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- Volume 11, Issue 16 Atari Online News, Etc. April 17, 2009
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2008
- 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
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-
- 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 #1116 04/17/09
-
- ~ Twitter Fights Off Worm ~ People Are Talking! ~ Ten Greatest Flops!
- ~ Pirate Bay 4 Get Jail! ~ DOJ Wants More MS Time ~ eBay's Seller Tweaks!
- ~ What Else Isn't Green? ~ Phishers Get More Wily ~ ID Hacks Quadruple!
-
- -* Will Nettop Kill Desktop PC? *-
- -* Spam E-mail Is Killing Environment! *-
- -* Microsoft Gets An EU Antitrust Extension! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's been another long, tiring week. On the plus side, the weather is
- starting to improve, with above-normal temperatures today. Sure, it
- won't last, but enjoy it while you can. Real Spring weather is finally
- getting here! I'm hoping to spend some time outside this weekend (before
- the rains arrive!) and get some work done in the yard. And, hopefully I
- will have the energy to get it done!
-
- I came across a couple of articles, included with this week's issue, that
- pertain to how some PC use is dangerous to our environment. I wanted to
- make my own comments about some of these observations, but I'll wait until
- next week to do so; I just don't have the time and energy to go about it
- the way that I'd like! So, I hope that you'll bear with me, and wait a
- week!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. I apologize for my absence last week, but
- things got crazy with the holiday, and there weren't a lot of items in
- the NewsGroup.
-
- I do want to talk about a couple of things this week though. If I had
- been able to get a column out last week, I would have mentioned this
- 'grass roots movement' about taxes... the "teabag movement".
-
- You'd think that one of these guys or gals in the Senate would have had
- an aide or intern google "teabagging" before they went public with it. A
- quick search for 'teabagging' at http://www.wikipedia.org would have
- told them that this was probably a bad term to use.
-
- As far as 'grass roots' is concerned, I can't see that. This is a
- movement conceived and presented by politicos. 'Regular' people have
- joined in, sure. But not in the numbers and not for the causes the
- loudest voices would have us believe. Some are protesting higher taxes,
- even though their taxes are going down. Some are protesting the stimulus
- package, even while they bemoan the lack of federal funds. There are
- those protesting restrictions on the financial industry, even though the
- lack of restrictions is what caused this mess. There are those
- protesting Obama's "muslim-ness", likening him to Hitler (in what
- possible way, I cannot fathom), questioning his citizenship even though
- it's been proven beyond any doubt, and decrying the fact that he's
- upheld some of the policies of the previous administration while
- simultaneously lauding the actions of that self-same previous
- administration. Cause and effect don't seem to mean anything here.
- There's even a Governor talking about secession from the union, even
- after requesting federal aid. All of this under the umbrella of
- 'teabagging'. Yeah, they're teabagging, alright.
-
- I also think it bears mentioning that the these people are intent on
- being the teabaggERs, not teabagEEs... Think 'David Vitter' as opposed
- to 'Larry Craig'.
-
- The economy IS showing some slight signs of improvement, and for some
- unfathomable reason that is held up by conservatives as vindication of
- the policies of the previous administration, while the root cause of the
- problem is blithely put upon the shoulders of the current
- administration. There's that cause-and-effect thing again.
-
- Personally, I don't follow the ups and downs of the stock market. It
- seems that every announcement from some gasbag radio talk show host and
- fourth rate television mouthpiece sends the market on a wild roller
- coaster ride as the buyers and sellers weigh indicators and volumes and
- rants and innuendo and hopeful and disparaging signs.
-
- I like former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan's method of tracking the
- economy: Following the sales of mens' underwear. They're not subject to
- the whims of a pronouncements from disgruntled Senators and Governors,
- all men need them but buy them as a necessity and not as a fashion
- statement or indulgence, the volume of sales is determined by only two
- things: actual need (which remains fairly constant) and available
- income. When money is tight, gotchies are one of the last
- considerations. In short, let me say that it might be time to buy a
- little bit of stock in Fruit of the Loom and Haines.
-
- Okay, BVDs aside, let's talk about another biggie... PIRATES! My first
- impulse is to blame Johnny Depp for making it look so cool. [grin] These
- guys have got to be stopped. The havoc they can create is incredibly
- far-reaching, and they need to be... discouraged. I'm not usually a
- violent or aggressive person, but if asked, I would recommend that any
- approaching unidentified or overtly aggressive water craft be greeted
- with a single warning shot... right... through... its... hull. The navy
- of the country of registry of every merchant ship should supply two or
- three trained sailors for each ship, equipped with an array of weapons
- deemed necessary for the protection of that vessel. Most of the 'pirate
- vessels' are small boats... some very small. A few encounters with the
- proper munitions would go a long way toward dissuading pirates from
- doing their thing.
-
- It's my understanding that international treaty or agreement prohibits
- the carrying of weapons of the type needed aboard merchant vessels and,
- by and large, that's a good thing. Merchant sailors shouldn't be asked
- to be weapons experts, nor should they be asked to militarize their
- careers... even though some would do so willingly and eagerly. But
- whatever treaty or agreement there is should be amended to allow, if
- not require, the aforementioned navies to provide support and protection
- for these vessels. And while outsourcing might be required by smaller
- countries, privatization should be banned. No more KBRs, Haliburtons or
- Blackwaters, please.
-
- While it's true, as I said before, that most of these 'pirate craft' are
- small fishing boats and, in some cases, 'Zodiac'-style boats, there are
- 'mother ships' here and there from which the small boats proceed when
- too far away from shore. I wonder how well maintained most of these
- ships are. I mean, big ships are a lot of work and I don't know if a
- 'gang' of pirates can properly maintain them. I wouldn't be at all
- surprised to hear of a lot of them simply disappearing, leaving nothing
- more than an oil slick as if they'd been hit by a torpedo or something.
- [dark grin]
-
- No, I'm not in a very charitable mood these days... at least not toward
- these guys.
-
- Well, enough of that. Let's get to the few messages that have built up
- in the past several weeks, okay?
-
-
- From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup
- ====================================
-
-
- In reference to the popular circuit simulator program, SPICE, and an
- instructional book on it, someone posts:
-
- "SPICE for Power Electronics and Electric Power
- This book about power electronics using spice program
-
- the link:
-
- http://tinyurl.com/cu2n82" [URL modified by Editor]
- [Be aware: This link is to a '.rar' file. We make no claim as to its
- content or safety. Open with care if you open at all]
-
-
- Lonny Pursell, being the humorous guy (and science fiction aficionado)
- that he is, replies:
-
- "Baron Harkonnen: He who controls the Spice, controls the universe!"
-
-
- Well, I thought it was cute. [grin]
- 'Tyndareus' asks for info and opinions on hard drives:
-
- "Which Hard drive solution works reliably with an ST system best an Atari
- Megafile or an ICD FAST or ???"
-
-
- Ben Smith tells Tyndareus:
-
- "You can download ICD's Hard Drive Utilities from www.icd.com
- This is the version before the Pro version!"
-
-
- Edward Baiz adds his experiences:
-
- "I was having MEGA problems on [my] ST using ICD. I switched to
- HDDriver. After that, no problems at all."
-
-
- Miro Kropacek adds the URL for Ultrasatan, a solid-state hard drive
- replacement for hard drives on any computer with an ACSI (Atari SCSI
- port):
-
- http://ultrasatan.atari.org "
-
-
- Guillaume Tello adds this:
-
- "For me the best solution is the one I can find. There are not too many
- HD for the ST... So, when you find one, get it! On my first STE I have a
- 160Mb SCSI Apple drive (taken from a MAC) with an ACSI/SCSI interface
- (not Icd, not The link). On the second one I have a Syquest 44Mb with
- the same kind of interface.
-
- Those SCSI drives are faster than the original Megafile."
-
-
- Ronald Hall adds his (and my) opinion for the software portion:
-
- "Hard to top HDDriver. Commercial, but its still being
- developed/Supported and Uwe is awesome."
-
-
- Tyndareus now asks for help with is Mega2:
-
- "I have a Mega ST2 which I used many years ago and decided it was time
- to resurrect it. When I powered it on nothing happened.
-
- Could someone kindly [point me toward] any service manual resources to
- help determine the cause?"
-
-
- Mike Freeman tells Ty:
-
- "My first thought would be the power supply unit. I had one go out in my
- Falcon. If that's the problem, you could either buy a new one (very
- expensive - try Best Elec.) or if you're more mechanically inclined you
- could hack in a PC power supply (cheaper, but harder fix). Just be aware
- that the wire colors aren't exactly the same between the two. If I
- remember correctly (and I may not) the yellow and blue wires are the
- same voltage, but reverse polarity between the two. I didn't find this
- out until it was too late and had to replace a violently exploded
- transistor from my Falcon's sound system. Very exciting! Fortunately,
- that was the worst damage that was done."
-
-
- Jim DeClercq adds:
-
- "Try a 40 ohm resistor between 12 volts and ground for a few seconds.
- Sometimes revives a stalled power supply. disconnect from Mega first, and
- might work. These 20 year old switching power supplies sometimes get
- flakey."
-
-
- Guillaume Tello posts this about M_Player under Aranym:
-
- "Finally, I managed to make M_Player run under Aranym. The "dirt"
- programming is back!
-
- I plan to improve two important points:
- - the disassembling of an animation (to TGA and sound)
- - the creation of an animation (the BATCH file is a bit hard for most
- users, I try to make a clearer interface)
-
- - the direct conversion only works under TOS with a very ... personal
- system (M_PLAYER calls a second M_PLAYER!)
-
- Well, for those of you who made long time ago some sequences with
- CyberPaint (*.SEQ, *.DLT) with Lexicor (*.FLM) or digitized videos with
- Video Master (*.FLM) this is the chance to view them again if you don't
- own your original Atari anymore.
- And with the disassembling and creating functions, you should be able to
- convert them to a more modern format such as AVI or MOV.
-
- So, you can test M_Player under Aranym, just download it from this page:
-
- http://pagesperso-orange.fr/gtello/mplayere.htm
-
-
- M_Player can now deal with long file names and lower case names too.
- So it is more compatible with newer systems (Ext2 partitions... etc)
-
- That's version 3.21"
-
-
- 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 - Ultra-Sensitive Wii Motion Controller!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Wii MotionPlus for New Games Only!
-
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Ultra-Sensitive Wii Motion Controller Due in June
-
-
- Building on its pioneering motion-sensing video-game console, Nintendo
- announced Tuesday the pending release of the Wii MotionPlus accessory,
- which it said will deliver "new levels of precision and performance."
-
- The accessory, previewed at the E3 trade show last summer and which
- attaches to the Wii wireless controller, is planned for release in early
- June. The company said, when used for specially designed games, it
- offers "finer detail" and "greater accuracy than ever before."
-
- At a MSRP of $19.99, the MotionPlus is designed to replicate exactly on
- a TV screen each turn of the player's wrist or twist of the body. One
- game designed to take advantage of such subtleties of motion is
- Nintendo's Wii Sports Resort, the sequel to the Wii Sports game that
- comes with the console. Activities in the Wii Sports Resort include
- cruising on a water scooter, dueling with swords, and throwing a
- Frisbee. A MotionPlus accessory is included with each Wii Sports Resort.
-
- Wii Sports Resort will be launched in July, but two other games from
- Electronic Arts - Grand Slam Tennis and Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 - will
- be released sooner, shortly after the accessory, and they are also
- designed specifically for the MotionPlus.
-
- Cammie Dunaway, executive vice president of sales and marketing, said
- Nintendo expects the new accessory to offer "a new evolution in
- video-game control," and developers are already working on additional
- games to take advantage of its motion sensitivity.
-
- But it will take a while for developers to adapt to the new capability.
- Game pioneer Masaya Matsuura recently told MTV that he had MotionPlus
- development kits during the making of his Major Minor's Majestic March
- marching-band game for the Wii, but "it didn't really make it any more
- fun than it already was." He speculated that MotionPlus titles need to
- be planned with the accessory in mind from the beginning.
-
- Nintendo is hoping such innovations as the MotionPlus will help it keep
- its position as the video-game console business moves quickly. Some
- industry observers, for instance, have noted that the Wii's console
- sales last month in Japan were lower than Sony's PlayStation 3, about
- 146,000 PS3s to about 99,000 Wiis. In total, though, the Wii has sold
- nearly three times as many units in that country as the PS3.
-
- Nintendo said it wasn't particularly concerned about the PS3's sales,
- especially since the first few months of a year are generally slower.
-
- The company also recently released the DSi, an update of its handheld DS
- console, which includes two screens and two cameras. Like the
- motion-sensing Wii, the cameras are intended to create a unique
- interactive signature, such as adding effects to photos or importing
- your image into a game.
-
-
-
- Wii MotionPlus for New Games Only
-
-
- Nintendo's Wii MotionPlus, a precision-remedy for its finicky Wii Remote,
- won't be backwards compatible, says the company. That's bad news for
- anyone who'd been planning to revisit oldies like Metroid Prime 3 or Super
- Mario Galaxy, or, you know, finally get some decent deterministic action
- out of Wii Sports' sloppy, pointless baseball and boxing sims.
-
- What /will/ it work with? New games only, all custom-tailored, a fact
- that reportedly torqued off certain blindsided third-party developers
- last summer.
-
- Why no retroactive precision-motion love? The cynical view fingers
- upcoming sequels like Wii Sports Resort with its medley of frisbee, jet
- ski, and kendo sims. Nintendo wants you to buy new stuff, not discover the
- pleasures of revisiting the oldies wielding a superior control mechanism
- they probably could and should have shipped in the first place.
-
- That's too bad. I was kind of counting on a backwards-compatibility
- option. I can't stand the wobbly, wiggly, frequently downright *sloppy*
- point-and-click action of the remote as-is. I played through the better
- part of Twilight Princess with the pointer feature disabled because the
- ball of light with fly's wings kept getting stuck in the sensor periphery.
- Don't get me started on point-and-squirm shooters like Call of Duty 3 (I
- mean *before* the stuff about the gameplay itself being ho-hum).
-
- Hey Nintendo, would it really sunder reality and usher in an epoch of
- apocalyptic doom if you worked with your third-party pals a little more
- closely, maybe even reconsidered downloadable MotionPlus updates for a
- few of your top-rated titles?
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Spam E-mails Killing the Environment
-
-
- If annoying users and wasting their time wasn't bad enough, spam e-mails
- are also responsible for clogging our atmosphere with carbon dioxide, a
- gas that shoulders much of the blame for global warming, according to a
- report commissioned by antivirus vendor McAfee.
-
- "When you look at it from an individual user perspective you're only
- talking about 0.3 grams of carbon dioxide per spam message," said Dave
- Marcus, director of security research and communications at McAfee's
- Avert Labs, in a telephone interview. "When you extrapolate the math out
- to the larger numbers, it definitely is significant."
-
- The McAfee report, which was written by consulting company ICF
- International, said the estimated 62 trillion spam e-mail that get sent
- each year consume 33 billion kilowatt hours of electricity, enough to
- power 2.4 million homes. In addition, spam e-mail releases as much carbon
- dioxide into the atmosphere as 3.1 million cars consuming 2 billion
- gallons of gasoline.
-
- That sounds bad, but what does it mean? McAfee's report didn't provide
- an estimate for the daily energy usage of a PC or server, or the energy
- consumed by other applications. Without these numbers, it's difficult to
- put the spam energy numbers into context and understand their
- significance.
-
- The report also failed to detail the methodology and assumptions that
- ICF used to arrive at these numbers. For example, the report doesn't say
- what researchers expect computers to be doing if not being used to
- filter and read spam e-mails or how this energy could be used for
- alternative applications. Depending on assumptions like this, it's
- possible that computers could be used for tasks that consume more power
- than applications that fight spam, releasing even greater amounts of
- carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
-
- McAfee deferred questions about the methodology and the assumptions that
- were made to ICF. However, because the ICF researchers who wrote the
- report are based in the U.K., the time difference meant they could not
- be reached to comment on this story at the time of writing.
-
- Even so, the crux of McAfee's argument remains unchanged: spam is bad
- and - all things held equal - it's more efficient to fight spam at the
- source or e-mail gateway than at the PC.
-
- "It's just so much less efficient if a user has to clean their own
- mailbox," Marcus said.
-
- Spam has long been a target of antivirus vendors but McAfee wanted to
- reframe discussions of the problem in environmental terms, rather than
- the annoyance that spam causes users or its links to malware and
- cybercrime.
-
- "This really gives people a different way of looking at it. Aside from
- the nuisance factor, it actually has a quantifiable impact on the
- environment," he said.
-
-
-
- If Spam Equals Tons of CO2 What's the Carbon Footprint of Cyber Porn?
-
-
- A McAfee study estimates 62 trillion spam e-mails equal 33 billion
- kilowatt hours of electricity or about as much carbon as 3.1 million cars
- consuming 2 billion gallons of gasoline. In January, a study by Harvard
- University claimed two Google searches produced the same amount of CO2 as
- bringing water to a boil on your stovetop.
-
- From these headlines it appears computer users should be shamed into
- joining drivers of gas-guzzling Hummer SUVs when it comes to feeling
- green guilt. It makes me wonder how the Internet's creator, former Vice
- President Al Gore, feels about these digital carbon statistics. Could a
- sequel to an *Inconvenient Truth* be in the works?
-
- Here's a list of digital activities I think digital-carbon-footprint
- scientists should look into next.
-
- *Facebook: *ComScore says 200 million people logged on to Facebook
- in December 2008 to check out photos, enter status updates, play Mafia
- Wars and answer endless mundane quizzes. Facebook may connect friends,
- but how much carbon is that zombie army of yours really spewing into the
- atmosphere?
-
- *Twitter: *Ashton Kutcher is trying to beat CNN to one million followers
- today, and millions around the world are tweeting to whoever is listening.
- But at what cost? I'm sure that double yoke you found in your egg this
- morning was quite gratifying, but did Tweeting this tidbit of information
- just push us closer to ecological disaster?
-
- *AOL Discs: *AOL subscription discs aren't around anymore, but what was
- the impact of millions of discs dropping into North American mailboxes
- every day? Some people have turned old AOL discs into art, but how many
- discs are sitting in landfills right now? Maybe you can start a massive
- salvaging campaign and turn those junked discs into solar panels. Get over
- to the local dump and start digging kids.
-
- *Porn: *First there is oodles of tasteless bandwidth hogging stuff. Then
- there is the never ending pop-ups, malware, and Web page re-directs (or
- so I'm told).
-
- *Online Pranks: *Hackers are rumored to be manipulating Time.com's poll
- to determine the world's most influential people. Take a close look at
- the top 10 and you'll see it spells out "marble cake." One hacker has
- already voted 10,000,000 times and another plans on running an entire
- server dedicated to manipulating the Time poll. Can we blame these
- hucksters for the meltdown of polar ice caps?
-
- *IM: *How many chat windows do you have open during the day? Two? Five?
- How much is that costing the environment? What are you really talking
- about all day anyway? Question: How much carbon does it suck up to
- produce every LOL on the Internet a day? Now here is a ban I can get
- behind.
-
- *Blogs: *Social media may be advancing the way we communicate via blogs.
- But is the environmental cost of millions of blogs on topics as exciting
- as floor wax worth the price?
-
- Did I miss anything in my list? Don't you feel guilty now for spewing up
- all that digital carbon? Just remember, you might be able to Pwn an
- iPhone, but there's no hacking Mother Earth once she is gone.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Says EU Antitrust Deadline Extended
-
-
- Microsoft Corp confirmed on Wednesday a report that it had received a
- one-week extension from EU antitrust regulators to respond to charges
- that it had sought to thwart rivals by bundling its web browser with
- Windows systems.
-
- "Microsoft confirms that the new deadline for the company to respond to
- the Commission's statement of objections is April 28," a spokeswoman
- said, referring to an unsourced reference to a new deadline reported on
- the website of the Financial Times.
-
- A spokeswoman for the European Commission said she could not immediately
- comment.
-
- Last month, the European Union executive pushed back the original
- deadline to April 21 after the giant U.S. software company asked for
- more time. It charged the company on January 15 with infringing EU rules
- by abusing its dominant position.
-
- The bundling of its Internet Explorer to Windows shielded Microsoft from
- head-to-head competition with other browsers, and that also harmed
- product innovation and reduced customer choice, the Commission had said.
-
- Microsoft has said the Commission may order the company and equipment
- makers to obligate users to choose a particular browser when buying a
- computer, or that multiple browsers be made available on new
- Windows-based computers. This could come on top of a possible hefty
- fine. Separately, trade group ECIS - which numbers International
- Business Machines Corp, Nokia, Oracle Corp and Sun Microsystems Inc
- among its members - joined in the case against Microsoft on Wednesday.
-
- ECIS said it had been accepted as an interested third party in the
- Commission's case.
-
- "Smaller, more innovative, browser developers need a level playing
- field," ECIS spokesman Thomas Vinje said in a statement.
-
- Google Inc, which offers the Chrome browser; the Mozilla foundation,
- producer of the Firefox Web browser, and privately held Norwegian
- company Opera have already added their voices to the case against
- Microsoft.
-
-
-
- US DOJ Requests More Time for Microsoft Oversight
-
-
- The Justice Department asked a federal judge Thursday to extend its
- watch over some of Microsoft Corp.'s business practices for a second
- time, saying it needs an extra year and a half to make sure Microsoft's
- antitrust compliance passes muster.
-
- Microsoft, the federal government and 17 states agreed in 2002 to settle
- an antitrust battle over the software maker's use of its Windows
- monopoly to squash competitors.
-
- The terms of the settlement were initially to expire in November 2007,
- but U.S. District Court Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly granted a two-year
- extension covering parts of the agreement. Now the Justice Department
- wants to extend that to May 2011.
-
- Microsoft agreed to the extension request. Kollar-Kotelly is expected to
- address it in a status conference in Washington on Wednesday.
-
- The antitrust settlement requires Microsoft to produce a how-to manual
- for outside companies that license Microsoft's server software and other
- programs, explaining how the servers communicate with Windows personal
- computers. Microsoft is also required to document how various parts of
- these systems can be used together.
-
- According to a status report released Thursday, Microsoft's
- documentation efforts are almost done. The company has been barred from
- charging royalties for the technology until the documentation reaches a
- certain level of quality, and the report said Microsoft might reach that
- point by the end of this year. The technical committee that reviews the
- documentation will continue to scrutinize the materials and work with
- Microsoft on changes through the term of the extension.
-
- The government also wants to extend its oversight of the way that
- Windows gives PC makers and users a way to install non-Microsoft Web
- browsers and media players and set them as defaults.
-
- The Redmond, Wash.-based software maker is readying its newest PC
- operating system, Windows 7, for launch in less than a year. Microsoft
- has added control panel options to turn off Internet Explorer, Windows
- Media Player and Microsoft's hard-drive search software, possibly in
- response to antitrust concerns.
-
- Microsoft and the Justice Department also agreed Thursday that when the
- extension is up, the government can't ask for more time to review an
- operating system than hasn't gone on sale. That means if the version
- after Windows 7 hasn't been released by May 2011, it won't be subject to
- antitrust scrutiny under the 2002 agreement.
-
-
-
- Twitter Fights Off Computer Worm
-
-
- Micro-blogging service Twitter was targeted by a wave of attacks by a
- computer worm over Easter weekend, a co-founder of the Web messaging
- company said.
-
- "On a weekend normally reserved for bunnies, a worm took center stage,"
- Biz Stone said in a post on the official blog of the San Francisco-based
- startup.
-
- Stone said the self-replicating computer worm, which resulted in users
- of the service receiving and sending unwanted messages, had not caused
- any damage.
-
- "Please note that no passwords, phone numbers, or other sensitive
- information was compromised as part of these attacks," he said.
-
- Stone said Twitter had come under attack on four occasions from the
- worm, which the online technology news agency CNET said was created by a
- 17-year-old New York hacker.
-
- "All told, we identified and deleted almost 10,000 tweets (messages)
- that could have continued to spread the worm," Stone said.
-
- He said the worm was similar to the Samy worm which recently attacked
- social network MySpace.
-
- "We will conduct a full review of the weekend activities. Everything
- from how it happened, how we reacted, and preventative measures will be
- covered," Stone said.
-
- Twitter, which allows users to pepper one another with messages of 140
- characters or less, has seen a dizzying surge in popularity since it was
- launched in August 2006, but has been unable so far to generate revenue.
-
-
-
- Hackers Grabbed More Than 285 Million Records in 2008
-
-
- Hackers made off with at least 285 million electronic records in 2008,
- more than in the four previous years combined, according to a new study
- that shows identity thieves are getting better at exploiting careless
- mistakes that leave companies vulnerable to attack.
-
- The number comes from a study of 90 data breaches investigated by
- Verizon Communications Inc., which is hired to do a post-mortem on most
- big computer intrusions.
-
- No victims are identified in the report. Many of the breaches aren't
- even public. That can happen if law enforcement insists on secrecy
- because of an ongoing criminal investigation, or if personally
- identifiable information wasn't lost in the hack.
-
- In many breaches, especially involving lost or stolen laptops, the
- records aren't used for anything at all.
-
- Verizon's study looked only at breaches involving attacks that resulted
- in compromised records being used in a crime, like making counterfeit
- credit cards and buying homes and medical coverage under someone else's
- identity - and on their dime.
-
- The company found that 90 percent of the breaches it investigated could
- have been avoided with basic security measures.
-
- One of those is recognizing how valuable so-called "non-critical"
- computers are to hackers.
-
- Peter Tippett, vice president of research and intelligence for Verizon's
- business security solutions division, says criminals aren't looking to
- crash through the front door with a brazen computer attack. Often
- they're content to feel around the edges and look for vulnerabilities
- that can get them in through the equivalent of a side window.
-
- Even by tapping into computers of low-level employees who don't handle
- sensitive data, hackers can get a toehold for installing more malicious
- software that scans the network traffic and looks for vulnerabilities in
- other computers.
-
- The study also found that data breaches are getting more severe because
- criminals are using sophisticated new programs that were custom-designed
- for particular attacks and weren't known to the security community or
- law enforcement.
-
- Verizon says 93 percent of all compromised records in its study came
- from the financial sector.
-
-
-
- Phishers Get More Wily as Cybercrime Grows
-
-
- Phishing scams have grown up from the unsophisticated swindles of the
- past in which fake Nigerian princes e-mailed victims, who would get a
- big windfall if they just provide their bank account number.
-
- Even as authorities try to stamp out that con and other e-mail and
- online scams, scammers are getting more wily and finding new loopholes
- to exploit.
-
- The vast majority of e-mail is spam and an unknown percentage of that is
- meant to defraud. The scale of electronic fraud means that that the
- criminals can make huge profits even if only a small percentage of
- people are duped.
-
- Phishing commonly refers to hoax e-mails purportedly from banks or other
- trustworthy sources that seek to trick recipients into revealing bank or
- credit card account numbers and passwords.
-
- The U.S. government scored a big victory in November when the web
- hosting company McColo Corp. was taken offline. Estimates vary, but the
- Washington Post said that 75 percent of spam worldwide had been sent
- through that single company.
-
- But the spam e-mails offering celebrity diets, cheap printer ink, erased
- credit card debt and amazing orgasms quickly found a new way to inboxes,
- according to Google's security subsidiary Postini.
-
- Now spammers use a variety of computers to send out spam e-mails to
- obscure their origins, meaning that a dramatic McColo-style takedown
- will be harder to reproduce, said Adam Swidler, product marketing
- manager for Google's Postini.
-
- And they've largely abandoned scams that are easy to see through - like
- the Nigerian prince - in favor of more sophisticated "location-based
- spam," which directs the victim to a Web site discussing a local
- disaster or similar issue. If they click on the offered video, the Web
- site downloads a virus to the user's computer, Google said in a blog on
- security.
-
- Tim Cranton, a Microsoft cybersecurity expert, said there was no way to
- know how much money is stolen. "We don't have a way to estimate numbers
- because there are so many victims that you're not aware of," he said.
-
- New technology means new ways to steal. One of the latest is "smishing,"
- which is nothing more than a phishing fraud sent via SMS text messaging.
-
- E-con artists are getting more sophisticated in approaching potential
- victims. One tactic has been to write spam that purports to come from a
- trusted source, like Paypal.
-
- When Paypal, which is owned by eBay, learned that spammers were using
- its name, they put a digital signature on their e-mails and asked
- providers like Yahoo and Google to block any e-mail purporting to come
- from them which did not have that signature.
-
- "We know how many they throw away and it's approximately speaking about
- 10 million a month," said Michael Barrett, Paypal's chief information
- security officer. "If the consumer never sees the e-mail in the first
- place then it's hard for them to get victimized."
-
- "Phishing was not just impacting consumers, in terms of general loss, it
- was impacting their view of the safety of the Internet and that it was
- indirectly damaging our brand," added Barrett.
-
- Security experts say they are seeing more and more shifts from outright
- fraud, where the victim will hand over their money, to the use of
- malware, basically malicious software which, among other things,
- collects passwords and credit card numbers for thieves.
-
- "Those will then be sold on the underground market," said David Marcus,
- a threat research expert at McAfee computer security firm.
-
- The person purchasing the passwords and card numbers will use that
- information to make purchases, get cash or create fake identities.
-
- The Federal Bureau of Investigation, working with police in the United
- Kingdom, Turkey and Germany, shut down one such online forum called Dark
- Market in October 2008 which, at its peak, had more than 2,500
- registered members, according an FBI press release issued at the time.
-
- But experts agreed that they didn't expect the problem to go away
- anytime soon, and that more people out of work could well mean more
- people like to fall for scams.
-
- Marcus said many of the scams were nothing more than the digital
- equivalent of confidence tricks, although on a massive scale that can
- net some scammers more than $100,000 a month.
-
- "These things only have to be 2 percent successful," he said. "Those
- campaigns are sent out to tens of millions of people at the same time.
-
-
-
- Pirate Bay's Fileshare Four Get Year in Jail
-
-
- Four men behind The Pirate Bay, one of the world's biggest free
- file-sharing websites, were each sentenced to a year in jail on Friday
- for breaching copyright, and ordered to pay $3.6 million in compensation.
-
- Analysts said the guilty verdict in the closely-watched test case could
- help music and film companies recoup millions of dollars in lost
- revenues, though they doubted it would stem the tide of illegal
- downloading.
-
- In a broadcast on The Pirate Bay's website one of the four defendants,
- Peter Sunde, taunted the court, holding up a mock IOU note for 31
- million Swedish crowns ($3.6 million) followed by the initials "JK" -
- Internet lingo for "just kidding."
-
- "That's the closest they're going to get to getting money from me,"
- Sunde said.
-
- International trade body IFPI, which represents some 1,400 record
- companies across the world, reported earlier this year that about 95
- percent of music downloaded in 2008 was illegal.
-
- On its website, The Pirate Bay scorned the ruling, calling it a "crazy
- verdict."
-
- "It was lol (laugh out loud) to read and hear," the message read. "But
- as in all good movies, the heroes lose in the beginning but have an epic
- victory in the end anyhow. That's the only thing Hollywood has ever
- taught us."
-
- IFPI Chairman John Kennedy welcomed the court sentence which he said in
- a statement provided a "a strong deterrent" against copyright
- infringement.
-
- "This is good news for everyone, in Sweden and internationally, who is
- making a living or a business from creative activity and who needs to
- know their rights will protected by law," he said.
-
- The men linked to The Pirate Bay - Sunde, Gottfrid Svartholm Warg,
- Fredrik Neij and Carl Lundstrom - were charged early last year by a
- Swedish prosecutor with conspiracy to break copyright law and related
- offences. They denied the charges.
-
- Companies including Warner Bros., MGM, Columbia Pictures, 20th Century
- Fox Films, Sony BMG, Universal and EMI also sought damages of more than
- 100 million crowns ($12 million) to cover lost revenues.
-
- The Stockholm district court said in a statement the four were found
- guilty of breaching copyright laws and each sentenced to a year in
- prison.
-
- Lundstrom's attorney, Per Samuelson, told journalists he was shocked by
- the verdict and the severity of the sentence.
-
- "That's outrageous, in my point of view. Of course we will appeal," he
- said. "This is the first word, not the last. The last word will be ours."
-
- The lawyers defending Sunde and Neij told Reuters their clients would
- also appeal the verdict.
-
- The group that controls The Pirate Bay, launched in 2003, says that no
- copyrighted material is stored on its servers and no exchange of files
- actually takes place there so it cannot be held responsible for what
- material is being exchanged.
-
- The prosecution said that by financing, programing and administering the
- site, the four men promoted the infringement of property rights by the
- site's users.
-
- Industry experts were not convinced the verdict would have a lasting
- effect.
-
- "Every time you get rid of one, another bigger one pops up. Napster
- went, and then up came a whole host of others ... The problem of
- file-sharing just keeps growing year on year, and it's increasingly
- difficult for the industry to do anything about it," said music analyst
- Mark Mulligan of research firm Forrester.
-
- Dan Cryan, senior analyst at media research firm Screen Digest, said the
- lack of international copyright law meant websites dedicated to illegal
- downloads could simply move on to a new country if legislation tightened
- where they operated.
-
- "Pirate Bay was brilliant at self-publicity, but the reality is there
- are lots of other torrent-tracker sites," he said.
-
- "The closing of the one that shouts the loudest won't make any
- difference."
-
-
-
- EBay's Tweaks for Sellers Part of Changes to Site
-
-
- More changes are coming to eBay. The online marketplace operator
- announced Tuesday that sellers will have new ways of listing items on
- the site.
-
- San Jose, Calif.-based eBay Inc., which had 86.3 million active users at
- the end of 2008, said the tweaks are to become effective in mid-June.
-
- Among the changes: Sellers will be able to charge various prices for
- similar products that are sold under one listing, such as
- different-sized shirts. And now June 15 is the deadline for sellers to
- add a return policy and handling time to their listings. That rule was
- originally supposed to take effect last month.
-
- EBay also is adding a feature called "Smart FAQ," which will
- automatically take information from site listings to give buyers answers
- to a number of top questions, such as whether a seller will ship items
- internationally. A seller wouldn't have to respond personally.
-
- The company added that that starting in the second quarter it will start
- handling disputes between buyers and sellers through eBay itself, rather
- than on the dispute-resolution section of its online payments service,
- PayPal, as it had in the past.
-
- EBay said the change is meant in part to cut down the time spent
- settling problems between buyers and sellers. It expects to handle all
- disputes on eBay before the start of the 2009 holiday season.
-
- EBay spokesman Usher Lieberman said the company decided to announce all
- the changes at once, about two months before they will be implemented,
- in response to sellers' requests for more predictability about site
- adjustments.
-
- The changes are the latest in a long line of alterations the company has
- made as it has struggled to improve its online marketplace. They are
- being announced a month after eBay acknowledged it still has a long way
- to go.
-
- At the time, Chief Executive John Donahoe echoed what many on Wall
- Street have long believed that eBay's marketplace business has not
- kept pace with the changing competitive landscape and customers' needs.
- Donahoe pledged to pick up eBay's pace of innovation.
-
-
-
- Will the Nettop Kill the Traditional Desktop?
-
-
- Sales of desktop PCs have been declining for some time now. In fact,
- notebooks now outsell their deskbound brethren worldwide. This trend isn't
- surprising, given the convenience, portability and growing affordability
- of portable PCs. Add to that the rapid ascension of the netbook, with its
- even smaller dimensions and prices, and shoppers are finding fewer reasons
- to purchase a bulky desktop unless they crave the ultimate in speed and
- storage.
-
- But the recent reinvention of the all-in-one desktop, or nettop, may
- "reinvigorate and redefine" the traditional PC, according to market
- researcher DisplaySearch. While the all-in-one desktop with a flat-panel
- LCD screen (AIO LCD PC) has been around for years, computer buyers
- haven't exactly embraced the concept. In fact, all-in-ones have account
- for just 2% of the total desktop display market in any given year,
- according to DisplaySearch.
-
- So why the sudden AIO bullishness? Because the new nettop PC melds the
- advantages of the hot netbook category-low price, slim design, and a
- relatively small footprint-with the ergonomically friendly (i.e.,
- desktop) benefits of a larger LCD display and a full-size keyboard. Some
- nettops may include touch screens too.
-
- As a result, the nettop is convenient for the cramped office cubicle,
- tiny home office, or student desk. Says DisplaySearch: "Based on the
- Intelא« Atom processor microarchitecture, which helped to launch the
- mini-note category, nettops are expected to be a far cry from the
- existing AIO LCD PCs, which are typically feature-rich and high priced."
-
- Affordability is key here. A nettop with a 18-5-inch LCD costs as little
- as $240 to $250 to build, and could sell for as little as $300 in some
- global markets, although a street price of $400 to $500 is probably more
- realistic, DisplaySearch estimates. Those low prices could boost
- all-in-one PC shipments (including nettops) to more than 6 million units
- worldwide this year, up from 3.5 million in 2008.
-
- The nettop and netbook probably won't attract the same shopper. The
- netbook buyer is intrigued by the concept of anytime-anywhere computing,
- and is willing to sacrifice screen and keyboard size for convenience.
- The nettop buyer wants an inexpensive desktop experience without the
- bulk of a traditional tower PC. Performance may prove disappointing,
- however, particularly if nettop fans decide to try more than basic web
- browsing and word processing.
-
- Even if conventional desktops survive, the trend toward cheaper, smaller
- computers is bound to continue.
-
-
-
- The 10 Greatest Flops in Computer History
-
-
- They were way ahead of their time and could have advanced the power of
- mass home computing by years. But these revolutionary concepts became the
- biggest failures in digital history.
-
- The Xerox Alto - it never made it beyond universities and research groups
- The Apple III - the first in a line of Apple flops
- The Osborne Executive - not what you'd expect from a laptop
- The IBM PCjr was cancelled in 1985
- Clive Sinclair's computing empire was at its peak when he launched the
- QL. The machine brought his company down
- Apple invents the personal computing turkey. Again.
- The NeXT was a commercial disaster but took Steve Jobs back to Apple
- Photo: Marcin Wichary
- Windows ME - fourth in the list of worst tech products of all time
- The Netwon Message Pad - yet another flop brought to you by Apple
- The Atari Jaguar - the machine that saw off ... er ...
-
- *Xerox Alto*
-
- The Alto was launched in 1973 following an extensive project at Xerox's
- original Palo Alto Research Center (PARC). Almost 40 years later it is
- still recognised as one of the most innovative computers ever designed
- and, for its time, its specification was breathtaking. The Alto used a
- mouse, menus, a graphical user interface (GUI), bit-mapped graphics, an
- Ethernet connection and 2.5mb removable drive "platters". Software
- included a Bravo, a WYSIWYG word processor; Draw, a graphical paint program
- that preceded Microsoft and Adobe's products by two decades; and Maze War,
- a three dimensional, networked, multiplayer, first-person shooter game -
- 20 years before ID Software brought the genre back with Wolfenstein,
- Doom and Quake.
-
-
- Designed to take advantage of the high-speed laser printers that Xerox
- was developing, the Alto was never released commercially. Xerox saw a
- future of desktop home computers with their electronic documents and
- electronic retrieval as a threat to its core business - printed
- documents. So the Alto was, instead, kept inside Palo Alto or given away
- to some universities and other research institutions. In all, 2,000
- Altos were built and very few survive today. But the legacy of the Alto
- most certainly does survive: Steve Jobs from Apple Computer toured
- Xerox's PARC in 1979 and saw the potential of the Alto's GUI. The design
- of the Lisa - Apple's great hope - was already well advanced but was
- changed to be based on a GUI and the world of computing was changed.
- Sadly, as we shall see, the Lisa was also destined to become one of
- computing's greatest flops.
-
- As a footnote, Xerox released a commercial version of the Alto - the
- Star - in 1979. It went on sale in the US for more than $16,000.
- Unsurprisingly, it quickly sank.
-
- *Apple III *
-
- The Apple 3 was released in 1980 and was a catastrophe for the company
- built by Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs. It was one of the worst computers
- ever built. Aimed at the business user, Apple priced it at close to
- $8,000 (if you wanted a keyboard, a monitor and a printer which,
- strangely, some people seemed to think were useful) which was way too
- high even for top-end business users.
-
- But the main problem with the computer was its design. Hideous by
- Apple's standards, internally the machine was a disaster. In an attempt
- to shield the components from external interference, Apple stuck an
- aluminium box inside the plastic case. At the same time, Steve Jobs
- decided that the computer should not have a fan meaning that it often
- got so hot that chips would pop out of their boards. Apple's disastrous
- PR machine informed customers that they should lift the box 10cm above
- their desks and "drop it to reseat the chips".
-
- The Apple III was supposed to be compatible with the successful Apple II
- but this was a half truth. Randy Wigginton, a member of its design
- team, blamed the machine's failure on "feature creep" and that it was
- designed by committee. "Everybody had ideas about what the III should do
- . . . and all of them were included," he said.
-
- Apple tried to fix the case problems and increased its RAM to 256KB. But
- the damage had been done and it was dropped in September 1985.
-
- *Osborne Executive *
-
- Osborne launched the highly successful Osborne 1 - a supposed portable -
- in 1981. The machine was a hit, having drawn much inspiration from
- Xerox's PARC projects of the mid and late 1970s. However, there were
- many flaws with the machine including its tiny screen, tiny memory and
- lack of decent software.
-
- The Executive was designed to correct these flaws and launched in 1982
- with a bigger screen and more memory. It also came with a higher price -
- marketing at close to $2,500. Like its predecessor the Executive opened
- to reveal a
- detachable keyboard, the built-in monitor and two floppy drives.
-
- Nobody who uses a modern laptop or netbook today would be under any
- illusion about either the Osborne 1 or the Executive's ease of
- portability. But, for their time, the machines - both the size of a
- sewing machine and weighing the equivalent of a fully-packed suitcase -
- were pretty radical.
-
- The Executive was a flop not because there was anything inherently wrong
- with the machine but rather because of its retail failure. An
- announcement by Osborne soon after the Executive launched that it was
- working on an IBM PC-compatible product called Vixen had a
- catastrophic effect on the Executive's sales meaning that the company
- did not have the money to continue developing Vixen.
-
- Osborne went into bankruptcy in September 1983.
-
- *IBM PCjr *
-
- IBM had enjoyed huge success with the original PC - launched in 1981 -
- the first mass market desktop personal computer. But the arrival of
- cheaper clones and a cheaper rival operating system - Microsoft's MSDOS -
- seriously eroded IBM's market position.
-
- So IBM decided that it had to capture a slice of the burgeoning home
- computer market and decided to build the* *IBM PCjr. Launched in March
- 1984, everybody expected the jr to be a huge success until they got their
- hands on one. Although it was based on the same architecture as the PC,
- the jr was largely incompatible with much of the PC's software and came
- with a whopping $1,300 price tag for the model with a floppy drive (there
- was no monitor included in the price).
-
- Other failings included a disastrous wireless keyboard which
- communicated with the main box through infra red, no direct memory
- access which meant that the keyboard was disabled when accessing the the
- floppy drive and that users couldn't save data directly to the floppy
- and a series of wholly non-standard expansion and interface ports.
-
- So few jrs were sold that the machine was cancelled in March 1985.
-
- *Sinclair QL*
-
- Sir Clive Sinclair's company dominated the British home computer market
- in the early 1980s with the Sinclair ZX81 and the phenomenally successful
- Sinclair Spectrum - a mass market machine with colour graphics and a huge
- number of third party games that made it, in effect, one of Britain's most
- successful games consoles.
-
- But Sir Clive was anxious to break into the small business market and
- developed the QL - Quantum Leap - unveiling it to the press in January.
- The machine was a breakthrough in computing power. It had two proprietry
- "Microdrives" instead of disk drives - tiny tape cartridge readers each
- capable of 128k of storage. The QL was based on Motorola's 68008 processor
- and was the first home computer with a 32 bit CPU - beating the Apple
- Macintosh to the title with just a few days to spare. Indeed the impending
- launch of the first Mac was the one reason that Sir Clive rushed through
- the launch of the QL and this proved to be the machine and, ultimately,
- the company's downfall. There were many orders but few early deliveries -
- Sinclair simply did not have the manufacturing capacity to satisfy the
- demand and started to lose money.
-
- Coupled with the failure of the C5 electric three-wheeled car, the QL
- laid low a company that had promised to make Britain a world leader in
- personal computing and Sinclair was sold to Amstrad in 1986.
-
- *Apple Lisa*
-
- After the disaster of the Apple III few thought that Apple could produce
- another lemon. They were wrong.
-
- Steve Jobs's original 1979 Spec for the Lisa called for a business
- machine costing $2,000 with a green screen, a 16-bit processor and a
- high capacity floppy drive. However, the project was beset by delays and
- interruptions and changes in management. Originally a low-end machine,
- the project became heavily influenced by the research done at Xerox's
- PARC and particularly the Alto computer's GUI. As the project
- progressed, Jobs was forced off it and went on to create a separate team
- developing the Mac in tandem.
-
- When it finally launched in 1983, the Lisa bore little resemblance to
- its original spec: it had two specially designed disk drives, a Motorola
- 68000 CPU, 1MB of RAM and a 5MB external hard drive. It also featured
- multitasking capabilities - a groundbreaking move but one which led to the
- Lisa becoming unacceptably slow. And the killer was the price - all that
- change in management and an estimated $50 million in research and
- development costs meant that Apple had to put the Lisa on sale for
- $10,000. The business community ran a mile from the machine and adopted
- IBM's PC. The final blow was the launch of the Macintosh in 1984 - a
- much cheaper machine which also featured a GUI, a mouse and an Apple
- badge. Two further models of the Lisa followed with final one being the
- so-called Macintosh-XL which could run Mac software. But the model never
- recovered and it was discontinued in 1986.
-
- *NeXT*
-
- Steve Jobs left Apple in 1985 after the successful launch of the
- Macintosh. He had been sidelined into the role of chairman and, by all
- accounts, had become bored. Jobs informed the board of Apple that he was
- going to launch another company and that a number of senior Apple staff
- were going with him.
-
- In 1987 he launched NeXT Computer Inc, a company based around a single
- idea: Jobs wanted to build a sophisticated yet cheap supercomputer that
- would be used by the scientific and academic communities. He designed
- the NeXT based upon Motorola's processors and running academia's
- operating system of choice: Unix. Jobs believed that the NeXT was
- perfect for scientists because it was more powerful than a Mac but far
- less expensive than the mainframes and minis most of them worked on.
-
- The NeXT was a groundbreaking machine with its striking black cube
- design and graphical front end. It also had a 33Mhz processor which made
- it more powerful than any other desktop computer on the market at the
- time. But it was still $6,000 and there was almost no truly useful
- software.
-
- Jobs, who had used his own money to launch the NeXT, quickly began to
- ran out of cash and took part in a documentary about young
- entrepreneurs. It was watched by Ross Perot - a multimillionaire and
- future presidential candidate - who offered to help Jobs and ended up
- pumping in tens of millions of dollars in return for a 16 per stake.
- Jobs believed that the company now couldn't fail and built a huge
- manufacturing plant capable of building 150,000 units a year.
-
- The company began to eat cash again and Jobs turned off potential
- partners, including his friend Bill Gates, the head of Microsoft.
- Everything was late as well with the final debugged versions not
- shipping until the end of 1988, over a year after it had originally been
- promised.
-
- Sales were well below Jobs's forecasts and, by the time the company
- pulled out of computer hardware in 1993, just 50,000 units had been sold.
-
- But the NeXT lived on in the cloud and back at Jobs's old company,
- Apple. Tim Berners-Lee developed hypertext - the language that drives the
- web - on a NeXT. Berners-Lee later wrote: "The NeXT interface was
- beautiful, smooth and consistent. It had great flexibility and other
- features that would not be seen on PCs until later, such as voice email
- and a built-in synthesiser."
-
- The final irony in NeXT's short life was its ultimate demise: Apple,
- desperate for a new operating system to replace its creaking MacOS had
- long admired the Unix that drove the NeXT. Just before Christmas 1996,
- Apple bought both NeXT and Jobs himself for $400 million.
-
- Four years later, Apple, with Jobs at the helm, launched OS/X - the
- operating system that drives today's phenomenally successful Macs, an
- operating system that began its life on the NeXT.
-
- *Windows ME*
-
- It was supposed to be the first operating system that would support
- Universal Plug and Play. But Microsoft's Windows Millennium Editiion (ME)
- was found to be less compatible than Windows 98 - its predecessor.
- Shortcomings in the OS meant that it needed to be constantly reinstalled -
- a process that was horrendously difficult - and led to derision for Bill
- Gates's company which was only matched when it launched Vista a few years
- later. There were huge instabilities within ME which meant that a series
- of drivers did not work and made it virtually unsuable for all but the most
- experienced Windows user. A PC World article dubbed Windows Me the
- "Mistake Edition" and ranked it fourth in the "Worst Tech Products of All
- Time" feature.
-
- *Apple Newton*
-
- Launched in 1990, the Newton was Apple's attempt to head off Penpoint - a
- handheld operating system developed by GO Corporation. When the Newton was
- launched, Apple's marketing boasted that it could "read your handwriting"
- which turned out to be an overblown claim. Writing in 2001, years after
- the product was killed, Larry Tesler, one of the Newton development team
- said: "The marketing group's desire to attract attention through dramatic
- claims ignored the fundamental tenet that a product must never seriously
- under-deliver on its promises. As soon as I saw the final Newton brochure,
- I knew we were doomed."
-
- The second generation Newton was launched and it was a dramatic
- improvement but it had already been beaten to the market by the Palm
- Pilot which was more focussed upon what consumers really wanted in a
- handheld and was available at an affordable price. The Palm was a
- roaring success and Microsoft reentered the market with Windows CE.
-
- The Newton continued to improve after its poor launch but it was too
- late and the product was finally killed in 1993. It marked the end of
- Apple's involvement in the handheld market until its dramatic and hugely
- successful reentry with the iPhone. Today the Newton retains a cult
- following with many thousands of users still dedicated to it.
-
- *Atari Jaguar *
-
- It was meant to rival the hugely successful consoles launched by Sega
- and Nintendo and mark Atari's return to domination of the gaming market.
- But the Atari Jaguar - released in 1993 - was a complete flop. The
- Jaguar was notoriously hard to write software for which meant that few
- games were ever released for it and gamers complained that the system's
- 15-button controller was ridiculously hard to use.
-
- Atari claimed that the Jaguar was the only 64 bit console - a claim that
- was highly questionable given its base 32-bit architecture. Its final
- demise was sealed when Sony launched the long-anticipated Playstation in
- 1994. The Jaguar was withdrawn in 1995 and spelled the end for Atari in
- the home video game console market.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
-
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