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- Volume 9, Issue 40 Atari Online News, Etc. October 5, 2007
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2007
- 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 #0940 10/05/07
-
- ~ eBay Urges Net Tax Ban ~ People Are Talking! ~ Puppy Linux Out!
- ~ New Phishing Defense? ~ National Telework Week ~ France vs. Spam!
- ~ Online Videos Viruses ~ Atari 2600 Turns 30! ~ Lexmark Rewards!
- ~ "E-mail Free" Fridays? ~ Non-English Domains! ~ 'Booze Cruise'!
-
- -* California Web Domain Pulled *-
- -* Americans Wrong About PC Security! *-
- -* Spam-Scam Crackdown Nets Billions In Fakes *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Well, it's been really hectic the past couple of weeks. I had some
- ideas to discuss this week, including my own comments regarding Joe's
- editorial last week. But, I just plain ran out of time this week to
- really get my comments down on paper. So, I'll work on that for next
- week, and let you move ahead to the rest of this week's issue.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Well, we may finally have enough messages
- to do a decent column. No promises, but we're going to give it a shot.
-
- Before we get to that though (and you just KNEW that there was going to
- be a 'but first...', didn't you? [grin]), I'd like to reply to a few
- people who emailed me about last week's column. Normally I reply in
- private, but given that last week's topic was something that I think
- everyone should be involved in, ie: the exploration of space, I decided
- to do it here.
-
- Now, I realize I've got to be careful here so that I don't do something
- that always ticked me off about my stint with... well, with that other
- weekly Atari-related online news magazine that we were affiliated with:
- The tendency to use editorials to get the last word in. It always
- seemed to me to be unfair.
-
- For those of you who missed it, or who've forgotten the topic, last week
- I talked about NASA's Chief Administrator, Michael Griffin, and his
- intonation that the United States should get used to the idea that
- China was going to beat us back to the Moon, and that we should just
- deal with it.
-
- Most of the emails I received were quite complimentary, which always
- makes me uneasy. One of my favorite English teachers always said that
- if you're getting uniformly good feedback, you're probably not getting
- your ideas across. Damn, Mrs. Daily, I hope you're wrong.
-
- The few dissenting opinions I did receive, I'm happy to say, were well
- thought out, cogent opinions, not hysterical or self-serving diatribes.
- I'm a bit surprised, though, that no one thought to ask what the heck
- talk about space travel and national pride had to do with computers in
- general, and Atari computers in particular. The short answer is:
- nothing. Perhaps people have just grown accustomed to my rambling on
- and my ranting and raving.
-
- Probably the most prevalent opinion was that space exploration is
- expensive. I agree. Many things are expensive. Social Security is
- expensive. Maintaining the national infrastructure is expensive.
- Medicare is expensive. Supporting education, defending civil rights,
- ensuring equal governmental representation, monitoring health... all
- expensive propositions. But we do these things because there is
- generally agreed to be a benefit in doing so. Even though we may not
- see immediate benefits, we believe that there will be a 'payoff' down
- the road. Money spent on what we collectively call "The Space Program"
- may result in better, cheaper, more durable materials, scientific
- advancement, discoveries about the Universe we live in, manufacturing
- processes that allow for more effective or more easily produced
- medicines... who knows what awaits us 'out there'? One thing is for
- sure; if we don't try, we'll never know.
-
- When Columbus set out to find a new trade route to China, he stumbled
- upon the Americas. He hadn't been looking for the new world, he'd
- simply been looking to get to the old world faster. While it's true
- that Columbus played up the idea that these new world 'savages' could
- become slaves... and ended up being considered an abject failure... his
- discovery made possible all that we have today.
-
- Another thing to think about is that this discovery was fueled not by
- private business concerns, but by a government. Queen Isabella of Spain
- (and by extension, the government of Spain) provided the ships and
- supplies to mount this excursion. Because the results weren't what the
- benefactor had anticipated, funding was stopped, and this discovery was
- bounced back and forth between the major powers of Europe for
- generations. During that time, resources were plundered, indigenous
- inhabitants were wronged not only by being conscripted and subjugated,
- but by being exposed to exotic new biological agents which they had
- never encountered before, and therefore had no resistance to.
-
- All of these things could have analogues in space exploration, and we'll
- make the same mistakes all over again if we're not careful. I'm not too
- worried about making Martians serve as field workers, I think it'd be a
- terrible loss to science if we caused the downfall of any sort of life
- we might come across on other planets or satellites because we either
- didn't know that they existed, or didn't care. We have the capacity to
- learn from our mistakes, and if we are mindful of our our
- responsibilities we can accomplish great things.
-
- Well, this has gone on longer than I had planned on, so I'm going to
- stop here and get to the news and stuff from the UseNet.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- 'Mark' asks about an FTP server to run in conjunction with MiNT:
-
- "What ftp server program do you suggest?
- I'll need to configure it so that the outside world can't access it.
-
- I just installed magxnet, with magic 5.0.4 on a Falcon. (I swapped the
- HD, so the mint setup is not lost). I was thinking about trying it with
- bnet. I've already tested 'smbclient', and I got it working. However,
- the hard disk (or computer) hangs with transferring files with sizes
- >1mb. Under mint and the same hardware I've never had that problem.
- On the other hand, smbclient is much faster under magic than under
- mint. Transfer time is the same, but logging on takes a while under
- mint."
-
- Edward Baiz tells Mark:
-
- "There is only one ftp server I know of for the Atari. It should be on
- most Atari ftp sites. I think it is just called FTP Server... It is a
- simple program and not too hard to setup unlike the PC one."
-
-
- 'Techman' asks for advice on some 1980's vintage floppies for his 130XE:
-
- "I recently went home to my parents house and found 2 bins of 5-1/4
- disks from the mid-80s for my Atari 130XE (although I can't find the
- computer and hard drive right now).
-
- I miss all of these games and applications. More importantly I miss
- many of the programs in basic I wrote. I truly wonder if all of the
- data is destroyed (it has been almost 20 years).
-
- Has anyone found old disks from their Atari that survived such a long
- time? Is there a way I can verify if the data is still preserved using a
- 5-1/4 disk drive from an IBM PC? Even better if I can find a way to
- recover the data if possible and copy it onto a new 5-1/4 disk,
- preserving the file format etc. I would looking to understand my
- options."
-
-
- Russ G. tells Techman:
-
- "You need to remember what floppy drive you had. Your BASIC programs
- could be on single, enhanced or double density. You probably had a
- 1050, XF551 or some other party drive. If you don't remember, then get
- a double density drive, it will do all three formats. You will need to
- find your 130XE and drive setup. There is a 10502PC or something like
- that adapter to read floppies directly to PC from a Atari floppy drive.
- What you might want to do is send the disks to someone to test and copy
- for you. Probably wouldn't want to make new 5 1/4" copies, but copy
- to .ATR images, which you could then use in a PC Atari emulator. You
- could also copy the files from floppy to an .ARC file."
-
-
- Steve Stupple adds:
-
- "Fortunately there is more space on ye olde 5.25 disks so the datastream
- isn't as compacted.
-
- The 1050 drive wasn't a true double density:( but 1.5. You would need
- dos 2.5 at least, I would think.
-
- As with backing disks up, the best way would be to use an 8-bit machine,
- ideally 130xe for the extra memory. Transfer it using taritalk or
- something similar to the ST.
-
- The st can work with 5.25 disk so if you have my favourite happy cart,
- you can copy 5.25 to 5.25, well do whatever you want with it as you
- would any other disk.
-
- I did produce disk back up software (that could correct some crc errors,
- typical disk copy protection technique of the time), along with tape
- to disk when I wrote "the mockingbird menu" system. unfortunately I lost
- all my source in a house fire in the later 80's:( page 6 library was
- sent copies, as in the pd, along with a few others, whether they have
- survived is another matter.
-
- I was building up my 8-bit stuff as I did enjoy programming those
- machines. Jury's still out at the moment.."
-
-
- 'Charlie' adds:
-
- "well I am no pro with the 130 xl , but my suggestion would be to
- join this group and ask for answers there, I am a member, a lot of
- people help, some don't. http://www.atari-forum.com/index.php "
-
-
- 'Guillaume' posts:
-
- "I just bought a 520 STe which works ok except for one thing :
- The sound output (on the video plug) is very weak compared to my other
- STe. I bet it's a common issue like a nearly dead decoupling
- condensor somewhere between the YM chip and the output (WIIIILD
- GUESS). Any help, service guide or even schematics is welcomed!"
-
-
- Roger Burrows tells Guillaume:
-
- "Try: http://dev-docs.atariforge.org/index.htm "
-
-
- Guillaume tells Roger:
-
- "Now that's DIY! Thanks for the links.
-
- Still, if the low sound volume issue happened to you, please let me know
- what you did or where the problem was."
-
-
- Stephen Moss offers:
-
- "I have not owned a STe or personally come across this problem, however
- from looking at the circuit diagram there appears to be three Audio
- lines... AUDIOI (Audio in?), AUDIOS (Stereo Audio mixed to a mono
- channel?) and AUDIO. The Audio appears to be generated from U508
- (LM1892?, page 10 of the PDF) as Left/Right audio which is them mixed
- together by U504 (LM347) to provide the audio feed to the video socket
- and so I would suspect one on these as the problem and it probably has
- more to do with U504 then U508.
-
- The first thing I would try it to compare the output from the Left/Right
- audio sockets to that of your Working STe, if it appears to be the same
- then you can eliminate U508. If you can eliminate U508 as the problem
- then compare the sound you get from the L/R audio sockets to the that
- coming from the video socket and see if you can tell if one channel or
- both channels are quite although ideally you would be better comparing
- them with an oscilloscope if you have access to one.
-
- There are could be several causes for low volume as follows...
- 1) The output of U504 is defective.
- 2) Over time some of the resistor have gone high resistance, if either
- of the 10K resistors (R527, R5338) have gone high then the gain will be
- reduced and so the volume will decrease.
- 3) Capacitors (C529, C543) could have gone open circuit resulting is a
- loss of signal transfer to U504.
-
- I think that is the area of the PCB you should be looking at but if all
- that appears to be fine then look at capacitor C416 and inductor L409
- which are the final two components the audio goes through on it way to
- the video connector."
-
-
- Guillaume Tello asks about his TT's ST RAM board:
-
- "I have a ST Ram expansion board in my TT with 2Mb on it. I heard that
- this could be changed to a 8Mb board just changing the ram chips, is it
- true?
-
- The problem is that I can't find any ST Ram board to sell at a normal
- price! If anyone has one..."
-
-
- Roger Burrows tells Guillaume:
-
- "Supposedly so, (about turning the 2 Meg board into an 8 Meg board),
- although I have not tried it myself. If you need the info, let me know
- - I have it printed out somewhere ...
-
- They (ST RAM Boards) are not easy to find."
-
-
- Lonny Pursell tells Roger, in reference to the documentation:
-
- "If you still have this in electronic form I'd like to add it to the
- document archive, perhaps a (do it yourself) section."
-
-
- Uwe Seimet adds:
-
- "It might be easier to find TT-RAM boards.
- Guillaume, do you already have TT-RAM in your TT? Since TT-RAM is
- considerably faster than ST-RAM adding TT-RAM sounds more promising to
- me than adding ST-RAM."
-
-
- Guillaume tells Uwe:
-
- "Yes for sure, I have a Magnum 64Mb (and maybe a TTRamide coming soon).
- But... I need a lot of ST Ram to store and replay large sounds."
-
-
- Mark Bedingfield does a little research on the TTRamide and tells
- Guillaume:
-
- "Woh Mama. I just googled. looks like a nice idea. I toyed with the idea
- of designing a VME IDE controller for MegaSTE and TT030. Should finish
- that."
-
-
- 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 - The Atari 2600 Turns 30!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Wii Shortage This Holiday?
- 'Booze Cruise' Reality Check!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- The Atari 2600 Turns 30
-
-
- Back in October of 1977, a little company known as Atari was hard at work
- manufacturing a console that would be a foundation for future video games
- to come. The Atari 2600 would introduce families to a new concept of video
- gaming that up until that time was mostly monochrome television tennis.
-
- Originally known as the Atari Video Computer System (VCS), the console
- came packaged with two joystick controllers, a pair of paddle
- controllers, and the video cartridge game "Combat". The name was later
- changed in 1982 to the Atari 2600 upon the introduction of its successor
- console, the Atari 5200. The Atari 2600 was a fun gaming console for its
- time for an 8-bit gaming machine, and with the exception of a few
- spectacular bomb titles like "E.T.", the console helped launch
- third-party gaming developer companies such as Activision, which made many
- fun games for the 2600, like "Pitfall" for example.
-
- Now mostly a collector item, the original Atari 2600 and gaming cartridges
- can still be found around the Internet if you want to get nostalgic. You
- can also keep an eye out for the modern remake of the Atari 2600 called
- the Atari Flashback 2, released in 2005, which looks similar to a Atari
- 2600 and has 40 titles built right in to the console.
-
-
-
- Nintendo Predicts Holiday Wii Shortage
-
-
- The Nintendo Wii is about to celebrate its first birthday, but the
- shortages that held up profits last holiday season are threatening a
- repeat performance. That, combined with Microsoft's Halo 3 validating its
- hype, could mean a slower holiday season for Nintendo.
-
- The Wii has far and away outsold Sony's PlayStation 3 and Microsoft's
- Xbox 360, despite the company's inability to manufacture enough consoles
- to keep up with demand. And now, Nintendo of America President Reggie
- Fils-Aime indicated he isn't confident Nintendo can produce enough
- machines for the holiday rush.
-
- "We have been sold out worldwide since we launched," Fils-Aime was quoted
- by the San Jose Mercury News as saying. "Every time we put more into the
- marketplace, we sell more, which says that we are not even close to
- understanding where the threshold is between supply and demand."
-
- With a statement like that, you have to wonder what is really going on,
- said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Jupiter Research. A company can
- certainly discover there is a far greater demand than market researchers
- anticipated for the launch, he explained, noting that companies can even
- have supply chain issues for months after a launch, especially with new
- technologies.
-
- "Here we are nearly a year later and Nintendo is saying it is not going
- to meet the demand for Wiis," Gartenberg said. "At the end of the day,
- it's a very fine balance for consumers. They may in many cases hold out
- and get the device they are looking for. But if supply turns out to be
- too scarce, consumers may decide that it's time to look at other
- alternatives and other devices, and that can only bode well for both
- Microsoft and Sony."
-
- What also bodes well, at least for Microsoft, is the blockbuster release
- of Halo 3. Fils-Aime told the Mercury News that Halo 3's impact on the
- console battle this holiday season is an open question. "I am fortunate
- to have a series of (games) that are all going to drive substantial sales
- for me and are all targeted to different parts of the consumer mix,"
- Fils-Aime said.
-
- Indeed, consumers who opt for the Wii tend to be looking for a more
- casual gaming experience than the intense shoot-'em-ups Microsoft and
- Sony offer. The Wii caters to a different market segment than the
- demographic that stood in line for hours to buy Halo. Still, analysts say
- there is no doubt that Halo 3 is a console-seller.
-
- "People will buy the Xbox 360 on the strength of Halo 3 and how good that
- game is. If you are in the video game business, this is a situation you
- want to be in," Gartenberg said. "Of course, the good news for Microsoft
- is that Halo is a first party title. We are not going to be seeing Halo
- for the Wii or Halo for the PS3 any time soon."
-
-
-
- 'Heavenly Sword'
-
-
- The hack-and-slash genre brings a certain mindless, yet simply satisfying,
- element to video games. Call it a quirk of gaming, but sometimes there's
- just an odd pleasure in pressing the same few buttons over and over again.
-
- "Heavenly Sword" (Rated T, $59.99) brings this game style to the
- PlayStation3 with Hollywood-caliber production values.
-
- One of the most noticeable things about "Heavenly Sword" has nothing to do
- with action: this game has some of the best eyes in the business.
-
- The action heroine, Nariko, shows quite an emotional range with her big
- brown eyes, slicing and dicing her way through hordes of armor-clad
- enemies with the game's namesake, the Heavenly Sword.
-
- Nariko's haunting, beautiful looks are a stark contrast to the grim fact
- that this weapon is slowly draining her life.
-
- The core gameplay puts you in control of Nariko, and she's a one-woman
- army who battles King Bohan and his relentless quest to obtain this weapon
- of ultimate power.
-
- There are better action games like this, notably the "God of War" series
- for the older PlayStation 2, from which this game clearly borrows heavily.
-
- But "Heavenly Sword" benefits from lush graphics on the PS3 and looks
- amazing on a high-definition television.
-
- The game offers some depth with combo moves and three ways to use the
- sword. When surrounded by enemies, switching stances between ranged, speedy
- and brute force attacks is a strategic decision.
-
- There are some exciting interludes where you'll have to tap the buttons at
- the right time to slide and run down giant ropes and onto a tower of
- waiting enemies, for example.
-
- It's like playing a movie at times, hardly a surprise with Andy Serkis,
- who played Gollum in "The Lord of the Rings" movies, once again pushing
- the boundaries of acting with a memorable turn as this game's devious
- King Bohan.
-
- With his mad desire for the Heavenly Sword, Serkis creates one of video
- gaming's more memorable villains, showing more than the usual
- one-dimensional depth afforded most pixelated bad guys.
-
- Not everything is heavenly in "Heavenly Sword."
-
- Nariko isn't alone in her quest to defeat Bohan, and occasionally you'll
- partake in missions as the svelte Kai.
-
- This is where the gameplay really breaks down. Amid countless acts of
- swordplay-driven heroism, you are interrupted with these very frustrating,
- out of place, shooting missions.
-
- Kai has a few where she shoots her bow and arrow to kill swarms of
- baddies. Nariko too, gets sidetracked with levels that just seem out of
- place in a game about big honking swordplay.
-
- "Heavenly Sword" doesn't offer much replay value, either. Single player
- mode is the only game option available, and it won't take skilled
- players more than a few days to complete.
-
- But oh, what a gorgeous few days it will be.
-
- Three stars out of four.
-
-
-
- Booze Cruise Video Game Gives Teens Reality Check
-
-
- The Canadian developers of a video game that simulates drunk driving hope
- it will make teenagers think twice about getting behind the wheel after a
- night of heavy drinking.
-
- The game, aptly named 'Booze Cruise,' was developed by Jim Parker, a
- digital-media professor at the University of Calgary, and a number of his
- students as a school project.
-
- "The basic story is that this person is absolutely pissed and woke up in
- the trunk of their car and now is going to drive home," Parker said.
-
- The player, with vision narrowed and blurred and reaction times slowed to
- mimic the reality of driving drunk, has 90 seconds to get home while
- navigating past obstacles that include pedestrians, other cars and a
- police checkpoint.
-
- "And then just for fun, we put distractions on the side of the road, like
- pink elephants," Parker said.
-
- Police in Calgary, Alberta, provided input as the team researched the
- game, trying to make it as realistic as possible. They also have high
- hopes for Booze Cruise.
-
- "I think it's going to be a great tool," said Const. Rob Haffner of the
- Calgary Police Service. "Whatever education that we can get out there is
- always going to be beneficial as far as drinking and driving goes."
-
- Parker said the design team hopes to get funding to finish a more complete
- version before letting schools and police get their hands on the game.
-
- While many teens are familiar with driving video games, Parker said the
- hope is that this one will persuade them that alcohol will affect their
- skills.
-
- "This is aimed not at adults, this is aimed at people who are 13 to 16,"
- he said. "We want to stop them from doing it in advance."
-
-
-
- Bungie and Microsoft Part Company
-
-
- Rumors circulating on the Internet for the past few days have proven to be
- true: Bungie Studios and Microsoft have parted company.
-
- Bungie Studios - now renamed Bungie LLC - became a privately held
- independent company, effective Oct. 1, 2007. Microsoft retains a minority
- equity interest in the new business, which will continue to focus on
- developing games for Microsoft platforms, according to Harold Ryan,
- BungieÆs studio head.
-
- Microsoft and Bungie indicated in announcing the separation that they will
- continue a "deep and long-term development and publishing relationship,"
- focused both on the long-term success of the Halo franchise and on a new
- IP created and owned by Bungie.
-
- That news is bound to come as a disappointment to Mac gamers who have
- longed for this day. From 1991 to 2000, Bungie was an independent game
- development company with a very strong focus on the Mac. It developed the
- Marathon first person shooter game series and Myth strategy game series;
- Marathon was a Mac-first title, along with a third-person action game
- called Oni.
-
- Bungie announced its now-legendary first person shooter, on stage at
- Macworld Expo in New York in 1999, indicating the game would be released
- for Mac and Windows platforms. In 2000, Microsoft acquired the company,
- and announced that Bungie would become part of MicrosoftÆs nascent game
- division, and that Halo would become an exclusive to the Xbox platform.
- Mac and Windows versions of the original Halo were ultimately released,
- although it would take a couple of years.
-
- "Working with Microsoft was great for us, it allowed us to grow as a
- team and make the ambitious, blockbuster games we all wanted to work on,"
- said Bungie founder and partner Jason Jones in a statement. And they will
- continue to be a great partner. But Bungie is like a shark. We have to
- keep moving to survive. We have to continually test ourselves, or we
- might as well be dolphins. Or manatees.
-
- Bungie and Microsoft recently released Halo 3, an exclusive title for the
- Xbox 360. The game ran up $300 million in sales during its first week of
- release - the fastest-selling video game in history, according to
- Microsoft.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- EBay Urges Internet Access Tax Ban
-
-
- An eBay executive warned Wednesday that fewer small businesses would sell
- products through the Web auctioneer, and elsewhere online, without a
- permanent ban on Internet access taxes.
-
- Congress first imposed a moratorium on taxing Internet access - which bars
- state and local governments from taxing the connection to basic Internet
- content - in 1998. Since then, it has been twice extended, but is set to
- expire Nov. 1.
-
- Congress is considering legislation that would extend the moratorium for
- several years or ban it permanently.
-
- While Brian Bieron, eBay Inc.'s senior director of federal government
- relations, did not directly say the company would suffer without the ban,
- he said the effect would be far reaching.
-
- "More importantly, fewer consumers will use the Internet," he said in
- testimony prepared for a House hearing. "And, for the small businesses
- using the Internet, that means fewer sales and less opportunity to compete
- with the mega retailers."
-
- He estimated more than 720,000 small businesses use the San Jose,
- Calif.-based company as a primary or secondary marketing channel, calling
- it a "lifeline" against larger retailers.
-
- Through eBay, he said about 15 percent of sales of U.S. small businesses
- are exported to other countries and small businesses can also find
- products from all around the world on the Web site.
-
- Bieron was one of five witnesses to testify before the House Small
- Business Committee, which is considering the potential impact on small
- businesses if the moratorium isn't renewed.
-
- Rep. Nydia Velazquez, D-N.Y., who chairs the committee, said in her
- opening statement that if Internet access is taxed then small businesses
- could see a 15 to 30 percent increase in their Internet bills.
-
-
-
- Americans Wrong About Computer Security
-
-
- Most Americans believe their computers are protected against viruses and
- spyware, but scans found that a large number had outdated or disabled
- security software, according to a poll released on Monday.
-
- Fully 87 percent of Americans polled said they had anti- virus software,
- 73 percent said they had a firewall and 70 percent said they had
- anti-spyware software, according to the survey by security software maker
- McAfee Inc and the National Cyber Security Alliance.
-
- But when pollsters asked to remotely scan the respondents' computers, the
- story turned out to be very different.
-
- While 94 percent of those polled had anti-virus software, just half had
- updated it in the past month, the survey showed. Eighty one percent had a
- firewall protecting private information, but just 64 percent had enabled
- it. And 70 percent said they had anti-spyware software, but only 55
- percent had enabled it.
-
- Spyware not only monitors what a computer user does, but can also install
- software without the user's consent and interfere with the computer in
- other ways.
-
- Bari Abdul, a McAfee vice president, said most viruses were not written by
- attention-seeking hackers looking to pull a prank.
-
- "Most of the action has gone to stealing identity," he said after speaking
- at a cyber security conference sponsored by the National Cyber Security
- Alliance.
-
- Nine percent of those polled reported having had their identity stolen, he
- said.
-
- The survey questioned 378 people between Aug 2 and Sept 10 about security
- on their home computers. The Cyber Security Industry Alliance is seeking
- U.S. legislation to set standards for the government and private industry
- to prevent data breaches and tougher criminal penalties against spyware.
-
- The Federal Trade Commission, which is one of several government agencies
- investigating cyber fraud, said on Monday it had stopped a scam that had
- infected 15 million computers.
-
- Three men, who gave up the $330,000 they made from the scam, collected
- various forms of spyware and adware and used them to infect computers,
- the FTC said. They made money by putting adult ads on the computers and
- advertisements for Internet-based businesses or travel.
-
- The unwanted software was hidden in free screen-savers and video files
- that users downloaded.
-
- "Every time they infect a consumer, they're getting paid," said Ethan
- Arenson, one of the FTC lawyers who worked on the case.
-
- FTC Chairman Deborah Majoras urged computer users to protect themselves
- against malicious software.
-
- "I can tell you we have two dozen open investigations into data
- security," said Majoras. "We can't round up all the bad guys."
-
- Majoras said she wanted to computer users to hit "delete" instead of
- "reply" when they get spam or email which is "phishing" for personal
- information that could be used for identity theft.
-
- "Phishing absolutely drives me insane," she added.
-
-
-
- Spam-Scam Crackdown Nets $2 Billion In Fake Checks
-
-
- An international crackdown on Internet financial scams this year has
- yielded more than $2.1 billion in seized fake checks and 77 arrests in the
- Netherlands, Nigeria and Canada, U.S. and other authorities said on
- Wednesday.
-
- The scammers, often West African organized crime groups, use ploys such
- as "spam" e-mail offering to pay recipients "processing fees" for
- depositing checks, which later turn out to be phony, and sending the
- ostensible proceeds to the scammer, authorities said.
-
- The ruses are aided by U.S. financial practices that quickly credit a bank
- customer for deposits even though it can take far longer to discover a
- fake check and reclaim the money from the customer. The victims find
- themselves out the money they forward when the checks prove to be fake.
-
- "Most Americans don't realize they are financially liable when they fall
- for these scams," Susan Grant, vice president of the National Consumers
- League, said at a news conference to publicize the arrests and promote
- awareness of the frauds.
-
- The crackdown netted 16 arrests in Nigeria, 60 in the Netherlands and one
- in Canada, said Greg Campbell, U.S. Postal Inspection Service inspector in
- charge of global security.
-
- "We shut down Internet cafes, we arrested scammers, and significantly
- disrupted the flow of fake checks into the United States," Campbell said.
-
- Law enforcement in England also took part. Nigeria is a recognized hotbed
- for the financial frauds and the other countries have significant West
- African populations that include fraud operators, authorities said.
-
- Three suspects from the Netherlands and Nigeria were extradited to New
- York and are awaiting trial, said U.S. Assistant Attorney General Alice
- Fischer. The United States is seeking to extradite five others.
-
- The United States is a major draw for the scammers. But other
- English-speaking countries are also targeted, in part because of the
- widespread use of English on the Internet and because of Nigeria's large
- English-speaking population, Campbell said.
-
- Nigeria has brought to court 290 cases of suspected fraud, and the
- prosecutions have been successful in 115 of the cases so far, said Ibrahim
- Lamorde, head of that country's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission.
-
- He said Nigeria is doing its best to stamp out the fake-check operations.
- It has seized counterfeiting equipment and convened meetings of anti-fraud
- officials from across Africa. But he acknowledged Nigeria has an image
- problem.
-
- "The first country that comes to mind is Nigeria," Lamorde said.
-
- Two-thirds of Americans said they received at least one potential scam
- contact per week, and 18 percent said they or a family member had fallen
- for one, in a survey conducted for an alliance of banks, consumer groups
- and the U.S. Postal Service.
-
- Grant said complaints to her group about fake checks have risen 60 percent
- this year, and the average victim loses about $3,000 to $4,000.
-
- Some U.S. banks have changed their practices, for example, by training
- tellers to better inform depositors about risks, Grant said. She called
- for regulations mandating that bank customers be given clearer
- information.
-
- Offers can also come in direct mail. Fisher showed hand-written envelopes
- directed to her at a Justice Department address.
-
- Inside were $850 checks with a Wal-Mart logo, with letters offering her a
- 10 percent cut if she would cash the checks and send the money back.
- "After you laugh and think how silly it is .. this shows it (the problem)
- is just completely rampant," she said.
-
-
-
- Yahoo, eBay Work To Block Phishing
-
-
- Yahoo Inc, is working with auction leader eBay Inc and its PayPal payments
- unit to block fake e-mails to users purporting to be from eBay and PayPal,
- hoping to spur on an industry that has been slow to fight the scourge of
- so-called phishing attacks.
-
- EBay and PayPal have upgraded their computer systems to support an
- emerging technology standard known as DomainKeys invented by Yahoo that
- authenticates e-mail senders are who they say they are, allowing Yahoo to
- block fake e-mails.
-
- The technology upgrade will be made available to Yahoo Mail users
- worldwide over the next several weeks, the company said.
-
- "It is a big step forward for consumers in defense against the bad guys,"
- John Kremer, vice president of Yahoo Mail, said in a phone interview.
-
- Along with banks and pharmaceutical makers, eBay and PayPal are among the
- brands most targeted by phishers seeking to trick consumers into divulging
- personal information such as credit card or password data in order to
- commit financial fraud.
-
- Over the past decade, phishing has been clogging the inboxes of e-mail
- users worldwide with ever more sophisticated attempts to fool users into
- clicking on fraudulent sites or giving up personal financial details to
- commit fraud.
-
- But to date, many of the defenses put forward by security software vendors
- and industry consortiums have failed to take hold with e-mail senders due
- to their complexity or costliness, or political in-fighting over
- standards, leaving individual consumers always guessing which e-mail may
- be real or fake.
-
- A PayPal official said Yahoo's system provides a way of automatically
- detecting potential phishing attacks without relying on the consumer to do
- anything new.
-
- "If the consumer doesn't receive an email in their inbox then it is very
- hard for the phisher to victimize them," Michael Barrett, PayPal's chief
- information security officer.
-
- Two camps have emerged among technology providers seeking to develop a
- coherent approach to identifying e-mail senders.
-
- One backed by Yahoo and Cisco Systems Inc. along with AOL, Google Inc,
- International Business Machines Corp, Sendmail and VeriSign Inc is the
- DomainKeys Identified Mail technology, which allows e-mail providers to
- identify the Web domain from which a sender has sent e-mail.
-
- A second standard known as Sender Policy Network (SPF) has been led by
- Microsoft Corp, which offers its own version of SPF known as Sender ID.
- SPF-based protections are used by Amazon, AOL, GoDaddy and eBay, which
- supports both DKIM and SPF.
-
- Chenxi Wang, a security analyst with Forrester Research, said DomainKeys
- relies on more sophisticated cryptography than the Microsoft-supported
- approach. This sophistication can make DomainKeys harder for Web sites to
- install but offers greater long-term defense against phishing attacks,
- she said.
-
- So far, most customers have installed sender authentication inside their
- e-mail systems as a monitoring tool but do not block e-mail for fear of
- false positives - mistakenly treating legitimate customer e-mail messages
- as phishing attempts.
-
- However, despite the industry disagreements, an underlying consensus is
- emerging among software vendors, Internet service providers and corporate
- Web sites that digital e-mail signing in one form or another is the best
- shot to combat phishing.
-
- "Two years ago if you asked companies whether they were using e-mail
- authentication, most people wouldn't have cared," Wang said. "Today if you
- ask most organizations if they think it is a good thing people would say,
- 'Yes."'
-
- "The industry is slowly coming around," Wang said. "EBay and PayPal are
- some of the first to actively block unauthenticated e-mails."
-
-
-
- France Kicks Off Nationwide Spam Fight
-
-
- France is hoping to shut down spammers more quickly through a system that
- makes it easier for users to notify ISPs (Internet service providers) when
- unsolicited e-mails are coming from their network.
-
- The French government funded the development of an open-source toolbar for
- Microsoft's Outlook and Mozilla's Thunderbird e-mail programs that people
- can use to report suspected spam, said John Graham-Cumming, an Englishman
- who built the software for the project, called Signal Spam.
-
- "From the French perspective, spam is like any other criminal activity
- that is affecting the French people," Graham-Cumming said.
-
- Most users today simply delete spam email from their inboxes, in part
- because they don't have a simple tool for reporting spam to their ISP. The
- SignalSpam project aims to provide them with such a tool.
-
- When users receive spam messages, the toolbar provides an easy way for
- them to forward the message to a central database. The messages are then
- sent to the ISP whose network they originated from, and the ISP decides
- whether to shut down the account of the sender, Graham-Cumming said.
-
- France is ranked as the 10th worst country for generating spam, according
- to The Spamhaus Project Ltd., which publishes a list that can be used in
- e-mail servers to block known spamming IP (Internet protocol) addresses.
- The U.S. is the worst, followed by China, Russia and the U.K.
-
- If a spam message originates outside of France, SignalSpam takes no
- action. If a message comes from a legitimate marketer, the system can send
- an automated response to the person who reported it telling them how to
- unsubscribe to the mailing list, Graham-Cumming said. Marketers are
- encouraged to register with Signal Spam.
-
- The system's success will depend on people's willingness to install the
- tool bar. Since the project launched in May, about 3.5 million spam
- e-mails have been collected in the database, which can be used to
- generate statistics on spam trends.
-
- By the end of the year, Signal Spam plans to release a toolbar for
- Outlook Express, another Microsoft e-mail client, Graham-Cumming said.
- Signal Spam is also in talks with Web-based e-mail providers, such as
- Microsoft and Google Inc., on developing a reporting mechanism.
-
- Some ISPs have been accused of profiting by allowing spammers to use their
- network, while other ISPs don't take action against spammers due to the
- expense of shutting them down. However, Signal Spam has received broad
- support from French ISPs, according to Graham-Cumming.
-
- In the next couple months he expects the database to start to reveal spam
- trends that could shed greater light on how to stop the problem.
-
- Eventually, Signal Spam may also turn its attention to closing phishing
- sites more quickly. Spam e-mails often try to entice people to a
- fraudulent Web site in order to trick them into divulging their personal
- information.
-
-
-
- Online Videos May Be Conduits For Viruses
-
-
- Online videos aren't just for bloopers and rants - some might also be
- conduits for malicious code that can infect your computer.
-
- As anti-spam technology improves, hackers are finding new vehicles to
- deliver their malicious code. And some could be embedded in online video
- players, according to a report on Internet threats released Tuesday by
- the Georgia Tech Information Security Center as it holds its annual
- summit.
-
- The summit is gathering more than 300 scholars and security experts to
- discuss emerging threats for 2008 - and their countermeasures.
-
- Among their biggest foes are the ever-changing vehicles that hackers use
- to deliver "malware," which can silently install viruses, probe for
- confidential info or even hijack a computer.
-
- "Just as we see an evolution in messaging, we also see an evolution in
- threats," said Chris Rouland, the chief technology officer for IBM
- Corp.'s Internet Security Systems unit and a member of the group that
- helped draft the report. "As companies have gotten better blocking
- e-mails, we see people move to more creative techniques."
-
- With computer users getting wiser to e-mail scams, malicious hackers are
- looking for sneakier ways to spread the codes. Over the past few years,
- hackers have moved from sending their spam in text-based messages to more
- devious means, embedding them in images or disguised as Portable Document
- Format, or PDF, files.
-
- "The next logical step seems to be the media players," Rouland said.
-
- There have only been a few cases of video-related hacking so far.
-
- One worm discovered in November 2006 launches a corrupt Web site without
- prompting after a user opens a media file in a player. Another program
- silently installs spyware when a video file is opened. Attackers have also
- tried to spread fake video links via postings on YouTube.
-
- That reflects the lowered guard many computer users would have on such
- popular forums.
-
- "People are accustomed to not clicking on messages from banks, but they
- all want to see videos from YouTube," Rouland said.
-
- Another soft spot involves social networking sites, blogs and wikis.
- These community-focused sites, which are driving the next generation of
- Web applications, are also becoming one of the juiciest targets for
- malicious hackers.
-
- Computers surfing the sites silently communicate with a Web application
- in the background, but hackers sometimes secretly embed malicious code
- when they edit the open sites, and a Web browser will unknowingly execute
- the code. These chinks in the armor could let hackers steal private data,
- hijack Web transactions or spy on users.
-
- Tuesday's forum gathers experts from around the globe to "try to get
- ahead of emerging threats rather than having to chase them," said
- Mustaque Ahamad, director of the Georgia Tech center.
-
- They are expected to discuss new countermeasures, including tighter
- validation standards and programs that analyze malicious code. Ahamad
- also hopes the summit will be a launching pad of sorts for an informal
- network of security-minded programmers.
-
-
-
- Tiny Linux Hits the Streets
-
-
- A very small Linux operating system, known as Puppy Linux, has had a
- "major upgrade" after version 3.0 hit the streets this week.
-
- What makes Puppy Linux different from other distributions of Linux is that
- the Puppy 3.0 Live CD can be run direct from the CD, without installing to
- a hard disk. Indeed, the operating system is just 97.6MB in size.
-
- Puppy is designed to be a very small Linux operating system designed to be
- "reliable, easy to use and fully featured." The entire operating system
- and all the applications can be run entirely from RAM. It comes with
- applications such as SeaMonkey/Mozilla Application Suite, AbiWord,
- Sodipodi, Gnumeric, and Gxine/xine.
-
- One of its most compelling features is that users can boot from the disk,
- work, and then save their files back to CD for the next time they boot
- the CD. It can also be run from USB storage sticks or Zip disks. This
- allows the Puppy operating system to be used on older computers, or as an
- emergency rescue system, a Linux demonstration system, or as a complete
- general purpose operating system.
-
- According to developer Barry Kauler, Puppy Linux 3.0 is a major upgrade
- over previous releases. One of the major changes in this release is a
- move to make Puppy Linux and Slackware compatible to allow users to
- install Slackware packages on Puppy. Slackware is one of the oldest Linux
- distributions, and aims to be the most Unix-like Linux distribution.
-
- "To that end, I used all the building block packages from Slackware 12,
- such as glibc 2.5, gcc 4.1.2 and gtk 2.10.13," said developer Kauler.
- "Most of the libraries in Puppy are now from Slackware. Note, though, this
- does not in any way make Puppy a clone of Slackware- apart from aiming for
- binary compatibility, Puppy is fundamentally unique from the foundations
- upward."
-
- Kauler has also "totally rewritten the key scripts that control how Puppy
- boots up, is configured, and shuts down." Other changes include better
- USB writing method, after "finally getting periodic flushing of RAM to
- Flash drive working properly- this is part of a mechanism that constrains
- writes to Flash drives so that they don't burn out."
-
-
-
- Sample Non-English Domains Coming Soon
-
-
- Sample addresses in nearly a dozen languages will be added to the
- Internet's central directories as early as next week, paving the way for
- Web surfers around the world to get online without knowing any English.
-
- At this point, the 11 domain names are meant primarily for software
- developers and Web site designers to test the new system, but they are the
- first such names entered in the 13 key domain name directories, known as
- root servers, after years of discussions and limited-access tests.
-
- If the global tests go well, non-English domain names could be in use by
- the end of 2008.
-
- Users outside the United States long have clamored for non-English
- domain-name scripts, finding restrictive the current limitation to the
- letters a through z, the numbers 0 through 9 and the hyphen.
-
- It is sometimes possible to create addresses in foreign languages, but the
- suffix - the ".com" part of an address - must use English characters. So
- the current tests involve non-English suffixes.
-
- The 11 suffixes now under review will read "test" in Arabic, Persian,
- simplified Chinese, traditional Chinese, Russian, Hindi, Greek, Korean,
- Yiddish, Japanese and Tamil.
-
- They were chosen based on the online communities that have expressed the
- most interest in and need for non-English domains, said Tina Dam, director
- of the Internationalized Domain Names program for the Internet Corporation
- for Assigned Names and Numbers, known as ICANN, which oversees Internet
- addressing policies.
-
- U.S. authorities are still reviewing the suffixes. They are expected to
- approve the test versions next week, and the tests will begin after that.
-
- On Oct. 15, ICANN plans to unveil mechanisms for individuals and
- businesses to try out the new suffixes. They won't be able to register
- domain names, but will be able to create Web sites and pass around
- non-English Web links. They will also be able to try locally popular Web
- browsers, beyond the major ones already tested.
-
- Everyone in the world will essentially be invited to try to break the new
- system, Dam said. A 24-hour hot line is being established to allow ICANN
- to quickly suspend the test if any problems might disrupt other domains
- such as ".com" and ".uk."
-
- The technology for the root servers themselves will not change. ICANN and
- the standards-setting Internet Engineering Task Force have instead
- developed techniques - using a system known as Punycode - for software to
- convert the non-English domains into codes using only the 37 characters
- now permitted.
-
- Among major browsers, only the one from Opera Software ASA fully
- implements Punycode, Dam said.
-
- Users of Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer, Mozilla's Firefox and Apple
- Inc.'s Safari should be able to get to the Web sites, she said, but until
- developers finish their work, portions of the Web address may appear in
- English characters even after being entered in another language.
-
- E-mail applications and Web-based mail systems ultimately will have to
- recognize Punycode as well. Approval of that technology is expected by
- year's end.
-
-
-
- www.sex.asia Likely To Be Internet Domain In Demand
-
-
- The Internet address www.sex.asia is likely to be the domain name most in
- demand next week when dot Asia Web sites are launched, Europe's .eu
- Internet domain registrar EURid said on Friday.
-
- "No one knows which names will be most popular...but EURid's experience
- offers some clues. In the first two days .eu domain names became
- available, EURid received 227 applications for sex.eu, 118 for hotel.eu
- and 94 for travel.eu," EURid said in a statement.
-
- "The .asia registry will probably see the same rush for generic names but
- that will pass," said Marc Van Wesemael, general manager of EURid.
-
- Dot asia addresses are due to become available from October 9. The
- distribution of the domain names is being managed by DotAsia Organisation
- (www.registry.asia), a not-for-profit group based in Hong Kong.
-
-
-
- Feds Shut Down California's Domain Name
-
-
- The Federal government pulled the plug on the ca.gov Web domain used by
- the State of California on Tuesday, setting into motion a chain of events
- that threatened to grind government business to a standstill within the
- state.
-
- State IT staffers were able to fix the problem within a few hours,
- narrowly averting disaster, but the situation shed light on what observers
- are calling a shocking weakness in the state's IT infrastructure.
-
- The story behind the shutdown, and how the U.S. General Services
- Administration (GSA) came within hours of shutting down the State of
- California's Internet presence is a complex one, but as with so many
- stories on the Internet, it begins with pornography.
-
- In early September the Transportation Authority of Marin, a ten-person
- agency charged with managing transportation funding in Marin County,
- California, discovered that the servers that handled the agency's Web and
- domain name service had been hacked and were being used to create links
- to pornographic Web sites.
-
- Domain name servers are used to translate the www.website.com domain names
- we type into our browsers into numerical IP addresses, used by computers.
- Together these Domain Name System (DNS) servers form a web-like database
- telling all of the computers on the Internet how to find each other. In
- the case of the Transportation Authority, there was one authoritative
- server responsible for telling all other DNS servers where to find
- computers operating within the tam.ca.gov domain.
-
- The agency spent a frustrating two weeks trying to get its Internet
- service provider, StartLogic Inc., to resolve the problem, said Dianne
- Steinhauser, executive director of the Transportation Authority of Marin.
- Then in mid-September it delegated domain name server authority for the
- Transportation Authority's domain to the ca.gov name server, run by the
- state's Department of Technology Services, she said. That meant that the
- state's servers and not StartLogic's were now responsible for keeping the
- authoritative domain record for tam.ca.gov.
-
- Unfortunately, it also meant that if an outside observer believed that the
- DNS server responsible for tam.ca.gov had been hacked, he might have
- assumed that the ca.gov name server was compromised as well. And that,
- apparently, is where the trouble really began for the State of California.
-
- On Tuesday, at around 2 p.m., the federal organization responsible for
- managing the.gov top level domain pulled the plug on the ca.gov domain,
- according to Jim Hanacek, a public information officer with California's
- Department of Technology Services. The "ca.gov domain was removed as a
- valid address by the federal General Services Administration, who has an
- office that oversees the use of the.gov domain," he said.
-
- Only the GSA knows for sure why this was done, but Hanacek said that the
- problems that had been experienced by the Transportation Authority of
- Marin were behind the move. "Our understanding... is they were seeing
- signs of some redirects over to pornographic sites and that is what caused
- them to shut down that domain."
-
- A GSA spokeswoman did not dispute California's account of what happened,
- but said that her agency was looking into Tuesday's events and "will be
- able to provide an update once the details are gathered."
-
- Security experts expressed amazement Wednesday that the federal
- government would undertake such a drastic move without first trying to
- resolve the problem with the state. "That's hard core, given how much
- stuff there is under ca.gov," said Cricket Liu, vice president of
- architecture with DNS appliance vendor Infoblox Inc. "Maybe they thought
- there was some sort of imminent threat."
-
- Within hours of the GSA's move, the state had begun working with the
- federal agency to reverse the damage caused by delisting the ca.gov domain
- from the world's DNS servers, Hanacek said. Although there were some
- isolated reports of state Web sites being inaccessible or e-mail not going
- through, the disruption caused by the event was minimal and things were
- back to normal by 5:30 p.m. on Tuesday.
-
- Because it takes time for DNS servers to update their records California
- managed to avoid disaster, but if Hanacek's office had not taken action
- within 24 hours, Web access and email to all state agencies using the
- ca.gov domain would have been cut off, Liu said. "It would have been
- crippling."
-
- Hanacek said that the state is working with the GSA to make sure that this
- type of event doesn't happen again. "I'm sure that we'll have some
- processes in place to make sure that the right parties get advanced
- notification of a significant change like this."
-
-
-
- Fridays Go From Casual To E-mail-Free
-
-
- Overwhelmed by e-mail? Some professionals are fighting back by declaring
- e-mail-free Fridays - or by deleting their entire in-box.
-
- Today about 150 engineers at chipmaker Intel will kick off "Zero E-mail
- Fridays." E-mail isn't forbidden, but everyone is encouraged to phone or
- meet face-to-face. The goal is more direct, free-flowing communication
- and better exchange of ideas, Intel principal engineer Nathan Zeldes says
- in a company blog post.
-
- E-mail-free Fridays already are the norm at cell carrier U.S. Cellular
- and at order-processing company PBD Worldwide Fulfillment Services in
- Alpharetta, Ga.
-
- Prominent techies are tackling the problem individually by declaring
- "e-mail bankruptcy" - deleting or archiving an entire in-box and
- starting over. Among them: prominent tech bloggers Jeff Nolan, Michael
- Arrington and Vanessa Fox, and venture capitalist Fred Wilson.
-
- E-mail overload is caused by the sheer volume of messages zipping around
- the globe. Each day, about 39.7 billion person-to-person e-mails, 17.1
- billion automated alerts, and 40.5 billion pieces of spam (unsolicited
- commercial e-mail) are sent worldwide, researcher IDC says. White-collar
- workers often receive 140 messages a day, executive coach Marsha Egan
- says.
-
- E-mail can be a useful communication tool, and people who write a lot of
- it are more likely to receive it, IDC (IDC) tech analyst Mark Levitt
- says. But it can quickly get out of hand.
-
- "I didn't even have time to figure out where to start," says Edward
- O'Connor, a Web developer from San Diego who declared e-mail bankruptcy
- two weeks ago. O'Connor had about 750 messages dating back three years,
- almost all of which needed a reply. "I was completely overwhelmed," he
- says.
-
- Egan says even the busiest e-mailers can, with care, keep control of
- their in-boxes. Her tips:
-
- * Don't use e-mail to avoid unpleasant tasks. "I couldn't believe people
- who had never talked to each other but worked in the same office," says
- Scott Dockter, CEO of PBD. Dockter started e-mail-free Fridays about a
- year-and-a-half ago. Since then, the number of messages his 400 employees
- send has dropped by about 75%.
-
- * Don't constantly check for new messages. It can take four minutes to
- refocus on work after checking an e-mail, Egan says. Jay Ellison, chief
- operating officer of U.S. Cellular, estimates that his 7,000 employees
- spend about 1א© hours a day on their in-boxes. E-mail-free Fridays give
- them more time to solve customers' problems, he says.
-
- * Respond to important messages first - even if they're difficult.
- Less-pressing issues can wait until a free moment, Egan says.
-
-
-
- 'National Telework Week' Gets A Show Of Congressional Support
-
-
- The federal government has a special day, week, or month for everything,
- so why not telecommuting?
-
- U.S. Rep. Frank Wolf, a Virginia Republican, has promoted the idea by
- sending a letter requesting the creation of a "National Telework Week" to
- President Bush and introducing a resolution to promote the idea. Wolf
- said he wants to encourage more employers to consider the option.
-
- "The best part of telework is that it improves the quality of life for
- all," Wolf said in his written statement Tuesday. "Nearly 20 million
- Americans telework today, and according to experts, at least 40% of
- American jobs are compatible with telework. Telework reduces traffic
- congestion and air pollution. It reduces gas consumption and our
- dependency on foreign oil."
-
- Wolf said telework provides parents with flexibility to meet personal and
- professional demands, increases opportunities for people with
- disabilities, and helps fill the nation's labor market shortage. He also
- said that companies reap benefits, including cost savings, lower absentee
- rates, increased retention, higher productivity, and improved morale.
-
- He also cited George Mason University research showing that for every 1%
- of the Washington metropolitan region workforce that telecommutes,
- traffic delays drop by 3%.
-
- "Just a few weeks ago the Texas Transportation Institute at Texas A&M
- University released its annual traffic congestion study which calculates
- that congestion creates a $78 billion annual drain on the U.S. economy
- due to 4.2 million lost hours of productivity and 2.9 billion gallons of
- wasted gas," he said. "That's not even considering the air pollutants
- caused by idling vehicles around the nation."
-
- Wolf pointed out that leaders in the Office of Personnel Management and
- General Services Administration support telework and want to promote it
- within the federal government.
-
- "National Telework Week would be an ideal time for employers, for just
- one day during one week of the year, to allow employees to work from home
- or an alternative work site to find out the benefits of telework," Wolf
- said. "It's time to give it a shot."
-
- Wolf said "work is something you do, not someplace you go."
-
- "Hopefully we can make telework as commonplace as the morning traffic
- report," he added. "There is nothing magical about strapping ourselves
- into a car and driving sometimes up to an hour and a half, arriving at a
- workplace and sitting before a computer. We can access the same
- information from a computer in our living rooms."
-
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- Lexmark Offers Online Rewards Program for Recycling Ink
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- While they say that the best things in life are free, the best things
- should also be good for the environment.
-
- On Tuesday, Lexmark announced an online rewards program letting
- consumers receive free inkjet cartridges for returning them.
-
- Here's how the program works: buy five ink cartridges from
- Lexmarkstore.com (no other retailer) within a 12-month period, then
- you'll receive one ink cartridge for free. Next, if you return those
- five empty cartridges to Lexmark within that 12-month period, you can
- get a second free cartridge. Basically, consumers can receive two free
- cartridges for every five bought and returned.
-
- So it's either 5 purchases or 5 returns (or both) within the required
- period. The good news is, if you buy a tri-pack of eligible cartridges,
- then that counts as three cartridge purchases.
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