $325, compared to about $240 for the 120 gig
- model. Seagate plans to extend the new recording technology to other
- notebook drives, as well its 1-inch drives used in handheld gadgets and
- 3.5-inch drives for desktop PCs.
-
- "Our transition to perpendicular technology increases our ability to meet
- the needs of our growing customer base," said Karl Chicca, general manager
- of Seagate's Personal Storage unit.
-
- Other drive makers also have either announced products or plans that
- include perpendicular recording. At the Consumer Electronics Show earlier
- this month, Toshiba unveiled its second 1.8-inch drive that relies on the
- new technology.
-
- Perpendicular recording has benefits beyond boosting storage density by
- reducing the need for additional components, said Mike Hall, a Seagate
- spokesman.
-
- "If you can reduce the component count, you reduce the power drawn, you
- reduce the heat and you reduce the wear and tear," he said.
-
- In the next three to five years, the new technology is expected to increase
- maximum drive capacities five fold, Hall said.
-
-
-
- Corel Debuts Revamped WordPerfect Office Software
-
-
- Corel Corp. launched a new version of its budget WordPerfect Office
- software package on Tuesday, with the Canadian software maker saying it is
- a cheaper alternative to Microsoft Corp.'s Office software.
-
- Ottawa-based Corel said its new WordPerfect Office X3 includes the ability
- to import and export documents, spreadsheets and presentations to the
- Portable Document Files (PDF) format, as well as revamped e-mail features.
-
- Privately held Corel's WordPerfect is one of a few programs that compete
- against Microsoft in the Office application-suite market for PCs running
- the software giant's Windows operating system. Sun Microsystems Inc. offers
- a product called StarOffice.
-
- Corel said its WordPerfect Office X3 costs between $79 and $399. Microsoft,
- the world's largest software maker, offers its Office programs from around
- $150 to more than $500.
-
- Microsoft held a $135 million investment in Corel, which it sold in 2003 at
- a deep loss, before the Canadian company was bought by venture capital firm
- Vector Capital Corp.
-
-
-
- GPL 3 Released for Public Comment
-
-
- The Free Software Foundation (FSF) released the first public draft of the
- new version of the General Public License, marking the first major
- alterations in 15 years to the licensing guidelines used by the open-source
- community.
-
- The GPL was originally intended for free software developed by the FSF, but
- the I.T. industry has experienced a sea change since then. Currently, there
- are some 50,000 developers using the GPL as a way of getting their software
- out to users.
-
- According to the FSF, the GNU GPL is the most widely used free-software
- license worldwide, with almost three-quarters of all free software
- programs, including Linux, distributed under it.
-
- Use of software released under the GPL allows distributors to charge for
- distributing the software - for example, for the cost of putting it on a
- CD-ROM - but it prohibits charging for actual software usage.
-
- The new GPL 3 draft provides an explicit patent license that covers any
- patents held by the program's developers, replacing the implicit license
- on which GPL 2 relies.
-
- Other provisions require some distributors to protect software users
- against patent-infringement claims, and prevent GPL-licensed applications
- from being used in digital-rights management (DRM) software.
-
- "As a campaign to limit users' rights, the adoption of DRM is fundamentally
- at odds with the spirit of the free software movement," the document
- states. "Our aim is, and must be, the abolition of DRM as a social
- practice."
-
- "The language in this version appeals more to organizations than individual
- users, especially concerning patents," said Aberdeen analyst Stacey Quandt.
- "There is more reference to suing companies that don't respect the
- license."
-
- Quandt also noted that the definition of derivative works - or modified
- versions of applications - remains nebulous in the GPL 3 draft. "I think
- it's intentionally vague because a lot depends on where the program is
- implemented."
-
- The GNU GPL license is the most widely used vehicle for acquiring
- open-source software, said Forrester Research vice president Julie Giera,
- adding that Forrester's latest research indicates that more than 60 percent
- of companies have installed, or plan to install, some open-source software.
-
- Giera pointed out that the FSF is engaging in a difficult balancing act
- with the revision, trying to find ways to minimize the burdens and risks
- that I.T. managers face using open-source code while at the same time
- keeping the spirit of open-source software alive.
-
- IDC analyst Dan Kusnetzky described the GPL upgrade as an evolutionary
- change rather than a major overhaul. "Open-source software is used in many
- countries today, and is subject to several different legal structures," he
- said. "So the FSF is attempting to ensure that freely available software
- is still protected everywhere it is used."
-
- The GPL 3 draft is available for download from the FSF Web site. It was
- released at this week's International Public Conference for GPL 3 at the
- Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The FSF is seeking feedback from
- software developers and users, and plans to publish a final discussion
- document by this fall. The final license is expected by spring 2007.
-
-
-
- Internet Explorer 7 Will Flush Its History
-
-
- Microsoft's forthcoming Internet Explorer (IE) 7 browser will have a
- thorough flush feature that clears its history and all associated files
- stored after a Web site is accessed.
-
- In IE 6, a user has to spend lots of time trying to expunge the information
- stored after a Web site has been visited, wrote Uche Enuha, a program
- manager on the IE user experience team, on the company's browser blog.
-
- The new "delete browsing history" feature under the "tools" menu will be
- able to wipe out five major data categories, including temporary Internet
- files, cookies, history, form data, and passwords, Enuha wrote.
-
- A user can delete all of those at once or can individually choose which
- ones to wipe through the "delete browsing history" panel, Enuha wrote.
-
- The feature goes deeper than a novice user would likely pursue. For
- example, deleting files from the temporary Internet files folder will also
- clean out attachments stored by the Outlook e-mail program in that folder,
- Enuha wrote.
-
- A beta version of IE 7 has been out for Windows XP Service Pack 2 and an
- enhanced beta version is available for the beta 1 version of Windows Vista,
- according to Microsoft's Web site.
-
-
-
- Maine Touts Recycling Computer Monitors
-
-
- A first-in-the-nation law went into effect Wednesday in Maine, requiring
- makers of televisions and computer monitors to pick up the tab to recycle
- and safely dispose of their products once they are discarded.
-
- Under the law, which mirrors the approach taken in Europe and Japan,
- manufacturers must shoulder the cost of sending electronics to recycling
- centers where toxic materials such as lead and mercury are removed.
-
- "It's time to bring them out of the attics, out of the garages, out of the
- closets, out of the basements," said Jon Hinck of the Natural Resources
- Council of Maine, which lobbied for the new law.
-
- The Maine recycling law is the first to bill manufacturers directly for the
- cost, Hinck said. A California law requires customers to pay a disposal fee
- when they buy a TV or computer monitor, while Maryland imposes registration
- fees on computer makers and disburses the proceeds to municipalities for
- use in recycling old hardware.
-
- Up until now, Maine communities charged people $15 to $20 to dispose of
- their electronic gear. Under the new law, consumers can drop off their TVs
- and computer screens for $2 apiece.
-
- Maine has approved five consolidators that will gather and sort the
- "e-waste," send it to recyclers and bill manufacturers for the cost
- according to the amount of waste they originated, said David Littell,
- acting commissioner of environmental protection.
-
- Disposal costs for "orphan units" whose manufacturers are no longer in
- business will be shared by the other companies in proportion to their
- overall costs.
-
- TVs and older computer monitors each contain between four and eight pounds
- of lead, along with an array of other toxic materials, and newer
- flat-screen monitors contain mercury, according to the Natural Resources
- Council of Maine.
-
- The primary purpose of the law is to keep those materials from being
- released into the environment from incinerators or landfills. But it is
- also intended to encourage manufacturers to use less lead and design
- products that lend themselves to recycling.
-
- Cities and states across the country are considering electronic waste
- legislation designed to address what the Environmental Protection Agency
- has called the nation's fastest-growing category of solid waste.
-
- The Electronic Industries Alliance, a trade group representing
- manufacturers of computers and televisions, expressed concern about the
- Maine law, suggesting that the state may have difficulty holding some
- foreign and small generic manufacturers to the same standards imposed on
- makers of brand-name equipment.
-
- "We clearly want to see this addressed at a national level. We think that's
- one way to avoid some of those loopholes," said Rick Goss, the
- association's director of environmental affairs in Arlington, Va.
-
-
-
- EBay Plans Instant-buying Service on Yahoo!
-
-
- EBay Inc. on Wednesday said it had unveiled a new instant-purchase service
- to supplement its bid-and-wait online auctions, pitting the company
- directly against conventional e-commerce retailers.
-
- Bill Cobb, president of eBay North America, said in a memo to eBay users on
- Wednesday that the new service - to be called eBay Express when launched
- this spring - aims to broaden the range of products shoppers can expect to
- buy on eBay.
-
- eBay also disclosed changes to the fees it charges in the United States for
- listing items on eBay.com, raising by around 8 percent the percentage
- transaction fee that it charges on the value of goods between $25 and $975
- in value. It said it would cut prices on low-priced items and other seller
- features.
-
- "We do believe this broadly to be accretive," EBay Chief Financial Officer
- Rajiv Dutta told investors on a conference call with investors following
- the company's 2005 year-end financial report.
-
- eBay spokesman Hani Durzy said that eBay now charges 5.25 percent of the
- first $25 of the final sale price of an item; 2.75 percent of the next
- incremental $975 of value, and 1.5 percent of the incremental value above
- $1000 of the item. The middle tier of prices - from $25 to $975 - will now
- be charged transaction fees of 3 percent, up from 2.75 percent.
-
- EBay Express will feature an online shopping cart that allows buyers to
- select multiple items and pay for them all at once, as Amazon.com Inc.
- shoppers are used to doing.
-
- Payments can be made via credit cards or eBay's online payment service.
- Sellers are paid instantly, meaning the potential for buyers to defraud
- sellers is eliminated.
-
- "We also think it (eBay Express) will attract new buyers to eBay who prefer
- a more conventional e-commerce shopping experience," Cobb said in his note
- to users in the San Jose, California, company's core North American market.
-
- The full note is available on eBay's site at:
- http://www2.ebay.com/aw/core/200601181327302.html/
-
- EBay Express is described as a "specialty site" that will be part of the
- broader eBay marketplace, alongside its exiting eBay Stores and "Fixed
- Price" listings.
-
- EBay sellers with strong buyer ratings will qualify to sell their items on
- both eBay Express and traditional eBay.com sites. Initially, eBay Express
- will only be available to U.S. sellers, but plans are to extend the service
- internationally.
-
- EBay Express is "a new feature, a quick and easy way to find items at a
- fixed price for quick and easy shopping," eBay President and Chief
- Executive Meg Whitman told investors on a conference call following the
- company's 2005 year-end financial report.
-
- EBay price increases initially apply only to U.S. listings. International
- price changes will be announced later this quarter, eBay executives said.
- EBay also said it was waiving all final sale fees in its EachNet China
- business.
-
-
-
- Suspect in Federal Spam Case Pleads Guilty
-
-
- The main defendant in the nation's first prosecution under a 2004 federal
- anti-spam law pleaded guilty Tuesday to three felony charges, federal
- prosecutors said.
-
- Daniel J. Lin, 30, of West Bloomfield Township faces nearly five years in
- prison and a fine of up to $250,000, the U.S. Attorney's Office in Detroit
- said.
-
- Two of the counts are fraud charges involving millions of unsolicited spam
- e-mails sent to computer users. The other is possession of a firearm by a
- felon, for guns discovered when authorities raided Lin's suburban Detroit
- home.
-
- He is scheduled to be sentenced May 16 in U.S. District Court in Ann Arbor.
-
- Lin and three other West Bloomfield Township men were identified in court
- documents as being part of the massive illegal spam scheme.
-
- Court papers described a complex web of corporate identities, bank accounts
- and electronic storefronts used to send hundreds of thousands of e-mail
- sales pitches for fraudulent weight-loss and erectile dysfunction products.
-
- The Federal Trade Commission said angry consumers forwarded to authorities
- more than 490,000 e-mails from the operation from January 2004 to April
- 2004 - more than from any other spam outfit worldwide during the same
- period.
-
- Court records show that charges against the other defendants, James J. Lin,
- Chris Chung and Mark M. Sadek, have been dismissed. The four were arrested
- in April 2004.
-
-
- Google, U.S. Clash Over Online Searches
-
-
- Google Inc. is rebuffing the Bush administration's demand for a peek at
- what millions of people have been looking up on the Internet's leading
- search engine - a request that underscores the potential for online
- databases to become tools of the government.
-
- Mountain View-based Google has refused to comply with a White House
- subpoena first issued last summer, prompting U.S. Attorney General Alberto
- Gonzales this week to ask a federal judge in San Jose for an order to
- force a handover of the requested records.
-
- The government wants a list all requests entered into Google's search
- engine during an unspecified single week - a breakdown that could
- conceivably span tens of millions of queries. In addition, it seeks 1
- million randomly selected Web addresses from various Google databases.
-
- In court papers that the San Jose Mercury News reported on after seeing
- them Wednesday, the Bush administration depicts the information as vital
- in its effort to restore online child protection laws that have been
- struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court.
-
- Google competitor Yahoo Inc., which runs the Internet's second-most used
- search engine, confirmed Thursday that it had complied with a similar
- government subpoena.
-
- Although the government says it isn't seeking any data that ties personal
- information to search requests, the subpoena still raises serious privacy
- concerns, experts said, especially considering recent revelations that the
- White House authorized eavesdropping on domestic civilian communications
- after the Sept. 11 attacks without obtaining court approval.
-
- "Search engines now play such an important part in our daily lives that
- many people probably contact Google more often than they do their own
- mother," said Thomas Burke, a San Francisco attorney who has handled
- several prominent cases involving privacy issues.
-
- "Just as most people would be upset if the government wanted to know how
- much you called your mother and what you talked about, they should be
- upset about this, too."
-
- The content of search request sometimes contain information about the
- person making the query.
-
- For instance, it's not unusual for search requests to include names,
- medical information or Social Security information, said Pam Dixon,
- executive director for the World Privacy Forum.
-
- "This is exactly the kind of thing we have been worrying about with search
- engine for some time," Dixon said. "Google should be commended for fighting
- this."
-
- Other search engines already have complied with similar subpoenas issued
- by the Bush administration, according to court documents. The cooperating
- search engines weren't identified.
-
- Yahoo stressed that it didn't reveal any personal information. "We are
- rigorous defenders of our users' privacy," Yahoo spokeswoman Mary Osako
- said Thursday. "In our opinion, this is not a privacy issue."
-
- Microsoft Corp. MSN, the No. 3 search engine, declined to say whether it
- even received a similar subpoena. "MSN works closely with law enforcement
- officials worldwide to assist them when requested," the company said in a
- statement.
-
- As the Internet's dominant search engine, Google has built up a valuable
- storehouse of information that "makes it a very attractive target for law
- enforcement," said Chris Hoofnagle, senior counsel for the Electronic
- Privacy Information Center.
-
- The Department of Justice argues that Google's cooperation is essential in
- its effort to simulate how people navigate the Web.
-
- In a separate case in Pennsylvania, the Bush administration is trying to
- prove that Internet filters don't do an adequate job of preventing children
- from accessing online pornography and other objectionable destinations.
-
- Obtaining the subpoenaed information from Google "would assist the
- government in its efforts to understand the behavior of current Web users,
- (and) to estimate how often Web users encounter harmful-to-minors material
- in the course of their searches," the Justice Department wrote in a brief
- filed Wednesday
-
- Google - whose motto when it went public in 2004 was "do no evil" -
- contends that submitting to the subpoena would represent a betrayal to its
- users, even if all personal information is stripped from the search terms
- sought by the government.
-
- "Google's acceding to the request would suggest that it is willing to
- reveal information about those who use its services. This is not a
- perception that Google can accept," company attorney Ashok Ramani wrote in
- a letter included in the government's filing.
-
- Complying with the subpoena also wound threaten to expose some of Google's
- "crown-jewel trade secrets," Ramani wrote. Google is particularly concerned
- that the information could be used to deduce the size of its index and how
- many computers it uses to crunch the requests.
-
- "This information would be highly valuable to competitors or miscreants
- seeking to harm Google's business," Ramani wrote.
-
- Dixon is hoping Google's battle with the government reminds people to be
- careful how they interact with search engines.
-
- "When you are looking at that blank search box, you should remember that
- what you fill can come back to haunt you unless you take precautions," she
- said.
-
-
-
- Phishing Attacks Hit All-Time High
-
-
- The Anti-Phishing Working Group (APWG) is saying that phishing attacks are
- more rampant now than ever, especially after last year, which saw steady
- growth of the online fraud.
-
- The number of unique fraud attacks launched over e-mail in November 2005
- was nearly double that of November 2004, according to the industry group.
-
- Although phishers continue to stick to some tried-and-true tactics - such
- as using the names of financial institutions to trick people into giving
- up their account information - they also have started using the names of
- other brands, like eBay, Google, and Apple.
-
- The number of major brand names targeted increased from 64 to 93 over the
- course of the past year, the APWG claims. Also increased is the number of
- Trojans used by phishers, particularly those pieces of malicious software
- that are carrying keylogger programs.
-
- The continued rise in phishing attacks shows increasing sophistication in
- strategy as well as more organized efforts among online criminals, said
- Dave Jevans, APWG chairman.
-
- "We're a long way from the days when attacks on systems were done to show
- off," he said. "With the motivation today being money, that creates a
- different kind of attacker."
-
- Often, he said, phishers are highly organized and very technologically
- savvy in using remote-controlled zombie machines to launch their attacks.
-
- As Internet users become more aware of potential scams involving financial
- institutions, phishers have been broadening their tactics to include
- messages purporting to be from well-trusted companies like Apple.
-
- "Basically, if they think it'll work, they'll try it," said Jevans. "So
- many companies send e-mails out to users with information about their
- account settings, and phishers see that as an opportunity to cash in."
-
- The APWG is keen on educating users to help reduce the phishing threat.
- And, as users become slowly more aware of the problem and take protective
- measures, other organizations have launched some technological efforts to
- tackle the phishing problem.
-
- For example, the recently released Thunderbird e-mail client, version 1.5,
- has a built-in phishing detector to flag suspicious e-mail messages.
-
- Other e-mail applications and Web browsers have begun to implement phishing
- protection as well, and the industry as a whole has been calling for
- stronger forms of e-mail authentication.
-
-
-
- Hackers Attack U.K. Student's Web Site on Yahoo!
-
-
- A Web site that earned an enterprising British student $1 million suffered
- a crippling attack by ransom-seeking hackers.
-
- Alex Tew, 21, said Wednesday that his Million Dollar Homepage was targeted
- after he publicized how it had helped him raise money for his university
- studies.
-
- Tew had sold 10,000 small squares of advertising space on the Web site for
- $100 each, achieving his target in four months. His initiative spawned
- several copycat sites.
-
- But Tew said that on Jan. 7, he received a threat from an organization
- calling itself "The Dark Group," demanding that he pay them $50,000 within
- 72 hours or face having his site taken down.
-
- "It was written in poor English, but the hackers asked for $50,000, saying
- that it was just 5 percent of what I had made," Tew said. "I did not reply
- to the e-mail. I had no intention of paying."
-
- Tew ignored the threat. Hackers then initiated a so-called distributed
- denial of service, in which attackers take command of third-party
- computers, through a virus or other security vulnerability, and instruct
- them to send junk data to the target site, overwhelming servers and causing
- the site to crash or perform poorly.
-
- Tew said the site now works normally.
-
- Tew, from Wiltshire, a county in southern England, said he informed the FBI
- because his site is hosted in the United States.
-
- FBI spokesman Paul Bresson said the agency was investigating.
-
- Such extortion cases targeting Web sites are occurring with greater
- frequency.
-
-
-
- Rating System Urged for Adult Internet Content
-
-
- An influential U.S. Senator warned the adult entertainment industry on
- Thursday that if it does not develop a rating system for its Internet
- content, Congress will.
-
- "My advice to your clients is that you better do it soon or we will mandate
- it if you don't," Republican Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, chairman of the
- Commerce Committee, told Paul Cambria, general counsel to the Adult Freedom
- Foundation.
-
- Cambria told the committee hearing that it was the first time his group
- had been invited to testify before Congress on the issue and he would take
- the message back to his clients.
-
- "I take that as a message and mandate to my clients that we should do
- that," Cambria said. "I might welcome a shot across the bow rather than
- one between the eyes."
-
- Tim Lordan, executive director of the Internet Education Foundation, said
- about 75 percent of Internet pornography comes from overseas, beyond the
- reach of U.S. laws. He said parents play a crucial role in keeping
- unwanted material away from their children and that a rating system would
- help.
-
- James Burrus of the FBI, illustrating how pervasive the problem is, said
- that a word search on "pornography" produced 19 million results.
-
- Deputy Assistant Attorney General Laura Parsky said law enforcement is
- using increasingly sophisticated techniques, including following the path
- of financial transactions, to crack down on child pornography. Younger
- children are being abused and the images are becoming more disturbing, she
- said.
-
- "In the past several years, the children we have seen in these images have
- been younger and younger, and, very regrettably, the abuse depicted has
- been increasingly more severe and is often sadistic," she said.
-
- She declined to comment on a Justice Department subpoena of Google Inc.,
- saying she could not talk about ongoing investigations. The department is
- seeking documents as part of the agency's probe of Internet pornography
- and the company rejected the demand as overreaching by the government.
-
-
-
- Russian Tycoon Is Spammers' New Target
-
-
- Russia has more in common with Nigeria these days than just oil.
-
- Following up on the politically charged jailing of oil tycoon Mikhail
- Khodorkovsky, a wave of scam e-mails in the style of Nigeria's notorious
- spammers have been popping up in inboxes from Moscow to Kentucky.
-
- But instead of impassioned pleas by dead African dictators' aides to move
- millions of dollars overseas, the appeals appear to come from the inner
- circle of the man who was once Russia's richest.
-
- "Dear friend, I got your reliable contact from my husband's business diary
- ..." begins one letter from "Leila Khodorkovsky," claiming to be the
- billionaire's wife - whose actual name is Inna. The letter requests
- assistance investing US$45 million (euro37 million) of the tycoon's money
- and promises compensation.
-
- Another is signed by "Larissa Sosnitskaya," who describes herself as a
- personal treasurer to Khodorkovsky, seeking a beneficiary for a similar sum
- that she intends to use "to relocate to the American continent and never to
- be connected to any of Mikhail Khodorkovsky conglomerates."
-
- While their details - and often grammar - are muddled, the
- Khodorkovsky-themed spam highlights the notoriety of his case and his
- eight-year sentence on tax and fraud charges, which critics called Kremlin
- revenge for his sponsoring of opposition parties.
-
- Worth some US$15 billion before his arrest at gunpoint on a Siberian
- airfield in 2003 - and currently an inmate of a bleak prison colony on
- Russia's border with China - Khodorkovsky was an obvious choice for the
- authors of the Nigerian-style spam, experts say.
-
- "This is a well-developed business - they choose what is up-to-date," said
- Yevgeny Altovsky, who coordinates a UNESCO-backed anti-spamming program in
- Moscow.
-
- "The main thing is it has to involve some kind of rich person," he said.
- "If a major court case against Bill Gates were to start tomorrow I'm sure
- he would appear in these messages."
-
- Yukos spokeswoman Claire Davidson declined to comment on why spammers might
- have selected Khodorkovsky and the company he founded as subject matter.
-
- "They aren't being issued from within the company," she said, referring to
- one letter in circulation allegedly signed by Bruce Misamore, Yukos' former
- chief financial officer.
-
- While versions of the letter from Khodorkovsky's managers have been sent in
- Russian, Altovsky said Russian Internet users are wise to such scams and
- were unlikely to be fooled.
-
- Indeed, the Russian market for spam differs widely from the more aggressive
- U.S. fare of online casinos, porn sites and erectile dysfunction drugs, and
- is used primarily by small and medium businesses as a means to advertise.
- Nonetheless, the Russian practice causes some $30 million a year in damages
- from traffic costs, Altovsky said.
-
- Nigeria - globally recognized as a base for criminals exploiting the reach
- of the Internet - said in October that it is considering making spamming a
- criminal offense that could land senders of unsolicited e-mails in jail for
- three years.
-
- Africa's most populous country is known for its "advance fee" scammers -
- criminals scouting for victims by sending millions of unsolicited e-mails
- with false proposals around the world.
-
- Among the most common are e-mails proposing to share portions of dead
- African dictators' ill-gotten estates in exchange for an advance payment
- to help move the money overseas. The scammers keep the "fees" while victims
- receive nothing.
-
- Khodorkovsky's case was accompanied by a sweeping back tax investigation at
- his Yukos oil company that eventually saw its main production unit sold in
- a disputed auction and eventually ending up in state hands. Yukos managers
- have since fled Russia as their colleagues were jailed and arrested in the
- continuing probe.
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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- profit publications only under the following terms: articles must
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- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
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