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- Volume 14, Issue 11 Atari Online News, Etc. March 16, 2012
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2012
- 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:
-
- Fred Horvat
-
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
- log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
- and click on "Subscriptions".
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- 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:
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- Now available:
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- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphiforums.com/atari/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
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-
-
- A-ONE #1411 03/16/12
-
- ~ Consumers To Get Tips! ~ People Are Talking! ~ Google Nexus Tablet!
- ~ Chinese Microbloggers! ~ Copyright Spy Scheme! ~ Farewell Britannica!
- ~ More Bots Than Humans! ~ Here Comes Pinterest! ~ Apple Story Pulled!
-
- -* Estonian To Extradite Scammer *-
- -* Yahoo Board Battle Will Begin Soon! *-
- -* 'The Art of Video Games' To Launch Big Tour *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's been a really rough week, and I'm not referring to the weather or
- a long work week - I wish that it were the case. Unfortunately, what
- I've been having to deal with since exactly a week ago is the sudden
- passing of my father. Although he was 91-years-young, he was in
- relatively good health. No, this was unexpected from what all that I
- know.
-
- My sister and I managed to make and finalize the arrangements for his
- final resting place. It took a couple of days because we were not aware
- of any arrangements that my father may have made, other than a family
- plot already arranged years ago. Other than a few glitches, everything
- went as "well" as possible.
-
- But, I have a message to convey this week as a result of this experience.
- We've all heard it over and over again throughout the years, and it bears
- repeating. If you have immediate family that is still living - whether
- it be parents, siblings, children or whomever - find out whether or not
- they have made plans for when the time comes. And just as important,
- have you and/or your spouse made your own final arrangements?
-
- The reason that I bring this up is because while going through some of
- my father's paperwork, I discovered my parents' wills. And my mother
- died 11 years ago! Anyway, my father's will was done over 40 years ago!
- If there's an updated one, I haven't come across it yet. My gut feeling
- is that there isn't one more current. So, why does the age of this
- document have significance? The administrators of the will, as named
- within, pre-deceased my father. That means there is no Executor. That
- means that there are two means to execute the will and settle my father's
- estate: the three children will have to unanimously name an administrator,
- or if that can't occur, one will have to be determined by the courts.
-
- This is where I am at the present time. I'm waiting for a "package" of
- documents and forms from the probate court to see exactly what needs to
- be done. This will not be an easy and short process. There will be
- expenses incurred, legal wranglings, and a lot of issues among family
- members. Most people think that their legal and moral responsibilities
- end once the family mamber has been buried; and that "someone else" will
- take care of "the paperwork". Doesn't work that way, most of the time.
-
- Check with your parents, siblings, spouse - whomever you may have to
- play a role in final arrangements. Make sure everything is in order!
- No one wants to think about death, and plan for it as far as making
- arrangements for the estate to be settled. Don't wait until it's too
- late! And I'm telling you this and I'm only in the very beginning
- stages of working to settle my father's estate!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - 'The Art of Video Games' To Launch Tour!
- """""""""""""""""""""""""""""
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- =~=~=~=
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-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- 'The Art of Video Games' To Launch 11-City Tour
-
-
- The first-ever exhibit to chronicle the 40-year evolution of video games,
- The Art of Video Games is at the American Art Museum of the Smithsonian in
- Washington DC March 16 - September 30, following the game world from Atari
- in the 1970s to today's Playstation 3.
-
- Visual effects and the creative use of technology and storytelling will be
- showcased through multimedia presentations. The aesthetics of the
- videogame medium will be illustrated through the variety of art forms
- incorportated, including painting, graphic design, music, storytelling,
- cinematography and technology.
-
- Videos are online from the exhibition depicting the themes of the show:
- Beginnings, Inspiration, Narrative, Experience, and The Future, including
- interviews from 20 influential gaming figures, such as Nolan Bushnell, the
- founder of Atari, and Hideo Kojima, creator of Metal Gear and other
- popular games.
-
- Five working games systems, one from each period, will be available for
- visitors to play, including Pac-Man and Myst to demonstrate how innovative
- techniques set the standard.
-
- Visitors will be able to explore a total of 80 video games, from early days
- to contemporary designs, selected by Chris Melissinos, founder of Past
- Pixels, who curated the exhibit, with the help of the public with 119,000
- votes from 175 countries
-
- Admission to The Art of Video Games is free but a ticket is required and
- can be obtained online. The show kicks off with GameFest, three days of
- play and screenings including the original Tron, costume photo-ops and
- talks by video game pioneers Nolan Bushnell and Hideo Kojima, which will
- be available in the archives:
- http://americanart.si.edu/multimedia/webcasts
-
- The exhibition will travel to 10 US cities following Washington DC,
- including visits to Boca Raton Museum of Art, EMP Museum in Seattle,
- Toledo Museum of Art in Ohio, Memphis Brooks Museum of Art in Tennessee,
- and the Frost Art Museum at FIU in Miami, Florida.
-
- Website: http://www.americanart.si.edu/taovg
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Yahoo Board Battle May Begin Within The Next Week
-
-
- A potentially nasty battle to reshape Yahoo's board of directors will
- begin within the next week unless the troubled Internet company submits
- to the demands of a major shareholder.
-
- Third Point LLC, a hedge fund that owns a 5.8 percent stake in Yahoo,
- issued its ultimatum in a letter Wednesday to company CEO Scott Thompson.
-
- The letter, released in a regulatory filing, comes a month after Third
- Point first announced that it wanted four seats on a Yahoo board already
- undergoing an overhaul.
-
- The board currently consists of 11 directors, but Chairman Roy Bostock and
- three other members announced they will step down at Yahoo's annual
- meeting. The departures are part of an attempt to placate shareholders
- frustrated with a long-running financial funk that has depressed the
- company's stock price.
-
- Third Point believes Yahoo would fare better if the hedge fund's
- representatives were in the boardroom. Third Point's proposed directors
- are: Daniel Loeb, the hedge fund's manager; former NBC Universal CEO Jeff
- Zucker; former MTV Networks executive Michael Wolf and turnaround
- specialist Harry Wilson.
-
- In Wednesday's letter, Loeb told Thompson he was disappointed with Yahoo's
- "dismissive" attitude toward Third Point's candidates since the two men
- spoke in a Feb. 17 conversation.
-
- "The board's stonewalling, apparent insouciance and decision not to engage
- with us in a serious manner, has left us no choice but to directly
- approach our fellow owners" in an attempt to get Third Point's slate
- elected as directors, Loeb wrote.
-
- In a statement, Yahoo said its board's nominating committee is still
- considering "a wide range of highly qualified candidates" for its board.
- The company appointed two new directors, Alfred Amoroso and Maynard Webb,
- to its board last month.
-
- "The committee has included Third Point's candidates in its thorough
- review process and will make its recommendations to the full board in due
- course," Yahoo said.
-
- Unless Yahoo accepts Third Point's candidates on the board, Loeb pledged
- to begin his campaign within the next week. That could lead to a showdown
- that culminates at Yahoo's annual meeting, which is usually held in late
- June.
-
- The mutiny would threaten to distract Thompson as he plots his turnaround
- strategy. Citing unnamed people, the technology blog All Things D recently
- reported Thompson is considering a tumultuous shake-up that could include
- thousands of job cuts.
-
- Yahoo has only said it "is engaged in a process that will generate
- significant strategic change."
-
- Given those plans Loeb urged Thompson to negotiate a truce. "You appear to
- have enough battles to fight already," Loeb wrote.
-
-
-
- Estonia To Extradite Cyber Fraud Scam Suspect to U.S.
-
-
- An Estonian charged in a massive worldwide cyber fraud scam will be
- extradited to the United States, the prosecutor's office in Tallinn said
- on Friday, to face court over the case which saw millions of computers
- infected with malicious software.
-
- The Estonian government made its final decision on Thursday to extradite
- Anton Ivanov, 26. Five other Estonian suspects are currently appealing a
- court ruling backing their extradition.
-
- "The government decision to extradite Ivanov yesterday was final and
- cannot be appealed and does not need parliamentary approval," Kadri
- Tammai, spokeswoman for the Estonian Prosecutor General's office, told
- Reuters.
-
- "For Ivanov, it is now up to an agreement with the Estonian Justice
- Ministry and the FBI as to when the FBI will come and collect him," she
- added.
-
- The six men were arrested in the Baltic state in November 2011. They were
- subsequently charged by U.S. authorities with using malicious software
- and rogue DNS servers to hijack millions of computers worldwide to
- redirect Internet searches toward their own online advertisements.
-
- Another man living in Russia was charged in connection with the case and
- is still at large. Four of the Estonians also face local money laundering
- investigations.
-
- U.S. authorities say the scope of the cyber fraud was remarkable and used
- malicious software or malware to infect about 4 million computers in 100
- countries including the United States. The scam is thought to have
- netted the suspects over $14 million.
-
- The Manhattan U.S. Attorney's office, which is prosecuting the U.S. case
- declined comment on Estonia's extradition decision, as did the FBI.
-
- Months after the men were arrested, experts are still scrubbing the
- malware from computers.
-
- The Manhattan federal court judge overseeing the case, Lewis Kaplan, last
- month agreed to a request by prosecutors for additional time to help
- Internet providers remove the malware from machines on their networks.
-
- The letter to the judge said tens of thousands of computers were still
- infected.
-
- Prosecutors also said temporary servers, installed to replace the rogue
- Estonian ones, needed to remain online for a few more months, or else the
- remaining infected computers would not be able to access the web.
-
- Installing the temporary servers at the time of the November take-down had
- insured the millions of infected computers would still be able to go
- online.
-
-
-
- Security Experts Will Tip Consumers to Cyber Fraud
-
-
- Internet security experts have set up a system to alert Americans when
- sensitive personal information such as social security numbers and online
- banking log-in credentials turn up in the hands of cyber fraudsters.
-
- AllClear ID, an Austin, Texas-based company that provides identity theft
- protection, is offering the free service with help from the non-profit
- National Cyber-Forensics and Training Alliance.
-
- The NCFTA collects information on identity theft cases from member
- organizations that include law enforcement agencies, big Internet
- retailers, banks and computer security companies.
-
- NCFTA members will pass on information about fraud that they suspect,
- witness or prevent directly to potential victims who sign up for the
- service from AllClear ID.
-
- Consumers can enroll in the service, which is available over the web as
- well as through an iPhone app, at www.AllClearID.com.
-
-
-
- Chinese Microbloggers Bemoan Identity Disclosure Rule
-
-
- Living in one of the world's most heavily censored societies, Wang Yong
- enjoys anonymously venting his daily frustrations, 140 characters at a
- time, via China's version of Twitter, but new government restrictions are
- making him think twice.
-
- As of Friday, Beijing-based microbloggers were required to register on the
- Weibo platform using their real identities or face unspecified legal
- consequences, in a bid to curb what Communist officials call rumors,
- vulgarities and pornography.
-
- Many users, however, say the restrictions are clearly aimed at muzzling
- the often scathing, raucous - and perhaps most significantly, anonymous -
- online chatter in a country where the Internet offers a rare opportunity
- for open discussion.
-
- "Definitely, I will not use Weibo if they need real names," said Wang, a
- 27-year-old government employee who said he loved being able to post his
- thoughts anonymously. "I don't want to be supervised because of my words."
-
- Weibo, which means microblog in Chinese, is operated by several companies,
- the biggest of which is Sina.
-
- Despite Premier Wen Jiabao's calls for greater political reforms, the
- ruling Communist Party has shown little sign of loosening its grip on
- power, or allowing public dissent.
-
- Wen, who is due to hand over power next year, told his last news conference
- at China's annual parliamentary session that letting off steam via the
- Internet was "normal".
-
- But as no other public forum offers people the same freedom of debate that
- microblogs do, operators deploy a host of measures to monitor content,
- blocking and removing comment deemed unacceptable, especially posts with a
- political slant.
-
- Even with all the censorship, Weibo users are able to access vast amounts
- of information that they would never have been able to some three years
- ago, as Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and other similar services are
- blocked.
-
- It is unclear how strictly the authorities will enforce the identification
- rules, which may also be introduced in other major cities such as Shanghai
- and Guangzhou.
-
- By midday on Friday, only 19 million out of more than 300 million users of
- Sina had registered their identities, and several microbloggers told
- Reuters they would not sign up.
-
- "I'm sure I will not use it any longer," said Sheng Hui, a 28-year-old
- employee at a foreign bank. "Weibo, for me, is just a tool to blow off my
- anger and pressure. I won't be able to shout abuse in future."
-
- Part of the appeal of microblogs stems from the failure of the state-run
- media, said He Weifang, a law professor at Peking University and a regular
- microblogger, who, like Premier Wen, understands the platforms' "safety
- valve" value.
-
- "China's official media has done a very poor job of reporting criticisms
- of the government and exposing society's weaknesses, so a country like
- ours needs to rely on the informal media," He said. "Once the people can
- express their opinions online, they don't have to take to the streets."
-
- On Thursday, one of the most talked about issues on Sina's microblogs was
- Bo Xilai, the ambitious Communist Party leadership contender who was
- sacked from his post as head of the inland city of Chongqing.
-
- Zhang Ming, a politics professor at Beijing's Renmin University and a
- frequent microblogger, said the new rules were aimed to "limit
- microbloggers' ability to expose malpractice by the local governments and
- bring whistleblowers immediately under control".
-
-
-
- American ISPs To Launch Massive Copyright Spying Scheme on July 12
-
-
- If you download potentially copyrighted software, videos or music, your
- Internet service provider (ISP) has been watching, and theyÆre coming for
- you.
-
- Specifically, theyÆre coming for you on Thursday, July 12.
-
- ThatÆs the date when the nationÆs largest ISPs will all voluntarily
- implement a new anti-piracy plan that will engage network operators in
- the largest digital spying scheme in history, and see some usersÆ
- bandwidth completely cut off until they sign an agreement saying they
- will not download copyrighted materials.
-
- Word of the start date has been largely kept secret since ISPs announced
- their plans last June. The deal was brokered by the Recording Industry
- Association of America (RIAA) and the Motion Picture Association of
- America (MPAA), and coordinated by the Obama Administration. The same
- groups have weighed in heavily on controversial Internet policies around
- the world, with similar facilitation by the ObamaÆs AdministrationÆs
- State Department.
-
- The July 12 date was revealed by the RIAAÆs CEO and top lobbyist, Cary
- Sherman, during a publishersÆ conference on Wednesday in New York,
- according to technology publication CNet.
-
- The content industries calls this scheme a "graduated response" plan,
- which will see Time Warner Cable, Cablevision, Comcast, Verizon, AT&T and
- others spying on usersÆ Internet activities and watching for potential
- copyright infringement. Users who are "caught" infringing on a creatorÆs
- protected work can then be interrupted with a notice that piracy is
- forbidden by law and carries penalties of up to $150,000 per infringement,
- requiring the user to click through saying they understand the
- consequences before bandwidth is restored, and they could still be subject
- to copyright infringement lawsuits.
-
- Participating ISPs have a range of options for dealing with customers who
- continue to pirate media, at that point: They can require that an alleged
- repeat offender undergo an educational course before their service is
- restored. They can utilize multiple warnings, restrict access to only
- certain major websites like Google, Facebook or a list of the top 200
- sites going, reduce someoneÆs bandwidth to practically nothing and even
- share information on repeat offenders with competing ISPs, effectively
- creating a sort of Internet blacklist - although publicly, none of the
- network operators have agreed to "terminate" a customerÆs service.
-
- It is because of those reasons that the content industries believe this
- program achieves much more than what might have been possible in the realm
- of public policy, and the ISPs appear to agree. The voluntary scheme will
- be paid for mostly by the content industries, which will share some costs
- with the ISPs.
-
- Not everyone sees it as a positive: The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
- digital rights advocacy group, argued that the "graduated response" scheme
- lacks transparency, and that copyright holders could wield the network
- operators like a blunt instrument in cases where their claims may not be
- entirely valid - which is the biggest problem with statutes codified by
- the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. They also pressed for assurances
- that claim reviews will be conducted by a neutral party, and suggested that
- users should be given some form of due process before their bandwidth is
- turned down or cut off entirely.
-
- The EFF also took issue with the system of protest the program puts in
- place, which only gives users six predetermined "defenses" against a
- copyright claim. "And even the six enumerated defenses are incomplete,"
- they complained. "For example, the æpublic domainÆ defense applies only if
- the work was created before 1923 - even though works created after 1923
- can enter the public domain in a variety of ways."
-
- A legislative effort that would have achieved some, but not all, of these
- ends was utterly destroyed by the InternetÆs first ever mass work stoppage
- late last year, which saw thousands of popular websites go dark in
- protest. (Disclosure: The Raw Story participated in that protest.)
-
- ItÆs not yet clear how the tech world will react to the ISPs siding with
- the content industries to do what the government simply could not.
-
-
-
- 'Non-Humans' Account for 51% of All Interent Traffic
-
-
- By one study's measure, slightly more than half of all the Internet's
- traffic comes from computers not being used by fleshy humans that might
- actually purchase products.
-
- That's according to study released today by Incapsula, an Interent
- security firm, begging the question: What exactly does Internet traffic
- from a "non-human" look like? Incapsula is here to explain: "hackers,
- spambots, scrapers and spies of sorts collecting proprietary business
- information and customer data from unsuspecting websites." "Hackers" (5
- percent) refers to hacking software that visits site to swipe credit-card
- information or crash sites (think of the ubiquitous DDoS attacks).
- "Scrapers" (another 5 percent) refer to bots that copy content from other
- sites and post it on their own, to get search-engine traffic. Altogether,
- the robotic ne'er-do-wells cited above constitutes 31 percent of all web
- traffic. The other 20 percent is the search engines themselves, the
- Googles and Bings of the Interwebbed world, whose servers work
- 'round-the-clock to index the Internet for our browsing pleasure.
-
- And sorry to scare you up there, advertisers. "The company says that
- typically, only 49 percent of a web siteÆs visitors are actual humans and
- that the non-human traffic is mostly invisible because it is not shown by
- analytics software," reports ZDNet. Traffic numbers apparently are only
- slightly inflated by non-human hits. The comment sections, however, may be
- more affected: 2 percent of all Internet traffic is from comment spammers.
- Which is actually sort of gratifying for anyone who's had to deal with
- angry commenters: dismissing them as just cranky robots isn't the worst
- coping strategy.
-
-
-
- Watch Out Facebook, Twitter. Here Comes Pinterest
-
-
- Christina Gomez has carefully displayed her dream cribs, rockers and
- mobiles on Pinterest, the increasingly popular online bulletin board.
- Never mind that she doesn't have a baby.
-
- "Ah, Pinterest - where I dress my unborn children and decorate my imaginary
- mansion," the San Antonio political consultant said - on Twitter - when
- asked about the website.
-
- Gomez is addicted. And she's not alone. The social site where users can
- "pin" images and follow others' collections has surged in recent months to
- become the 16th most-visited site in the United States, according to the
- Web information company Alexa. That's a higher rank than CNN.com.
-
- Pinterest CEO Ben Silbermann, who grew up in Iowa collecting bugs and
- stamps, said on Tuesday that his goal is to help people discover things
- that they didn't know they wanted. He said there are plenty of people
- trying to tell you what you want via billboards, catalogs or Internet ads.
-
- "But no one has really made a lot of progress toward building a place you
- want to go every day to discover things that feel like they were
- hand-picked just for you, and that's what I can hope we can do,"
- Silbermann told a packed ballroom at the South by Southwest (SXSW)
- Interactive conference in Austin.
-
- The self-deprecating Silbermann, who has rarely spoken publicly about the
- site he co-founded in fall 2009, described having "catastrophically small
- numbers" at first. Nine months in, there were fewer than 10,000 people on
- it, he said. He sought feedback from early users, giving some his cell
- phone number. And he didn't quit.
-
- Silbermann, who spoke repeatedly of wanting his site to be beautiful and
- display beautiful collections, said one goal of his was to create a
- service that offered timelessness in an era when people were obsessed with
- real-time sites like Twitter.
-
- "If something is your favorite book, it's no less your favorite book 72
- hours from now or a year from now or five years from now or 10 years from
- now," he said. "It still says something about who you were then and who
- you want other people to know you as."
-
- For Gomez, who lives in a 900-square-foot home in Texas and is about to
- move to smaller digs in Washington, D.C., Pinterest allows her to collect
- things - like USB drives shaped like teddy bears - without taking up
- precious physical space.
-
- Like other users, she has organized her pictures into boards with titles
- like "Sewing Projects," "Gift Ideas" and "For the new house. She has used
- it to post pictures of clothes she already owns and to learn to cook with
- a crock pot.
-
- The growth of Pinterest has been fueled primarily by women, including those
- planning their weddings, said Robert Quigley, who teaches new media and
- multimedia at the University of Texas. The draw is the site's simplicity,
- he said.
-
- "The rise of Pinterest has been absolutely incredible - it just came out of
- nowhere," Quigley said. "It's so visual, it's easy to use and simple - yet
- complex enough to allow you to organize the way you want."
-
- Pinterest isn't only for women.
-
- Guillaume Driscoll, 30, a design student at the California College of the
- Arts in San Francisco, said he and his girlfriend both use the site. Before
- he joined a few months ago, he was interested in clothes, but "not on a
- level of some of my lady friends." He's seen that change as he's pinned
- more clothes, like colorful socks and a grey cashmere sport coat from J.
- Crew.
-
- "Now, I'm starting to think about it more. What is my style? What does my
- style say about me?" said Driscoll, who was visiting Austin for SXSW.
-
- Silbermann said it makes sense for people to use Pinterest to explore
- topics that lifestyle magazines focus on - design, home decorating, cooking
- and fitness - but he's also seeing new uses like political satire (say,
- Mitt Romney's fake yacht collection). Museums are using Pinterest to post
- art collections. Some users are posting travel guides to cities.
-
- "Every day, literally, we see at least one board where we just couldn't
- have imagined how people would use it and to me, that's really exciting,"
- Silbermann said.
-
-
-
- Rumor Says GoogleÆs Nexus Tablet on Its Way With A $149 Price Tag
-
-
- Apple fans are lined up the world over today to pick up the latest and
- greatest iPad tabet, but for Android users, there could be an interesting
- alternative on the horizon.
-
- Rumors have been swirling that Google and Asus are preparing a tablet in
- GoogleÆs Nexus line of devices for some time. Now, new information from
- Android and Me claims the tab could be available as soon as May and be
- priced as low as $149. That would make it one of the cheapest tablets on
- the market, and well below even the newly-discounted iPad 2, which is now
- on shelves for $399.
-
- While GoogleÆs Eric Schmidt previously said Google intended to "market a
- tablet of the highest quality," as Boy Genius Report notes, that may not
- mean the most technically capable. Instead, the Android and Me rumor
- focuses on a cheaper tablet more in line with AmazonÆs Kindle Fire, with
- a 7-inch screen and lacking the Tegra 3 processor that was originally in
- AsusÆ MeMo tablet on which the Nexus was rumored to be based.
-
- The rumor claims that Asus has scrapped the $249 MeMo altogether in favor
- of the Nexus tab, and with the higher price tag goes a quad-core
- processor for the tablet. Instead, Android and Me says to expect a
- dual-core processor (which, to be fair, is whatÆs available in the iPad 2)
- and speculates it could be QualcommÆs Snapdragon rather than NvidiaÆs
- Tegra 3. Android and Me cites an anonymous source it says are high in the
- Asus supply chain, and that person claims the tablet is "a done deal."
-
- Without knowing too much of the greater details of GoogleÆs plan, the
- rumors of a smaller, less technically proficient but cheaper Google tablet
- are very interesting. Amazon has proven with the Kindle Fire that thereÆs
- a low-price tablet market out there that is only just being exploited, and
- it was with that price tag that Amazon was able to grab the no. 2 sales
- position behind the iPad in the fourth quarter of 2011. But at the same
- time, Amazon sold a few million Kindle Fires during the period, while
- Apple moved 15.4 million iPads in the same period. And Amazon is selling
- Kindle Fires at a loss with the expectation of selling lots of content to
- tablet owners through its online retail portal, so one wonders what such
- a low price tag might cost Google.
-
- Still, it seems the latest thinking on how to fight back against the iPad
- is to address markets Apple isnÆt, and that seems to be working for
- Amazon. Google could definitely be competitive against Amazon going
- toe-to-toe with its Android rival, and that might be more successful than
- attempting to go all David on AppleÆs Goliath. That does nothing to
- address the fact that Apple continues to tower over the rest of the
- tablet market, though. WeÆll have to wait and see how GoogleÆs game plan
- develops.
-
-
-
- Radio's 'This American Life' Retracts Apple Story
-
-
- The public radio program "This American Life" on Friday retracted a story
- about what a monologist said he found while investigating Apple operations
- in China, citing "numerous fabrications."
-
- The show's Friday broadcast will detail inconsistencies in the highly
- popular Jan. 6 episode that was an excerpt from writer Mike Daisey's
- critically acclaimed one-man show "The Agony and the Ecstasy of Steve
- Jobs," which currently is at the Public Theater in New York.
-
- "We're retracting the story because we can't vouch for its truth," Ira
- Glass, host of "This American Life," said in a letter posted on the show's
- website. Spokeswoman Emily Condon said Glass wouldn't take calls for
- comment until after Friday's episode airs.
-
- In his program, Daisey describes meeting workers who put in very long
- hours and were forced to do crippling, repetitive motions at factories
- that make Apple products in China.
-
- But "This American Life" says Rob Schmitz, a China correspondent for the
- public radio show "Marketplace," located and interviewed Daisey's Chinese
- interpreter, who disputed much of the artist's claims.
-
- "This American Life" said in its statement that staffers asked Daisey for
- his interpreter's contact information while fact-checking the story and he
- said the cellphone number he had for her didn't work anymore and he had no
- way to reach her.
-
- "At that point, we should've killed the story," Glass said in the
- statement. "But other things Daisey told us about Apple's operations in
- China checked out, and we saw no reason to doubt him."
-
- Daisey posted on his web site Friday that he stands by his work and that
- what he does is theater, not journalism.
-
- "'This American Life' is essentially a journalistic - not a theatrical -
- enterprise, and as such it operates under a different set of rules and
- expectations. But this is my only regret," Daisey's letter said.
-
- Apple has been rebutting Daisey's allegations for months, to little
- effect. An Apple spokeswoman declined comment Friday.
-
- The original episode, "Mr. Daisey and the Apple Factory," has become the
- most popular podcast in the history of "This American Life" with nearly
- 890,000 downloads.
-
- In his show, Daisey splices career milestones of Steve Jobs and the
- transformation of Apple from a David into a Goliath with more personal
- stories about his own connection to the computer maker.
-
- He has said that when he saw four photos posted online taken by workers at
- a Chinese factory to test the iPhone but mistakenly not erased, he
- suddenly realized people, not robots, were putting the sleek devices
- together.
-
- In interviews and on stage, Daisey has said he traveled to the Chinese
- industrial zone of Shenzhen and interviewed hundreds of workers from
- Foxconn Technology Group, the world's largest electronics contract
- manufacturer.
-
- "I talk to people whose joints in their hands have disintegrated from
- working on the line, doing the same motion hundreds and hundreds of
- thousands of times. It's like carpal tunnel on a scale we can scarcely
- imagine," he said while performing the show in New York in October.
-
- While the piece specifically targets Apple, most of what Daisey said he
- discovered is applicable to many high-tech manufacturers. Daisey has
- performed the new monologue for some 50,000 people from Seattle to
- Washington, D.C., and it is now at The Public Theater until Sunday. Daisey
- was expected to take the show on tour, but its future is now in doubt.
-
- In a statement, The Public Theater said the show would be performed in New
- York as scheduled and stood by what it called "a powerful work of art."
-
- "Mike is an artist, not a journalist," the statement said. "Nevertheless,
- we wish he had been more precise with us and our audiences about what was
- and wasn't his personal experience in the piece."
-
-
-
- Farewell, Encyclopedia Britannica in Print
-
-
- The set my parents owned was packed around all over the country, from one
- military base to another. Just how high the high shelf was in my childhood
- depended on how many volumes had to be stacked to reach.
-
- One volume served as a hard surface for an entire summer as I desperately
- tried to perfect pencil-drawn people. Another was consulted when I first
- heard of leukemia and thought I might have contracted it. Another, still,
- helped me get the information needed for an essay on the Vietnam War. The
- school library had a set just like mine. So did most of my friends.
-
- According to The Upshot, Encyclopedia Britannica has announced it will no
- longer offer its print edition once its current inventory is gone. The
- decision marks the end of a 244-year era in which seemingly everyone had
- their own heavy set. The world has turned to other sources of information
- now - mostly digital - and has left the need to consult the massive,
- hardbound encyclopedias behind.
-
- Britannica has moved on as well. The printed volumes don't account for
- 1 percent of its sales anymore. Instead, it offers a $70 a year
- subscription to its online version, which it plans to ramp up in the
- future as it faces competition from other companies' free services, and
- it is planning to offer social connections on the site.
-
- In a way, the idea of never having to move a 129-pound, 32-volume set
- around or facing the potential of dropping one of those books on your toe
- is welcome. Never having to page through endless amounts of information just
- to find the one piece you're looking for isn't bad at all, nor is the
- irritation of realizing the volume that contains the information you need
- has been separated from the rest of the set.
-
- But still, the end of the era brings nostalgia. It was a part of days gone
- by just as much as merry-go-rounds and console televisions. Farewell, big
- set of books. You served us well.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
-
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