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- Volume 7, Issue 8 Atari Online News, Etc. February 18, 2005
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2005
- 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:
-
- Kevin Savetz
-
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
- log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
- and click on "Subscriptions".
- OR subscribe to A-ONE by sending a message to: dpj@atarinews.org
- and your address will be added to the distribution list.
- To unsubscribe from A-ONE, send the following: Unsubscribe A-ONE
- Please make sure that you include the same address that you used to
- subscribe from.
-
- To download A-ONE, set your browser bookmarks to one of the
- following sites:
-
- http://people.delphiforums.com/dpj/a-one.htm
- http://www.icwhen.com/aone/
- http://a1mag.atari.org
- Now available:
- http://www.atarinews.org
-
-
- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
- http://forums.delphiforums.com/atari/
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #0708 02/18/05
-
- ~ Netscape Beta Released ~ People Are Talking! ~ Enhanced StarOffice
- ~ New HypView Released! ~ MS Free Anti-Spyware! ~ College Web Auction
- ~ Tracking Students Out! ~ XBox Power Cord Recall ~ New IE This Summer!
- ~ Yahoo's Small Victory ~ New Matrix Is Coming! ~ New MyDoom Surfaces
-
- -* Atari Yesteryear - WAACE '90 *-
- -* Ultimate Encryption Method Cracked! *-
- -* Uncle Sam Gets "D-Plus" In Cyber Security! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- It's been another one of those "weeks that was". I don't know about you,
- but I'm ready for the good times to roll! Things have to improve
- eventually. This past week started last weekend when I got a call from one
- of my old college buddies. One of our close friends had passed away earlier
- in the day. Good ol' "L'il Buddy" - one of the nicest guys that you'd ever
- meet. We met 35 years ago in a small college dorm in Boston's Back Bay. We
- had a lot of adventures back in those days. I remember his wedding, the
- birth of his first kid, and numerous reunions over the years. Although we
- weren't in active contact over the years, we talked on occasion and
- reminisced about the good ole days a lot. At least I still have the
- memories.
-
- Speaking of memory lane, I finally have our first installment of some great
- memories of our Atari past. The first AtariFest that I ever attended was a
- WAACE show - the first one at the Reston Sheraton. What a weekend! So, I
- did some searching, especially through some of Michael Burkley's Suzy B's CD
- archives, and found some early reports that first appeared in Z*Net. Later
- in this issue, I've compiled those reports and brought them back. Reading
- those report of the show brought back a lot of terrific memories of that
- show. In the next few weeks, we'll have some more tidbits from the past.
- It's great to reminisce!
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- HypView 0.35.1 Released
-
-
- Gerhard Stoll has announced:
-
- Version 0.35.1 of the ST-Guide clone HypView has been released.
-
- Latest changes:
- - Save up to 10 favorite files using marker
- - Support for Pure C Help protocol / AC_HELP message
- - CTRL+SHIFT+V displays clipboard in a new window
- - Bug fixed: loading of skins should work again
- - Global window-cycling is configurable
- - File errors are displayed in an alert box
-
-
- http://www.xn--donz-epa.ch/atari/software/hypview.php
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE User Group Notes! - Meetings, Shows, and Info!
- """""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
- Tales of Yesteryear!
-
-
- /// 1990 WAACE ATARIFEST REPORTS
- --------------------------------
-
-
- I want to begin by saying that the WAACE show was one of the best Atari
- Shows I have attended. And I have been involved in or attended a lot
- of them. One of the things I enjoy most about Atari shows is you can
- get a first look at many new products. This show had them in abundance.
-
- Joppa Computer Products introduced "JuST the FAX!". This is a hardware/
- software product that allows you to send FAX messages using 4800 baud,
- Group 3 FAX transmission. It also doubles as an excellent 2400 baud
- modem that will work with any communication program, such as FLASH.
- The software will allow you to convert IMG, Degas, and ASCII files into
- a FAX file for transmission. There are printer drivers to allow you to
- convert Pagestream and Calamus files to FAX, allowing you to produce
- your page and then FAX it to someone. The price for all of this is $169
- suggest retail. It was sold at the show for $139. I did a few quick
- tests, and sent out a couple Pagestream pages to the FAX machine at work
- and it really works nice! There will be some upcoming upgrades that
- will allow both sending and receiving FAX messages at 9600 baud, and
- adds additional features to the modem. For more info contact Joppa at
- (301)679-4102.
-
- Alpha Systems, had two new products. JamMaster is a powerful software
- program digital sampling synthesizer program loaded with features. It
- requires a cartridge based sound digitizer for output, such as Digisound
- Professional, and a MIDI compatible keyboard. You create your own
- sounds and assign them to your keyboard. You can have up to 32
- different sounds and any number of octaves. Instead of using musical
- sounds, try some digitized voices or sound effects. It's great! Also
- introduced was an inexpensive clock card called Watchcart. This is a
- simple, bare bones cartridge that is just what I was looking for. I'm
- not sure what the retail price was (it wasn't in their flyer) but the
- show price was $12.
-
- HiSoft was showing their line of products, including lattice C Version
- 5, and the new HARLEKIN program. Harlekin is a bunch of useful
- utilities rolled into one neat package. Just to name a few, there is a
- word processor, scrapbook, disk editor, terminal program, calendar,
- ascii table, RAMdisk, printer spooler...and on and on. It does require
- at least 1Mb of memory however. Hisoft is a British company, but I
- believe Michtron is a distributor of this product. (Sorry, I was
- reading my notes about this on the plane trip back, and it was too late
- to ask).
-
- In the Gadgets by Small booth...well what can I say. All sorts of new
- toys over there! Spectre GCR was running on a TT. The 68030 was
- installed and strutting it's stuff. It was running next to a second ST
- running the same bouncing ball demo, at TWICE the speed! The 68030
- upgrade is quite large, and will probably be offered as a Mega upgrade
- only, unless Dave can figure out a way to shrink it down. The Telsa
- coil was a real grin. Can't wait for that to go into mass production.
-
- Sliccware introduced their new product SLICCTOP. WOW! This desktop
- replacement features multi-tasking, code swapping, process queuing,
- unlimited windows, data sharing, code sharing, dynamic memory, and too
- much other stuff to mention! Watch for a review of this product in the
- near future.
-
- ICD introduced their new product, AdSpeed. This is an 68000 accelerator
- for all models of Atari ST's from the 520 through the STE. Using a
- multilayer, surface mount design, the chip is the side of the 68000 chip
- and will be no problem to install. Just unsolder the old chip, install
- a socket and install the AdSpeed. I ordered one at the show and will
- have more information once I can get it installed and play with it. The
- flyer gives the following features: No mouse, I/O or blitter conflicts,
- no jumper wires, software selectable true 68000 8 MHz mode for 100%
- compatibility (switches speeds on the fly without rebooting the
- computer), 32 kilobytes of high speed static RAM for 16k of data/
- instruction cache and 16k of cache tag memory, full read and write-
- through caching for maximum speed, and supports 16 MHZ high speed ROM
- access.
-
- Genie had a few surprises of their own. This month, Genie began their
- new price cutting rates. To help the user even more, they are
- introducing Aladdin. This is a terminal program written by Tim Purves of
- Michtron. You now have full featured program that lets you automate
- your online time by automatically capturing messages and download
- descriptions. You can then read and reply to messages while off line,
- and select files to download. The program will then automatically send
- your messages, and download the files. Full use of the GEM interface
- makes this program a must have for all Genie users. Best of all, it's
- FREE. It should be available for downloading sometime this week.
-
- Add to all of these new products a number of upgrades for many other
- products, and this was a very enjoyable show. The exhibition rooms
- featuring a number of topics were great also! I don't know how they
- lucked out and found a hotel that could fit in so many of these
- "classrooms" but I sure hope they can secure it for future WAACE shows.
-
- But you didn't think I'd leave without complaining about something, did
- you? Will someone please explain the Dulles Toll road to me? You can
- travel from Dulles airport directly to Washington DC for free, but get
- off in the middle and you pay a toll? I smell a loophole in all of
- this!
-
-
- WAACE AtariFest 1990
-
-
- I'll start this article out with a one-word first impression of the
- show: WOW. Having been to the last two or three WAACE AtariFests held
- at Fairfax High School, the professional look of this one at the
- Sheraton Reston really impressed me. I think it's the kind of image
- Atari needs to make a comeback in the U.S. I spoke to some of the
- organizers as I was getting ready to leave at about 3:30 P.M. and was
- told their best guess on attendance for the day was 1500. Yes, that's
- one thousand, five hundred! Not bad. The official total was to be
- announced at the 8:00 P.M. banquet. I don't know how accurate the
- number is, but it certainly was crowded the six hours I was there.
- Let's hope tomorrow is as busy.
-
- Now on to the show. There was one very large room that held most of the
- vendors and eight smaller rooms for specialized topics such as
- education, Mac and IBM emulation, midi, games, DTP & productivity, a
- swap meet, users groups and the seminars. Very nice layout. Especially
- with the large turnout. I didn't get to talk to every vendor today, but
- those I missed I'll try to talk to for tomorrow's report.
-
- I'll start with what I thought was the most impressive booth: Gadgets by
- Small. Now I don't even own a Mac emulator (and I don't work for Dave
- Small), but he sure had the STuff to look at!! Would you believe a
- MegaST 4 with 12 megabytes of RAM and running at 18 megahertz!?! I
- actually played with it, too! Boy did that thing fly! And Dave said he
- hasn't even "tweaked" it yet and should be able to get it faster! It
- was equipped with Dave's new 68030 board with 8MB of RAM installed.
- That, along with the 4 megs of the Mega, made up the 12. This may be
- the way to go if you just want blind speed and don't need the extras the
- TT has. No, it's not available yet (nor is the price), but Dave says he
- will be marketing it in the future. He also had Spectre GCR running on
- a TT and a Telsa coil demo at his booth. If you're going to be at the
- show tomorrow, and missed the Gadgets booth today, make sure you take
- the time to check it out.
-
- D.A. Brumleve was there with the latest versions of all her great KID
- programs: KIDPublisher Pro 6.2, KIDGrid 1.6, KIDPainter 2.3a and a new
- one (to the public) called Telgram (already at version 2.5) that allows
- kids to send each other "telegrams", complete with music.
-
- Debonair Software was represented by J. Andrzej Wrotniak and was showing
- a new version (1.3) of ElCal, the math machine. Star Base v1.02, a
- complex astronomy program, was also on display. Mr. Wrotniak informed
- me that the public domain versions of these two programs (SubCal and
- Star 2000) would be uploaded to CompuServe sometime this weekend, so
- look for them.
-
- Goldleaf Publishing, Inc. had version 1.1 of Wordflair for sale at their
- booth, although you couldn't upgrade version 1.0 at the show even if you
- had brought along your original disk. The upgrade is only available by
- mail. I was told Wordflair 2 would be available right after Comdex with
- LOTS of new features.
-
- HiSoft was there showing Lattice C version 5 (not related to version 3)
- and a new version of their Devpac ST assembler. They wanted everyone to
- know that they were still supporting the ST, even though Michtron, who
- was distributing their products, has decided not to continue to carry
- them anymore. They will also be supporting the TT.
-
- NeoDesk 3 was available at the Gribnif Software booth to both new and
- old users. Upgrading was available to registered user "while-u-wait".
- They seemed to be pretty busy every time I passed by.
-
- Joe Waters of Current Notes was there selling his magazine and wanted
- everyone to know that his entire public domain or Spectre software
- libraries are now available on 44 meg cartridges.
-
- Branch Always Software was upgrading Quick ST II to version 2.2 and
- mentioned that Quick ST III was still in the works. For those of you
- that didn't get a manual with Quick Tools, it was available at the show.
- I got mine and it looks like it will really help me to use all the great
- programs in this package.
-
- A newcomer, Frontier Software, was attending their first U.S. show
- today. They were selling a cartridge-type clock called "Forget-Me-Clock
- II" which allows other cartridges to be plugged into it so the cartridge
- slot isn't lost when using the clock. They also had a product called
- the "Xtra-RAM STe Solder-Free RAM Upgrade" that looked good. For you
- entrepreneurs out there, they mentioned that they are looking for
- dealers and/or distributors in the U.S. for their products. Go for it.
-
- Double Click Software had new version of both DC Desktop and DC
- Utilities and were upgrading at the show. The new versions are 1.2a for
- Desktop and 2.0 for Utilities. If you have older versions of these
- programs, upgrade them. They have been extensively improved.
-
- Talon Technologies had LOTS of SuperChargers for sale. And at a reduced
- price for the show. They included the new version 1.4 of the software
- too, which they were also upgrading for anyone that had earlier
- versions. TC Power was being shown which allows you to use your Atari's
- RAM as expanded memory and 64K of extended memory. A software upgrade
- to OmniSwitch was also available for a reasonable price.
-
- Of course Codehead Software was there with lots of STuff. All the
- latest versions of their software was available to be sold or upgraded.
- Two new programs were being shown too: CodeKeys! (customized mouse and
- keyboard macros for any program) and LookIt! & PopIt! (a file viewer/
- binary editor & desk accessory that lets you assign "hot keys" to your
- DA's). If you need to know if you have the latest version of any
- Codehead program, they are: CodeKeys!-1.1, LookIt! & PopIt!-1.0, G+Plus
- -1.3, MultiDesk-2.1, HotWire-2.3, MaxiFile-2.0, CodeHead Utilities-Rel.
- 3 and MIDIMAX-1.3.
-
- Data Innovations was showing version 2.11 of their excellent hard drive
- backup program Diamond Back II. They were upgrading at the show also.
- 3 in 1 College & Pro Football and Basketball, the Pro Game was selling
- too.
-
- The Atari Corp. booth was pretty busy. It had STE's on display running
- demo's to show off the colors and sound. Quite impressive. One area
- was reserved for the Portfolio and was displaying two new products: the
- Portfolio PC Card Drive (HPC301) which lets your desktop PC read and
- write to Atari Portfolio Memory Cards, with data exchange happening in
- an instant; and a Finance Card, which turns your Portfolio into a
- financial genius with amortization schedules, break-even analyses,
- compound investments and depreciation alternatives.
-
- There were lots of other vendors and I hope to talk to them all
- tomorrow. Look here for another report. But before I finish, I did
- attend one seminar which I'd like to report on today. The Bob Brodie
- and "Atari Corporation: Live!" seminar. This was kind of a special day
- for Bob as it was his 1 year anniversary with Atari. Also, the WAACE
- AtariFest 1989 was the first show he attended in his current job. He
- spoke about his first Atari system (a 400) and his current one (Mega ST
- 4). About how he first discovered "users groups". He got quite a
- response when he told one particular story of his early days as Users
- Group Coordinator. Seems he told his bosses that his policy was to
- always tell the public the "truth" and nothing but the "truth". When
- questioned by his superiors why he thought this policy would work, Bob
- replied, "Because you never tried it before." Let's hope Bob stays
- around for a long time!
-
-
- WAACE ATARIFEST 1990 - DAY 2 by Scott Lapham
-
-
- First off, I'd like to apologize to all of the people that I didn't
- write about in yesterday's article who were at the show and showing/
- selling a product. I tried to get to everyone but was not successful.
- I'm kind of new at this and hope I'll do better (if asked) in the
- future. It was hard trying to concentrate on writing the article and
- seeing all the things that were there to see.
-
- The second day of Atarifest 1990 was much less crowded than the first
- day, but I didn't hear too many people complaining. Overall, the
- vendors were very pleased with the show and from more than one
- perspective. They liked selling all the products (of course), but a lot
- of them also mentioned how nice the people were. Words like "pleasant"
- and "enthusiastic" were often used. One vendor said it was nice to be
- at a show without "Atari-bashers" everywhere. I'll second that motion.
-
- Here are some quotes from day 2 on sales: "We did about the same as last
- year", L&Y Electronics; "We sold out of all the SuperChargers we
- brought. On a scale of one to ten, I'd give the show an 8", Talon
- Technologies; "This was the second best show I've ever been to (behind
- Toronto)", Branch Always Software; "Our first day here was better than
- all of last year", ISD Marketing; "Much better than last year...close to
- best show ever", CodeHead Software; "First day was 50 percent better
- than last year", Debonair Software; "Best show this year...better than
- last year", D.A. Brumleve; "Excellent, although it helps to debut a new
- product", WizWorks; "About the same as last year", Current Notes; "Very
- good...about the same as Glendale, which was the second best show this
- year (behind WOA)", Zubair Interfaces, Inc; "Very good...as good as
- Glendale, which was best ever", Gribnif Software; "Great...better than
- last year", Joppa Computers; "Not quite as good as last year", Best
- Electronics; "Good...made more contacts than expected and almost sold
- out of product", Frontier Software (their first U.S. show); "Great...did
- lots of updates", Data Innovations; "I wasn't selling but all my fliers
- about the 68030 board are gone...lots of interest shown", Gadgets by
- Small; "Good show...best this year", Double Click Software.
-
- The above said, it wasn't ALL positive. There were a few complaints
- about the lack of chairs for the people working the booths. Made for a
- long day. And bigger booths were mentioned too. On the flip side of
- that, Darek of BRA said WAACE did "an incredible job". He said they
- sent "lots" of updates to vendors to keep them on top of what was going
- on before the show. He rates it best in organization and advertising
- this year and thinks WAACE deserves applause.
-
- Before I go, I'd like to mention a few things from the "Atari
- Corporation: Technically Speaking" seminar. Ken Badertscher (the "TOS
- god" according to Bob Brodie) felt the day was right for some "true
- confessions". He said the resolution bug in STE TOS (1.6) "may" have
- been caused by some people working long and hard one weekend to get 1.6
- out the door and "maybe" some of TOS 1.4 code got mixed up with it when
- being put together. He said TOS 1.62 fixes this but doesn't know if
- 1.62 will be available to the public soon or ever. Also, he said the
- DMA problem with the STE "may" have been caused by someone putting in
- the wrong chip at the factory. Even if true, it's not happening
- anymore. Enough of "true confessions". He also said that a new GDOS
- (which supports scaleable outline fonts) was for real. Sounds like good
- news to me. When asked if UIS-III, QuickST, etc. would ever be included
- in a version of TOS, the answer was N-O. Too expensive. Oh, well.
-
- I'll end on a note you "insiders" may enjoy; How much memory does it
- take to open a VDI workstation? Answer: 3K. (hmmmm...it got lots of
- laughs at the show?!) Cheers.
-
-
- WAACE ATARIFEST 1990
-
-
- Category 11, Topic 6 Message 121 Sat Oct 06, 1990
- DARLAH [RT~SYSOP] at 18:03 EDT
-
- The show has been really busy. I am not sure of the numbers. The door
- people say there has been about 1200 to 1500 registered but I thought it
- felt like a whole lot more. I know the developers that I talked to were
- all very happy. The booths packed where developers had a hard time
- getting back into their own booths. I am impressed with the quality of
- the show and am glad that they held it in this sort of environment.
-
- Dave Small really did show his Tesla coil. I even helped in holding the
- various light bulbs. I couldn't believe that he brought it. The guy is
- a kick and proved to be a highlight of the show.
-
- GEnie was showing Aladdin for the ST. The general public should see
- this one VERY soon. It will not only automate your time but save you
- the much needed $$ that we all need to do with the holidays coming up.
-
- Numerous developers were available at the show. I think everyone that
- is on the list J.D.BARNES uploaded earlier in this thread showed. Not
- one commented negatively.
-
-
- Category 11, Topic 6 Message 133 Mon Oct 08, 1990
- J.MEEHAN3 [Joe] at 07:50 EDT
-
- Just Back from WAACE (an 8 hour drive with no sleep)
-
- Some quick notes,
-
- Two 030 boards at the show, working! Estimated delivery late 1990?
- Two TTs seen working!
- A Hyper Card sort of program for the ST.
- Aladdin Working - I had a chance to play with it a little and it looks
- great. Thanks GEnie and Tom Purves (sorry Tom about the spelling)
- Aladdin, a special program to do all you want to do on GEnie easier and
- quicker (save$) should be available later this week for download. Only
- charge will be for download. Watch for an announcement in the ST RT
- banner.
-
- Many thanks to all the hard working WAACE people and all those who put
- this very professional and fun show together. Thanks for the tickets
- Russ.
-
- Charles Johnson gave a great speech at the dinner Sat night. How about
- posting the text in the library? I have my copy but I am sure that
- others would be interested.
-
-
- Category 11, Topic 6 Message 134 Mon Oct 08, 1990
- NEVIN-S at 09:30 EDT
-
- The WAACE show was GREAT. It was my first show displaying Tracker/ST
- and as a vendor I was very happy. I met a bunch of my registered users,
- and had a lot of success selling both to the general public and to the
- stores that had booths at the show. I think all of the other vendors
- were very happy as well.
-
- Since I was at the Step Ahead Software booth all day I didn't really
- have a chance to see much else. Gadgets and Jim Allen each had their
- own separate 68030 boards (at different booths). They both seemed nice.
- CodeHead was doing blockbuster business and there were always a bunch of
- people at the Gribnif booth. Joppa introduced a Fax system for the ST.
- Mr. HyperLink came down from Canada to introduce his product (but I did
- not see his speech). Nathan was at the Toad Computer booth showing
- folks the entire Calamus line. The happiest area of the show seemed to
- be the Dorothy Brumleve table next to the WizWorks/Dr. Bob table. There
- were always a few young folks using KidPublisher Pro and smiling, and
- people lined up to use MugShot and check out Image Cat. Lots of folks
- got videotaped (including me) for a Mug Shot compilation disk. That 2
- table area was definitely hopping.
-
- Charles speech was very good and it has already been uploaded as part of
- ST Report.
-
- Neil Harris was at the show and he looked great. I think working at
- GEnie (not working for Atari??!!) agrees with him.
-
- Darlah looked more beautiful than ever and was showing Aladdin with help
- from Jeff Williams and author Tim Purves. Dan McNamee had SoftSource
- running on a Moniterm.
-
- I did not have a chance to go to any of the seminars. But the show was
- definitely a success. The hotel was nice, the exhibition space was
- good, the crowds were good, people were in a good mood and no shots were
- fired. <grin>
-
-
- Category 11, Topic 6 Message 135 Mon Oct 08, 1990
- ISD [Nathan] at 15:45 EDT
-
- It was a great show. The organization by WAACE was excellent and let me
- add my congratulations to their chairman, Russ Brown for the superb job.
- All the Developers enjoyed themselves without exception. We all met
- lots of our customers and there was an excellent turnout overall. The
- response to Aladdin was great. I might also add that at one point Eric
- Rosenquist of Steno/Stalker fame manned one of the GEnie stations
- showing off his product as well. Eric came down from Ottawa, more than
- a few hour drive. :-) Bob Brodie talked to a packed house. The room
- held 216 seats. Every seat was taken and then so were all the walls.
- :-) Can he pack them in. :-) Let me also thank all those of you that
- attended the Calamus seminar that I put on. It wasn't quite as packed
- as Bob's as there were maybe a few dozen empty seats, :-) but there were
- more than enough to make for an interesting discussion. Thank you to
- all that attended. The banquet was packed. Not an empty seat in the
- place and Charles' speech was highly entertaining. One excerpt comes to
- mind, something about picturing Jim Allen as the white rabbit in Alice
- in Wonderland. Those that have met the diminutive Jim, imagine him in a
- bunny suit if you will. :-) I'm sure that many other posts will appear
- in the next few days so I will leave it to those more erudite than I to
- fill you in. Great show Russ, thanks!!
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- [Editor's note: Due to Joe being under the weather this week, PAT will not
- appear. Stay tuned nest week.]
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Xbox Power Cord Recall!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Atari To Release New Matrix!
-
-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Atari to Release New 'Matrix' Game This Holiday
-
-
- Video game publisher Atari Inc. will return to the universe of "The Matrix"
- with a new game that lets players assume the role of actor Keanu Reeves'
- lead character Neo, the company said on Monday.
-
- "The Matrix: Path of Neo" will be out this holiday season for the PC and
- leading game consoles, Atari said.
-
- The Wachowski brothers, who wrote and directed the "Matrix" trilogy of
- films and directed the 2003 video game "Enter the Matrix," will write and
- direct for the new game as well.
-
- "Enter the Matrix," released in May 2003, was heavily criticized in the
- gaming press amid accusations of serious bugs in the game. It became a
- smash hit nonetheless and has sold 6 million units worldwide.
-
- The likenesses of the key characters from the films will appear in the
- game, as will footage from the movies.
-
- Last week Atari said it would substantially overhaul its operations,
- closing two studios and committing to spending more time and money on games
- to improve their development.
-
-
-
- Microsoft to Recall Xbox Cords Due to Electrical Issue
-
-
- Microsoft Corp., the world's largest software maker, said on Thursday it
- will recall 14.1 million power cords for its Xbox video game console after
- a defect gave some users minor singe burns and scorched carpets.
-
- Robbie Bach, chief Xbox officer for Microsoft, told Reuters the recall
- covered all Xboxes made for continental Europe before Jan. 13, 2004, and
- units made for the rest of the world before Oct. 23, 2003.
-
- Consoles built after those dates were designed in such a way that the
- failures no longer occurred, Bach said.
-
- "It ends up being a combination of both things in the box and
- circumstances," he said. "It did take us quite a bit of time to understand
- that there was a challenge."
-
- The company declined to say who manufactured the defective units but said
- it was accepting responsibility for the problem. Microsoft also declined
- to comment on what the replacement program would cost the company, other
- than characterizing it as a "significant investment."
-
- The recall represents a significant portion of the worldwide Xbox installed
- base of more than 20 million. Microsoft debuted the Xbox in November 2001
- in the United States and subsequently rolled it out worldwide.
-
- Based on reports to its customer service unit and warranty repair data,
- Bach said Microsoft had observed a failure rate of about 1 in 10,000 units.
-
- In seven of those units, users reported suffering minor burns akin to
- briefly touching a hot iron. In 23 cases, users reported minor smoke damage
- or burns to a carpet or entertainment center.
-
- Affected customers can request a new power cord free of charge via the Web
- site, Xbox.com (http://www.xbox.com), or by calling toll-free numbers in
- their respective countries.
-
- Microsoft said customers would get replacement cords within 2-4 weeks from
- the time of order, and in the interim it advised users to turn off their
- Xboxes when not in use.
-
- In March 2002, Japanese retailers temporarily stopped selling the console
- just weeks after its launch there because some machines were scratching
- discs. The company made an unconditional offer to replace hardware and any
- damaged software.
-
- Bach said some consoles on retail shelves in Japan and Korea were also
- affected by the electrical problem and Microsoft was working with retailers
- there to replace the cords in those units.
-
- Microsoft is widely expected to release a successor to the Xbox this year.
- Rival and industry leader Sony Corp. is expected to launch the third
- version of its popular PlayStation console next year.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Uncle Sam Gets 'D-Plus' on Cyber-Security
-
-
- The Department of Homeland Security led a list of seven agencies that
- received flunking grades for their cyber-security efforts in 2004, with the
- federal government at large earning an overall grade of "D-plus" from a key
- congressional oversight committee.
-
- For the fifth straight year, at least half of all federal agencies received
- a grade of "D" or worse on the House Government Reform Committee's annual
- cyber-security report card. Agencies that received failing marks include
- the departments of Agriculture, Commerce, Energy, Health and Human
- Services, Housing and Urban Development, and Veterans Affairs. A grade of
- "D" was awarded to the departments of Defense and Treasury, as well as the
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration and the Small Business
- Administration.
-
- The congressional panel based the grades on internal agency assessments and
- information that agencies are required to submit annually to the White
- House Office of Management and Budget. Grades depended on how well agencies
- met the requirements set out in the Federal Information Security Management
- Act (FISMA). The law requires agencies to meet a wide variety of computer
- security standards, ranging from operational details - such as ensuring
- proper password management by workers and restricting employee access to
- sensitive networks and documents - to creating procedures for reporting
- security problems.
-
- This year's overall grade of "D-plus" was up slightly from last year's "D"
- and the "F" grade Uncle Sam earned on the report card in 2002.
-
- Committee Chairman Tom Davis (R-Va.) said he was encouraged by the fact
- that 10 agencies improved their scores over 2003, increasing the overall
- governmentwide grade by 2.5 points this year. But he chided agencies for
- not moving fast enough.
-
- "I hope it won't take some kind of major cyber-attack to wake everybody
- up," Davis said.
-
- Eight agencies earned lower grades for 2004. The departments of Commerce
- and Veterans Affairs saw their marks drop from a "C" two years ago to an
- "F" in 2004.
-
- One explanation for the lower grades, according to Dennis Heretick, the
- chief information security officer for the Justice Department, is that
- agencies were required to meet new standards last year that were not
- evaluated in past report cards, such as determining how frequently agencies
- applied software patches to fix known computer security flaws.
-
- Several agencies made significant gains in 2004. The Department of Justice
- (news - web sites), for example, increased its score from an "F" in 2003
- to a "B-minus" last year. The U.S. Agency for International Development
- earned an "A-plus" - up from a "C-minus" in 2003 - though the agency was
- among three this year that failed to submit its internal assessment for an
- independent evaluation.
-
- The Department of Transportation elevated its grade from a "D-plus" in 2003
- to an "A-minus" last year, an increase that department chief information
- officer Dan Matthews attributed to high-level attention to computer
- security issues.
-
- "One should never underestimate the power of [DOT Secretary Norman Mineta]
- telling the staff that he wants to make this happen," Matthews said. "I
- don't think there are a lot of agencies that do have the CIO talking to the
- secretary on a near daily basis."
-
- Fifteen federal information security officers said establishing enforceable
- internal computer security policies was the key driver in improving their
- agencies' cyber-security grades, according to a phone survey conducted by
- Telos Corp., a government technology contractor. Thirty out of 117 federal
- chief information security officers were contacted for the survey, results
- of which were released today in conjunction with the cyber-security report
- cards.
-
- Some computer security experts expressed concern that the annual report
- cards amount to little more than a bureaucratic exercise. For years,
- lawmakers in Congress have warned federal agency leaders that they would
- slash funding for technology projects that fail to meet basic computer
- security requirements. But despite such threats, agency funding has
- remained unaffected by high or low grades on the computer security report
- cards, according federal security officers contacted for the Telos survey.
-
- "If there are no incentives for agencies to comply with FISMA requirements,
- what is the point?", said Richard P. Tracy, chief security officer for
- Telos.
-
- Amit Yoran, a former high-ranking cyber-security official in the Bush
- administration, said the report cards sometimes don't completely measure
- all the steps agencies have taken to improve security.
-
- "This is more an audit of agency paperwork than it is jacking into the
- networks and looking at the systems and actual performance of an agency's
- security technologies," Yoran said. "That said, it is clear that the
- government is not at a level it needs to be in protecting its own systems."
-
- Rep. Davis said cutting technology budgets for agencies that fail to
- improve their cyber-security grade could prove counterproductive. But he
- said he plans to examine ways to amend the current law so that agencies
- that show marked improvements are rewarded for their progress.
-
- "We'd like to make sure FISMA doesn't become a paperwork exercise where
- agencies comply with the letter of the law but not the spirit of it," he
- said.
-
-
-
- Another Form of Encryption Goes Down for the Count
-
-
- News that a nine-year-old encryption method - one that underlies the
- protection of virtually all secure online communications - appears to have
- been cracked by a team of three Chinese researchers has spurred encryption
- experts around the world to issue a call to action.
-
- The standard, known as SHA-1, "is used in pretty much every cryptographic
- protocol out there," says encryption expert Bruce Schneier. "[SHA-1 is]
- used in SSH, in SSL, in S/MIME, in PGP. It's used in IPSec. VPNs use it.
- Everybody uses it."
-
- The scope of the problem is enormous. Virtually all application and server
- software that incorporates SHA-1 into its functions - including Web
- browsers, e-mail clients, instant messaging programs, secure shell clients,
- and file- and disk-encryption software - will need to be replaced or
- upgraded.
-
- "We all sort of knew this could happen, but we didn't expect it this bad,
- this soon," says Schneier, who also blogs about security topics.
-
- "This is a critical break in SHA that is just at the edge of feasibility,"
- Schneier says. But even though SHA-1 has been broken by academics, that
- doesn't mean the government or criminals will be able to spy on your
- encrypted communications immediately.
-
- For regular computer users, the breaking of SHA-1 has no sudden
- repercussions. Secure online communications have not been thrown wide open.
- A tougher standard that hasn't been broken, called SHA-256, already exists.
- Encryption experts are urging software companies to integrate SHA-256 into
- applications that currently use SHA-1.
-
- Coincidentally, the news about SHA-1 has come out during one of the largest
- conferences about computer security and encryption, the annual RSA Data
- Security Conference, which runs through Friday in San Francisco.
-
- "We've all been discussing what we're going to do for some time," says Jon
- D. Callas, chief technology officer for PGP, a company that makes
- encryption products for individual and business computer users, as well as
- high-end mail encryption gateways for enterprises. "The next release of PGP
- will incorporate SHA-256 into the software," Callas says. "PGP 9 will
- likely go into beta in a few weeks."
-
- "At PGP, we've been working on this for a long time, but we're a little
- quicker about this kind of stuff than most people," Callas adds.
-
- "This is not a 'Run for the exits, the place is on fire' kind of
- situation," Callas says. "It's 'The fire alarm is on, this is not a drill,
- please move to the exits.'"
-
- Schneier posted a brief item about SHA-1 on his blog Tuesday, crediting
- three Shandong University researchers - Xiaoyun Wang, Yiqun Lisa Yin, and
- Hongbo Yu - with the achievement.
-
- "They are respected cryptographers, their work is phenomenally good. This
- is not a fly-by-night group, and there's no reason not to believe this [is
- real]," he says.
-
- He describes SHA-1, invented by the National Security Agency in 1995, as
- "the most common cryptographic primitive" on the Internet. (Cryptographic
- primitive is an academic term describing a mathematical formula that
- cryptographers can use to scramble and unscramble codes.)
-
- In the arcane language of encryption, SHA-1 is known as a one-way hash
- function. Cryptographers use these tools to calculate a hash value for a
- secret message. Hash values help guarantee that a secret message has not
- been tampered with in transit, and they can't be used by spies to
- reconstruct the message.
-
- "We know less about hashing than anything else in crypto - and we thought
- we knew more," Callas says. "It will probably take us another two to five
- years until we really understand hashing algorithms, and in the meantime
- there will be more dramatic things that will happen."
-
- Breaking encryption takes immense amounts of computing power. The
- researchers who cracked SHA-1 didn't have banks of supercomputers at their
- disposal, so instead they used a distributed computing program - Callas
- describes it as "basically something like SETI@Home" - to harness the idle
- computing power of thousands of PCs around the world to complete the task.
-
- "The best attack anyone has ever done [on current encryption] was the
- distributed attack on MD5-RC64, which took 300,000 computers - and it took
- them five years," Callas says. "[Breaking SHA-1] is 32 times harder than
- that; it'd take those same 300,000 computers roughly 150 years."
-
- But faster home computers, and the power of distributed computing (which
- shares portions of a monumental task among many thousands of users), seems
- to have shortened the time scale. "Cryptographic attacks always get better,
- sometimes by a factor of two or four, but they never get worse," Schneier
- says.
-
- In an essay he wrote for last August's Computerworld magazine, Schneier
- hinted that researchers at the time were perhaps close to breaking SHA-1.
- The essay urged cryptographers to start work on the next generation of
- one-way hash functions, before the current generation became so broken as
- to be unusable.
-
-
-
- New Mydoom Worm on the Move
-
-
- Call it the worm that simply will not die. Anti-virus vendors have begun
- issuing warnings that yet another variant of last year's notorious Mydoom
- is spreading fast.
-
- This variant, Mydoom.AO or W32/Mydoom.bb@MM worm, also known as Mydoom.bb,
- uses Google, Altavista, Yahoo and Lycos to search for e-mail addresses in
- order to replicate itself; thus a single infected computer can distribute
- thousands of copies of the worm in just a few minutes, according to Panda
- Software CTO Patrick Hinojosa.
-
- Like the other variants, this Mydoom installs a back door onto the infected
- computer, which makes it highly likely it is being spread by hackers who
- work for spammers and other Internet miscreants. "They are probably laying
- the groundwork for a spam attack or to look for credit card strings," he
- tells NewsFactor.
-
- That is probably the disconcerting reason for Mydoom's persistence: It has
- been proven effective. "The Mydoom family was one of the most successful
- viruses ever," Sophos security consultant Graham Cluley tells NewsFactor.
- That is why it keeps getting repackaged and released.
-
- Compared to the earlier variants, he says, Mydoom.AO is spreading at a
- relatively slow pace. "It is spreading faster than anything we have seen
- in recent weeks, but nothing compared to the significant numbers of earlier
- attacks," he says.
-
- According to Panda Sofware, after Mydoom AO finds a likely e-mail address,
- it attempts to trick users by pretending to be a mail delivery error
- message.
-
- The name of the attached file that actually contains the worm is chosen at
- random and has one of the following extensions: ZIP, COM, SCR, EXE, PIF,
- BAT or CMD.
-
- This is not the first time a virus has made use of a search engine in order
- to spread. According to Luis Corrons, director of PandaLabs, Mydoom.N was
- the first virus to use this strategy. "This new worm is following in its
- footsteps," he says.
-
- Virus creators are finding Internet search engines a powerful tool for
- rapidly spreading malicious code. This tactic effectively multiplies the
- propagation capacity of a virus, and it is therefore likely that we will
- see more of the same.
-
-
-
- Microsoft Plans Free Anti-Spyware Program
-
-
- Stepping up its fight against computer threats at the risk of alienating
- security businesses, Microsoft Corp. announced Tuesday it will give away a
- program to combat privacy-stealing and PC-clogging spyware and other
- virtual pests.
-
- Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates also unveiled plans to release antivirus
- tools for consumers and make a major security upgrade to its Internet
- Explorer Web browser. At the same time, he showed off new software for
- businesses to combat security threats.
-
- The moves are part of a wide-ranging effort by the world's largest software
- maker to improve the security and reliability of its Windows operating
- system and other programs, which have become favorite targets of hackers,
- virus writers and other malware creators.
-
- Speaking at the annual RSA Conference, a major gathering of computer
- security experts, Gates outlined successes over the past year but did not
- suggest total victory was imminent or even possible. Microsoft has
- distributed more than 170 million copies of a major security enhancement
- to Windows XP since its release last year, but Gates said more work is
- needed.
-
- "It's a challenging area and new threats seem to be emerging all the time,"
- Gates said. "But I'm optimistic ... we'll be able to mitigate the security
- problems and therefore let the advances of this digital infrastructure
- allow for fantastic things to happen."
-
- Gates said spyware and adware threats are growing more quickly than worms
- and viruses. The programs that track Web surfing, generate pop-up ads and
- slow systems are often installed when users try to run free software
- without reading the license agreement. Later versions also have taken
- advantage of known Windows flaws to sneak onto machines.
-
- "Spyware ... is something we need to nip now," Gates said.
-
- In December, Microsoft purchased Giant Software Co. and turned its offering
- into Microsoft AntiSpyware. Gates said more than 6 million copies of a free
- "beta," or test, version have been downloaded.
-
- Besides the consumer software, Microsoft will sell tools that are better
- suited for businesses where administrators need more control over their
- computers.
-
- But numerous companies are already selling or giving away programs for
- cleaning machines of the unwanted programs. Microsoft's decision to give
- its software away is reminiscent of its decision to bundle an Internet
- browser and media player with Windows - something that landed the company
- in legal hot water both in the United States and Europe.
-
- Microsoft's plan to give away its software didn't surprise or scare Richard
- Stiennon, vice president of threats research at Boulder, Colo.-based
- Webroot Software Inc., maker of the popular Spy Sweeper program. Webroot
- charges $29.95 a year for updates and support.
-
- "All I can say is, you get what you pay for," Stiennon said. "Security is
- a huge learning curve to climb, and Microsoft is just stepping into these
- waters."
-
- Microsoft's free product also is likely to be targeted by hackers and other
- malware developers. Just last week, a "Trojan horse" program was detected
- that attempts to shut down its antispyware program as well as steal online
- banking passwords.
-
- "It may be the first of many such future attacks," said Gregg Mastoras,
- senior security analyst at Sophos PLC, a security firm.
-
- Microsoft's broader consumer antivirus tools, which Gates said would be
- made available by the end of the year, will face similar challenges. He did
- not elaborate on what will be offered or how much it might cost.
-
- The tools for consumers and businesses will compete directly with existing
- products from the likes of Symantec Corp., McAfee Inc. and others, all of
- which have been profiting for years from Microsoft vulnerabilities and the
- hackers who target them.
-
- "It will be a battle, but (security companies) have been expecting this to
- come for a while and they're prepared for it," said Bruce Schneier, founder
- and chief technology officer of Counterpane Internet Security Inc.
-
- Vincent Gulloto, vice president of McAfee's Antivirus and Vulnerability
- Emergency Response Team, said his company currently has a partnership with
- Microsoft and "we have all intentions to maintain it."
-
- Symantec also plans to continue partnering with Microsoft, but noted the
- software giant hasn't released details on how it's going to jump into the
- market, Symantec said in a statement.
-
- "As long as there is (a) level playing field, we welcome that competition,"
- the statement read.
-
- Gates also said Microsoft would begin testing this summer an update to its
- Internet Explorer browser, version 7. The update, mainly security-related
- improvements, would be available only to users of the latest version of
- Windows - XP with last summer's Service Pack 2 upgrade, which also came
- with security improvements to IE 6.
-
- It also will be bundled with the next version of Windows, code-named
- Longhorn.
-
- The company did not mention any non-security improvements such as features
- found in rival browsers like Mozilla Firefox and Opera.
-
-
-
- Yahoo Sees Small Victory in Nazi Dispute
-
-
- Free speech activists and Yahoo Inc. declared a small victory Thursday in a
- dispute over whether the e-commerce giant can host auctions for Nazi
- memorabilia on its U.S. sites.
-
- The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said it would rehear some arguments
- in a 5-year-old lawsuit against Yahoo by two French human rights groups,
- which are trying to ban the sale of Nazi-related items on any Internet site
- viewable in France.
-
- France's Union of Jewish Students and the International Anti-Racism and
- Anti-Semitism League sued Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Yahoo in 2000 and won a
- French court order requiring the company to block Internet surfers in
- France from auctions selling Nazi memorabilia. French law bars the display
- or sale of racist material.
-
- Yahoo stripped Nazi memorabilia - including flags emblazoned with swastikas
- and excerpts from Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" - from its French subsidiary,
- yahoo.fr. But to the anger of French Jews, Holocaust survivors, their
- descendants and other activists, Yahoo kept such items on its vastly more
- popular site, yahoo.com.
-
- Although that site is run on computer servers in California, it's
- accessible to Web surfers anywhere in the world.
-
- For failing to take down the offensive items, French courts began levying
- fines on Yahoo of more than $13,000 per day starting in February 2001.
- Yahoo theoretically owes more than $5 million today.
-
- In 2002, Yahoo asked the U.S. District Court to rule that the French order
- violated the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment, arguing that the fines
- created a "chilling effect" for all Internet service providers.
-
- District Court Judge Jeremy Fogel of San Jose ruled that if Yahoo wanted
- to continue selling items on a site that could be accessed around the
- world, the company had to assume the risk that it could violate laws of
- other countries and was subject to more lawsuits. But in August, the Ninth
- Circuit Court of Appeals reversed Fogel's decision, saying he had no
- authority to hear the case.
-
- The two-sentence ruling Thursday does not explain how the judges came to
- their decision but forces both sides to argue their cases again in front
- of an 11-judge panel, likely this spring.
-
- The new opportunity for a courtroom victory, Yahoo executives said, could
- benefit all Internet service providers and anyone who publishes content
- online.
-
- "If American companies have to worry that foreign judgments entered against
- them might be enforceable, it could end up with companies censoring their
- Web sites," said Mary Catherine Wirth, senior corporate council at Yahoo
- and a professor at University of California Hastings College of The Law.
-
- Attorney Richard Jones, who represented the French organizations, called
- the decision "meaningless" and said there's no reason to believe the new
- panel would vindicate Yahoo.
-
- Jeffrey Pryce, a lawyer specializing in Internet and international suits
- in the Washington office of Steptoe & Johnson LLP, emphasized that
- decisions to revisit cases are rare, suggesting that the new panel of
- judges may be inclined to rule that Yahoo needn't comply with French laws
- on its U.S. sites.
-
-
-
- Sun to Show Off Enhanced StarOffice, JDS
-
-
- Sun Microsystems Inc. plans to preview the beta of its upcoming StarOffice
- 8 desktop productivity suite, currently slated for release by midyear, as
- well as Release 3 of its Java Desktop System, due next quarter, at the
- LinuxWorld Conference in Boston this week.
-
- Herb Hinstorff, a director at Sun, told eWEEK that the Santa Clara, Calif.,
- company, will be highlighting the expanded device support in the third
- release of JDS, which is based on the Linux 2.6 kernel.
-
- "We will be reminding people that the JDS provides a true alternative
- desktop with some security and affordability advantages over the legacy
- alternatives and how Release 3 advances that," Hinstorff said.
-
- Also at LinuxWorld, HP and Novell are opening up more code.
-
- On the interoperability front, a big focus will be on improvements,
- including better interoperability with Microsoft Exchange and Microsoft
- file formats (Samba 3.0 is included to provide better file format
- interoperability) as well as improved Internet Explorer compatibility in
- Mozilla.
-
- "Linux and other alternatives have to fit really well into legacy
- environments; they have to be able to coexist easily in these environments,
- and we have concentrated on providing that," he said.
-
- Among the key enhancements to StarOffice 8, which moves to a public beta
- this week and will stay open for the next six weeks, is better
- interoperability with Microsoft Office. "We have made significant usability
- enhancements so that when users download and use it they will see the
- changes we have made to the look and feel of the product," Manish Punjabi,
- Sun's group manager for StarOffice/OpenOffice.org, told eWEEK.
-
- StarOffice 8 will also have better import/export filters. Sun is also
- trying to reduce the migration cost from an enterprise standpoint as well
- as lower the risk of migration through better migration support. "We will
- now support the conversion of Visual Basic-based macros to StarOffice-based
- macros," Punjabi said. "We also made significant enhancements to the
- database functionality, which is now more like Microsoft Access."
-
- In addition, StarOffice 8 will provide, for the first time, an automated
- way for users to migrate their macros. The StarOffice spreadsheet
- application will now support 65,536 rows, the same as number supported by
- Microsoft Excel. "This is a document format compatibility kind of
- attribute," he said.
-
- With regard to presentations, StarOffice 8 enables users to import and
- export their animations developed in PowerPoint, which will convert over
- to StarOffice, Punjabi said.
-
- On the thorny issue of compatibility with Microsoft Office and the products
- in that suite, Hinstorff said StarOffice 8 took "another big step forward."
- The product development team spent a lot of time addressing more basic user
- issues, like providing the ability to take a document, read it, write it
- and have everything preserved.
-
- "Across the board our message is going to be interoperability, a
- compatible, easy-to-use user experience and a bigger set of devices
- supported. We will also focus our discussions at LinuxWorld on our
- contributions to open source. All of this is based on open source and
- things that we have contributed in addition to community products," he
- said.
-
- Sun will also be focusing on the positioning of the products in the market.
- "For those mainstream core features used by the majority of users, the
- interoperability with other legacy software is very strong," Hinstorff
- said.
-
- "We want the public beta to expose any of the corner cases that we may have
- missed. The feedback we have got so far shows that compatibility is very
- good," he said.
-
- Punjabi said Openoffice.org will also benefit from the majority of the
- changes in StarOffice. "But the commercial quality spell checker and some
- other features are not included in Openoffice.org," he said.
-
-
-
- Bugs Delay AOL Netscape Beta
-
-
- America Online is delaying the release of the first public test version of
- a new Netscape Web browser until the end of the month so that it can fix
- some last-minute bugs, the company said today.
-
- The beta version of the Netscape 8 browser had been scheduled for public
- release tomorrow, but that date will slip by a week or two, an AOL
- spokesman said in a statement sent via e-mail. An early version of the
- browser that the IDG News Service saw late last month crashed many times
- under normal use.
-
- The new Netscape browser is designed to protect users from scams and
- malicious code while surfing the Web. One feature, for example, adjusts the
- browser security settings based on a list of known malicious Web sites to
- protect users from phishing scams.
-
- With this release, AOL takes aim at Microsoft's dominant Internet Explorer
- Web browser, which has suffered from many security vulnerabilities. In
- addition, AOL is looking to piggyback on the popularity of Mozilla's
- Firefox, an open-source Web browser released in November that has since
- been downloaded more than 25 million times.
-
- In an about-face, Microsoft on Tuesday said that it would release a test
- version of a new IE browser by midyear. Previously the company had said
- that it wouldn't release a new browser until the next version of Windows,
- code-named Longhorn, ships in 2006. There hasn't been a new version of IE
- in four years. The new IE 7.0 will address security issues such as phishing
- schemes, Microsoft said.
-
- Phishing is a prevalent type of online attack that typically combines spam
- e-mail messages and fraudulent Web pages that look like legitimate
- e-commerce sites. Such attacks are designed to steal user names, passwords,
- credit card numbers, and other sensitive information.
-
- Netscape 8 is based on Firefox but also supports the IE browser engine. AOL
- released a preview version of the browser to a select group of testers in
- late November. The Netscape browser doesn't include the IE engine but it
- uses the engine that is incorporated in Windows. As a result, the
- Netscape 8 browser works only on Windows computers.
-
-
-
- Microsoft to Release New Internet Browser
-
-
- Microsoft Corp. will release a new version of Internet Explorer, the
- world's most popular Internet browsing software, with new, built-in
- security features, Chairman Bill Gates said on Tuesday.
-
- In a speech at a major security conference here, Gates said Internet
- Explorer 7.0, with new anti-spyware features, will be released for
- preliminary testing this summer.
-
- The move comes three years after Microsoft, the world's biggest software
- company, launched a major initiative to improve the reliability and
- security of its software, which runs on about 90 percent of all personal
- computers.
-
-
-
- Students Launch Online Auction for College
-
-
- At the end of each semester, Bentley College sophomore Shahzad Zia usually
- offers his used textbooks to the highest bidder on the most popular
- Internet auction sites. This spring, he plans to list them for a more
- exclusive community - and save money in the process.
-
- Zia plans to post his books on College Junktion, an online auction designed
- by college students, for college students, that opened for business Friday.
- Registration to the Web site - www.collegejunktion.com - requires a valid
- ".edu" e-mail address. Such addresses are reserved for people connected
- with schools.
-
- President, CEO and University of Miami sophomore Jason Baptiste developed
- College Junktion with two friends living on the same dormitory hall.
-
- The idea grew from a bulletin board Baptiste passed while going for a cup
- of coffee on campus. "There was this board with hundreds of flyers of stuff
- for sale - a car here, a textbook there, this TV. The only way to get
- exposure was this board," he said. "I thought, 'What could I do to make
- this easier? Why not create a service to buy, sell and trade them on the
- Internet?'"
-
- It's no longer a unique idea, with online giants Amazon's and eBay's
- massive auctions and the regional classifieds on craigslist. But Baptiste,
- 19, from Norwood, N.J., plans to combine auctions with networking features
- found on Friendster or thefacebook, which link users by common interests or
- acquaintances.
-
- Within the next few months, Baptiste said, photo sharing, calendars, blogs
- and user groups will be added to the site. Eventually, the
- friends-of-friends listed in a seller's network could become a potential
- pool of buyers he can contact directly.
-
- On College Junktion Friday morning, Joel Glynn, Miami junior and company
- vice president, listed a textbook from one of his prelaw classes, Thomas
- L. Tedford's "Freedom of Speech in the United States."
-
- If a potential buyer wants to know whether Glynn actually found the book
- useful before placing a bid, a link under Glynn's profile sends a message
- directly to his e-mail, allowing him to respond without being logged onto
- the auction.
-
- The key to this transaction is dot-edu; it only works for students, faculty
- and university staff.
-
- Coupled with an e-mail verification for registration, it's meant to work as
- an automatic security check. "If somebody signs up with a fake e-mail
- address, it bounces back to us, so we can see who that is" and keep them
- off the site, Baptiste said.
-
- That restriction defines College Junktion in a crowded Internet
- marketplace, said Ina Steiner, editor of the online trade magazine
- AuctionBytes.com.
-
- "In the time since eBay started - that's been 10 years - scammers have
- really figured out how to play the system, how to commit fraud," she said.
- Steiner said that online buyers are now asking, how safe is their personal
- information?
-
- College Junktion testers at schools around the country praised the limited
- access, saying they're more comfortable trading with fellow students with
- similar needs.
-
- "The fact that it's being run by college students is reassuring," said Lisa
- DePascale, a freshman at Quinnipiac University in Hamden, Conn. "You know
- you can relate to the person that started it, and that they're looking out
- for the best interests of someone my age."
-
- College Junktion initially included auction categories for class notes and
- term papers. Baptiste said he decided to withhold these features Friday
- over questions of security and plagiarism.
-
- Steiner cautions that a ".edu" e-mail address alone won't ensure safer
- online auctions.
-
- "Users still shouldn't be lulled into a false sense of security. Whether a
- college student is more responsible than anyone else is up for grabs."
-
- Compared with eBay, which according to a spokesman had 1.4 billion listings
- in 2004, College Junktion is starting small. About a thousand listings,
- mostly for textbooks and electronics, and a few hundred users were
- registered for Friday's launch, Baptiste said.
-
- Investments from family and friends got College Junktion off the ground.
- Advertising, premium listing charges, and entry fees for promotions such
- as +video+ game tournaments will sustain it, said Ben Horwitz, a Miami
- freshman and the site's chief financial officer. Revenue from the students'
- other e-commerce company, Miami Merchants Inc., will supplement the auction
- site.
-
- College Junktion won't charge for basic listings, or take commissions from
- sales. Baptiste hopes to attract eBay sellers such as Boston-area student
- Zia, who said he's switching to the new auction to avoid eBay's increased
- fees on some listing options.
-
- "It costs me an extra three to five bucks (in eBay fees), and I think
- that's going to double, so that's just money wasted," Zia said.
-
- Online auction watchdog Rosalinda Baldwin, editor of The Auction Guild
- newsletter, doubts that the free listing options will entice many eBay
- sellers to defect.
-
- "In general, the people who are selling online, most of us are in our 40s,
- 50s, 60s and 70s. People think, 'Online - oh, cool, young.' No, it's the
- baby boom generation online," she said.
-
-
-
- Company Pulls Out of Deal to Track Students
-
-
- The grade school that required students to wear radio frequency
- identification badges that can track their every move has ended the program
- because the company that developed the technology pulled out.
-
- "I'm disappointed; that's about all I can say at this point," Earnie
- Graham, the superintendent and principal of Brittan Elementary School in
- Sutter, said Tuesday night. "I think I let my staff down. Nobody on this
- campus knows every student."
-
- The badges, developed by Sutter-based technology company InCom Corp., were
- introduced on Jan. 18. The school board was set to talk about the
- controversial policy Tuesday night but tabled the discussion after InCom
- announced it was terminating its agreement.
-
- "I'm not convinced it's over," parent Dawn Cantrall, who filed a complaint
- with the American Civil Liberties Union, told the (Marysville)
- Appeal-Democrat. "I'm happy for now that kids are not being tagged, but I'm
- still fighting to keep it out of our school system. It has to stop here."
-
- The system was imposed, without parental input, by the school as a way to
- simplify attendance-taking and potentially reduce vandalism and improve
- student safety.
-
- While many parents criticized the badges for violating privacy and possibly
- endangering children's health, some parents supported the plan.
-
- "Technology scares some people it's a fear of the unknown," parent Mary
- Brower told the newspaper before the meeting. "Any kind of new technology
- has the potential for misuse, but I feel confident the school is not going
- to misuse it."
-
- Each student was required to wear identification cards around their necks
- with their picture, name and grade and a wireless transmitter that beamed
- their ID number to a teacher's handheld computer when the child passed
- under an antenna posted above a classroom door.
-
- The school had already disabled the scanners above classroom doors and was
- not disciplining students who didn't wear the badges.
-
-
-
-
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