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- Volume 9, Issue 41 Atari Online News, Etc. October 12, 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 #0941 10/12/07
-
- ~ Internet2 Gets Faster! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Disabled Web Use!
- ~ Gmail Storage Limits! ~ Spammer Assassinated? ~ New AtarICQ Out!
- ~ E-mail Authentication? ~ Hacker Gets To eBay! ~ Hybrid Hard Drive!
- ~ EU Privacy Continues! ~ New Spider-Man Is Fun! ~ Assassin's Creed!
-
- -* Gateway To Buy Packard Bell? *-
- -* Pro Gamers Spurn The Geek Stereotype *-
- -* House Approves 4-Year Net Tax Ban Extension *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's been a rough October so far, to be sure! But, things are starting
- to level off again, finally. I'm still finding time to be a luxury these
- days, but we'll see what happens.
-
- It appears that the fall season has taken hold of us here in New England.
- Some trees are starting to turn, and it won't be long now before we're all
- buried in leaves. It's a nice time of the year, but unfortunately, it
- also means that winter isn't that far off. I guess we'll all just have to
- live with that - we actually don't have much choice, do we?!
-
- I was going to comment further about Joe's commentary a couple of weeks
- ago, but I won't get into it much. I agree with Joe in that I feel that
- the U.S. should continue its space exploration program in an aggressive
- manner. Whether it's beating China to the moon, or any other country, it
- should be done. This country has a history of being inquisitive and one
- that thrives on exploration. It's time that we move forward, and well
- beyond our "borders" to learn more. I'll leave it at that.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- AtarICQ 0.171 Is Released
-
-
- Hi all,
-
- Following the 0.170 release in June earlier this year, there is now a new
- aICQ release ready for download.
-
- A good deal of small issues have been sorted out but there are a couple of
- additions made this time too.
-
- You can download the new release here:
-
- http://www.ataricq.org
-
- Compared to the previous official release:
-
- * A number of minor bugs sorted
-
- * In some popup menus it was not possible to select an entry in case
- either contact list or msg window was also open. Fixed now.
-
- * Fetching of contacts from the server side list had accidentally been
- disabled in 0.170. It works now, but this needs to be reimplemented in
- the future.
-
- * Found and fixed a small bug that would result in form_wbutton() not
- being used under MagiC for handling of mouse clicks in background.
-
- * AtarICQ now use AV_STARTPROG instead of VA_START when:
- 1. Asking AV-SERVER to launch the Colour Selector (In Prefs./Contact
- list)
- 2. Asking AV-SERVER to replay sound sample files
- 3. Asking AV-SERVER to display history file (CTRL+H)
- 4. Asking AV-SERVER to display the help file (HELP)<br>
- (This should be good news to people who use other desktops than Thing)
-
- * A right click on an empty place in contact list will open up the popup
- menu with a listing of contacts, allowing you to "Create TAB for
- <nick>". (Also available through CTRL+T)
-
- * All popup menus that have window titles will now also have a CLOSER
- widget. Also, these popups can now also be moved like any other GEM
- window.
-
- * Using TAB or UP/DOWN-ARROW to jump to next text edit field in a dialog
- now works better under MagiC. SHIFT+TAB will now move focus backwards.
- Also, when we hit the last (or first, depending on TAB-direction)
- editable object of the dialog, focus will not wrap back to the first
- (or last) editable object. (This is in fact a workaround for MagiC's
- limited implementation of FORM_KEYBD)
-
- * Last AtarICQ release had a bug in the keyboard evaluation code that
- prevented user to type chars that required ALT-combinations. Should be
- OK now.
-
- * Adapted aICQ to some server changes on the ICQ-servers, making the
- logging in process a tad faster, and the updating of the contact list a
- lot smoother during it.
-
- Have fun, and please don't hesitate to send feedback!
- I hope there are a bunch of people out there still using the program,
- is that so? :)
-
- Regards,
-
- /Joakim
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I'm not really sure of what I'm going to
- talk about here yet, but I'm sure that as I ramble on, something
- coherent will present itself.
-
- I just got finished watching that interview by Donnie Deutsch of Ann
- Coulter. You remember Donnie Deutsch, right? He did a couple of
- segments on THE APPRENTICE, and he's now got his own show, THE BIG
- IDEA. Well, I've never seen the show itself, so I can't tell you
- anything about it, other than he interviewed neo-conservative Ann
- Coulter, who was shilling her new book. I've got to tell you, I'm
- disgusted. I truly hope that the things she said were motivated by her
- wish to cause controversy and sell more books, not because she actually
- believes any of it. If you want to see the interview for yourself, go
- here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wS9qEnmerfs . To quote Forrest
- Gump, That's all I have to say about that.
-
- I just heard that Al Gore has won the Nobel Peace Prize. Good for him!
- Now THAT's a charmed life, huh? Winning the popular election for
- President of the United States AND a Nobel Prize! (The last person to
- do that was... anyone?... That's right... Jimmy Carter." I wonder if
- Gore going to wait to see if Dubya contests THIS win. Hopefully, Dubya
- has no relatives in Oslo.
-
- Okay, okay, I've spread enough joy, I guess. There aren't a lot of
- messages on the UseNet again this week, but we're going to give it a
- shot.
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- Last week, someone mentioned their TT by saying:
-
- "My TT is great with the SuperNova VME gfx card, the CPU could do with a
- bit of a kick though..."
-
-
- 'Jan' replies:
-
- "Yes, of course. But where can one find such an item nowadays? The last
- project of building one, from M. Becroft, seems to have been
- abandoned."
-
-
- Jeff Armstrong tells Jan:
-
- "I don't know if abandoned is the right word. I'm using a Becroft
- Galaxy VME card in my TT. It's a great product, but it was also
- expensive to make and purchase (I think i paid in excess of US$300). I
- think it was also a support nightmare for Mario thanks to all the
- "interesting" programming in Atari software. The big downside (for me,
- at least) was that Calamus wouldn't work with it."
-
-
- Matthias Arndt asks about a good RAM test utility for his Falcon:
-
- "Can anyone recommend a good utility that will perform an enduring test
- of the ST-RAM in the Falcon under TOS? Something to let run for 10 hours
- to verify that a memory upgrade is indeed fully working..."
-
-
- Guillaume Tello tells Matthias:
-
- "You can do it on your own... Just poke a value at a random address,
- then peek it back to verify if it's the same and loop!"
-
-
- 'Scaler' posts this just to make a good many of us feel old:
-
- "The Atari 2600, known in the 70s as the Atari VCS ~ Video Computer
- System, is 30 years as of October 2007. it's birthday was actually
- at the start of this month, but I didn't realize it until just now.
- it's incredible knowing that the videogame console industry is over 30
- years old."
-
-
- 'Impmon' tells Scaler:
-
- "Better yet: new games are still being produced for Atari 2600. Come
- and check Atariage store for some games that are far better than what
- we had in 1970's and 1980's like Medieval Mayhem."
-
-
- Rich Hutnik adds:
-
- "Q-B is a great title (whatever it is named). It is a QBert type game
- that works real well on the 2600."
-
-
- Well folks, that's it for this week. There WAS a rather lengthy thread
- about TOS being 'much better' than Mac OS, but I really don't want to
- get into that discussion, no matter how much I might agree with the
- idea, there are just too many opinions that are derogatory or
- mean-hearted or just plain opinion masquerading as fact. So, we'll end
- it here and hope there are more posts next week.
-
- 'Till then, keep your ears open so you'll hear what they are saying
- when...
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Pros Spurning Geek Stereotype!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Gaming's Worst, Top 4?
- "Assassin's Creed" Soon!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Pro Gamers Spurn Geek Stereotype As Go Mainstream
-
-
- Geoff Robinson does not fit the stereotype of a hardcore geek gamer. The
- Oregon State University student is sociable, an avid weight lifter,
- studies English and history - not computer science - and wants to be a
- high school teacher.
-
- But Robinson, 22, is also the best American at a computer strategy game
- called "StarCraft: Brood War" and he is one of about 700 gamers from 74
- countries competing this weekend at the World Cyber Games 2007 Grand
- Final in Seattle.
-
- Organizers of the World Cyber Games said these players are athletes with
- tremendous hand-eye coordination who happen to be competing in
- "e-sports," or electronic sports.
-
- "We'd love to see the stereotype of the geek gamer smashed," said Michael
- Arzt, senior vice president with the World Cyber Games. "It's not that
- lonely kid in the basement that people think it is."
-
- In playing "StarCraft," Robinson estimates that a good player will do
- about 300 different "actions" per minute on either a keyboard or mouse
- and the best players can push that to 500 actions per minute.
-
- "It's about hand speed," said Robinson, who has been playing "StarCraft"
- since 1998.
-
- Well-rounded, media-friendly players like Robinson are key to moving
- professional video gaming to the mainstream and wider acceptance, a
- strategy adopted by other activities like poker and competitive eating.
-
- Professional video gaming has not reached the mainstream in America or
- Europe, but it's already a closely-followed past time in South Korea where
- tournaments are regularly televised and the best players can make over
- $100,000 a year.
-
- The transition to the mainstream is taking place all across the $30
- billion video game industry. Nintendo Co. Ltd's Wii has become a huge hit
- by targeting people who are not hardcore gamers and Microsoft's "Halo 3"
- had a bigger first-day opening than any movie, book or album.
-
- The Grand Final's format is similar to the Olympics when players compete
- represent their country and the goal is to win medals for the national
- team. They will also compete for $448,000 in cash prize money.
-
- "The goal is to one day be recognized as on par with the Olympics or the
- World Cup," said Arzt.
-
- Players compete in one of 12 games - eight computer games, four for
- Microsoft Corp.'s Xbox 360 - including Electronic Arts Inc.'s "FIFA 07"
- soccer game, Vivendi Universal Games' "WarCraft III: The Frozen Throne"
- strategy game and Microsoft's "Gears of War" shooter.
-
- There are no overwhelming favorites to win the most medals, but the
- Germans are strong in FIFA and the Koreans tend to dominate the strategy
- games, but the host Americans are also a threat in some of the console
- games.
-
- Robinson said he practices StarCraft three hours a day and kicks that up
- to five to six hours a day in the weeks leading up to a tournament, but
- his hand work doesn't come at the expense of school, time at the gym or
- his social life.
-
- "I probably lost a few hours of sleep," said Robinson. "I don't think it
- ever crossed my mind to make a living playing video games, but I would
- like to see where this takes me."
-
-
-
- "Assassin's Creed" Stalks Into Stores Soon
-
-
- An action-adventure game, "Assassin's Creed," that lets players control a
- Crusades-era hitman stalking and killing his targets, is gearing up to be
- one of the biggest titles this holiday.
-
- With "Halo 3" now in stores, players and developers alike are keeping a
- close eye on November, the month during which Ubisoft's "Assassin's Creed"
- and some of its biggest competitors will hit the shelves.
-
- The game, which will be available for the Xbox 360, the PlayStation 3 and
- the PC, is generating lots of buzz.
-
- Video game Web site IGN.com counts it among "our most anticipated games of
- 2007." A trailer released in May was downloaded more than 1.3 million
- times in less than a week.
-
- Ubisoft invested in realism for the game, and it shows.
-
- Beautifully rendered visions of cities like Jerusalem and Damascus circa
- 1191 are no accident. The company hired an Oxford historian to help with
- detail and brought in a consultant who worked on the film "Kingdom of
- Heaven," which was set during the same historical period.
-
- The game takes place as the Third Crusade rolls across the Holy Land. The
- player takes on the role of Altair, an assassin tasked with taking out
- targets on both sides of the conflict with a mixture of acrobatics and
- swashbuckling skill.
-
- "But there's also kind of this hidden sci-fi aspect to it which they
- (Ubisoft) have been playing very, very close to the vest," says Jeff
- Haynes, PlayStation editor at IGN.com.
-
- Ubisoft has kept quiet about the futuristic touches, like the symbols that
- envelop some characters.
-
- The developers also spent a lot of time making the crowds in the game
- interactive and often crucial to success.
-
- "We wanted to create a crowd that not only was believable, - living and
- breathing and did things that were interesting - but also created
- gameplay," Jade Raymond, the producer on Assassin's Creed, said in an
- interview.
-
- This has the potential to lead to unique and unpredictable scenarios and
- that, combined with the promise of a deep plot, has anticipation running
- high.
-
- Raymond admits trying to live up to the hype can be intimidating.
-
- "I was pretty worried for a while, to tell you the truth, just because
- you never know," she said. However, after presenting a near-final version
- of the game to testers and game media, she said the response has been
- universally positive.
-
- "So that's reassured me a little bit," she said.
-
- IGN.com's Haynes said there were some concerns earlier this year about
- the controls but these have improved since then.
-
- "I think it's still one of the bigger titles," he said of the game. "I
- have a feeling that it's going to be one those games that will probably
- wind up surprising people, especially when they get their hands on it."
-
-
-
- 'Spider-Man: Friend Or Foe' Is Good, Simple Fun
-
-
- If you launch the latest Spider-Man video game expecting a comic
- book-inspired brawler for younger players, you won't be disappointed with
- this superhero adventure. But those in search of a deep story, open-ended
- environments or high-definition graphics should swing past this title.
-
- As its name suggests, Spider-Man: Friend or Foe lets you not only play as
- the webbed wonder but also choose a sidekick from one of a dozen villains
- as they team up to fight a greater evil. Each with their own unique
- fighting technique and super powers, sidekicks include Doctor Octopus
- ("Doc Ock"), Venom, Rhino and Green Goblin, all of whom need to be first
- defeated before they'll fight alongside you.
-
- While playing alone, you control one character, while the game's
- artificial intelligence handles the other. For example, while fighting
- baddies as Spider-Man, the computer will control, say, Sandman, but you
- can switch at any time by pressing a button on the game pad. The game's
- mechanics also allow the two characters to work together at times, such as
- bypassing traps (by each character stepping on pressure plates at the same
- time) or defeating a bigger "boss" enemy by taking advantage of each
- character's skills. If you want to replay a level - be it in a high-tech
- laboratory, on the sandy streets of Egypt, along city rooftops or
- throughout a creepy Transylvania - you can swap out the current sidekick
- for a newly unlocked one from the main game screen. This adds to the
- game's replayability.
-
- Another welcome feature in Spider-Man: Friend or Foe is built-in
- cooperative play. At any time, a friend can pick up a second controller on
- the game system and take control of the second hero or villain.
-
- Played from a third-person perspective - and in classic "platformer"
- style, the action tends to move from the left side of the screen to the
- right - you will have fun "button mashing" to defeat the enemies.
- Influenced by the game's comic book origins, the characters and
- environments are colorful and bright. The animation is smooth, so you will
- enjoy pulling off slick moves, such as using Spidey's web to pull items
- toward him, or using aerial acrobatics during combat sequences.
-
- Skilled gamers will be rewarded with special unlockable characters,
- including the black-suited Spider-Man from the last motion picture, as
- well as special behind-the-scenes material accessible at anytime
- throughout the game, such as movies, character art and more. A "Versus"
- mode lets you fight in a number of arenas.
-
- Perfect for younger players who want a fairly straightforward fighting
- game but with plenty of replayability, Spider-Man: Friend or Foe is an
- enjoyable twist on the popular franchise.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE Gaming Online - Online Users Growl & Purr!
- """""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Top 4 List: Worst Video Games
-
-
- *1. E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (Atari 2600): Rush-released for the
- holidays to capitalize on the success of Steven Spielberg's magical
- movie, this jaw-dropping stinker isn't just the worst game ever; it
- defines what a bad game truly is. The slow, choppy gameplay consists
- mostly of a green, pixilated E.T. climbing out of pits, dodging an
- awkwardly programmed detective, and ... getting out of more pits. E.T.
- himself would trade in stashes of Reese's Pieces to ensure no curious
- gamer touches this monstrosity.
-
- *2. Survival Arts (Arcade): When "Mortal Kombat" revolutionized fighting
- games, piles of imitators followed, but none as bad as this. From the
- cheap, garish costumes and overly dramatic death cries to the horrible
- controls and character actors, "Survival Arts" will make one burst into
- fits of laughter with its ineptitude. Did I mention the old guy with a
- limitless supply of weapons and the boss who looks like Richard Simmons?
-
- *3. Superman 64 (Nintendo 64): People love Superman because he represents
- absolute good and can do no wrong - except when he flies on your home
- console. This N64 turkey defaces the good name of Superman in every way,
- forcing the Man of Steel to fly through hoops as a mission. The gameplay
- is extremely buggy, with unresponsive controls and limited superpowers.
- You may find yourself giving up when Lex Luthor challenges, "Solve my
- maze." Difficult, as there is no maze.
-
- *4. Gods and Generals (PC): A tie-in for a hated Civil War movie that
- can't get basic game programming right. The low artificial intelligence
- has soldiers shooting randomly and running through fire until they die;
- the landscaping has more polygons than a geometry book; there are hardly
- any game physics; and nearly every troop looks exactly the same. Had the
- Civil War itself been like this game, it'd probably be known as the
- Clone Wars long before George Lucas made movies - if either side even
- won.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- House Approves Four-Year Extension of Net Tax Ban
-
-
- The House Judiciary Committee voted Wednesday to extend a moratorium on
- state and local taxes on Internet access. The committee approved an
- amendment to the Internet Tax Freedom Act, offered by Rep. John Conyers
- Jr. (D-Mich.), to extend the ban four years, until November 1, 2011.
-
- Under the ban, originally passed in 1998 and extended in 2004, the law
- prevents local governments from taxing "a service that enables users to
- access content, information, electronic mail, or other services offered
- over the Internet."
-
- While the White House, Republicans, and tech-state Democrats pushed for
- making the ban permanent, the committee struck a compromise position,
- accommodating the concerns of local governments that fear that once they
- are permanently banned from collecting taxes, cable and telecom operators
- will try to add telephony, TV, and other currently taxable services.
-
- Rep. Bob Goodlatte, a Virginia Republican who is a leader on high-tech
- issues, called on the committee to allow the full House to vote on a
- permanent Internet tax ban "so that the Internet will continue to thrive
- and so that access to the Internet does not become limited to wealthy
- Americans in urban areas."
-
- But Conyers, who said his amendment is supported by the Don't Tax Our Web
- coalition and the National Governor's Association, said the compromise
- would "provide much-needed clarity to the communications and Internet
- industries, while addressing the needs of states and local governments."
-
- "I truly believe this four-year extension is the absolutely best way to
- get this measure to the floor and signed into law by November 1," Conyers
- said.
-
- The National Governor's Association said the amendment not only offers a
- reasonable, limited extension of the ban but also closes a loophole "that
- puts state revenues at risk" and grandfathers protection for existing
- revenue. The limited extension is important, the governors said, "to
- ensure that Congress revisit the moratorium to review any unintended
- consequences for consumers, industry, or the states."
-
- The Don't Tax Our Web coalition, comprised of technology, cable, and
- telecom companies, had been supporting a permanent ban on Internet-access
- taxes. "Taxes that impede consumer demand for access and inconsistent
- application of state taxes on new technologies are a roadblock to ... new
- investments," the group says on its Web site.
-
- Addressing state concerns, the Conyers amendment allows nine states to
- continue their existing Internet-access taxes and clarifies that the tax
- moratorium is on Internet access, not services such as VoIP.
-
- Time is running short, though. While the current moratorium expires on
- November 1, Democrats have yet to schedule a floor vote on the bill and
- the Senate Commerce Committee hasn't taken up the issue since it tabled a
- bill last month after members were unable to reach a compromise on whether
- the extension should be temporary or permanent.
-
- In addition, Congress has more pressing items on its agenda, notably a
- rewrite of legislation allowing the government to spy on foreign targets
- on U.S. soil under a blanket warrant. That bill is expected to go to the
- House floor next week, potentially pushing a vote on Internet taxes
- beyond the November 1 deadline.
-
-
-
- Gateway Plans to Buy Packard Bell
-
-
- Gateway Inc. on Monday announced plans to acquire PC vendor Packard Bell
- BV for an undisclosed amount, a move funded by Acer Inc. as part of its
- planned acquisition of Gateway.
-
- Gateway delivered a binding offer to purchase all of John Hui's shares in
- PB Holdings Co. SARL, Packard Bell's parent company. Hui is Packard
- Bell's largest shareholder.
-
- Acer announced its plans to buy Gateway in late August for US$710
- million.
-
- In 2006, Gateway signed an agreement with Hui that gave Gateway the right
- of first refusal if he decided to sell PB Holding Co. At the time, if
- Paris-based Packard Bell wanted to enter into a final agreement to be
- purchased by a third party, the company had to ask Gateway first. Gateway
- could then move into the first position to enter purchase talks with
- Packard Bell.
-
- Hui also sold the privately held eMachines to Gateway in 2004.
-
- The acquisition will be a blow to Lenovo Group Ltd., which in early
- August revealed it was in discussions with Packard Bell over a possible
- acquisition.
-
- The deal is anticipated to close later this year or in the first quarter
- of 2008, Gateway said.
-
-
-
- Blazingly Fast Internet2 Gets 10x Boost
-
-
- The ultrahigh-speed Internet2 network just got 10 times faster, partly in
- anticipation of rising demand for capacity after the world's largest
- particle collider opens near Geneva next year.
-
- Until recently, the Internet2 had a theoretical limit of 10 gigabits per
- second, which is thousands of times faster than standard home broadband
- connections. By sending data using 10 different colors, or wavelengths, of
- light over a single cable, operators are boosting the network's capacity
- to 100 Gbps.
-
- That means a high-quality version of the movie "The Matrix" could be sent
- in a few seconds rather than half a minute over the old Internet2 and
- several hours over a typical home broadband line.
-
- The new Internet2 network was largely completed in late August, and its
- operators this week made it possible for researchers to temporarily grab
- an entire 10 Gbps chunk for specific applications, so that they don't
- slow down normal Internet operations.
-
- "It's now possible for a single computer to have a 10 gigabit connection
- and we needed to have a way of making sure that those kinds of demanding
- applications could be served at the same time as all the normal uses,"
- Doug Van Houweling, Internet2's chief executive, said Wednesday.
-
- The Internet2 network, run by Level 3 Communications Inc., parallels the
- regular Internet to let universities, corporations and researchers share
- large amounts of information in real time.
-
- An institution typically has one 10 Gbps connection to the 100 Gbps
- Internet2 backbone for normal Internet usage, along with a second 10 Gbps
- connection it can tap on demand for specific needs, Van Houweling said.
-
- Physicists will likely be among the first to use that on-demand
- capability, Van Houweling said, when the $1.8 billion Large Hadron
- Collider at the European Organization for Nuclear Research begins
- operations, now scheduled for May.
-
- "There will be thousands of physicists who will all need to access the
- data coming out of the LHC," he said.
-
- Astronomers, meanwhile, might one day use the faster network to link
- distant radio telescopes to get a clearer picture of the sky in real
- time, Van Houweling said.
-
- Internet2 already is planning future expansion. By adding certain
- equipment, Van Houweling said, the network can easily boost capacity
- another fourfold to 400 Gbps - something likely to begin in 12 to 18
- months.
-
-
-
- Hybrid Hard Drive Works Without Windows
-
-
- New FlashMate hybrid hard drive technology has been introduced that allows
- data to be read, even when the computer is switched off.
-
- This enables notebook users to access content on the hard disk drive,
- without having to power on the computer, in order for example to listen to
- MP3 files, view digital pictures, access email, etc.
-
- The technology has been developed by SST (Silicon Storage Technology), a
- flash memory technology business, and Insyde Software, a provider of
- UEFI-based firmware, BIOS and engineering services.
-
- FlashMate combines hardware, firmware and software in a system application
- subsystem that manages a notebook computer's hard drive. It is based on
- SST's expertise in NAND flash controllers and memory subsystem design with
- Insyde Software's expertise in PC BIOS, system software and power
- management.
-
- FlashMate can work in conjunction with features such as Windows Vista
- ReadyDrive and serve as nonvolatile cache for the hard disk drive, thus
- enabling a standard hard disk drive to function as a hybrid drive.
-
- Hybrid drives feature a hard disk drive accompanied by a NAND flash drive
- acting as a data cache. By using the NAND flash memory buffer when the
- system is active, the notebook's hard drive is rarely engaged, leading to
- better hard drive reliability, reduced power consumption, increased
- performance, and faster boot and resume times.
-
- FlashMate does more by giving notebook users the ability to access to
- hard disk data and various applications via the notebook's USB interface,
- without actually having to engage the CPU.
-
- Bing Yeh, SST's president and CEO, said: "Current hybrid-drive products
- available on the market, either as nonvolatile cache embedded in the hard
- disk drive or integrated on the motherboard, have enhanced some of the
- capabilities of notebook computers, but these solutions only scratch the
- surface of what is possible."
-
- "Our FlashMate technology expands beyond hybrid-drive functionality by
- enabling notebook users to conveniently perform tasks without having to
- turn on the computer, such as transferring files from an external memory,
- getting contact information from an Outlook address book, listening to
- MP3 music or checking flight arrival times."
-
- This provides faster and more convenient access to data because the
- notebook computer does not have to go through a lengthy boot process.
-
- The first series of products featuring FlashMate technology are scheduled
- to be available from SST in the second quarter of 2008. The two companies
- are working with notebook computer manufacturers to have FlashMate
- technology designed into their products as an embedded application.
-
-
-
- Google Vows To Increase Gmail Storage Limit
-
-
- People using Google's Gmail service are sucking up storage space faster
- than the company can add it.
-
- Google said on Friday it is speeding up the rate at which it adds storage
- space for its Gmail Web-based e-mail service due to the increased storage
- requirements for attachments such as photos.
-
- "A few of you are using Gmail so much that you're running out of space, so
- to make good on our promise, today we're announcing we are speeding up our
- counter and giving out more free storage," wrote Rob Siemborski, a Google
- engineer on the Gmail blog.
-
- On Friday, the counter on the Gmail login page stood at more than 2,935MB,
- or about 2.9GB, of storage, and was rising - but the counter is an
- illustration rather than a hard limit.
-
- Google started gradually increasing Gmail storage in April 2005 when the
- service turned one year old. Google's Gmail gained immediately popularity
- when it launched in 2004, offering free accounts with 1GB of storage, but
- this year has been surpassed by its rivals.
-
- Microsoft upped its free storage limit for its Windows Live Hotmail
- service to 5GB in August, and Yahoo started offered "unlimited" storage
- in May.
-
-
-
- Can E-Mail Authentication Stop Phishing?
-
-
- What do you get when Yahoo, eBay, and PayPal join forces against malware?
- A collaborative effort to help protect consumers against fraudulent
- e-mails and dangerous scams commonly called phishing attacks.
-
- A movement got underway on Thursday that gives eBay and PayPal customers
- who use Yahoo Mail an upper hand against fraudsters by blocking fake
- e-mails that claim to be coming from these popular online properties.
-
- Michael Barrett, chief information security officer at PayPal, called it
- an aggressive move and a significant step in the fight to protect
- consumers against e-mail-based crimes. "While there is clearly no silver
- bullet for solving the problems of phishing and identity theft," he said,
- "[the] announcement is great news for our customers who rely on Yahoo
- Mail."
-
- Yahoo's Domain Keys technology is designed to verify the authenticity of
- e-mail messages, allowing ISPs to determine whether messages are real and
- should be delivered to a customer's inbox. Yahoo developed Domain Keys,
- which uses cryptographic keys, to address the widespread issue of e-mail
- forgery.
-
- Essentially, the Domain Keys technology allows e-mail providers to
- validate an e-mail's originating domain, making use of blacklists and
- whitelists more effective. It also makes phishing attacks easier to detect
- by helping to identify abusive domains. In May 2007, the Internet
- Engineering Task Force approved Domain Keys as a proposed Internet
- standard.
-
- Domain Keys is seeing terrific industry adoption, in part due to the
- widespread consensus about its potential as an Internet standard,
- according to Nicki Dugan, Yahoo's blog editor.
-
- "About 40 percent of the e-mail we deliver on Yahoo Mail is signed with
- Domain Keys," Dugan wrote in a recent blob. "And we hope [this] news gets
- the attention of information security officers at some of the more
- obvious phishing targets so we can help protect even more consumers from
- the havoc these scams wreak."
-
- Andrew Braunberg, a research director for the Enterprise Software and
- Security group at Current Analysis, said Domain Keys is a good approach
- to authentication as it flows in the same vein of the movement in other
- markets, especially financial services, toward risk-based authentication.
-
- But Braunberg said companies have to consider the level of authentication
- that is appropriate to the communication. "There is always some overhead
- associated with any security technology," he said. "There's always a
- trade-off between productivity and security, or access and security."
-
- Braunberg pointed out that you don't want to make people jump through six
- hoops every time they want to open Outlook. "It doesn't make sense," he
- said. "It's got to be a more rationalized, prioritized approach to
- defining security requirements. That's where the market is moving."
-
- While the Domain Keys method might sound like an ideal solution to the
- problem of phishing and spam, because it works automatically in the
- background so that users never see the e-mail that is identified as
- fraudulent, it is of limited usefulness unless a majority of e-mail
- providers back it.
-
-
-
- Hacker Breaks Into eBay Server, Locks Out Users
-
-
- A malicious hacker broke into an eBay server on Friday and temporarily
- suspended the accounts of a "very small" number of members, the company
- said.
-
- "We were able to block the fraudster quickly before any permanent damage
- had been done. At no point did the fraudster get any access to financial
- information or other sensitive information," eBay spokeswoman Nichola
- Sharpe said via e-mail.
-
- eBay has "secured and restored" the affected accounts and is calling the
- affected users, she said, without specifying how many accounts the hacker
- accessed and tinkered with.
-
- "The fraudster did this by accessing externally visible servers, not by
- hacking into the eBay site," Sharpe said.
-
- She didn't immediately reply to follow-up questions from IDG News Service
- seeking clarification on what is an "externally visible" server and how
- it's different from an eBay site server.
-
- eBay faces attacks to compromise its systems "every day," Sharpe said.
- "After learning of the recent situation, we quickly reacted to it," she
- said.
-
- "As we continue to lock down on the traditional ways that bad guys have
- attempted to exploit our system, it is only natural that they will look
- for new ways to get in. It is an ongoing battle," she said.
-
- The incident, first reported by e-commerce news site AuctionBytes,
- happened a little more than a week after someone used an eBay discussion
- forum to post confidential information about eBay users.
-
- The previous incident led the e-commerce giant to shut down the forum, one
- that ironically was devoted to the discussion of security issues.
-
- The perpetrator of that confidential data disclosure posted the names and
- contact information of 1,200 eBay members on the company's Trust & Safety
- discussion forum, along with credit card numbers that were later
- determined to be invalid.
-
- eBay eventually concluded that the attacker obtained the information via
- a phishing scheme, tricking individual members into disclosing the data.
-
- Friday's hack has quite a few eBay members rattled, judging by this long
- discussion forum thread about the incident.
-
- In that thread, some affected eBay members report receiving e-mails from
- a hacker identified as Vladuz saying that he had targeted them for
- posting forum comments that were critical of him.
-
- Vladuz has in the past reportedly stolen login information that has
- allowed him to post messages to eBay discussion forums as if he were an
- eBay employee.
-
- In its article, AuctionBytes said Vladuz has been targeting eBay for
- about 10 months.
-
- Sharpe didn't immediately reply to the question whether eBay knows who
- was behind Friday's attack.
-
-
-
- Reported Assassination Of Russian Spammer Deemed A Hoax
-
-
- The reported assassination of an alleged Russian spammer is a hoax,
- according to security researchers.
-
- On Thursday, a blog post on the Web site Loonov.com claimed a spammer
- named Alexey Tolstokozhev was found murdered in a villa outside Moscow.
- "He has been shot several times with one bullet stuck in his head.
- According to authorities, this last head shot is a clear mark of Russian
- hit men," the post said.
-
- The reported assassination of Tolstokozhev echoed the 2005 murder of an
- actual Russian spammer, Vardan Kushnir. Kushnir was found beaten to death
- in a Moscow apartment, prompting speculation his murder was related to
- his activities as a spammer. However, a police investigation later said
- Kushnir was killed by robbers and his death was not connected with his
- spam activities.
-
- The Tolstokozhev story caught the attention of the security community as
- well as blogs, even making it on to Slashdot, one of the most popular
- sites for technology-related news. But security researchers soon debunked
- the report.
-
- The story began to unravel when researchers failed to locate Tolstokozhev
- in records of known spammers, even though Loonov.com claimed he was
- responsible for "up to 30 percent of all Viagra and penis
- enlargement-related spam" and made more than $2 million in 2007 from
- these unsolicited e-mails. More questions were raised when researchers
- discovered that the Loonov.com domain name was registered on the same day
- the assassination post appeared.
-
- "We got the feeling pretty quickly that it was a hoax," said Dave Marcus,
- security research and communications manager at McAfee's Avert Labs. "It
- just became obvious that either this was somebody's idea of a joke or they
- were using a real person's name and trying to associate him with being a
- spammer."
-
- Other security researchers picked up on the hoax as well, with reports
- appearing on Sunbelt Software's SunbeltBlog and Taint.org, a blog written
- by Justin Mason, a software developer in Ireland.
-
- The motivation behind the Tolstokozhev hoax is not clear. The Loonov.com
- domain was registered anonymously and the identity of the person behind
- the hoax is not known.
-
- "It's probably just an attempt to besmirch this person's name, because
- this guy's name does not appear on the list of usual suspects," Marcus
- said.
-
- Avert Labs and other researchers looked into whether there was a
- malicious side to the Loonov.com site, such as downloading malware onto a
- visitor's computer, but didn't find anything suspicious. "As of now, we
- haven't found any malicious code embedded in the site," he said.
-
- Perhaps ironically, all of the attention that's been given to the
- Tolstokozhev story may eventually turn Loonov.com into a spam site.
-
- "He's getting an awful lot of traffic being driven to the site because of
- all the attention he's getting. He'll get a lot of Google juice out of
- this," Marcus said, referring to the way Google's search engine ranks Web
- sites. "If you use it as a spam site, you've already got good Google
- activity built up, but that's just a guess."
-
-
-
- EU Privacy Body To Take Months On Google Probe
-
-
- The European Union's data watchdog will take another few months to decide
- whether Google Inc or other Web search engines may be violating EU privacy
- laws, a participant in the watchdog's meeting said on Wednesday.
-
- The EU body, made up of national protection supervisors of the bloc's 27
- member states, said earlier this year that Google seemed to be failing to
- respect EU privacy and expanded its investigation in June to other Web
- search engines.
-
- "We have written to Google to say that we are continuing our work, that it
- is not limited to Google, and that we will adopt an opinion at the
- beginning of 2008," the official said after the so-called Article 29
- Committee met on Wednesday.
-
- "We want to adopt a comprehensive opinion, saying how long they can keep
- data, and which ones," the official said.
-
- When users carry out searches, Google gathers information about their
- tastes, interests and beliefs that could potentially be used by third
- parties, such as advertisers, but the company says it never passes on the
- data.
-
- Google wrote to the EU data watchdog in June saying the company was ready
- to curtail the time it stored user data to a year and a half.
-
- That storage time was the low end of an 18- to 24-month period it had
- originally proposed to regulators in March.
-
- The best-known search providers include Google, Yahoo Inc, Microsoft
- Corp's Live Search and Ask.com, which is owned by IAC/InterActiveCorp.
-
- The watchdog advises the EU on privacy rules. It has no legal power and
- its opinions are not binding.
-
-
-
- Disabled Less Likely To Be Online
-
-
- Americans with disabilities and other chronic conditions are less likely
- to use the Internet, but those who are online are among the most avid
- consumers of health-related information, a new study finds.
-
- Half of those with chronic conditions use the Internet, compared with
- three-quarters of those without, the Pew Internet and American Life
- Project said Monday.
-
- That's partly because those with chronic conditions tend to be older and
- less educated, two factors linked with lower Internet usage overall,
- said Susannah Fox, an associate director at Pew and the study's main
- author. Other barriers include difficulties navigating the Web for those
- with, say, poor vision or motion control.
-
- But when they are online, those with chronic conditions are more apt to
- seek health information online - at least for some tasks.
-
- "It's an indication of what could happen in the future if there were
- more universal access to the Internet," Fox said. "This population is
- just as likely as anyone else to take advantage of the technology's
- promises."
-
- The telephone study of 2,928 American adults was conducted in August
- 2006 and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2 percentage
- points. Results based on the 268 Internet users with chronic conditions
- have an error margin of plus or minus 7 percentage points.
-
- Pew said 86 percent of Internet users with chronic conditions have
- looked online for information on at least one of 17 health topics,
- compared with 79 percent of those without such conditions. The
- difference, however, falls within the error margin.
-
- The study found the chronic population far more likely to look for
- information about medication, specific treatments and procedures and
- alternative treatments and medicines - all by margins exceeding the
- potential sampling error.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
-
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- 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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-
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- not necessarily reflect those of the staff, or of the publishers. All
- material herein is believed to be accurate at the time of publishing.