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- Volume 8, Issue 34 Atari Online News, Etc. August 25, 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:
-
-
-
-
- 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
- Now available:
- http://www.atarinews.org
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphiforums.com/atari/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #0834 08/25/06
-
- ~ US Sues Maine Officials ~ People Are Talking! ~ Near Done IE7 Out!
- ~ Tech Addicts May Sue! ~ CNN To Replay 9/11! ~ Windows Goes Incan!
- ~ Brits Bust Web Scams! ~ Anti-Predator Campaign ~ New Logitech Mice!
- ~ Apple Recalls Batteries ~ Web Addicts Get Help! ~ Florida Piracy Bust!
-
- -* Verizon Sticks It To DSL'ers *-
- -* AOL Chief Technology Officer Resigns *-
- -* Brit Teen Sentenced for Mass E-mail Attack *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Well, the weather has cooled down a little bit, but that suits me just fine
- these days. I don't need to see high temperatures and the humidity that
- usually accompanies it. It also makes working outside a lot more enjoyable!
- And, it was also nice to play a round of golf without having to towel off
- every few minutes!
-
- Most of my outdoor projects are nearing completion. We decided to paint the
- house trim to match the new paint color scheme on the shed. What an
- experience it is to tape up windows and vinyl siding (I can be a sloppy
- painter!). Some of our windows are quite old, so the molding needs a lot of
- extra care. I'm almost done with them, however. Then I'll finish up the
- deck and the back stairs. Then, it looks like a little clean-up (washing
- down some of the siding) and the majority of outside stuff will be complete.
- Then on to the inside projects!!
-
- It's hard to believe that the summer is almost over - only a month
- officially, but only a week if you follow Labor Day as the unofficial end
- of the season. I have to admit that it's been an overall great summer - one
- I've really enjoyed. True, that enjoyment is probably due to my
- "retirement". It's been a summer in which I've been extremely busy, but
- it's been a controlled busyness. No stress, no unrealistic deadlines, and
- no critics other than my wife and me. As to how long I'll continue this
- path is still unclear, but I'll likely start to really think about my future
- in the next month or so. It should be an interesting period of time!
-
- I know that these next comments are really out there (and literally so), but
- I have to mention it. All of the sudden, Pluto is not a planet?? Why,
- because a bunch of scientific yahoos decided to come up with new criteria,
- and Pluto didn't make the cut? Sorry, but we traditionalists aren't buying
- into this decision! What's next? I suppose some technology yahoo will make
- a determination that the Atari systems aren't real computers because none of
- them operated at speeds over 100 Mhz. Sorry for the distraction!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I apologize for my absence last week, but
- I had a minor family emergency last week. Luckily, it wasn't a major
- problem, but it did, nonetheless, keep me from completing the column
- last week.
-
- Suffice it to say that the wonders of modern day medicine, while not
- without their price, are a wonderful thing. My father went for a cardiac
- stress test and was sent for an angiogram followed immediately by an
- angioplasty. He's doing fine now, and dog-sitting for my sister's
- papillon... I agree... they're almost too small to be classified as
- dogs, but what the heck. <G>
-
- It's been one of those annoying weeks all around, too. The hard drive in
- my laptop (my main computer) decided to give up the ghost the other day,
- and the replacement just arrived today. I've got everything backed up,
- but it's the swapping the drives and formatting and partitioning and
- re-installing of apps and configuration of all the miscellaneous stuff
- that I don't have time for at the moment.
-
- So I'm sitting here using a borrowed laptop with WinDOZE. Now, those of
- you who read this column regularly know that I usually use Linux. I
- guess that if you've never used Linux, Windows might make you happy. But
- Linux is what I'm comfortable with for the moment, and I've always said
- that computers should be about making things easier.
-
- So here I sit, wishing that hard drives would last longer and that all
- operating systems would automatically conform to what you want. Well,
- someday, maybe. <G>
-
- Well folks, let's get on with the reason for this column... the news,
- hints, tips and info available from the UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- 'Ryan' posts this about his memory expansion unit:
-
- "So the one interesting feature of my non-working Atari STf is this
- memory expansion thing that's installed. I figured you'd like to hear
- about it, or maybe can even tell me more about it.
-
- The logic board of this Atari looks like this, though mine is labeled
- "Rev. D" not "Rev. C":
-
- http://oldmachines.tripod.com/ActPics/atari_1040open.jpg
-
- The square chip in the lower right of the logic board has been removed
- and a circuit board stuck in its place, and the chip placed back in a
- socket on the board. The chip is labeled "C025912-38 / JH23-019 / 7A1
- 03". There are also 8 places where additional chips can be installed on
- the board; every other one is filled with a chip marked "TOSHIBA 9319TCK
- / TC514400AZ-60 GER" which seem to be 60-ns RAM chips, though I don't
- know what capacity. Though since only half of the spots are filled, I'm
- guessing this is a 2-MB expansion card. From the board there snakes a
- 20-pin ribbon cable into the left side of the metal box in the center of
- the logic board where a similar chip hijacking is taking place, this
- time with a rectangular one marked "C025914-38A / PH23-024 / 6M1 37".
-
- The only identifiable markings on the board are "Gigatron OHG" which
- seems to be the name of a company that made 2- and 4-MB memory expansion
- products for the ST back in the day, though my Google search isn't
- turning up a whole heck of a lot -- just a German article about the
- existence of the product:
-
- http://www.stcarchiv.de/stc1990/12_ramerw.php
-
- For anyone interested in what the article says, it begins with a lot of
- palaver over why one would want more RAM, describes Atari's official
- expansion strategy of soldering more memory chips on top of the existing
- ones, and then dives into the 3rd-party products which achieve RAM
- expansion in more sane ways. They mention the RAM piggy-back board
- strategy, which works a lot like soldering the extra RAM chips directly
- over the old ones but is a bit cleaner. And they talk about the MMU
- piggy-back strategy, which seems to be what this Gigatron product does.
- (So I guess this "C025912-38" chip is the MMU.) The article goes on to
- mention MMU piggy-back upgrades from two other companies.
-
- I was surprised to hear about an MMU -- based on my experience with
- 8-MHz 68000-based Macintosh computers I hadn't expected the Atari ST to
- have one, since the Macs don't.
-
- This Atari doesn't turn on anymore (red light on keyboard, that's about
- all) so it's hard to figure much out about this expansion card. Months
- ago, when it did at least turn on and sometimes boot into TOS, I got
- Notator started a couple times and the free memory was much more than
- usual on my functioning 1MB ST. I also once got a newer version of TOS
- booted from floppy which did a RAM test and I want to say it listed
- 2.5MB but I don't remember for sure.
-
- I had wanted to remove the expansion to see if it's the cause of this
- Atari's problems, but I can't even physically remove the MMU from its
- socket in the Gigatron board. I don't want to try too hard for fear of
- damaging it. And anyway my working ST doesn't have any square chips or
- sockets like the one into which the expansion plugs, so I couldn't test
- it there either.
-
- So, that's all there is for now.
-
- Now that I'm selling it on eBay I got around to taking a photo of the
- RAM expansion, in case anyone is curious:
-
- http://www.ryandesign.com/tmp/atari-stf-gigatron.jpg"
-
-
- Mark Bedingfield tells Ryan:
-
- "Pretty much spot on, the majority of ram upgrades (Marpet, Evesham
- etc) piggy back the video shifter and MMU.
-
- IIRC the 68000 doesn't have a built in MMU. It wasn't until the 68030
- cam about that Motorola integrated one. It is why you cannot run virtual
- memory on an Atari without a 68030 or better.
-
- If 8 slots are full and 8 empty it will be 2 meg. Try reseating all the
- socketed chips. It is amazing what a little oxidization will do."
-
-
- 'Phantomm'asks for Atari info:
-
- "[I'm] Looking for info on all ways possible to connect Atari Computers,
- such as MegaSTE and Falcon to the Internet without using a normal
- Dial-up account/modem.
-
- Is there any Web Sites with info?
-
- Seems I recall some hardware that allowed this.
-
- Anything new in the works?
-
- What I really need is a way to use a Cable Modem with my Ataris.
- What do I need to do this? (Hardware and Software)
- Without using Mint if possible."
-
-
- David Wade tells Phantomm:
-
- "http://hardware.atari.org/disco/ether/enec.htm
- http://www.dwade.freeserve.co.uk/atari/main.html
- http://home.arcor.de/thomas.redelberger/prj/atari/etherne/index.htm
- http://www.cyberus.ca/~anodyne/ethernet/main.htm "
-
-
- Lyndon Amsdon adds:
-
- "Not forgetting:
-
- http://hardware.atari.org/netusbee/netus.htm "
-
-
- David Wade replies:
-
- "Sorry, cut and paste overload. That was meant to go in the "Anything new
- in the works?" section.
-
- How is it going, it looks good, when can I order some for my STE, TT and
- old old Mega 2....
-
- p.s. any one going to do USB storage driver. would be nice if we could plug
- USB lap top drive in that USB port...."
-
-
- Rob Mahlert jumps in and posts:
-
- "Yes, CAB is SLOW! But have you tried HighWire?
- http://highwire.atari-users.net"
-
-
- Ronald Hall adds:
-
- "There is the Lantronix UDS10 serial port to LAN converter. It will allow
- you to do telnet and ftp easily on any Atari.
-
- There is the EtherNEC. Its basically a NIC (network card) that attaches to
- the cartridge port of your ST, TT or Falcon. It works with STing, and
- there are MINT drivers as well. With it, you can browse the web, do
- e-mail, newsgroups, pretty well whatever.
-
- In the works, is the EtherNAT. True LAN connectivity for Falcon owners
- with a CTxx series accelerator... USB port as well."
-
-
- 'Kryten'asks an interesting question about some of the frequencies used in the ST:'
-
- "I notice my STE has 32.084988 for the main logic and CPU
- 8.010613 for the FDC
-
- I am curious as to why Atari chose these seemingly arbitrary and unrelated
- frequencies for the CPU and FDC clocks."
-
-
- 'Chris' tells Kryten:
-
- "32 was for the video circuit, STE is a bit different though on a STFM you
- will find the 32 is plugged into the shifter for the video. It then goes to
- 16mhz for the input of the MMU, which then chucks out 8mhz for the cpu and
- 4mhz for the sound system. I think there was a 2mhz also for the modem
- port I think."
-
-
- Kryten counters:
-
- "What I meant was why did they use 32.084988 and 8.010613 rather than 32
- and 8 MHz exactly. The latter are easy values to find and buy.
-
- 0.084988 is 1/11.766367... or roughly 3/35.2991...
-
- I can't see a relation between any of the crystal frequencies and PAL and
- NTSC colour carriers, which one might do to reduce colour dot crawl for
- instance.
-
- It isn't needed to correct PAL frame timing, as this uses multiples of 64
- us.
-
- NTSC is slightly slower than 60 Hz field rate, so one would expect a
- crystal slower than 32 MHz."
-
-
- Chris adds:
-
- "Don't forget the shifter is a cpu in its own right, it has to crunch
- millions of bits of information 60times a second to output the video. You
- might want to check out the diagrams for the ST to get a idea on what's
- going on exactly."
-
-
- Kryten explains:
-
- "I'm a professional electronic engineer implementing the Atari STE logic
- (as much as possible) in a single FPGA. I can easily get a 32 MHz crystal
- and divide it down for 8 MHz etc.
-
- I have the ST circuit diagrams and can understand them well.
-
- What I don't understand is why Atari chose crystal frequencies that are
- slightly off integer multiples of 1 MHz.
-
- If I have to run several different clock domains this makes implementation
- harder."
-
-
- Michael Schwingen tells Kryten:
-
- "This should work as long as you don't need PAL or NTSC TV output. If you
- look at the schematics (I remember the ST/MST version), you can see that at
- least in the PAL version, the 32.xxxMHz clock oscillator is part of a
- discrete PLL that is sync'd to the 4.433MHz PAL burst - IIRC, the HSYNC
- signal (which is scaled down from the 32.xxxMHz main clock) is phase-locked
- to the 4.433MHz clock. AFAIR, this is required to produce PAL-compliant
- FBAS signals. I am not sure about NTSC, though."
-
-
- Kryten replies:
-
- "I suspected something like that, I just could not work out the ratio.
- 32.084988/4.43361775 = 7.236751071
-
- That [NTSC] has a 32.215905 MHz crystal.
- Which is nearly 14.31818.. MHz * 9/4
- Using precise values, 4 times NTSC times 9/4 is 32.21590909... MHz
- So it seems that Atari used the rounded off value of 14.31818 MHz.
- Bad boys!
-
-
- Oh well, I think I shall use NTSC based values for both PAL and NTSC
- versions.
- Most modern TVs that use PAL also have SCART (PERITEL) sockets for analogue
- RGB input, while NTSC TVs do not. I see the circuit just uses a
- 32.21590909... MHz oscillator block for the Peritel-output version.
-
- The Amiga sensibly used a single 14.31818.. MHz crystal and halved it for
- the CPU clock."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. It's getting late, and this foreign
- keyboard is getting on my nerves. No, it's not French or Dutch or anything
- like that... When I said foreign I meant that I was unaccustomed to it,
- that's all.
-
- Tune in again next week, same time, same station, and I'm sure I'll have
- more to tell you about my adventures with hard drive replacement. That's
- what I get for going for the largest, fastest, hottest drive I could find,
- I guess, huh? 'Till then, keep your ears open so you'll hear what they are
- saying when...
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - PS3 Production Not Started Yet!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Madden NFL 07 On Sale!
- Activision Goes Classic!
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Sony President Admits PlayStation 3 Production Not Even Started Yet
-
-
- It's less than three months before Sony is scheduled to release its
- PlayStation 3, but Sony's president and CEO admits the company hasn't even
- started making the consoles yet.
-
- Kaz Hirai, the man in charge of Sony Computer Entertainment America,
- admitted to gaming publication GameSpot that the PlayStation 3 production
- lines have yet to be turned on.
-
- "We haven't started manufacturing yet," he said. "Some of our ops guys were
- actually just in China, and also in Japan just reviewing the lines and
- everything else. But they are, again, preparing as we speak to get the
- manufacturing going," Hirai stated.
-
- In November, Sony says it will launch its next-gen video game console, the
- PS3, in three continents. Rumours of hold-ups have long circulated, with
- fears of production being costly and complicated, and anticipated problems
- with the built-in Blu-ray disc drive.
-
- "We've not announced and we haven't set really a specific date to say, 'As
- of this day we're going to start manufacturing'," Hirai told GameSpot.
- Because of short timescale for mass production, Hirai says retail shortages
- of the PlayStation 3 are inevitable (one not need look very far back to
- remember Microsoft's Xbox 360 shortage last November).
-
- "Even if you do the simple math you're talking about less than 700,000
- units per territory, per major territory, between launch and the end of the
- year," he said. "So even if there was some fluctuation - you give Japan
- more, you give the US more, what have you - you're going to end up with
- some shortages. I think it's going to be very much of a challenge to be
- able to meet every single unit demand that's out there in the market.
- That's just a logistical impossibility."
-
- Despite the tight timeline between now and November, Hirai says he is
- confident the company will still have its two million promised units for
- launch date. He says the company will also be able to ship one million
- consoles per month after that to reach six million units by March 2007.
- "Everything's pretty much on track," Hirai told GameSpot. "We're internally
- really getting geared up to go to market with this beautiful console in
- three months' time, and at this point in time all signs are good to go."
-
- Of course everything is on track. Does anyone really expect Sony's
- president to admit he can't sleep at night because all he can think of are
- the giant pain-in-the-ass problems that don't seem to be going away? No
- way - it would fuel the fire for Xbox 360 and the upcoming Wii console from
- Nintendo.
-
- Plus, market analyst firm Yankee Group recently released "a study" that
- predicted the PS3 will still be victorious over Xbox 360 and Wii. Despite
- the fact that nobody has even seen the PS3 yet, Yankee Group seems to be
- quite sure it will be market leader by 2011, with 30 million units (or 44
- per cent of the market) sold worldwide. Microsoft will come in second with
- 40 per cent market share (the company has already sold a reported five
- million units) while Nintendo will capture only 16 per cent.
-
- But Sony shouldn't get cocky just because one firm thinks it can see into
- the future. More importantly than the PS3, we should be trying to get our
- hands on Yankee Group's crystal ball.
-
-
-
- Electronic Arts Begins Selling "Madden NFL 07"
-
-
- Electronic Arts Inc. on Tuesday began selling "Madden NFL 07," the newest
- title in its best-selling sports series, which year in and year out has
- delivered top-performing games.
-
- "Madden" is the largest U.S. sports video game franchise with North America
- unit sales since 1989 topping 51 million, EA said.
-
- Wedbush Morgan Securities analyst Michael Pachter predicted the new game's
- first-week sales performance could rival that of last year's title, which
- logged a record-setting 1.7 million copies sold.
-
- "It could do 1 million in five days," Pachter said, referring to "Madden
- NFL 07" unit sales.
-
- Pachter, who estimates that the new game could account for about 7 percent
- of EA's estimated annual revenue of around $3 billion, said all video game
- companies will be interested in how the game fares.
-
- "Madden is a good proxy for the health of the industry," he said.
-
- While teams and players change each year, the game's perennial star is
- former Oakland Raiders head coach turned broadcaster John Madden, who
- earlier this month was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
-
- This year's "Madden" installment faces a daunting legacy.
-
- Last year's game was the top-selling title in North America, and has sold
- 6.5 million copies thus far, according to EA.
-
- NPD research analyst Anita Frazier said that game was the best-selling
- "Madden" title to date, with revenues of about $278 million.
-
- That amount was just short of the U.S. box office revenue from the last
- "Harry Potter" movie and came even as fans criticized the version of the
- game designed for Microsoft Corp.'s next-generation Xbox 360.
-
- Game reviewers and analysts said EA's challenge is to prove that the
- creators of "Madden" are still turning out innovative games despite the
- lack of competition. EA is in the second year of a exclusive video game
- license deal with the National Football League.
-
- "This is another 'prove it' year," said Bryan Intihar, previews editor at
- Electronic Gaming Monthly magazine.
-
- Among other things, this year's offering has more advanced animation and
- emphasizes the running game with new features that allow players to control
- the lead blocker and create an open path for the running back, EA, which is
- based in Redwood City, Calif., said.
-
- While the new title is more refined, with players that look and move more
- realistically, Intihar said it lacks the innovation that has made earlier
- versions of the game stand out.
-
- "It's a good game ... It's not leaps and bounds better," he said.
-
- The residents of Madden, Mississippi - population 74 - hosted the game's
- official "Maddenoliday" launch party on Tuesday and were among the first
- to try the new game on Microsoft's next-generation consoles. Attendees
- included NFL greats Jerry Rice, Warren Moon and Marshall Faulk along with
- some 3,000 children and parents from surrounding towns.
-
- "They were just loving it," Faulk said of people who played the game on
- game kiosks set up around town.
-
- "Madden NFL 07" carries an "E," for everyone, rating and sells for between
- $59.99 to $29.99, depending on device.
-
-
-
- Activision Goes Classic On PSP
-
-
- The days of a single joystick with a lone button may be long gone, but
- Activision is banking that the appeal of games that use simple controls
- isn't. The publisher today announced Activision Hits Remixed for the
- PlayStation Portable, a collection of the company's games from the days of
- the Atari 2600.
-
- The compilation, due for release this fall, will include more than 40
- Activision offerings from the classic console - games such as the
- vine-swinging, alligator-stomping, scorpion-jumping Pitfall! Also confirmed
- for the package will be Kaboom!, Chopper Command, Stampede, and Keystone
- Kapers.
-
- Games that have a multiplayer mode will be playable by either taking turns
- on one PSP, playing games over the handheld's wireless capabilities, or
- competing in two-player matches over two PSPs with just one UMD disc using
- the game-sharing feature.
-
- It's unclear how or if the games will be "Remixed," but Activision does say
- the collection will sport "modernized front-end graphics." Gamers can also
- look forward to a 1980s-themed soundtrack, classic game manuals, and
- several unlockables.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- AOL Chief Technology Officer Resigns
-
-
- AOL chief technology officer Maureen Govern, who oversaw the division
- responsible for accidentally releasing search data for more than a half a
- millions Internet users, has resigned from the company, according to an
- internal company memorandum.
-
- John McKinley, AOL's former CTO, will take over on an interim basis,
- according to the memo obtained by Reuters on Monday. Govern joined the
- company last September.
-
- AOL declined comment.
-
- AOL apologized on August 7 for releasing information onto the Web about 20
- million keyword searches from about 658,000 anonymous users over a
- three-month period. Disclosing the data was against company policy, AOL
- said at the time.
-
- The release of data by the online division of media conglomerate Time
- Warner Inc. drew the ire of privacy advocates, who called for the U.S.
- Federal Trade Commission to review the company's customer data retention
- practices.
-
- Collecting and sharing Internet user data for any purpose is under close
- scrutiny by privacy watchdogs. Internet search leader Google Inc. won
- plaudits for refusing to comply with U.S. government demands to hand over
- search data.
-
- A researcher in AOL's technology research department and the employee's
- supervisor have also left the company in the wake of the disclosure, a
- source familiar with the matter said on Monday.
-
- In response to a torrent of criticism across the Internet, AOL also said
- it plans to create a task force to review its customer information privacy
- policy.
-
- "We have to earn their trust each and every day and with each and every
- action we take," AOL Chief Executive Jonathan Miller wrote in a separate
- memo obtained by Reuters.
-
- The task force, headed by AOL Vice Chairman Ted Leonsis and AOL General
- Counsel Randy Boe, plans to review the company's data collection and
- retention policies, according to the memo.
-
- AOL currently stores search data that can identify users for 30 days.
- Anonymous search data, the kind divulged by AOL in early August, is stored
- indefinitely, the source said.
-
- Privacy advocates such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation filed a
- complaint with the FTC last week requesting an investigation into AOL's
- privacy practices, arguing that the Internet provider did not need to store
- such search data.
-
- AOL's task force will also review other measures to protect users,
- including ways to prevent the storage of any sensitive data in the research
- database that include 16 digits, like those of many credit cards, the
- source said.
-
-
-
- Apple To Recall 1.8 Million Notebook Batteries
-
-
- Apple Computer Inc. will recall 1.8 million lithium-ion notebook computer
- batteries after nine devices overheated, causing minor burns to two users,
- U.S. safety regulators said on Thursday.
-
- The recall is the second-biggest in U.S. history involving electronics or
- computers. Just last week, No. 1 PC maker Dell Inc. recalled 4.1 million
- lithium-ion batteries.
-
- In both cases, the batteries had power cells made by Sony Corp.. Apple,
- like Dell, said it did not expect any "material" financial impact on its
- business.
-
- Sony said in a separate statement that it did not anticipate further
- recalls of batteries using the potentially faulty cells. The Japanese
- electronics company said the Apple and Dell recalls would cost Sony between
- 20 billion yen and 30 billion yen - or $172 million to $258 million.
-
- Cupertino, California-based Apple will recall 1.1 million batteries sold
- with notebook computers in the United States and 700,000 abroad, the U.S.
- Consumer Product Safety Commission said.
-
- "Our No. 1 priority is to recall and replace the affected batteries free
- of charge," Apple spokesman Steve Dowling said. The reported overheating
- incidents were due to "contamination" in the Sony battery cells, he added.
-
- The batteries were sold with Apple iBook G4 and PowerBook G4 computers from
- October 2003 through this month, according to the safety commission. None
- of Apple's most recent notebooks using microprocessors from Intel Corp. are
- affected, Dowling said.
-
- Apple had said last week after the Dell recall that it was reviewing its
- notebook batteries to ensure they met its standards.
-
- "The key message to consumers is these lithium-ion batteries can actually
- overheat and pose a fire hazard," said Scott Wolfson, spokesman for the
- Consumer Product Safety Commission in Washington.
-
- "Sony clearly has a problem here," said Tim Bajarin, principal analyst at
- Creative Strategies in San Jose, California. "There's a problem with the
- batteries overheating."
-
- Bajarin noted, however, that in Apple's case there were no reported
- notebook fires, while several of the recalled Dell computers had erupted in
- flames. Dell said it had reports of six batteries overheating, but no
- injuries were reported.
-
- The recall follows a smaller Apple recall of lithium-ion batteries in
- certain iBook G4 and PowerBook G4 notebooks sold worldwide from October
- 2004, through May 2005. Those batteries were made by LG Chem Ltd. of South
- Korea, according to Apple's Web site.
-
- Dell of Round Rock, Texas, last week began a voluntary recall of 2.7
- million batteries sold in the United States and 1.4 million sold overseas.
- The Dell-branded batteries were in computers sold from April, 2004, through
- July 18 of this year.
-
-
-
- Microsoft's IE7 Nears Final Version
-
-
- Microsoft released the latest test version of its Web browser, Release
- Candidate 1 (RC1), as it prepares to officially launch Internet Explorer 7
- later this year. IE7 is the first major update for the browser in five
- years. Microsoft has said that improving security was a top priority, and
- the software giant hopes to quell IE6 critics who have cited a plethora of
- security flaws in that browser.
-
- Advanced security features in IE7 include ActiveX Opt-in, a "phishing"
- filter, and a Fix My Settings application, both of which should help
- protect against malicious software and fraudulent Web sites.
-
- Explorer 7 Release Candidate 1, made available on Thursday, should be the
- final test iteration and Microsoft is confident that Web sites and
- applications designed for RC1 will be compatible with the final version.
-
- No major changes have been made since the release of IE7 beta 3, although
- the new browser has been tweaked to improve the French and Spanish language
- support, and includes a feature that removes prior betas and makes it
- easier to install the new version.
-
- RC1 is available for Windows XP SP2, Windows XP Professional x64 Edition,
- and Windows Server 2003 systems.
-
- Microsoft appears to be on schedule to launch IE7 in tandem with the
- upcoming Vista operating system, Jupiter Research analyst Joe Wilcox said.
- "This is the near-final version, and if no major bugs are discovered, which
- is always a possibility, this is the last test."
-
- Delivering a better browser is critical move for Microsoft, Wilcox said,
- noting that the company has lost ground to competitors like Firefox and
- Netscape.
-
- The new security features are important, Wilcox said. But, he added, there
- is still work to do in making the browser compatible with Web standards
- and removing some obstacles that force page designers to tweak their sites
- so they are compatible with Explorer.
-
- "Support for cascading style sheets is still not what it should be, and
- that could be a problem because Web developers use CSS to make their pages
- more flexible," he said. Still, the analyst believes that IE7 will live up
- to the hype and will be a critical component of the Vista OS.
-
-
-
- Logitech's New Mice Offer Speedier Searches
-
-
- Logitech announced new mice that it claims will ease Web searches and
- navigation of content on a PC.
-
- The wireless MX Revolution and VX Revolution laser mice include an
- automatic Web search button, and a wheel that can navigate down hundreds of
- pages in seven seconds, according to the company.
-
- After flicking the MicroGear Precision Scroll Wheel, the wheel spins
- continuously for seven seconds, scrolling down hundreds of pages in a Web
- page, spreadsheet, or word processing document, said Kate Brinks, a
- Logitech spokeswoman.
-
- The free-spinning wheel makes it easier for users to navigate through long
- documents or data lists. "Even in a three-page document, [the mouse]
- reduces the repetitive motion of scrolling down. I use it a lot in my
- e-mail inbox," Brinks said. The wheel can switch between the free-spin and
- the conventional scroll mode.
-
- Located under the scroll wheel is the One-Touch Search button, which brings
- up Web search results for a highlighted word or phrase with just a single
- click. After highlighting a term in a spreadsheet or document, clicking the
- search button opens a Web browser with Yahoo, Google, or Yahoo LiveWords
- search results for the term. Logitech's SetPoint software needs to be
- installed for this button to work, Brinks said. Users can highlight terms
- for Web search in any software.
-
- The $100 MX Revolution, targeted at desktop users, also has a thumb wheel
- that collaborates with the MicroGear Precision Scroll Wheel to zoom into
- pictures, Logitech said. It also has seven customizable buttons to run
- program macros.
-
- The smaller $80 Logitech VX Revolution is targeted at laptop users and
- operates on a single AA battery.
-
- Both come with a USB micro-receiver that wirelessly connects the mice to a
- PC up to 30 feet away.
-
- The mice work on Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Mac OS X PCs. They will
- become available on Friday, according to the company.
-
-
-
- Bolivia Debuts Microsoft In Incan Tongue
-
-
- Just click "Qallariy" to begin. Pronounced "KAH-lyah-ree," the word
- replaces "Start" on Microsoft Windows' familiar taskbar in the program's
- Quechua translation, which debuts in Bolivia on Friday.
-
- President Evo Morales, the South American nation's first Indian leader,
- has found an ally in the world's largest software company as he promotes
- the native tongues of his country's indigenous majority.
-
- Some 2.6 million Bolivians - nearly one third of the country - speak the
- Incan language, and Morales sees empowering these people as his primary
- mission. Among the first users of the Quechua software will be Indian
- members of a constituent assembly meeting in this colonial city to rewrite
- the nation's constitution.
-
- First launched in Peru in June and now freely available for download
- online, the software is a simple patch that translates the familiar Windows
- and Office menus and commands into Quechua. For now, it works only with the
- Spanish version of Windows XP and Office 2003, but it and other languages
- will be built-in to Microsoft's next operating system, Vista.
-
- Microsoft Corp. teamed up with several universities in Peru's
- Quechua-speaking south to create the translation program, joining 47 other
- versions of Windows in such languages as Kazakh, Maori and Zulu.
-
- "More than anything, I was surprised," said 21-year-old Dilma Arancibia, a
- Quechua speaker invited to a Thursday preview of the program. "If they
- hadn't done this with Quechua, and if we don't teach it to our children,
- the language would definitely cease to exist."
-
- And while few of the estimated 10 to 13 million Quechua speakers in South
- America have regular access to a computer, the project is already paying
- dividends for Microsoft: The company recently won a contract from the
- Peruvian government for 5,000 Quechua-equipped computers.
-
- Linguistics professors spent nearly three years reconciling 22 dialects of
- the language - many without a formal written form - to compile a vocabulary
- fit for Microsoft's programs.
-
- For "file," they chose "kipu" (KEE-poo), borrowing the name of an ancient
- Incan practice of recording information in an intricate system of knotted
- strings. "Internet" became "Llika" (LEE-ka), the Quechua word for spider
- web.
-
- The Quechua translation also includes many English words, as well as a few
- in Spanish.
-
- The greatest challenge was likely finding a balance between the use of
- foreign words and the creation of new terms, said Serafin Coronel-Molina,
- a linguist at Princeton University and native Quechua speaker.
-
- Borrowed words "are one way that a language evolves," he said. "But you
- can't just fill up a language with borrowed words, because then what have
- you got?"
-
- It seems the computers are also still trying to figure out Quechua.
-
- Sandra Picha was one of a dozen Quechua speakers invited to type out a
- letter to Morales at Thursday's preview. As she filled the screen with
- Quechua words, Microsoft's automatic spell-checker underlined every single
- one in red.
-
- "It says I've written it all wrong," she laughed.
-
-
-
- British Police Arrest Two Over Web Scams
-
-
- British police arrested a man and woman in London on Saturday as part of a
- wide-ranging investigation into holiday Web site fraud that has left nearly
- 3,000 people out of pocket.
-
- The woman in her thirties, and the man in his 60s, were detained at
- separate addresses in London and are being questioned by fraud squad
- officers, the Metropolitan Police said.
-
- The fake Web sites; sunmedresorts.com, unbeatableholidays.com,
- holidaydaysforunder200pounds.com, holidayrez.com and holidayez.com were
- all used in the con.
-
- The fraud worked by enticing people to buy non-existent holidays and then
- disappearing with the cash.
-
- The Association of British Travel Agents has warned people to be careful
- about buying trips online. The organization advises people to check its own
- Web site or that of other affiliated organisations like Air Travel
- Organisers' Licensing to make sure any holiday firm is bona fide.
-
- The Metropolitan Police, the Fraud Squad and the Office of Fair Trading are
- all investigating the scam which is thought to have netted hundreds of
- thousands of pounds.
-
-
-
- British Youth Sentenced for Mass Email Attack On Former Employers
-
-
- A British teenager has been given a two-month curfew and made subject to
- electronic tagging after admitting a mass email attack against a major
- insurance company which had earlier sacked him.
-
- David Lennon admitted sending around five million emails over a five-day
- period in 2004, leading to the collapse of the Domestic and General Group's
- mail server, which processed company emails in Britain, France, Germany and
- Spain.
-
- A youth court in Wimbledon, southwest London, was told the disruption had
- cost the company around 30,000 pounds (44,000 euros, 57,000 dollars).
-
- The emails purported to come from employees and the head of Microsoft, Bill
- Gates. They also contained a quote from supernatural film "The Ring".
-
- The teenager, from Bedworth, west central England, pleaded guilty to a
- charge under Britain's Computer Misuse Act of "causing an unauthorised
- modification to a computer".
-
- Lennon was 16 at the time of the offence and a former part-time employee
- of the insurance firm. He had been dismissed from the company in 2003.
-
- The Metropolitan Police's Computer Crime Unit said it was the first time a
- successful prosecution had been brought for this type of offence.
-
- Domestic and General's main business is providing warranty protection on
- domestic appliances, electrical equipment and gas central heating systems.
-
-
-
- Man Gets 6 Years In Software Piracy Case
-
-
- A Florida man who made millions of dollars selling illegal copies of
- computer programs was sentenced Friday to six years in prison in one of the
- nation's largest software piracy cases.
-
- Danny Ferrer, of Lakeland, Fla., pleaded guilty in June to conspiracy and
- copyright infringement charges after an FBI investigation of his Web site,
- BuysUSA.com. Ferrer also was ordered to pay more than $4.1 million in
- restitution to software makers Adobe Systems Inc., Autodesk, and Macromedia
- Inc.
-
- Ferrer bought numerous airplanes, a fighter-jet simulator, a Lamborghini,
- a Hummer and other luxury vehicles with his profits. U.S. District Court
- Judge T.S. Ellis III ordered the items be sold to pay restitution in the
- case.
-
- "You extended your hand into the pockets of these people," Ellis said
- before sentencing Ferrer. "If severe penalties were not attached, people
- would line up from here to Los Angeles to do what you've done."
-
- Ferrer told the judge he started selling the pirated software to pay for a
- feeding tube for his sick wife, but "there was probably a certain amount
- of greed."
-
- Prosecutors said they are working with the FBI to investigate the providers
- of fake software serial numbers on the Internet, which allowed Ferrer to
- sell the programs.
-
- The software looked legitimate to consumers, but was deeply discounted,
- said John Wolfe, of Business Software Alliance, an industry group.
-
- Ferrer's Web site began selling software in 2002 and was shut down by the
- FBI in October 2005, authorities said.
-
- Prosecutors said the illegal sales cost the software companies as much as
- $20 million, but industry officials say the amount could be higher.
-
- "This is the ultimate case," prosecutor Jay V. Prabhu said in court. "This
- is a case where someone made a lot of money."
-
-
-
- Verizon Replaces Cancelled DSL Fees With Its Own
-
-
- Verizon Communications has decided to pocket most of the savings from the
- cancellation of a government surcharge on digital subscriber lines, despite
- calls from consumer groups to pass on the savings on to users.
-
- Verizon, one of the biggest U.S. telecoms companies, used to charge DSL
- customers a monthly fee of $1.25 or $2.83, depending on connection speeds,
- for a government fund to help bring service to lower-income and rural
- areas.
-
- The government stopped charging that fee from August 14, but Verizon will
- instead impose a new monthly surcharge of $1.20 or $2.70, beginning August
- 26, which it said was to help subsidize connection costs.
-
- "There's a lot of cost associated with the service and this is a way we've
- elected to recover a portion of that cost," said Verizon spokeswoman Bobbi
- Henson on Tuesday.
-
- By introducing the new surcharge as the previous fee ended, Verizon hoped
- to minimize the impact on customers, she said.
-
- But consumer groups like the Consumer Federation of America said DSL
- customers should not have to pay a new fee.
-
- "They charge so much for that already. The simple fact is they have market
- power," said Mark Cooper, an official at the Consumer Federation of
- America.
-
- Verizon's latest earnings report in August showed it had a total 6.1
- million broadband customers, although 375,000 were connected to its more
- advanced fiber-optic network called FiOS.
-
-
-
- BellSouth Drops Fee For High-Speed Internet
-
-
- BellSouth Corp., the No. 3 U.S. local telephone company, on Friday said it
- will immediately drop a $2.97 monthly fee for its high-speed Internet
- service after U.S. communications regulators threatened to question the
- charge.
-
- Most customers would see the change on their bills within a week, but it
- could take up to six weeks to implement, the company said. It added that
- customers charged the fee dating back to August 16 would receive a credit.
-
- The Federal Communications Commission was poised to send a letter
- questioning the fee that replaced a surcharge for a government program that
- ended this month, a source familiar with the matter said earlier on Friday.
-
-
-
- US Sues Maine Officials for Probe on Verizon, NSA
-
-
- The U.S. government sued Maine officials on Tuesday to block their demand
- that Verizon disclose whether it gave the government's spying program
- access to its customer data, documents showed.
-
- The government's civil suit, submitted by the U.S. Department of Justice
- to a district court in Maine, said the Maine public utilities officials'
- attempts to obtain information on Verizon's involvement with the National
- Security Agency (NSA) were "invalid."
-
- "The defendant state officers' attempts to obtain such information are
- invalid under the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution and
- are preempted by the United States Constitution and various federal
- statutes," the lawsuit said.
-
- Kurt Adams, chairman of the Maine Public Utilities Commission, as well as
- two other regulatory officials, were named in the lawsuit.
-
- Verizon's local subsidiaries were also named to prevent the company from
- responding to the Maine officials' demands for information.
-
- "We're just in the middle here," said Verizon spokesman Peter Thonis.
-
- The federal government has also sued the New Jersey Attorney General and
- Missouri utility regulators for serving similar subpoenas for information
- to ATT 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or
- redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior
- written consent of Reuters. Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or
- delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.
-
-
-
- Unable To Unplug, Tech Addicts May Sue
-
-
- Keeping employees on electronic leashes such as laptops, BlackBerries and
- other devices that keep them constantly connected to the office could soon
- lead to lawsuits by those who grow addicted to the technology, a U.S.
- academic warns.
-
- In a follow-up to an earlier paper on employees' tech addictions, Gayle
- Porter, associate professor of management at the Rutgers University School
- of Business in Camden, New Jersey, has written a paper that states workers
- whose personal lives suffer as a result of tech addictions could turn their
- sights on their employers.
-
- "These people that can't keep it within any reasonable parameters and have
- these problems in their lives, at some point may say: 'My life is not all
- that great. How did this happen? Who can I blame for this?'," Porter, who
- co-authored the study with two other academics, said in an interview on
- Thursday. "And they're going to say, 'The company'."
-
- The paper, which is still under review and expected to be published in an
- academic journal in the near future, highlights the potential for fallout
- resulting from technologies initially aimed at boosting a company's
- productivity.
-
- But instead of increased efficiency, lawsuits against employers who supply
- workers with gadgets are "very possible," she says.
-
- Research In Motion Ltd.'s BlackBerry wireless device - jokingly dubbed the
- "CrackBerry" by some - is well known for what some describe as its
- addictive properties.
-
- In most major North American and European cities, businesspeople can be
- seen gazing nose-down into their BlackBerry screens, tapping out terse
- e-mails.
-
- Porter says she isn't picking on RIM or the BlackBerry in particular, but
- notes that terms like "CrackBerry" show that "there is, however
- lightheartedly, some acknowledgment that many people have kind of gotten
- out of control with using these devices."
-
- Others complain of simply being unable to unplug at home, with laptops,
- e-mails or conference calls keeping them working into the wee hours.
-
- Addiction to technology - blamed by critics on the seeming ubiquity of
- portable e-mail devices, smartphones, cellphones and laptops, coupled with
- long working hours - is hardly a new phenomenon.
-
- But Porter argues litigation could be the next step, as employees seek
- redress for technology dependence. She predicts companies could use a
- free-will argument in defending themselves: "They're going to, I would
- suspect, say that this was an individual choice."
-
-
-
- Internet Addicts Halfway House Opens in Shanghai
-
-
- Mainland China has opened its first halfway house for Internet addicts,
- offering shell-shocked teenagers counselling, books - and the use of
- computers.
-
- The shelter can hold four minors for one-night stays and help bridge gaps
- between children and parents, the Shanghai Daily said.
-
- "None of the teenagers are forced to come here," the newspaper quoted Wang
- Hui, the house's chief social worker, as saying.
-
- "We wander around in nearby Internet bars at night and bring them to the
- halfway house if the teen agrees."
-
- Computer and online gaming has exploded in China in recent years, with an
- estimated 14 million people taking part.
-
- Amid growing concern that more and more young people are getting hooked,
- China has issued a raft of regulations aimed at curbing excessive game
- playing at Internet cafes and heavily fining owners that admit minors.
-
- The Shanghai shelter, modeled on one already in operation Hong Kong, took
- in the first three boys on Monday, the paper said, including Chen Jiafeng
- - a 17-year-old "fed up with the depressive atmosphere" of his family.
-
- Chen went home after talking with a psychologist for four hours and after
- social workers visited his family to discuss proper parent-child
- communications, the paper said.
-
- In May, the parents of a 13-year-old boy who killed himself after playing
- a computer game for 36 hours sued the game's Chinese distributor.
-
-
-
- Campaign Targets Web Crimes Against Kids
-
-
- Attorney General Alberto Gonzales announced a new public service campaign
- Monday that will warn teenage girls against posting information on the
- Internet that could put them at risk of attack by child predators.
-
- "Every day, these predators are looking for someone to hurt," Gonzales said
- at the 18th annual Crimes Against Children Conference in Dallas. "Every
- day, we must educate parents and children about the threat."
-
- About 2,700 law enforcement officials from around the world are attending
- the conference, which runs through Thursday.
-
- "We want the front line professionals to be able to go back to their
- communities to protect the children in their communities," Gonzales said.
- "This conference brings folks together from all parts of the world and gets
- them talking with each other."
-
- A third of this year's 180 workshops are focusing on Internet crime, said
- Lynn Davis, president and CEO of the Dallas Children's Advocacy Center,
- which is hosting the conference with the Dallas Police Department.
-
- The ad campaign by the Department of Justice, in partnership with the
- National Center for Missing & Exploited Children and the Ad Council, will
- begin running early next year.
-
- "It's all part of the ongoing effort to educate the public about this very
- serious threat," Gonzales said.
-
- According to a Justice Department study, one in seven children using the
- Internet has been sexually solicited and one in three has been exposed to
- unwanted sexual material. One in 11 has been harassed.
-
- One that warned about the dangers online was developed in 2004, giving
- advice to parents on how to protect their children from Internet predators.
- A second series of ads released in 2005 warned teen girls about forming
- online relationships with people they don't know.
-
- Dallas Children's Advocacy Center: http://www.dcac.org/
-
- Nat'l Center for Missing & Exploited Children :
- http://www.missingkids.com/
-
-
-
- CNN.com To Replay 9/11 Attacks Coverage
-
-
- CNN will mark the fifth anniversary of the Sept. 11 attacks by replaying
- on the Internet the cable network's coverage of that day's events.
-
- Viewers can watch how events unfolded starting at 8:30 a.m., minutes before
- the first reports of an airplane hitting the World Trade Center. The feed
- will run in real time, as the network showed it five years ago, until
- midnight.
-
- For the day, CNN will make its online video service, CNN Pipeline,
- available for free. Normally, viewers pay $2.95 a month or $24.95 a year
- for four separate video feeds.
-
- Online viewers will be able to watch live reports of memorial services
- through one of the feeds. So that viewers won't accidentally stumble upon
- graphic footage from 2001, the replay feed will be covered with a notice
- instructing users to click only if they want to watch.
-
- "Our users may choose to view the stream of coverage from Sept. 11, 2001,
- or live coverage of memorial services at Ground Zero, or they may click
- through the numerous interactive elements on the site," said David Payne,
- senior vice president and general manager of CNN.com. "They have the power
- to determine the best way for them to remember the anniversary."
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
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-
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- Atari community. Reprint permission is granted, unless otherwise noted
- at the beginning of any article, to Atari user groups and not for
- profit publications only under the following terms: articles must
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- Opinions presented herein are those of the individual authors and do
- not necessarily reflect those of the staff, or of the publishers. All
- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.
-