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- Volume 8, Issue 7 Atari Online News, Etc. February 17, 2006
-
-
- 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:
-
- Djordje Vukovic
- Uwe Seimet
-
-
-
- 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 #0807 02/17/06
-
- ~ New Tera Desktop Out! ~ People Are Talking! ~ New HDDriver Manual!
- ~ New AtarICQ Update! ~ No MSN Name Change! ~ Mac Virus Debuts!
- ~ Vista Out By Holidays? ~ Going Online For Fun! ~ New MacBook Pro!
- ~ ~ No MSN Name Change! ~
-
- -* Bill Graham's Rock Archives! *-
- -* U.S. To Fight Internet Censorship! *-
- -* New Cyber Stalking Law: What Is Annoying? *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- What a week it was! Remember that Joe, in his column last week, mentioned
- that we were due for a snowstorm over the weekend. Well, it hit the both of
- us with a wintry vengeance. If I recall, Joe's area of New England got
- about two feet of snow, and we got over a foot in my neck of the woods. We
- had to go out twice to keep up with the ferocity of snowfall. There were
- some areas around here that was getting 2-3 inches an hour! Fortunately,
- it was so dry that the snow was light and powdery. It was easy to move, and
- didn't take too long to clean up. And now, a few days later, it's almost
- gone. We've had temperatures around 50 degrees, so this stuff has been
- melting quickly. Just in time for some arctic cold this weekend! So,
- Spring is just around the corner, right?
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- AtarICQ 0.167 Is Released (Important Update!)
-
-
- Hi all,
-
- Have you been experiencing problems with ICQ last few days? Then keep
- on reading!
-
- Recently there have been some serious problems with a couple of ICQ
- clients, aICQ being one of them. The problem has been that incoming
- messages have not been received properly. It would have seemed like all
- your friends were silent all the time. Thanks to some fast research by
- Dan, there is now an update which should take care of this issue. If
- you use AtarICQ, make sure to grab this update ASAP!
-
- Other noticeable changes in the new release:
-
- * Cleaned up the keyboard evaluation code
-
- * Masked out all messages about oncoming contacts during the first
- 10s. (Some ppl reported server was lagging this data a bit, hence this
- delay was added in order to avoid unnecessary console text)
-
- * Some ICQ (spam) bots are trying to trick ppl to add them to
- contact list by sending out signal that "user is online". That would
- indicate that we have already added them to your contact list,
- something that is not necessarily true. Since aICQ now supports the
- server side list directly, some of these attempts will now be detected
- and blocked.
-
- * If contact list was empty, the option to "hide separators" would
- crash aICQ. Solved by temporarily cancelling the hiding, until contacts
- are added.
-
- * In dialog for adding more contacts, the number of allowed chars
- for UIN/ screenname has been increased from 10 to 16.
-
- * In MagiC, setting both SELECTEABLE and TOUCHEXIT for an object
- will make form_button() wait for the mouse button to be released. This
- is now worked around, allowing the setting of auto-away time in
- preferences to work smoother under MagiC.
-
- Get the new AtarICQ release here:
-
- http://www.ataricq.org
-
- Regards,
-
- /Joakim
-
- http://www.ataricq.org
- http://xaaes.atariforge.net
- http://topp.atari-users.net
-
-
-
- HDDRIVER News: English Manual
-
-
- Hello,
-
- As the Atari Workshop website has vanished and I have not been able to
- reach Atari Workshop by email I have decided to offer the English version
- of HDDRIVER *including the English manual* myself.
-
- I am currently revising and updating the English manual. Users ordering
- HDDRIVER 8.1 can now choose between the German, English and French manual.
- The French manual only covers HDDRIVER 7, though.
-
- For registered users of HDDRIVER 8.1 the current English manual is also
- available separately. Please refer to
-
- http://www.seimet.de/hddriverprices_english.html for details.
-
- Remember that you can pay with PayPal, which ensures that HDDRIVER can also
- be ordered conveniently from countries outside the EU without having to pay
- high fees for bank transfers or sending the money in cash.
-
-
- Best regards, Uwe
-
-
-
- TeraDesk 3.80 Is Available
-
-
- Hello;
-
- Version 3.80 of Tera Desktop (TeraDesk) open-source desktop is available
- at:
-
- http://solair.eunet.yu/~vdjole/teradesk.htm
-
- TeraDesk is currently the only open-source desktop available for 16-bit and
- 32-bit Atari computers. Developer's goal is to maintain TeraDesk as a
- small, simple, fast and reliable desktop, which can run on any
- TOS-compatible Atari computer, clone or emulator and which can be be
- functional and competitive in the modern multitasking environments and all
- flavours and versions of TOS-compatible operating system(s), while keeping,
- as much as reasonable, familiarity with the original TOS desktop.
-
- Main new features in this release are related to a capability to pass names
- of network objects, such as web pages and ftp sites, via the AV and
- drag&drop protocols, and to assign such names as 'document types' to
- applications. Supported name prefixes are currently http:, ftp: and
- mailto:; this enables e.g. MyMail to work properly with TeraDesk, and makes
- it possible to open network targets from the Open... menu/dialog if
- appropriate applications are installed.
-
- As a byproduct of these changes, names of network objects can also be
- assigned as targets of symbolic links and desktop icons. It is thus
- possible e.g. to have icons of favourite internet sites on the desktop.
-
- A considerable number of not-very-obvious bugs has been fixed as well, most
- of them related to handling of extremely long paths and filenames
- (unfortunately, the bugfix code increased program size by about 1 KB). See
- the history file for details.
-
- Another point which may be of interest is that there may be, probably very
- soon, Russian, German and French translations of this version of TeraDesk.
- Links will be posted on TeraDesk home page as soon as translations become
- available.
-
- Users are advised to read the documentation before running the program ;)
- Some features of TeraDesk may not be immediately obvious.
-
- Have fun.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Last week brought us a couple of feet of
- snow here in my area, and to make it even more interesting, it all hit
- in under 24 hours! Yep, that's right, I got a whopping 27 inches of snow
- in my backyard from 9:00 pm on Saturday to about 3:00 Sunday afternoon.
- For a while, we were averaging four inches an hour. My back is still
- yelling at me after all the shoveling!
-
- The Olympics is in full swing, and I've got to admit that I'm having a
- little trouble in coming to terms with some of the sporting events. I
- mean, c'mon... snowboarding? An Olympic event? Gimme a break. It may be
- fun... it may require skill (no 'maybe' about that)... but I just can't
- see it being on the same level as the old tried-and-true events. What's
- next? Olympic hula-hoop? The Wheel-O Relay?
-
- Anyway, The Olympics are in progress in Italy (or, as my grandfather used
- to say, "It-lee"). I find it a good sign that we citizens of the world
- are still able to put politics and our philosophies aside for a couple
- of weeks and join in sportsman-like competition. I guess that now the
- tricky part would be to carry that over to other areas.
-
- The NewsGroup activity is low again this week, so it's going to be a
- short column. I'm afraid that this is going to become an ongoing trend.
- Let's hope that I'm wrong. Hell, it HAS happened once or twice before.
- <chuckle>
-
- Let's get to the news, hints, tips and info from the UseNet
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- Ronald Hall asks for opinions on games:
-
- "Hey guys, I was just poking around Wikipedia and noticed the entry for
- Dungeon Master. It says it had 50% penetration of the ST market. Does
- that make it the best selling/most popular ST game ever? I was just
- curious as to what game holds that spot."
-
-
- 'RustyNutt' tells Ronald:
-
- "Zork Zork Zork!"
-
-
- Edward Baiz adds his opinion:
-
- "Dungeon Master on the ST was a great experience and I just loved it. To
- me, however, the Ultima series was the best."
-
-
- Ronald tells Edward:
-
- "I loved that series too Edward. I played 3-4-5 to death. I've got 6 but
- never completed it. VI even runs on my Falcon, and is hard drive
- installable. I have to say I'm disappointed in the graphics in certain
- areas of the game though. It looks like whoever ported it over used the
- original EGA (not VGA) versions for things like character portraits. Very
- ugly. Far less than what even a standard ST is capable of doing.
-
- I guess 5 is my favorite. There is just something about the story of the
- Underworld and the Shadow Lords that holds my attention. Other little
- things as well, like when you do something wrong and the next town you go
- into has a wanted poster listing you and your party in it. Alas, mine
- won't run on my Falcon, just on my STs..."
-
-
- 'Phantomm' posts this about MagiC4 and Ease:
-
- "I need to know what the final version of Magic4 and Ease was? And if
- there are updates that still can be gotten for free or pay?
-
- I have at least version 4 of both. Also, can Ease be used with Geneva
- instead of NeoDesk?
-
- And how does Ease stack up to other desktop replacements such as
- NeoDesk, and Thing?"
-
-
- Edward Baiz tells Phantomm:
-
- "I have version 5 of Ease and version 6.2 of Magic..."
-
-
- Chris Ryan asks:
-
- "Before I ask questions that have probably been asked a hundred times,
- I was wondering if there was a good web site that had good resources
- for the 1040st? I've been doing google searches, but I cant seem to
- find a definitive one."
-
-
- Ronald Hall tells Chris:
-
- "Here ya go:
-
- http://web.archive.org/web/20041014070904/www.megacom.net/~q-funk/ST/
- http://www.atariarchives.org/cfn/06/02.php
- http://jens-inge.dyndns.org/html/guide206/INDEX.HTM
- http://www.dwade.freeserve.co.uk/atari/main.html
-
- I also have an Atari FAQ section on my BBS (see sig below), although it
- is not complete. Its a bit more bother to reach, since as a new user you
- would have to go through the registration. Honestly, you can probably get
- most of what you need from the links I provided. Unless you just want to
- call for a chance at the free monthly prizes. :-)
-
- Other than that, don't hesitate to ask questions here in this newsgroup.
- For every wretch that slams you for asking a question they have happened
- to have heard before, there will be 3-5 that try hard to help you. :-) "
-
-
- While we're talking about desktops and such, Djordje Vukovic posts this
- about TeraDesk:
-
- "Version 3.80 of Tera Desktop (TeraDesk) open-source desktop is available
- at: http://solair.eunet.yu/~vdjole/teradesk.htm
-
- TeraDesk is currently the only open-source desktop available for 16-bit
- and 32-bit Atari computers. Developer's goal is to maintain TeraDesk as
- a small, simple, fast and reliable desktop, which can run on any
- TOS-compatible Atari computer, clone or emulator and which can be be
- functional and competitive in the modern multitasking environments and
- all flavours and versions of TOS-compatible operating system(s), while
- keeping, as much as reasonable, familiarity with the original TOS
- desktop.
-
- Main new features in this release are related to a capability to pass
- names of network objects, such as web pages and ftp sites, via the AV
- and drag&drop protocols, and to assign such names as 'document types' to
- applications.
-
- Supported name prefixes are currently http:, ftp: and mailto:; this
- enables e.g. MyMail to work properly with TeraDesk, and makes it
- possible to open network targets from the Open... menu/dialog if
- appropriate applications are installed.
-
- As a byproduct of these changes, names of network objects can also be
- assigned as targets of symbolic links and desktop icons. It is thus
- possible e.g. to have icons of favourite internet sites on the desktop.
-
- A considerable number of not-very-obvious bugs has been fixed as well,
- most of them related to handling of extremely long paths and filenames
- (unfortunately, the bugfix code increased program size by about 1 KB).
- See the history file for details.
-
- Another point which may be of interest is that there may be, probably
- very soon, Russian, German and French translations of this version of
- TeraDesk. Links will be posted on TeraDesk home page as soon as
- translations become available.
-
- Users are advised to read the documentation before running the program.
- Some features of TeraDesk may not be immediately obvious...
-
- Accidentally, wrong files were put on the web page. Corrected files were
- uploaded again about 00:20 h, Feb. 16th (GMT+1). If anyone happened to
- download the wrong file(s) in the few hours between the initial upload and
- the upload of the corrected files, please download again.
-
- Sorry for the inconvenience.
-
- A correction had to be made to the just-released TeraDesk 3.80- a
- variable was used uninitialized, which could cause starting of an
- application to -sometimes- fail with "Command too long" message. As luck
- would have it, this bug showed up for the first time only after the
- program has been released, although that particular piece of code has
- been made about a month ago.
-
- As this was just a single correction and made immediately after the
- initial release, I did not update the version number; it is still 3.80,
- but release date is now February 16th.
-
- Hopefully it will be all right now. I apologize for the inconveniences
- that this repeated releasing might have caused."
-
-
- Dr. Uwe Seimet, author of HD Driver, posts this tidbit:
-
- "s the Atari Workshop website has vanished and I have not been able to
- reach Atari Workshop by email I have decided to offer the English
- version of HDDRIVER *including the English manual* myself.
- I am currently revising and updating the English manual. Users ordering
- HDDRIVER 8.1 can now choose between the German, English and French
- manual. The French manual only covers HDDRIVER 7, though.
- For registered users of HDDRIVER 8.1 the current English manual is also
- available separately. Please refer to
- http://www.seimet.de/hddriverprices_english.html for details.
-
- Remember that you can pay with PayPal, which ensures that HDDRIVER can
- also be ordered conveniently from countries outside the EU without
- having to pay high fees for bank transfers or sending the money in
- cash."
-
-
- Rodolphe Czuba tells Uwe:
-
- "That's a good decision!! The internet is here to allow direct selling
- from small authors/companies...this business model does not need some
- distributors..."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this time around. Tune in again next week, same
- time, same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying
- when...
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Call of Duty 2: Big Red One!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Nintendo DS Internet Browsers!
- Video Games Awards Show!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Call of Duty 2: Big Red One
-
-
- World War II was one of the biggest conflicts in American history. The
- impact of this war has been so strong that to this day, game makers are
- still bringing out title upon title about it. With all of the games based
- on World War II, it takes a lot to keep the genre fresh and convince gamers
- to play another first-person shooter taking place in the 1940s.
-
- The new angle that Treyarc Games took is to retell the story of the Big Red
- One, the legendary first infantry division. These guys were the best of the
- best, and they were in the thick of the conflicts from Europe to North
- Africa. You play a newcomer to the squad. You'll start right off on the
- battlefield, and you'll get a tutorial as you finish your first mission.
- Each mission is a large level broken down into objectives and checkpoints.
- There are only about one to three checkpoints per level, so whenever you do
- die, you'll be sent back to the very first objective before you reached a
- checkpoint. This can be infuriating, because at times your enemies will mow
- you down with gunfire and explosives from all possible sides.
-
- To survive the levels, you get to use many types of weapons, some American
- and others that drop when you kill enemy soldiers. Each weapon has its own
- firepower, reload time, basically its own style: picking up a sniper rifle
- might be a better choice than an M1 for one level, while having two
- automatic weapons may be best for a more intense mission. Since this game
- has a degree of realism to it, you can only carry two guns at a time and
- you can only carry a certain amount of ammunition at a time. Reloading is
- realistic as well, so if you find yourself standing in the middle of the
- street with enemies nearby, it would be smart to find cover before you
- reload a clip.
-
- The graphics for 'Big Red One' aren't quite amazing. They're your standard,
- non-eye-catching graphics, but they look good enough when you're blasting
- swarms of Nazi troops or planting dynamite on a 'Screaming Mimi.' The
- aspects of the game that are really done well are the movements of the
- non-playable characters, and the faces of the main characters look as if
- they were based on actual people. Each level layout also looks as if they
- have been properly modeled after the true battlegrounds they represent.
-
- 'Big Red One' has bonus materials, such as artwork, behind-the-scenes
- footage, and the history of the real Big Red One, so you can learn the
- basics of who these game characters are based on and what made them so
- notable. There's also some incredible video footage from the real battle
- that you can see in the game and the extras menu. You get more extras in
- the Special Edition of the game, but the regular game's bonuses are just as
- rewarding. Multiplayer is fantastic and playing against human opponents in
- classic modes like capture the flag and deathmatch makes 'Big Red One'
- worth sticking with after you've finished playing offline.
-
- 'Call Of Duty 2: Big Red One' has about as many hours of gameplay as a
- first person shooter should, and the action is hectic, fast, and exciting.
- People who've invested their time into many titles like this will not feel
- like their time playing has been wasted. For everyone else, you won't
- regret traveling back to one of the most famous wars in American history,
- especially if your PS2 is rigged for online play.
-
- Ratings (1-10):
-
- Graphics 7.5. Good in some aspects, average in others.
-
- Sound 8.0. Actors from the HBO miniseries Band of Brothers lend their
- voices to the Big Red One squad. All the sounds of war are authentic and
- the ambience is believable.
-
- Gameplay 8.5. The game is very challenging and mission objectives have a
- good amount of variation
-
- Story 8.0. You go from ground to air to sky with the whole Big Red One
- squad, and after each mission that's completed, you get to see real
- footage from WWII.
-
- Replayability 8.5. Story mode is worth playing more than once, and online
- multiplayer is a great mode.
-
- Overall 8.0. 'Call of Duty 2: Big Red One' holds its own with the flood
- of World War II shooters in the market.
-
-
-
- Nintendo Device to Have Internet Browsers
-
-
- Opera Software AS will supply Internet browsers for Nintendo Co.'s hugely
- popular dual-screen handheld game device, the Norwegian company's chief
- executive said Wednesday.
-
- "This is a breakthrough," Opera co-founder and chief executive Jon S. von
- Tetzchner told The Associated Press by telephone. "This is the first time
- we have provided a browser for a game device."
-
- As of early this year, the Japanese company had sold more than 13 million
- of its Nintendo DS devices, which it began manufacturing in November 2004.
-
- Nintendo DS combines dual screens, touch screen, voice recognition and
- wireless communications capabilities.
-
- Von Tetzchner said users will now also be able to surf the Internet with
- both of the device's screens by using the Opera browser inserted on a card
- into their machine's wi-fi slot.
-
- "There had been no really good browser earlier in the game machine market,"
- von Tetzchner said by telephone from a trade fair in Barcelona, Spain.
-
- Opera said the system allows owners to use their game machine with the key
- functions of a personal data assistant, or PDA.
-
- "Within just five seconds of turning on the system, the Nintendo DS is
- already fully operational. This makes it the ideal device to enable people
- to swiftly obtain the latest information from the Internet, wherever they
- are," said Masaru Shimomura, deputy general manager of Nintendo's research
- and development department.
-
- He praised the small Norwegian company's browser for ease of use and quick
- access to favorite Web sites.
-
- According to Opera, the browser will first be offered to consumers in
- Japan, with further distribution to be decided later. The companies
- declined to estimate the economic value of the deal, which is based on a
- license payment per unit.
-
- "Gaming devices are growing more advanced and a great Web experience is
- becoming a product differentiator for gaming manufacturers. Opera is
- excited to work with Nintendo to deliver a unique dual screen, full
- Internet experience on Nintendo DS," said Opera Executive Vice President
- Scott Hedrick.
-
- Oslo-based Opera's browser has won praise as being fast and compact, and
- has been gaining ground in mobile phones and personal digital assistants.
-
- The company, which employs about 250 people, was founded in 1995 by two
- former developers for the Norwegian telecommunications group Telenor as an
- offshoot of a company project.
-
-
-
- Playstation 3 Release 'Definitely This Year'
-
-
- Sony will definitely launch its new PlayStation 3 (PS3) game console this
- year, though the company still has not decided on a launch date nor pricing
- for the console, said Tetsuhiko Yasuda, managing director of Sony Computer
- Entertainment Asia.
-
- While stressing that the earlier launch of Microsoft's Xbox 360 did not add
- pressure on Sony, Yasuda told reporters that the company wants to be
- completely prepared when it begins marketing the PS3.
-
- Accumulated global shipments for the PS3 are expected to exceed 100 million
- units, a record that was set by Sony's earlier games consoles, the PS and
- PS2, despite the fact that the PS3 will be priced higher than the PS2,
- Yasuda said.
-
- To the disappointment of attendees at the show, Sony only displayed three
- mock-up versions of the PS3 and demonstrated some functions of the new
- console through a video. This raised doubts if Sony can really bring the
- PS3 to the market in the spring of this year as expected, according to
- market sources.
-
- The PS3 will lag the Xbox 360 more in market share if Sony delays launch
- of the PS3 to the end of 2006, the sources said, noting that Microsoft
- predicted global shipments of its Xbox 360 will reach 4.5-5.5 million units
- by the end of June.
-
- Yasuda also told reporters that Sony is expected to follow its previous
- experience in the production of the PS and PS2 by outsourcing production
- of the PS3 to contract makers a few months after its launch, according to
- a February report in the Chinese-language Commercial Times.
-
- Taiwan makers are expected to benefit from Sony's outsourcing policy and
- win orders for the PS3 in 2007 since local makers have been producing the
- PS2 and PSP (PlayStation Portable) for the Japanese vendor, the paper said.
-
-
-
- Video Game Awards Show To Debut in 2007
-
-
- The Academy of Interactive Arts and Science has unveiled a new annual
- television event, a co-venture with Dick Clark Prods. designed to showcase
- the year's best video games and the creative teams that made them possible.
-
- The announcement came last week during the nonprofit organization's DICE
- 2006 Summit in Las Vegas.
-
- "The Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences Presents: The Year in Games"
- is set to debut in first-quarter 2007.
-
- Jules Haimovitz, vice chairman and managing partner of Dick Clark Prods.,
- said the audience for the show is "much, much broader than most people
- think, at least 12-49."
-
- He was reluctant to describe the show in detail, however, because the
- format is unique. "We're creating a form of video that heretofore hasn't
- existed, so it would be like trying to describe a music video to somebody
- in 1968," Haimovitz said. "It will be entertaining even to those outside
- the game crowd."
-
- AIAS president Joseph Olin agreed the special will be much more than an
- awards show. Although its selection of games will be based on those titles
- making the shortlist for the DICE Awards - which honor achievement in many
- aspects of game creation - the show will focus more on how these titles
- became worthy of recognition.
-
- Part of the program's approach will be to incorporate insights from
- celebrities, consumers and well-known talents in the video game industry.
-
- "Since its inception 10 years ago, the AIAS has honored the innovators of
- the industry," Olin said. "The time is right for us to introduce these
- pioneers to the mass market, and we're looking forward to making our dream
- a reality in tandem with Dick Clark Prods. through a major television
- special."
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Apple to Begin Shipping New MacBook Pro
-
-
- Apple Computer Inc. said Tuesday it will begin shipping this week the new
- MacBook Pro, the company's first laptop computer to feature an Intel Corp.
- microprocessor.
-
- Apple, which is in the midst of a historic shift to Intel chips, last month
- introduced its first Intel-based desktop computer, the iMac G5, about six
- months ahead of schedule.
-
- Analysts expect the new Intel-based Macintosh products to boost Apple's
- perennially small share in the U.S. PC market, which increased slightly
- last year to more than 4 percent as the popularity of Apple's iPod media
- players drove consumers to give the Macs another look.
-
- Using Intel's Core Duo processors aligns Apple with the same kind of chips
- that rival makers of Windows-based computers use. It also has allowed Apple
- to tap into the vast marketing power of Intel, the world's largest
- semiconductor company.
-
- Apple says the MacBook Pro delivers up to four times the performance of its
- former flagship laptop, the PowerBook G4, which uses PowerPC chips from IBM
- Corp. and Freescale Semiconductor Inc.
-
- Instead of using the previously announced 1.83 gigahertz Core Duo
- processor, Apple said the new high-end MacBook will feature a 2.0 Ghz chip,
- but will remain priced at $2,499. The lower-end $1,999 model will have a
- 1.83 Ghz chip, instead of the previously announced 1.67 Ghz chip.
-
- Customers may also upgrade to a 2.16 Ghz version.
-
- Some may have to wait before obtaining one. Apple has said it may need some
- time to catch up with a backlog of orders.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Sees Vista in Stores by Holidays
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. hopes to have the new version of its Windows operating
- system available in time for the U.S. holiday season, narrowing the time
- frame for the much-anticipated product's release.
-
- Microsoft has long said the new system, called Vista, would be available
- in the second half of 2006, but spokesman Lou Gellos said Tuesday that the
- company wants to have it in stores in time for the holiday season, which
- typically begins around Thanksgiving. He declined to give any more detailed
- guidance.
-
- Analyst Charles Di Bona with Bernstein & Co. said that's important in part
- because consumers, rather than businesses, are often the first to buy a
- new version of Windows. He also said it will signal that Microsoft, which
- has often been plagued by missed deadlines, can get this product to market
- in time.
-
- "If they do that, they're on schedule, so that's good," he said.
-
- Joe Wilcox with Jupiter Research said the move also will be good for
- computer makers, who can use Vista as a push to persuade shoppers to buy
- new PCs.
-
- "The Dells and the HPs of the world want to have those nice, shiny new PCs
- to sell, and a brand new operating system would be a good start," he said.
-
- The new version of Windows, Microsoft's first update for its flagship
- offering in five years, promises to give users faster, better ways to
- search for data such as e-mails, music, photos and video content. It also
- will offer security improvements, an updated look and other perks such as
- parental controls and a new media player.
-
- However, it won't include an even more advanced way to store and organize
- information, called WinFS, that was originally promised and is now slated
- to come later.
-
- The release comes as the Redmond software giant faces emerging competitors
- such as Google Inc., whose products threaten Microsoft both on and off the
- desktop.
-
- Microsoft must persuade consumers that the upgrade will be worth the
- expense and trouble, when plenty of users might be perfectly happy with a
- computer running the current version of Windows.
-
- "The challenge for Microsoft will be trying to show consumers why Windows
- XP is not good enough and why they should consider Vista, and that's as
- much a marketing challenge as it is one about features," Wilcox said.
-
-
-
- No Name Change for MSN
-
-
- Though the new head of Microsoft's MSN division has been calling the
- company's MSN portal "MSN Media Network" internally, Microsoft has no
- formal plans to rebrand the site, a Microsoft spokesperson says.
-
- Rumors and published reports surfaced earlier this week that Microsoft
- would change the official name of its MSN portal to reflect a ramp up of
- services on the site offering more access to digital media and
- entertainment content. However, Microsoft spokesperson Kathy Gill says
- that while there will be an enhancement of entertainment and media services
- under the leadership of new MSN division leader John Nicol, the MSN brand
- will not change.
-
- "There will be investments going forward so it feels like a media network,
- but it will still be MSN," she says.
-
- Nicol took over as general manager of MSN in November following the
- departure of Hadi Partovi, who previously led the division. Nicol formerly
- was president and chief executive officer of the news channel MSNBC, and
- also worked for Microsoft's IPTV division at the company's Silicon Valley
- campus before assuming his current role, Gill says.
-
- Nicol will use his media experience to enhance MSN so it seems more like
- an Internet destination for entertainment services rather than merely a
- place for users to link to and find information or check e-mail, she says.
- The company will integrate more video content through MSN's various
- channels - such as Travel, Shopping, Health & Fitness, Dating & Personals,
- and Movies - as well as add personalization features so users can customize
- the way they use those channels, Gill says.
-
- For instance, if an MSN user has photos from a recent trip he or she would
- like to share with the MSN community, there will be a service that allows
- them to post those photos to the Travel channel, she says. Similar
- customization features will be offered for other channels, Gill adds.
-
- Microsoft's MSN is at the center of the company's strategy to offer more
- Web-based services and entertainment content so the company can derive
- revenue through paid advertising and deals with media content providers.
- Microsoft officially launched this initiative, dubbed "Live Software,"
- late last year.
-
- Since then the company has rolled out new services, such as Windows Live,
- a beta service that lets users customize Web-based content and services on
- a homepage called Live.com. The company also is expected to roll out the
- first beta of Office Live, an online e-mail and business intelligence
- service aimed at business users, next week.
-
- Also to bolster its Live Software plans, Microsoft recently launched Live
- Labs, an internal research effort to help get Web-based services developed
- and out of the door quickly, and is slated to host its first-ever trade
- show for Web and multimedia content developers, MIX 06, in Las Vegas next
- month.
-
-
-
- U.S. Moves to Fight Internet Censorship
-
-
- The State Department announced plans Tuesday to step up a campaign to
- combat efforts by foreign governments to restrict use of the Internet.
-
- At a news conference, Josette Shiner, a top State Department trade expert,
- called the Internet "the greatest purveyor of news and information in
- history" but said too often the flow is blocked by government censors.
-
- Shiner announced the formation of a task force that will consider, among
- other issues, the foreign policy aspects of Internet freedom, including the
- use of technology to restrict access to political content.
-
- She said it is a top U.S. government priority "to do all we can to ensure
- maximum access to information over the Internet."
-
- The United States, she said, has "very serious concerns" about the
- protection of privacy and data throughout the Internet globally, and in
- particular, some of the recent cases raised in China.
-
- Under Secretary of State Paula Dobriansky said a U.S. team was en route to
- China on Monday to discuss the issue with Chinese authorities.
-
- Separately, Graham characterized China's use of U.S. Internet companies to
- abuse its citizens' rights "chilling and outrageous." He mentioned Yahoo!
- Inc., which has been accused of helping Chinese police identify and convict
- a journalist who criticized human rights abuses in China.
-
- U.S. lawmakers have criticized China's use of U.S. Internet companies to
- abuse its citizens' rights. Yahoo! Inc. has been accused of helping Chinese
- police identify and convict a journalist who criticized human rights abuses
- in China.
-
-
-
- Virus Attacking Apple Macintosh PCs Found
-
-
- A malicious computer worm has been found that targets Apple Computer Inc.'s
- Mac OS X operating system, believed to be the first such virus aimed
- specifically at the Mac platform.
-
- The worm is called OSX/Leap-A, according to a posting on the Web site of
- antivirus software company Sophos, which said the worm is spread via
- instant messaging programs.
-
- The worm attempts to spread via Apple's iChat instant messaging program,
- which is compatible with America Online's popular AIM instant messaging
- program, according to the Sophos Web site.
-
- The worm sends itself to available contacts on the infected users' buddy
- list in a file called "latestpics.tgz," according to the Sophos Web site.
-
- The vast majority of malicious hacks are aimed at Microsoft Corp.'s
- Windows operating system and some of its products, largely because
- Microsoft has more than 90 percent of the market for computer operating
- systems.
-
- "This first Macintosh OS X threat is an example of the continuing spread of
- malicious code on to other platforms," said Vincent Weafer, senior director
- at Symantec Security Response, in a statement.
-
- The worm will not automatically infect Mac computers, but will ask users to
- accept the file, Weafer said.
-
- Symantec ranked the new worm as a Level 1 threat (with 5 being the most
- severe).
-
-
-
- Cyberstalking Law Opens Debate On What's Annoying
-
-
- It didn't get much publicity, but an anti-stalking bill passed by Congress
- recently makes it a federal crime to "annoy" someone over the Internet.
-
- And that's really beginning to bug some people.
-
- "It's a stupid law that has slipped in under the radar," says Clinton Fein,
- a San Francisco-based artist who runs annoy.com, a website that he says
- offers "unique and irreverent" commentary on politics and culture. "Who
- says what's officially annoying? Is that a business we really want our
- government to be in?"
-
- The law makes it a crime to anonymously "annoy, abuse, threaten or harass"
- another person over the Internet.
-
- Rep. Jim McDermott of Washington inserted the provision into legislation
- that reauthorized the federal Violence Against Women Act. It carries a
- prison sentence of up to two years and an unspecified fine for those
- convicted of violations. President Bush signed the bill into law Jan. 5.
-
- McDermott said he was prompted to act by the case of Joelle Ligon, a
- Seattle woman who was sent menacing e-mails, falsely accused of
- resume-padding in messages to co-workers and impersonated in sex-oriented
- Internet chat rooms from 1998 to 2003.
-
- Some of the communications were traced to a former boyfriend in South
- Carolina. He was sentenced to five years of probation and 500 hours of
- community service after he was prosecuted under a federal
- telecommunications law that protects against harassment.
-
- To eliminate questions over whether phone law applied to the Internet,
- McDermott pressed for the new legislation. The language "annoy, abuse,
- threaten or harass" was taken directly from the telephone law.
-
- Mike DeCesare, a spokesman for McDermott, says the new law is not intended
- to curb free speech.
-
- "This is about bad people doing bad things. ... It relates to somebody who
- does something to somebody else," he says. "It's not about posting
- something on a message board. It's got to be direct, one-to-one
- communication."
-
- No one has been prosecuted under the new law, DeCesare says.
-
- Critics aren't satisfied. Fein says it is unclear whether the law refers
- to annoying "conduct" or simply an e-mail whose message irritates its
- recipient.
-
- "No one knows what this means," Fein says. "That in itself has a chilling
- effect."
-
- Barry Steinhardt, a lawyer who specializes in privacy issues at the
- American Civil Liberties Union in New York City, says the new law's chief
- problem is the "subjective nature" of the word annoy. "Words like threaten,
- harass and abuse can be defined by what a reasonable person understands
- them to mean," he says. "Anyone who's ever had their spam filter stop
- something they wanted, or let something through that they didn't, knows
- that deciding what is annoying is something else again."
-
- He says the ACLU is considering whether to ask a federal court to declare
- the new law unconstitutional because it's too vague.
-
- A scholar who specializes in cyber law says the law could be difficult to
- overturn. Susan Brenner, a University of Dayton law professor and a
- consultant to the Secret Service on cyber laws, says courts likely would
- read "annoy" together with the words that follow it - "abuse, threaten or
- harass" - and conclude that the law refers to specific behavior.
-
- In 2004, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit used that reasoning
- to uphold the conviction of Erik Bowker, an Ohio man who had stalked a
- Youngstown television reporter via telephone.
-
- But in 1999, a federal appeals court in Washington, D.C., ruled that a man
- could not be prosecuted for "annoying" conduct because he had telephoned
- the U.S. attorney seven times to complain about a case that had been
- brought against him. The calls, the court found, were political speech
- protected by the First Amendment.
-
- David Hudson, a lawyer with the First Amendment Center, a speech-rights
- advocacy group in Nashville, says the different ways that courts have
- interpreted the word "annoy" make the new anti-stalking law "ripe for a
- challenge."
-
-
-
- Internet Users Go Online for Fun
-
-
- Some people go online just for the sake of it: A new study finds that on
- any given day, nearly a third of U.S. Internet users log on just for fun or
- to pass the time.
-
- Compared with other online tasks, recreational surfing ranks behind only
- e-mail and search and it's about even with getting news online, according
- to the Pew Internet and American Life Project.
-
- "What it says about the Internet is that it is becoming a full-blown
- destination in itself," said Deb Fallows, the Pew senior research fellow
- who led the study released Wednesday. "They are just led there just to see
- what is going on."
-
- Pew credits the growth in broadband connections at home and the increase in
- the number and variety of Web sites available.
-
- The 30 percent of Internet users who went online for fun on a given day
- represents an increase from 21 percent a year earlier.
-
- Skeptics may see parallels with television channel-surfing, an activity
- often dismissed as mindless.
-
- But Fallows said the Internet is different: "It's not a passive activity
- that you're just sucking yourself into. You are navigating yourself around,
- you are discovering things, learning things."
-
- The random telephone-based survey of 1,931 adult Internet users in the
- United States was conducted Nov. 29 to Dec. 31 and has a margin of sampling
- error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.
-
-
-
- Bill Graham's Rock Archives Stream Online
-
-
- Some of rock's most intriguing content is now in cyberspace via Wolfgang's
- Vault. The memorabilia seller offers treasures from the stash of promoter
- Bill Graham, programmer of San Francisco's legendary Fillmore, who died in
- 1991.
-
- A 75-song playlist culled from 7,000 to 8,000 vintage audio and video
- concert recordings made between 1966 and 1999 began streaming on the
- Wolfgang's Vault Web site February 8, at no cost to consumers. The owner
- of the Graham archive is optimistic that some of the seminal performances
- will make it to retailers' shelves as CDs and DVDs by year's end.
-
- San Francisco-based Wolfgang's Vault sells authentic Graham concert
- memorabilia from such acts as Johnny Cash, Miles Davis, Santana, Jefferson
- Airplane, the Rolling Stones, U2, Tom Petty, Jimi Hendrix and the Who.
-
- Entrepreneur Bill Sagan paid more than $5 million for the cache in 2003.
- He named it in honor of Graham, who was born Wolfgang Grajonca in Germany.
-
- Six years after Graham died in a helicopter crash, SFX purchased Bill
- Graham Presents for $65 million. Clear Channel acquired SFX in 2000,
- creating Clear Channel Entertainment, which sold the Graham material to
- Sagan. He considered the archive an entry into the world of music
- intellectual property.
-
- "I knew generally what was in (the archive), though there were close to a
- thousand boxes that we didn't open during due diligence," Sagan says. "I
- spent very little time listening to the audio archive or looking at the
- video archive, so a lot of surprises happened after we completed the
- transaction."
-
- The video footage, much of it expertly shot with multiple cameras, includes
- the legendary 1973 San Francisco show by the Who at the Cow Palace when
- Keith Moon fell into his drum kit; the Sex Pistols' final concert; and a
- four-camera shoot from the Tanglewood (Mass.) concerts of 1970.
-
- "The quality is unbelievable," Sagan says. "I give the BGP people a lot of
- credit; they kept (the tapes) cold and they kept (them) at low humidity."
-
- Gregg Perloff, a former exec at BGP hired by Graham in 1977, says that,
- contrary to some recent press reports, most BGP employees were
- knowledgeable about the archive. "All of this stuff had been archived and
- inventoried," says Perloff, now president of Another Planet Entertainment.
- "We were well aware of what we had."
-
- The four asset groups, as described by Sagan, included posters, handbills,
- tickets and the copyrights associated with them; photos from virtually
- every performance from Graham's 30,000 shows; the audio/video masters; and
- miscellaneous items from Graham's life and career.
-
- Wolfgang's Vault has been selling the memorabilia since 2004. Sagan says
- he is "damn close" to making back his initial investment - and that is
- before making a dime from what may prove to be the archive's most valuable
- asset, the music.
-
- Sagan and his team spent more than a year transferring the recordings to
- high-end digital format, then mastering virtually every song. Sagan says
- they have mastered about 80 percent of what they intend to use.
-
- There is no cost to stream the music at 128k at the Wolfgang's Vault site.
- Sagan says he hopes the feature will draw more fans to the site and sell
- more merchandise.
-
- Meanwhile, Sagan is navigating the murky publishing and licensing waters,
- hopeful that CDs and DVDs of Graham's shows could be on the market by the
- end of the year. Sagan says he is in talks with record labels.
-
- "The chances of having physical audio product by mid-summer are very high,"
- Sagan says, adding that DVDs could be available by the fall.
-
- "I had imagined it would be a quagmire, and now I don't think it will be,"
- Sagan says of obtaining the rights to release this content, which was
- recorded legally. "Graham, especially with some of those early performance
- contracts, got some rights that other (promoters) might not have. He was a
- visionary in how he structured some of these agreements."
-
- For his part, Perloff is happy that some of these concerts will see the
- light of day. "It's fantastic what they're doing, in the sense that (the
- music) will get out into the marketplace and people will get a piece of
- that period," Perloff says. "People are going to go nuts over this stuff."
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
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