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- TidBITS#325/22-Apr-96
- =====================
-
- Lots of hot news in this issue: Apple announces new Macs, Adobe
- announces PageMill 2.0, Specular announces 3D Web Workshop,
- Connectix ships the Color QuickCam, and you can download betas
- of Eudora Pro 3.0 and Internet Assistant for Microsoft Word 6.
- This issue also brings you information on a few compatibility
- problems with the System 7.5.3 update and a follow-up to Adam's
- recent article about Internet chain mail.
-
- This issue of TidBITS sponsored in part by:
- * APS Technologies -- 800/443-4199 -- <sales@apstech.com>
- Makers of hard drives, tape drives, and neat SCSI accessories.
- For APS price lists, email: <aps-prices@tidbits.com>
- * Northwest Nexus -- 206/455-3505 -- <http://www.halcyon.com/>
- Providing access to the global Internet. <info@halcyon.com>
- * Power Computing -- 800/375-7693 -- <info@powercc.com>
- Now shipping... The Award-Winning First MacOS Compatible!
- Press comments! <http://www.powercc.com/News/quotes.html>
- * America Online -- 800/827-6364 -- <http://www.aol.com/>
- The world's largest provider of online services.
- Give Back to the Net -- <http://www.aol.com/give/>
- * EarthLink Network -- 800/395-8425 -- <sales@earthlink.net>
- Providers of direct Internet access for Macintosh users.
- For eWorld refugees: no setup fee! <http://www.earthlink.net/>
- * DealBITS: Shake and bake deals!
- <http://www.tidbits.com/dealbits/> -- <dealbits@tidbits.com>
-
- Copyright 1990-1996 Adam & Tonya Engst. Details at end of issue.
- Information: <info@tidbits.com> Comments: <editors@tidbits.com>
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Topics:
- MailBITS/22-Apr-96
- Connectix Ships Color QuickCam
- Updating for the 7.5.3 Update
- As The Web Turns
- Breaking the Chain
-
- <ftp://ftp.tidbits.com/pub/tidbits/issues/1996/TidBITS#325_22-Apr-96.etx>
-
-
- MailBITS/22-Apr-96
- ------------------
- It's been an interesting few days. Last Thursday, my main Mac - a
- Centris 660AV - started to experience weird errors and crashes. I
- tried basic fixes first, repairing minor problems with Norton Disk
- Doctor and rebuilding desktops, but the problems worsened. Around
- midnight I gave up on recovering the drive, and focused on
- recovering the one file that would have been hell to recreate -
- the third part of the Bookmark Managers article. At 1:40 AM, I
- managed to recover the file, so I went to bed. Sleep merely
- refreshed me for Friday, when I tediously reformatted and tested
- the drive with different formatting applications, only to confirm
- my 1 GB drive was toast. A quick call to APS late on Friday
- afternoon started a 2 GB drive (and a matching 2 GB drive and CD-R
- burner I need for the next edition of Internet Starter Kit for
- Macintosh) on their way to me for Saturday delivery. The drives
- arrived as promised, and I spent Sunday reformatting,
- repartitioning, and restoring from our nightly DAT backup with
- Retrospect. Luckily, all of those things take a long time but
- almost no attention, so I enjoyed the nice weather on Sunday, and
- (in the first major wildlife sighting since moving) met a bear
- while running in the woods behind our house. I'd like to thank the
- folks at APS for service above and beyond the call of duty, and
- also the folks at Dantz for Retrospect, which saved the day once
- again. [ACE]
-
-
- **More Bookmarks than Books** -- I've written another part to the
- bookmark managers mini-series that began in TidBITS-323_ and
- continued in TidBITS-324_. We didn't have space in this issue to
- include Part III, but we do plan to run the article next week.
- [ACE]
-
-
- **Eudora Pro 3.0 Beta Available** -- Qualcomm has released a
- public beta of Eudora Pro 3.0 for owners of Eudora Pro 2.x. I've
- been using earlier test releases for a month or so now, and find
- the added features extremely welcome. My favorites include much-
- enhanced filters that can automatically forward or reply to email,
- a Reply With menu item that makes boilerplate replies easier, a
- completely new rich text editing environment that's not limited to
- 32K (and supports drag & drop), and the capability to launch URLs
- (which display in blue) by double-clicking them. Other features
- abound, including multiple signatures, an improved Address Book,
- an improved Find dialog, and a configurable toolbar. As usual,
- some of the best parts of Eudora are the little touches, such as
- the feature that lets you can Option-click any cell in a mailbox
- to select all messages matching the value of that cell (useful for
- selecting all message from a certain person or with a certain
- subject). I also like being able to set mailboxes to group
- subjects, which is essential for handling high-volume mailing
- lists. If you use Eudora Pro 2.x and don't mind using stable beta
- software, take a look. [ACE]
-
- <http://www.qualcomm.com/ProdTech/quest/mac30B.html>
-
-
- **Apple Unveils Four New Power Macs, Upgrade Cards** -- Today
- Apple unveiled four new PowerPC 604-based Power Macs: the
- 9500/150, 8500/150, and 8500/132 (essentially faster versions of
- current 9500 and 8500 models), plus the Power Mac 7600/120. Apple
- is gearing the Power Mac 7600/120 at business and education users,
- and claims the machine runs up to twice as fast as the current
- 7500/100. All these new machines support processor speeds up to
- 200 MHz. Prices range from $4,800 for the 9500/150 down to $3,000
- for the 7600/120. Apple also introduced a 120 MHz version of the
- Power Mac 7200 starting at $1,900.
-
- Apple announced it expects to have 120 MHz and 132 MHz PowerPC
- 604-based upgrade cards for the Power Mac 7500/100, as well as
- logic board upgrades for the Power Mac 8500 and 7200 by this May,
- although the logic board upgrades will not come with a processor
- card, which presumably must be purchased separately. [GD]
-
- <http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1996/q3/
- 960422.pr.rel.pmfamily.html>
-
-
- **New All-In-One Macs for Education** -- Last week Apple announced
- the Power Macintosh 5260/100 and 5400/120, which are specifically
- targeted at the education market. Both systems are all-in-one
- designs with a built-in monitor, quad-speed CD-ROM drive, 16 MB of
- RAM, and a PowerPC 603e processor. The 5400/120 also features PCI
- slots, a video input card and video-out connector, and an
- expansion bay for an optional TV tuner. The 5260/100 is available
- now for $1,700; the 5400/120 should be available in mid-May for
- about $2,300. [GD]
-
- <http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1996/q3/
- 960415.pr.rel.powermacs.html>
-
-
- **Apple PC Compatibility Cards for Power Macs** -- Apple has
- officially announced its next generation of PC Compatibility
- cards, designed to provide Windows and MS-DOS capability to PCI
- Power Macs. Two versions will be available: the 12-inch card
- sports a 100 MHz Pentium, and the 7-inch version uses an "entry
- level" 100 MHz 586 chip (a third-party x86-compatible chip) that's
- roughly equivalent to a 75 MHz Pentium in performance. Both cards
- incorporate an ATI Mach64 video controller, game port, 16-bit
- Sound Blaster Pro support, and 8 MB RAM (upgradable to 72 MB).
- Prices for the stand-alone cards will range from $800 to $1,050;
- Apple is also introducing a Power Mac 7200/120 PC Compatible with
- either a 586 or Pentium card for $2,600 to $2,800 (a substantially
- better value). Both the cards and the 7200-based systems should be
- available in June. [GD]
-
- <http://product.info.apple.com/pr/press.releases/1996/q3/
- 960422.pr.rel.pccompat.html>
-
-
- **Free Email, but not for Us** -- D. E. Shaw & Co., L.P. today
- launched Juno, a nationwide free email service sponsored by
- advertiser dollars, claiming the model used by free TV and radio
- stations ought to work on the Internet. The custom software and
- service will be free to the user; the software will display ads
- tailored to the user's "member profile" while he or she reads and
- writes mail, and while messages are transferred via modem. (Users
- who aren't within a local call of about 200 dialup numbers will be
- able to use an 800 number at no cost.) The new service currently
- lacks file attachment capability, but more importantly, it lacks a
- Macintosh version of the free software, which is required to
- access the service. The company claims it will consider developing
- a Mac version if there's sufficient interest. D. E. Shaw & Co --
- 800/654-5866 -- <charlesa@juno.com> [MHA]
-
- <http://www.juno.com/>
-
-
- Connectix Ships Color QuickCam
- ------------------------------
- by Mark H. Anbinder, News Editor <mha@tidbits.com>
-
- Almost two years after bringing video input capability within
- financial reach of ordinary Mac users with its attractive,
- spherical QuickCam video camera, Connectix recently upped the ante
- with the new Color QuickCam, available shortly from dealers and
- mail-order firms for about $230. The new camera sports the
- familiar spherical eyeball form, and connects to a Macintosh via
- both a serial port and an ADB (keyboard and mouse) port. The ADB
- connection brings power to the camera; the connector has a pass-
- through port so users won't lose an ADB port. Connectix is
- offering a $30 rebate to anyone purchasing a QuickCam through
- 31-Jul-96 (the camera currently comes with a rebate form).
-
- <http://www.connectix.com/>
-
- The new unit's color CCD (charged couple device) array can take
- color still images as large as 640 by 480 pixels at up to 24-bit
- color depth and provides higher frame rates than the original
- QuickCam: up to 15 frames per second (fps) at 320 by 240
- resolution and 24 fps at 160 by 120 resolution (even faster on
- high-end Power Macs). Connectix engineers developed a new video
- compression technology to enable up to 16:1 real-time compression
- of the video stream being sent through the serial connection to
- the computer, so even mid-range Macs can handle video streams
- containing three times the raw data of similarly sized greyscale
- video images. Still, Connectix recommends a 68040-based Macintosh
- or a Power Macintosh for use with the Color QuickCam, since a
- slower computer may have trouble handling a color video stream.
-
- Color-capable versions of the QuickPICT and QuickMovie utilities
- developed for the original QuickCam come with the Color QuickCam.
- The new QuickPICT, intended for taking still snapshots, includes a
- new Auto Capture feature that's useful for automatic updating of
- images on a Web page, security spot checks, or similar tasks.
- (Visit the Connectix Web site to see a color snapshot of the
- obligatory company fish tank, updated once a minute.)
-
- <http://www.connectix.com/connect/fishcam.html>
-
- QuickPICT also has a timed snapshot feature with visual and
- audible countdowns, and the ability to expose a still image for a
- user-selectable number of seconds. [QuickPICT is also scriptable,
- but just barely. -Geoff]
-
- The QuickMovie utility, for recording video streams to disk, lets
- users set frame size and rates to optimize the video quality of
- the finished product. It stores video in QuickTime movie format,
- requiring between 1 and 2 MB of disk space for ten seconds of 160
- by 120 video. The new version of QuickMovie offers digital effects
- such as image mirroring and flipping so users can change the video
- orientation while recording.
-
- [The new versions of QuickPICT and QuickMovie appear to work with
- the original QuickCam, but there's no word on when (or how)
- Connectix might make the software available to current QuickCam
- owners. -Geoff]
-
- Connectix says the new camera works well with their existing video
- software products, QuickCards and VideoPhone. QuickCards sells for
- around $30 and creates self-running multimedia presentations for
- use as floppy-based greeting cards. VideoPhone, about $60 by
- itself (also available as a bundle with an original QuickCam or a
- Color QuickCam), offers network videoconferencing for local
- network or Internet use. The software supports AppleTalk and
- TCP/IP protocols, and unlike Cornell University's free CU-SeeMe
- utility (or White Pine's new commercial version of the same
- program), has broadcast capability without the need for a Unix
- server. Both VideoPhone and White Pine's Enhanced CU-SeeMe have a
- white board feature for collaboration.
-
- <http://goliath.wpine.com/cu-seeme.html>
- <http://cu-seeme.cornell.edu/>
-
- The Color QuickCam lacks audio capture. Connectix included a
- microphone in the original QuickCam so even users of fairly low-
- end Macs could produce QuickTime movies complete with sound, but
- adding additional audio data to the Color QuickCam's serial stream
- impeded the smooth flow of video. Since most current Macintosh
- models have built-in or included microphones (or at least
- microphone ports), Connectix decided not to compromise video
- quality to provide separate audio input.
-
- As with the original QuickCam, the Color QuickCam is available for
- Macintosh first. A Windows version should be ready in about a
- month; happily we Mac users needn't wait.
-
- Connectix -- 800/950-5880 -- 415/571-5100 -- 415/571-5195 (fax)
- <info@connectix.com>
-
-
- Updating for the 7.5.3 Update
- -----------------------------
- by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
-
- In TidBITS-318_ Geoff reported on System 7.5.3, and in TidBITS-
- 322_ and TidBITS-323_, I talked about how you might obtain the
- update. Reports I've seen suggest once you've successfully
- installed 7.5.3 you won't encounter many compatibility problems.
- Even so, users of Connectix's RAM Doubler and Speed Doubler, as
- well as Symantec's AntiVirus for Macintosh may save themselves a
- great deal of hair-pulling by checking out the rest of this
- article.
-
-
- **Speed Doubler** -- Speed Doubler users running 7.5.3 must update
- to version 1.1.2, which is available via Connectix's Web site. If
- you need a localized version, note that Connectix should start
- posting localized versions later this week.
-
- <http://www.connectix.com/connectix/sdchoice.html>
- <ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/info-mac/cfg/speed-doubler-112-updt.hqx>
-
-
- **RAM Doubler** -- If you run RAM Doubler on a 68K-based PowerBook
- (but not any PowerBook using a PowerPC chip) the machine is likely
- to experience Type 8 errors upon awakening from sleep. To avoid
- this particular problem, either disable RAM Doubler or try
- installing MacsBug 6.5.3, which - according to Connectix - blocks
- the problem.
-
- In case you were wondering, MacsBug is a low-level programming
- debugger. It won't fix bugs, but programmers use it to isolate
- bugs and there's no harm in non-programmers using it. To install
- MacsBug, place it in your System Folder and restart. After that,
- other than a "Debugger Installed" message in the Welcome to
- Macintosh startup screen, you shouldn't be able to tell that
- MacsBug is installed - it doesn't have a control panel, put icons
- in your menubar, or anything like that. However, if you crash, you
- may be "dumped" into MacsBug, a black and white display with lots
- of numbers and low-level programming stuff. To recover from the
- crash, try these techniques, in this order:
-
- 1. Type g and press return. (G stands for Go.) In a few instances,
- this may return you to what you were doing.
-
- 2. If g doesn't work, type es. (ES stands for Exit to Shell - it's
- like Command-Option-Escape in System 7.x.) This might return you
- to the Finder. If it does, quickly save any unsaved work in other
- applications and restart normally.
-
- 3. If es doesn't work, type rs. (RS stands for Restart.) This
- should restart the computer, though you won't get to save any
- unsaved work.
-
- 4. If rs doesn't work, do whatever you normally do when your Mac
- freezes (you might press a reset button or Command-Control-Power).
-
- <ftp://ftp.support.apple.com/pub/apple_sw_updates/US/mac/utils/
- MacsBug_6.5.3.hqx>
-
- Getting back on topic, if you have RAM Doubler with System 7.5.3
- on a 68040-based Macintosh (but not the 660AV or 840AV) you are
- likely to crash while copying files in the Finder. MacsBug won't
- help with this problem, though Connectix plans to fix all these
- problems in the next release of RAM Doubler.
-
- <http://www.connectix.com/connectix/New_Stuff.html>
-
-
- **SAM** -- If you update to 7.5.3, run SAM, and receive an error
- message saying SAM can't find its Virus Definitions file, you can
- solve the problem by updating to SAM 4.0.8. (Symantec recommends
- 4.0.8 for anyone running 7.5.2 or 7.5.3). A patcher is available
- at Symantec's FTP site.
-
- <ftp://ftp.symantec.com/public/mac/sam/SAM408.faq>
- <ftp://ftp.symantec.com/public/mac/sam/SAM_4.0.8_Patcher.sea.bin>
-
-
- If the 7.5.3 Update has become an important part of your life, and
- you want to stay abreast of each and every incompatibility, you
- might monitor Julian Daniel's 7.5.3 Tips site as well as Macworld
- News's running list of 7.5.3 incompatibilities, by Roxanne
- Gentile.
-
- <http://www.norstar.on.ca/System-753/tips.html>
- <http://www.macworld.com/exclusive/753patches.html>
-
-
- As The Web Turns
- ----------------
- by Tonya Engst <tonya@tidbits.com>
-
- I've been slightly remiss in reporting on Web authoring stuff
- lately, so I want to mention a few noteworthy recent events and
- also share some of the information in Adobe's official
- announcement of PageMill 2.0.
-
-
- **Tables for BBEdit** -- If you use BBEdit for Web authoring and
- wish to create tables, don't miss Stephen Marshall's $5 shareware
- BBEdit HTML Tables version 1.0.1, which brings rather good table-
- making abilities to BBEdit. Although the extension doesn't add a
- visual way to set up tables, it does facilitate typing table tags
- and it can also convert existing delimited text to tables.
-
- <ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/info-mac/text/bbe/bbedit-html-tables-101.hqx>
-
-
- **PageSpinner** -- Another recent shareware entry, the $25
- PageSpinner by Optima System, is well worth a look, especially if
- you want to learn HTML in a friendly and reasonably robust
- environment. I've almost completed a review, but - because Optima
- System may update PageSpinner in the next week or so, I haven't
- finished.
-
- <http://www.algonet.se/~optima/pagespinner.html>
- <ftp://mirrors.aol.com/pub/info-mac/text/html/page-spinner-104.hqx>
-
-
- **PageMill 2.0** -- In the commercial arena, the big news is
- Adobe's announcement of PageMill 2.0, due to ship in July for both
- Macintosh and Windows, with similar feature sets in both versions,
- though the Windows version will sport a Windows interface. If all
- goes as planned, version 2.0 will fix many problems (see my review
- of PageMill 1.0 in TidBITS-305_). In particular, the new version
- will support reasonably sophisticated tables within its WYSIWYG
- interface, including a toolbar button for quickly dragging out a
- table's dimensions.
-
- Adobe has identified serious HTML geeks as an audience that -
- although perhaps not their largest - is certainly their most
- vocal, and they have eliminated a number of technical annoyances,
- such as the <BR> problem and much (though not all) of PageMill's
- tendency to rewrite existing HTML code, hopefully eliminating the
- problematic aspects of this behavior. The HTML exported by
- PageMill will also be more nicely formatted, making it easier to
- work with in a more powerful, text-based program, such as BBEdit
- or Nisus Writer.
-
- Other new features include spell checking, search-and-replace, a
- source code view for directly editing HTML, support for Netscape
- plug-ins (help with coding for them and using them in Preview
- mode), drag & drop for sounds (if you drag a sound file into a
- PageMill document, it will be linked into the document and
- converted to .au format), and more control over image alignment.
- PageMill 2.0 should also offer the ability to embed text (such as
- JavaScript) that cannot be modified while in the WYSIWYG editing
- view. PageMill may come with a few converters for common word
- processing programs, and - if you drag it in - PageMill will be
- able to convert a range from an Excel worksheet into an HTML
- table.
-
- If you purchase PageMill 1.0 on 22-Apr-96 or later, and register,
- you will be eligible for a free copy of PageMill 2.0.
-
- <http://www.adobe.com/>
-
-
- **3D Web Workshop** -- Graphically oriented Web authors may be
- especially interested in Specular's announcement of 3D Web
- Workshop. Scheduled to ship on 15-May-96, 3D Web Workshop will
- integrate features available in Specular's existing products
- LogoMotion and TextureScape with PageMill (presumably version 1.0,
- initially). The integration will help Web authors create and use
- animated logos and backgrounds for both background tiling and
- coloring other Web-ready graphics. 3D Web Workshop will also
- include WebHands, a large collection of Web-ready graphics. 3D Web
- Workshop should retail for $399, though if you own PageMill you
- can purchase a light version for $249.
-
- <http://www.specular.com/hot-stuff/press_releases/041596.ww_announce.html>
-
-
- **Internet Assistant** -- Microsoft has released a public beta of
- Internet Assistant for Word 6 for Macintosh (the beta only works
- with the English language version of Word). Given that I don't
- have Word 6 installed, I'm unlikely to spend time with the beta.
- However, I did see a demo of a slightly pre-beta version of the
- product, and the Microsoft employees who demoed the product
- emphasized that they see it as a way to make Web pages within the
- Microsoft Office environment, making it most handy for people
- already familiar with Office. In the demo, Internet Assistant
- appeared to have a strong and reasonably well thought-out feature
- set.
-
- What twisted round and round in my mind as I drove home from the
- demo, though, was not the fact that Microsoft appeared to have
- done quite a good job on Internet Assistant. Instead, I found
- myself thinking about the fact that - not surprisingly - Microsoft
- has integrated Internet Explorer extensions into the product and
- has done nothing to help users differentiate the currently
- uncommon Explorer extensions from more commonly used proper HTML
- tags and Netscape extensions. Although this makes it easier for
- Microsoft to pitch the value of their products to large sites
- running intranets (internal miniature Internets) and standardizing
- on Word 6 along with Internet Explorer, it only adds to end-user
- confusion about which HTML options are likely to work in which
- browsers. The fact the people who gave me the demo seemed far more
- excited about intranets than concerned about end user confusion on
- the Internet suggests to me that Microsoft doesn't yet fully
- understand what the Internet is all about.
-
- <http://www.microsoft.com/msword/internet/ia/macia/>
-
-
- Breaking the Chain
- ------------------
- by Adam C. Engst <ace@tidbits.com>
-
- My article on chain mail in TidBITS-324_ elicited more responses
- than I'd anticipated. They fell into a couple of categories that I
- found interesting, and I thought I'd share some of the information
- with you.
-
-
- **Creative Responses** -- Several people wrote in with creative
- responses to chain mail messages. One group keeps a list of ten
- volunteers who are willing to receive chain mail messages from
- anyone within that organization who can't bring themselves to
- break the chain of a "bad luck" message. Needless to say, those
- ten volunteers delete the messages to ensure that the chain goes
- no further, and the people who forward the mail don't worry about
- a spate of bad luck.
-
- There's also a clever piece of chain mail that frees "its
- recipients from the need to send future chain-letters." I have no
- idea how effective it is, but it should confuse the superstitious
- types (what happens when you have one chain mail note promising
- good luck if you send it along, and another promising bad luck if
- you do?).
-
- A number of people requested my boilerplate response to chain mail
- messages I receive. My impression is that many people feel
- uncomfortable informing the senders of chain mail of what they've
- done wrong, especially since people who forward chain mail seldom
- act out of spite. This bit of text is no masterpiece of prose, but
- feel free to use it as a reply to anyone who sends you chain mail.
-
- "By forwarding that message to me, you have participated in
- electronic chain mail, which not only irritates everyone involved
- but is also an abuse of the Internet. You have allowed someone to
- exploit you for their purposes. Even worse, you have helped them
- exploit even more people and waste more time, bandwidth, disk
- space, and money. It's bad enough to be a victim, but it's worse
- to become an accessory. If everyone forwarded every piece of chain
- mail to the number of people requested, normal email delivery
- would grind to a halt, thanks to the exponential growth of chain
- mail. Please do not ever forward chain mail again."
-
- Finally, Mark Horne <mhorne@ucla.edu> comments:
- For chain letters that involve sending money via the U.S. Mail
- (which is illegal, and commonly referred to as a "ponzi" scheme),
- you can alert the United States Postal Service by sending a hard
- copy of the offending document to:
-
- Postal Inspector In Charge
- United States Postal Inspection Service
- Operations Support Group
- 222 South Riverside Plaza
- Suite 1250
- Chicago IL 60606-6100
-
- They'll investigate, send warning letters or take legal action as
- appropriate, and send you a letter explaining what transpired (it
- may take a long time, however).
-
- <http://www.usps.gov/websites/depart/inspect/chainlet.htm>
-
-
- **What about worthy causes?** Several readers wrote in to say they
- felt chain mail about worthy causes was justified in some
- instances. I feel there is no cause worthy enough to justify
- abusing the Internet via chain mail. Those that use chain mail to
- promote a cause risk far greater damage to their reputations.
- Using chain mail for worthy causes suffers from two basic
- problems.
-
- First, even if the information in a piece of chain mail was
- accurate at one time, situations change. The classic piece of
- chain mail is the one that requests that postcards be sent to
- Craig Shergold, a dying boy in England. Guess what? Craig was
- cured, he's quite a bit older now, and the postcards keep coming,
- overwhelming the local post office. Craig was a classic good
- cause, but chain mail turned his wish for postcards into a
- nightmare.
-
- <http://www.eff.org/papers/eegtti/eeg_81.html#SEC82>
-
- Second, there are without a doubt a ton of good causes. If they
- all decided to use chain mail in order to raise money or gain
- support, the Internet would be swamped. Then there's the issue of
- differences in opinion - your good cause may be my anathema, and
- vice versa. Of course, once a good cause proved successful, how
- far behind would the con artists and scam mongers be? The only way
- to deal with chain mail is to stop it whenever it rears its head.
-
- Worthy causes can use other tools available on the Internet to
- garner support. For instance, the Web is ideal for disseminating
- information. You can update a Web page with the latest information
- so what's disseminated is never inaccurate. A Web page can also
- provide source information so people can check for themselves and
- decide if they agree with you. You can even collect names for an
- online petition on a Web form.
-
-
- **Identifying and Analyzing Chain Mail** -- I'd like to leave you
- with a few bits of advice on how to identify and analyze chain
- mail.
-
- * Look for specifics, especially a cut-off date, a court case
- number, or an FCC docket number. Most chain mail doesn't contain
- much specific information, because otherwise people would see that
- it was a hoax.
-
- * Look for an authoritative source. Who is the message from
- originally? Who forwarded it to you? (Be wary if you don't know
- the person who forwarded it.) Remember, it's easy to forge email.
- Also, if the message doesn't come with an email address or Web
- page from which you can get more information, it's likely to be
- chain mail.
-
- <http://www.crew.umich.edu/~chymes/newusers/Think.html>
- <http://www.utopia.com/mailings/rre/chain.letter.petitions.html>
-
- * Verify the situation. Recently there was a furor over a proposed
- newsgroup called rec.music.white-power. The first chain mail
- message I saw exhorting people to vote against the group didn't
- contain the call for votes (CFV) and without the CFV, there was no
- way to tell when the voting would end. Research in DejaNews
- revealed the voting had been over for almost a month, but the
- results hadn't been released. You must take everything with a
- grain of salt, but the more information you have, the better.
-
- <http://www.dejanews.com/>
-
- * Finally, don't be gullible. Just because something appears in an
- email message doesn't mean it's true or has any bearing on
- reality. Think before you act and encourage others to do the same.
-
-
- $$
-
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- accuracy of articles. Caveat lector. Publication, product, and
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