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- Volume 10, Issue 37 Atari Online News, Etc. September 12, 2008
-
-
- Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2008
- All Rights Reserved
-
- Atari Online News, Etc.
- A-ONE Online Magazine
- Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
- Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
- Rob Mahlert, Associate Editor
-
-
- Atari Online News, Etc. Staff
-
- Dana P. Jacobson -- Editor
- Joe Mirando -- "People Are Talking"
- Michael Burkley -- "Unabashed Atariophile"
- Albert Dayes -- "CC: Classic Chips"
- Rob Mahlert -- Web site
- Thomas J. Andrews -- "Keeper of the Flame"
-
-
- With Contributions by:
-
-
-
-
-
- To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
- log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
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- Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
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-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE #1037 09/12/08
-
- ~ Firefox 'Privacy Mode' ~ People Are Talking! ~ Dropbox Is Live!
- ~ Yahoo Gets A Makeover ~ No Wi-Fi, No Magic! ~ Obama Sex Video?
- ~ AOL One-Stop E-mail! ~ Google Changes Policy! ~ Game Sales Booming
- ~ Berners-Lee Spots Flaw ~ Bosses Screen Web Life ~ Wii To Get Wi-Fi!
-
- -* Fake You Tube Pages, Malware *-
- -* McAfee's Nearly Instant Malware Aid *-
- -* Virginia Court Strikes Down Anti-Spam Law! *-
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- What a week! The temps cooled down in the Northeast, while hurricanes
- threatened the gulf coast. I'll take the cool down! This kind of weather
- made hard work on the golf course a lot more bearable to handle. And we
- put in a long and hard week!
-
- Well, the "single life" will end in a couple of days. I talked to my wife
- earlier today, and the ship is on its way back to New York. From there
- it'll be a 5-hours bus ride back to Boston. So, I'll either pick her up
- late Saturday night, or some time on Sunday. It was a strange week being
- a "bachelor", I can tell you that! A few steaks, a few beers, sleeping a
- little late, and no "honey-do" list for a week!
-
- So, while I enjoy a few more hours of "freedom", let's take a stroll
- through this week's issue.
-
- Until next time...
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
- compiled by Joe Mirando
- joe@atarinews.org
-
-
-
- Hidi ho friends and neighbors. We're not doing UseNet messages this
- week, since there just aren't enough to make a good column.
-
- I'd make you sit here and read through a bunch of my rambling about
- politics and other assorted stuff, but the truth is that I've kind of
- under the gun here...
-
- The father of one of my long-time friends passed away and they're making
- plans as I type this for interring his ashes in their family plot here
- in town.
-
- Y'see, the parents retired and moved from Connecticut to Florida, and
- the rest of the family is spread out all over the east coast from New
- Hampshire to Florida.
-
- Being a long-time friend, and seeing as I'm less than five miles from
- where my friend's father's ashes will be buried, I've offered to help
- with any arrangements where I can.
-
- Oops... big mistake. I don't mean to sound like I'm complaining, but you
- tend to forget all the minutia that's involved in just getting somebody
- planted in the ground.
-
- I'm happy to help out, though, and I'm sure that it'll be appreciated.
- And, if it's, not, y'know what? That's not important. I didn't offer my
- help so that they could coo over how good a friend I am. I offered my
- help to make things as easy as I could for a family that I've been
- proud to count among my friends for more than 30 years.
-
- Well, off to call someone about getting a canopy for the graveside
- service and see about hotel rooms for far-flung family members.
-
- C'mon back next week and let's hope that there are enough UseNet
- messages to make a good column.
-
- 'Till then, keep your ears open so that you'll hear what they are saying
- when...
-
- PEOPLE ARE TALKING
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->In This Week's Gaming Section - Wii Gets Wi-Fi Adapter!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""" Spore Gets the Treatment!
- Game Sales Booming!
- And more!
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- ->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
- """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
-
-
-
- Nintendo Announces Wii Wi-Fi Adapter
-
-
- Befuddled housewives anxious to download Strong Bad's Cool Game for
- Attractive People need no longer worry. Nintendo has announced the
- Nintendo WiFi Network Adapter, due to arrive in Japan September 18.
-
- Kotaku is reporting that the WiFi Network Adapter can serve as a router,
- or become a "bridge" for an existing router. It can also be set to
- "Auto," which will automatically switch over the household's network.
- Wii owners, consider your online experience streamlined.
-
- The adapter will be available for Ñ5,800 (USD $53) on Nintendo's
- homepage, and can be used with both the Wii and the Nintendo DS. No word
- on whether it's due to come out to America, but we'll count it as
- "likely." For Wii owners who haven't yet figured out how to access the
- splendors of Everybody Votes, will this be enough to push you online?
-
-
-
- 'Spore' Gets the Social Network Treatment
-
-
- With all due respect to Hell's Kitchen, the biggest game release of the
- last week was unquestionably Spore. That's why Raptr - the hot new
- social platform for gamers - got the game up and running on their
- service as quickly as possible. Joining Raptr-compatible heavy-hitters
- like Steam, Xbox Live, PlayStation Network, and World of Warcraft, Spore
- players can now ping their buddies with the intimate details of their
- galactic conquest.
-
- For those in the dark on this whole Raptr scene, it's essentially trying
- to do for gamers what Facebook did for alcohol-dependent college
- students. It's a social network that collects tons of data from the
- games you play, and then presents your accomplishments in aggregate to
- the world - via the Raptr client itself, or by forwarding to other
- networks like Myspace. In the case of Spore, Raptr will automatically
- inform your friends of your in-game achievements, in addition to
- providing real-time snapshots of your creations as they develop and
- evolve.
-
- Achieving seamless integration with such a big-name title is
- commendable, lending the upstart some early credibility. That goodwill
- should come in handy, especially in the face of the established
- competition. We'll be taking a closer look at Raptr in the coming weeks,
- so be sure to check back when you're not too busy looking at the new
- feet your cousin just put on his Spore creature.
-
-
-
- Preorder 'Far Cry 2' at Gamestop for Extra Missions
-
-
- Want more variety in your AAA-game special editions? Of course you do.
- In a press release today, Ubisoft announced a new Limited Preorder
- Edition of Far Cry 2 exclusive to GameStop stores. This isn't the
- Limited Edition we reported on Friday; instead it's regularly priced and
- only available for pre-ordering at GameStop. The Preorder Edition comes
- packed with six bonus missions promising about three extra hours of
- gameplay, a fold-out map, and exclusive packaging. We have no word on
- whether this new packaging is the same wooden box promised with the
- other LE set.
-
- In the same press release, the company reconfirmed the game's previously
- reported October 21 release date, so you'll know when to order by. So
- which is more important to you: a t-shirt, art book, and DVD, or three
- hours of bonus missions? Or if you preorder the Limited Edition, do you
- get both the Limited Edition and Preorder Edition contents? What's the
- end result of all of this special edition mixing and matching? Our heads
- just exploded.
-
-
-
- Video-Game Sales Still Booming Despite Slowdown
-
-
- Stockings are expected to overflow with video games this year,
- researchers say. As the 2008 holiday season approaches, the gaming
- industry is gearing to get under the tree and analysts are predicting
- August's single-digit sales growth is no indication of what to expect
- for the holiday season.
-
- Analysts predicted the gaming industry would begin to slow down during
- the summer months and they did, according to NPD Group, a research firm
- based in New York. But that will not hurt the bottom line.
-
- The gaming industry's massive double-digits growth over the year had to
- slow eventually. August saw an increase of only 9 percent in video-game
- sales from August 2007, but analysts say single-digit growth in August
- is okay.
-
- "It's not a big deal," said David Riley, a spokesperson for NPD Group.
- "The summer months are historically the slowest months in the industry
- in terms of sales. The industry historically has followed the
- seasonality trends."
-
- In the summer months consumers are busy doing other things like
- vacationing and playing outdoors and are not normally in front of the
- television, according to Riley.
-
- Retailers in the U.S. cashed in on $1.08 billion in video-game sales for
- August, compared to $995 million the same month in 2007.
-
- "Why have we seen continued growth in this industry even though we are
- in a recession?" Riley asked. "{Software games} are going to be under
- the tree because they won't fit in the stockings," he quipped. "I don't
- think the industry is going to be suffering."
-
- In fact, NPD analysts say the industry will do well because during the
- holidays and in the last three calendar months, the industry generally
- makes 50 percent of annual sales.
-
- Despite a slow month, companies are expected to hit their annual revenue
- target of $22 billion to $24 billion because year-over-year numbers are
- still showing double-digit increases.
-
- Microsoft's Xbox 360, Sony's PS3, and Nintendo's Wii have been fierce
- competitors on retailers' shelves, and, depending on which day it is,
- Xbox or Wii will lead.
-
- And it's no secret that the two gaming systems will continue competing
- for holiday shoppers' attention. Wii and Xbox were in the top three in
- sales for the month of August.
-
- While Xbox 360 sold an impressive 195,200 units in August, Wii sold more
- than double with 453,000 units.
-
- "It's a very competitive market," said Riley. "It's very small and
- incestuous with just a small number of players, but it's huge in terms
- of revenue."
-
- The recent price drop for the Xbox 360 to $199 may help Microsoft sell
- more units, especially to those consumers who were on the fence about
- buying the game console. "You can expect to see some interesting results
- in September," Riley said.
-
- Asked if Nintendo and Sony will follow Xbox's lead in the price cut,
- Riley said: "Not any time soon. I don't know what they are thinking, but
- they don't need to drop the prices."
-
- Consumers want their gaming devices in hand along with other devices,
- and it showed as Nintendo DS trumped Wii and Xbox, selling 518,300
- devices.
-
- "Nintendo has ruled the portable space for so long," Riley said. "The
- Nintendo DS is highly addictive and certainly does attract the masses
- because it has a huge library of titles that appeal to every type of
- demographic you can imagine."
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
- A-ONE's Headline News
- The Latest in Computer Technology News
- Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
-
-
-
- Virginia Court Strikes Down Anti-Spam Law
-
-
- The Virginia Supreme Court declared the state's anti-spam law
- unconstitutional Friday and reversed the conviction of a man once
- considered one of the world's most prolific spammers.
-
- The court unanimously agreed with Jeremy Jaynes' argument that the law
- violates the free-speech protections of the First Amendment because it
- does not just restrict commercial e-mails. Most other states also have
- anti-spam laws, and there is a federal CAN-SPAM Act as well.
-
- The Virginia law "is unconstitutionally overbroad on its face because it
- prohibits the anonymous transmission of all unsolicited bulk e-mails,
- including those containing political, religious or other speech
- protected by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution," Justice G.
- Steven Agee wrote.
-
- In 2004, Jaynes became the first person in the country to be convicted
- of a felony for sending unsolicited bulk e-mail. Authorities claimed
- Jaynes sent up to 10 million e-mails a day from his home in Raleigh,
- N.C. He was sentenced to nine years in prison.
-
- Jaynes was charged in Virginia because the e-mails went through an AOL
- server there.
-
- The state Supreme Court last February affirmed Jaynes' conviction on
- several grounds but later agreed, without explanation, to reconsider the
- First Amendment issue. Jaynes was allowed to argue that the law
- unconstitutionally infringed on political and religious speech even
- though all his spam was commercial.
-
- Jaynes' attorney, Thomas Wolf, has said sending commercial spam would
- still be illegal under the federal CAN-SPAM Act even if Virginia's law
- is invalidated. However, he said the federal law would not apply to
- Jaynes because it was adopted after he sent the e-mails that were the
- basis for the state charges.
-
-
-
- McAfee Brings Nearly Instant Malware Updates
-
-
- What if your desktop security application could detect and remove a new
- threat that was only minutes old? That's the impetus behind McAfee
- Artemis Technology, announced on Monday.
-
- Artemis, which McAfee plans to market within its 2009 consumer products
- as "Active Protection," is not focused on hourly updates, or even
- 15-minute updates, as rival Symantec has. It means instant detection,
- said Dave Marcus, director of security research and communications for
- McAfee Avert Labs.
-
- McAfee's use of Artemis is similar to Trend Micro's use of cloud-based
- computing to analyze and produce new signature files within 15 minutes
- in that software on the desktop, then pass suspicious files to a larger,
- remote database. McAfee's Marcus told CNET News that the difference is
- that McAfee plans to use a desktop communication channel already built
- into the product, so existing users won't need to download new software.
-
- The file database maintained at McAfee Avert is much larger than what's
- possible on the desktop. Marcus said it's responsive to minute-by-minute
- changes in the threat landscape. The new technology opens a doorway to
- the larger database.
-
- When asked if Artemis is a listening agent, one that reports desktop
- activity back to McAfee, Marcus dismissed the idea. He said that
- whenever the McAfee software finds something suspicious and not in its
- signature database, it'll ping the larger database back at McAfee Avert
- Labs to get the signature needed. The files sent back and forth are
- minuscule, he added.
-
- Marcus confirmed that McAfee would continue to send down daily signature
- files, but, in the heat of the moment, if a new malware sample is
- received by a McAfee-protected computer, it'll have instant protection
- from the vast database back at the company headquarters.
-
-
-
- New Tool Creates Fake YouTube Pages for Spreading Malware
-
-
- Cybercriminals are getting more and more business-like. The latest
- examples involve a tool that automates the creation of fake YouTube Web
- sites that can be used to deliver malware and password-cracking services
- for sale.
-
- Panda Security said it has uncovered a tool circulating in underground
- hacking forums, dubbed YTFakeCreator, that enables anyone to easily
- create a fake YouTube page that surreptitiously installs a Trojan,
- virus, or adware on a visitor's computer, said Ryan Sherstobitoff, chief
- corporate evangelist of Panda Security.
-
- The tool does not spread the video link on its own. An attacker must
- distribute it via e-mail, FTP, IRC channels, peer-to-peer file-sharing
- networks or CD.
-
- Once a visitor arrives at the page, a fake error message appears saying
- that the video can't be played because an important software component,
- such as a codec or Flash update, is missing. The visitor is prompted to
- download the software and the malware is installed.
-
- YTFakeCreator makes it easy for even unskilled people to set up an
- attack. It has a configuration menu that lets the would-be attacker
- select a warning message to be displayed on the fake video page and
- properties of the video, among other options. More details are on the
- Panda site.
-
- "They've really commercialized malware. There's been an upsurge of
- sophisticated custom-built Trojans that come with service level
- agreements and tech support sold in underground forums," Sherstobitoff
- said. "They are renting out denial of service attacks and botnets and
- selling trading, just like arms dealers, but in this case it's
- electronic crime."
-
- Meanwhile, IBM's Internet Security Systems said password cracking is
- also being commercialized and marketed as "password recovery" services.
-
-
-
- Browser Wars Heat Up as Firefox Adds 'Privacy Mode'
-
-
- Keeping in step with rival Web browsers from Microsoft and Google,
- Mozilla has announced a "privacy mode" for Firefox 3.1. The update is
- scheduled to be released in beta form in October.
-
- In privacy mode, a browser doesn't record a history of visited sites or
- save cookies from those sites.
-
- On the Mozilla Wiki, developer Mike Connor listed three goals for the
- privacy mode.
-
- "There should be a clear line drawn between your 'public' and 'private'
- browsing sessions," he wrote, so users can't be tracked when they are
- doing things they consider private. Information on visits can still be
- explicitly saved, he continued, such as per-site permissions, bookmarks,
- and so on.
-
- In addition to not recording visited sites and removing all downloads
- from a given session, privacy mode will also mean there is no prompt to
- save passwords, and password fields cannot be autofilled. "Autocomplete"
- can be available, but entered data will not be kept. When a user enters
- or leaves privacy mode, any current authenticated sessions will be
- logged out.
-
- Currently, Firefox offers an extension called Stealthier with private
- browsing features.
-
- The addition of privacy mode is a response, at least in part, to the
- recent launch of a beta version of Google's Chrome browser, which
- features a privacy mode called Incognito. In the Web-published log of
- Mozilla bug tracking, one Firefox developer noted that "recent
- developments with Chrome will likely make finally getting
- private-browsing mode shipped a priority for 3.1."
-
- When a user opens Incognito in Chrome, however, Google points out that
- its privacy mode is not intended to deal with such privacy issues as
- identity theft or tricking users. This includes, Google noted drily,
- "Web sites that collect or share information about you," malicious
- software that tracks your keystrokes, "surveillance by secret agents" or
- "people standing behind you."
-
- In addition, the number-one browser in market share, Internet Explorer,
- features private browsing - called InPrivate - in IE8 Beta 2. The
- Safari browser from Apple also has private browsing.
-
- Some observers are suggesting that this latest round of one-upmanship
- suggests that the browser wars are back. Harold James, writing in
- Business Day online, wrote Friday that "Google is threatening to reopen
- the browser wars of the 1990s, when Microsoft's Internet Explorer
- eliminated its rival, Netscape's Navigator."
-
- Al Hilwa, program director at industry research firm IDC, said, "We're
- definitely back in the browser wars."
-
- But, he pointed out, "a lot has changed" since the first major war 10
- years ago. This generation of browser competition, he said, is taking
- place in an environment where a browser is a common interface for many
- applications, a role once served exclusively by operating systems.
-
- Hilwa also noted that there is also "more isolation between processes,
- more security and privacy," and browsers now have a prominent role in
- the center ring of computing - mobile devices.
-
-
-
- AOL Rolls Out One-Stop E-mail Service
-
-
- AOL on Wednesday unveiled a new e-mail feature designed to allow users
- to access multiple e-mail services from one location on the site.
-
- The e-mail service is part of AOL's plans to debut new features to the
- site over the coming weeks; the features aim to provide customization
- and give users more control, such as adding Web links to the main
- navigation bar and accessing custom feeds from a variety of sites from
- AOL.com's main page.
-
- The new features follow efforts earlier this year to shore up the
- company's user traffic by revamping the design of its Web sites, from
- Money & Finance to its News and Sports pages.
-
-
-
- Dropbox Is Live and Linux-Friendly
-
-
- Dropbox, one of the many file-synchronization and online-backup combo
- tools to debut this year is finally ready for the masses to sign up; no
- more invite required. The basic service is free and includes 2GB of
- storage space online.
-
- With the launch comes pricing for more storage - the next jump from 2GB
- at no charge is 50GB for either $9.99 a month or $99.99 a year. The
- Dropboxers say the 2GB accounts will remain free forever, and if you had
- more space during the beta you're probably grandfathered in.
-
- Maybe even better news: Dropbox now has Linux clients (for Fedora Core 9
- and Ubuntu 7.10 and 8.04), which it says is functionally the same as
- what you get on Mac and Windows. You won't find that yet with the
- competition. Now, if only Dropbox opened up sync/backup to more than
- just a single folder. But the developers in the Dropbox forums say it's
- coming.
-
-
-
- Google Slashes Data-Retention Policy in Half
-
-
- In the face of heavy pressure from privacy advocates, Google on Monday
- announced a new policy on retention of data.
-
- The latest privacy plan centers on a promise to anonymize IP addresses
- on Google's server logs after nine months. That slashes the
- data-retention policy in half to - as Google explained it - address
- regulatory concerns and take another step to improve privacy for its
- users. But Google is not saying how it is making the addresses anonymous.
-
- "Over the last two years, policy-makers and regulators - especially in
- Europe and the U.S. - have continued to ask us (and others in the
- industry) to explain and justify this shortened logs-retention policy,"
- said a Google blog post attributed to Global Privacy Counsel Peter
- Fleischer, Senior Privacy Counsel Jane Horvath, and software engineer
- Alma Whitten.
-
- "We responded by open letter to explain how we were trying to strike the
- right balance between sometimes conflicting factors like privacy,
- security, and innovation," they continued. "Some in the community of EU
- data-protection regulators continued to be skeptical of the legitimacy
- of logs retention and demanded detailed justifications for this
- retention. Many of these privacy leaders also highlighted the risks of
- litigants using court-ordered discovery to gain access to logs, as in
- the recent Viacom suit."
-
- Google's initial move in March 2007 to anonymize its logs, the company
- noted, came with the potential to sacrifice future innovations and
- degrade the usefulness of the data in a way that outweighed the privacy
- benefit for users.
-
- Nevertheless, Google said it continued working on what it calls a
- computer-science problem. The problem is difficult to solve, Google
- said, because the characteristics of the data that make it useful to
- prevent fraud are the very characteristics that also introduce some
- privacy risk.
-
- "After months of work, our engineers developed methods for preserving
- more of the data's utility while also anonymizing IP addresses sooner,"
- the privacy team wrote on the corporate blog. "We haven't sorted out all
- of the implementation details, and we may not be able to use precisely
- the same methods for anonymizing as we do after 18 months, but we are
- committed to making it work."
-
- Still, Google made it clear that it is still concerned about the
- potential loss of security, quality and innovation that may result from
- having less data. Google warned that as the anonymization period grows
- shorter, there is a shrinking gap between the benefit to users and the
- drawbacks to innovation.
-
- Privacy advocate seem appeased, at least for now. Ari Schwartz, deputy
- director at the Center for Democracy and Technology, called Google's
- move toward a nine-month retention policy a positive step, especially
- when considering that just more than a year ago there was no limit on
- data storage.
-
- "How long do the engineers need the information to prevent fraud and
- maintain search quality? There's been a debate on that and the numbers
- keep changing. We still don't know the answer and we still don't know
- how the anonymization is going to work," Schwartz said, noting that
- Google now has the shortest data-retention policy in the industry.
-
- "There are still lot of questions out there, but we are moving in the
- right direction. If Google answers the question about how they are going
- about doing IP anonymization, that will help answer some of these
- questions about how long you need it for."
-
- The EU's research concluded that search engines don't need to retain
- data for longer than six months. Schwartz said competing search engines
- could move to outdo Google with six-month data-retention policies, but
- when and who is not clear.
-
-
-
- Yahoo's Home Page, Other Sections To Get Makeover
-
-
- Yahoo Inc. is preparing to tweak several popular sections of its Web
- site, including its home page, during the next few months to accommodate
- more material from rival services as the Internet company tries to
- polish its tarnished franchise.
-
- The makeover outlined for reporters Thursday represents another a key
- step in Yahoo's push to regain the momentum that it lost while being
- outmaneuvered by Internet search rival Google Inc. and more recent
- upstarts like the rapidly growing online hangouts MySpace and Facebook.
-
- Yahoo's previous dawdling crimped its profits during the past two years,
- leading to a dramatic downturn in its market value that triggered an
- unsolicited takeover bid from Microsoft Corp. this year.
-
- Since Microsoft withdrew its $47.5 billion bid in May, Yahoo has been
- battling to boost its stock price, which recently sunk to its lowest
- level in nearly five years. Yahoo shares climbed 85 cents Thursday to
- close at $18.55, well below Microsoft's last offer of $33.
-
- Boasting 500 million users worldwide, Yahoo is hoping to bounce back by
- becoming an even more indispensable vehicle for Web surfers and
- advertisers. As part of that process, the Sunnyvale-based company has
- been spotlighting more content from other Web sites and extending its
- advertising network so it can run ads on more Internet properties.
-
- Yahoo plans to open up more with the first major redesign of its home
- page since May 2006. The changes will enable Yahoo users to plant more
- mini-applications known as "widgets" on personalized versions of the
- home page, said Ash Patel, executive vice president of the company's
- audience product division.
-
- In a demonstration, Patel showed how Yahoo users subscribing to the
- online DVD rental service Netflix will soon be able to review their
- latest movie requests and ratings without leaving Yahoo's main page.
- Yahoo is hosting a conference for outside developers Friday in hopes of
- cultivating more applications for its new home page.
-
- Patel declined to specify when the redesigned page will be unveiled,
- saying only that it will begin gradually within the next few months.
- "You will see a rolling thunder kind of thing," Patel said.
-
- Yahoo also plans to open up its music section to rival services like
- Apple Inc.'s iTunes and Amazon.com Inc. during the next few weeks, said
- Scott Moore, who runs Yahoo's media operations. Moore said Yahoo's news
- section also will start to feature more local content from newspapers
- around the nation.
-
- Another one-time Internet darling, Time Warner Inc.'s AOL, announced a
- similar redesign this week, opening its home page to content from rival
- companies in a bid to broaden its appeal to users who have endless
- choices online.
-
- On the marketing front, Yahoo still plans to begin an advertising
- partnership with Google next month despite an intensifying antitrust
- investigation by the U.S. Justice Department.
-
- Yahoo thinks it can boost its annual revenue by $800 million by relying
- on Google's technology to sell some of the ads on its Web site, but the
- partnership has raised concerns about diminished competition because the
- two companies combined control more than 80 percent of the U.S. search
- advertising market.
-
- In a move that could foreshadow a formal legal challenge, the Justice
- Department has hired an antitrust lawyer to review the evidence
- collected in an inquiry that began even before Yahoo announced its
- partnership plans with Google in June.
-
- Because they aren't exchanging stock or cash, Yahoo and Google could
- have launched their alliance months ago but voluntarily waited until
- October to allow antitrust regulators to assess the situation.
-
- Yahoo plans to start posting some ads from Google at an unspecified date
- next month, even if the Justice Department hasn't completed its review,
- said Hilary Schneider, who oversees Yahoo's U.S. operations. Google
- Chief Executive Eric Schmidt has expressed the same intention.
-
- "We are confident we can get (regulators) comfortable" with the
- partnership, Schneider said Thursday.
-
-
-
- Without Wi-Fi, Mini-Computers Not As Magical
-
-
- As personal computers go, the new rash of ultra-mini laptops are full of
- geeky goodness. Light, portable and powerful, they are almost perfect.
- Almost.
-
- But like a rowboat in your backyard or a flat-screen TV in a blackout,
- most of these new PCs suffer when removed from a critical element.
- Specifically - when outside of high-speed Internet access range, they
- go from power-in-your-pocket to pricey-digital scratchpads.
-
- The idea behind the resurgent "netbook" niche is that
- consumers-on-the-go primarily use computers to email, write documents,
- manage spreadsheets and surf the Web. Once online, they can access
- critical files, chat with others, or use social sites like Facebook or
- music services like Pandora.
-
- That's great - if you are sure to be near a broadband connection, such
- as a home network, a Wi-Fi-covered college campus or an area with WiMax,
- a high-speed wireless technology that can blanket entire cities.
-
- But an unconnected machine's power is limited.
-
- "I am convinced this class of products will sing when WiMax comes out,"
- said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at The Enderle Group. "It kind of
- depends on ... being always connected. As a disconnected device, outside
- of email and word processing, it's not quite as interesting.
-
- "It's more focused on the future than on the present."
-
- By eschewing video editing, the ability to play DVDs, or power gaming,
- these users forgo the need for cutting-edge chip speed or tons of
- hard-drive storage capacity, and the extra cost they require.
-
- The latest in this genre is Dell's Inspiron Mini 9, a 2-pound machine with
- a 9-inch screen and wireless Internet card. At $349, it is similar to
- rivals developed by Hewlett-Packard, Acer, ASUS, Intel and others aiming
- at youngsters who prefer a full screen and keyboard to thumbing on
- smartphones.
-
- With U.S. consumers watching their wallets amid economic uncertainty,
- the low prices may pique their interest.
-
- "We think that price is ... affordable," said John Thode, a vice
- president at Dell. "We find that that is the right kind of price to
- encourage (the purchase of) second and third devices in a person's
- portfolio."
-
- Think of these PCs as an economical fit between pocket-sized smartphones
- - which surf the web, and manage contacts and information on a
- business-card sized screen - and full blown laptop computers. Dell's base
- model Inspiron 9 comes with 512 megabytes of RAM memory, a 4-gigabytes
- solid state drive, and built-in wireless network card.
-
- Last year, Taiwan's Asustek Computer introduced the $399 Eee PC which
- flew off store shelves from Asia to North America.
-
- Dell's netbook, which is powered by Linux operating system software (or
- Windows XP, plus a built-in webcam, for $50 more), is as light as Apple's
- MacBook Air, but smaller by about 4 inches in screen size. Apple's Air
- also boasts an 80-gigabyte hard drive, and costs $1,300 more.
-
- "It (this category) could potentially be bigger than the existing laptop
- market," Enderle said. "If you believe in the cloud computing model of
- the future, this is the kind of product that leads up to that future."
-
- Cloud computing refers to services centrally stored remotely on networks
- rather than on your device, which has to access the information "in the
- cloud" via the Web.
-
- According to PC Magazine analyst Cisco Cheng, the Dell PC's ability to
- do so much with so few on-board resources comes with another caveat -
- like most PCs, it might crash.
-
- "The combination of the Atom processor and 1 Gigabyte of memory gives
- you more than enough power to accomplish any general-purpose task,
- whether (you are) running MS Office 2007, encoding a video, running
- iTunes, watching YouTube, or playing online poker. Just don't do all of
- these things simultaneously," he said in an online review.
-
- And makers of these computers must not forget the ever-present threat
- that impulse buyers might find that the iPhone or iPod Touch soothes
- their craving for a low-cost, web-enabled computer, even thought its
- screen is only 3-inches, and it lacks a full keyboard.
-
-
-
- One in Five Bosses Screen Applicants' Web Lives
-
-
- Written references could become old hat for hiring managers with one in
- five saying they use social networking sites to research job candidates -
- and a third of them dismissing the candidate after what they discover.
-
- A survey by online job site CareerBuilder.com of 3,169 hiring managers
- found 22 percent of them screened potential staff via social networking
- profiles, up from 11 percent in 2006.
-
- An additional nine percent said they don't currently use social
- networking sites like Facebook or MySpace to screen potential employees
- but they do plan to start.
-
- The survey found that 34 percent of the managers who do screen
- candidates on the Internet found content that made them drop the
- candidate from any short list.
-
- The top area for concern among the hiring managers with 41 percent
- citing this as a downfall were candidates posting information about
- drinking or using drugs.
-
- The second area with 40 percent of concern were candidates posting
- provocative or inappropriate photographs or information.
-
- Other areas of concern to arise from social network sites were poor
- communication skills, lying about qualifications, candidates using
- discriminatory remarks related to race, gender or religion, and an
- unprofessional screen name.
-
- But the survey found hiring managers scouring social network pages was
- not all bad with 24 percent of these managers saying they found content
- to help them solidify their decision to hire that candidate.
-
- Top factors that influenced their hiring decision included candidate's
- backgrounds supporting their qualifications for the job, proving they
- had good communications skills, and having a site that conveyed a
- professional image with a wide range of interests.
-
- "Hiring managers are using the Internet to get a more well-rounded view
- of job candidates in terms of their skills, accomplishments and overall
- fit within the company," said CareerBuilder.com spokeswoman Rosemary
- Haefner in a statement.
-
- "As a result, more job seekers are taking action to make their social
- networking profiles employer-friendly. Sixteen percent of workers who
- have social networking pages said they modified the content on their
- profile to convey a more professional image to potential employers."
-
-
-
- Obama Sex Video? Hardly. It's Spyware Spreading Via E-mail
-
-
- Don't believe everything you read on the Internet: Democratic
- presidential candidate Barack Obama isn't a terrorist...or a porn star.
-
- A malicious spam e-mail is spreading that claims to have a link to a sex
- video of Obama but is instead spyware that steals sensitive data from
- the computer, security firm Sophos warned on Wednesday.
-
- The subject line says "Obama sex video!!!" and the e-mail appears to
- come from "infonews@obama.com, Graham Cluley, senior technology
- consultant at Sophos, says on his blog.
-
- Clicking on the link downloads an executable file that plays an amateur
- porn video, but Obama is not in it.
-
- Meanwhile, behind the scenes a Trojan horse known as Mal/Hupig-D is
- installed. The Trojan targets Windows machines and steals passwords and
- bank account data, Cluley said.
-
- Is it the work of the Republicans? Probably not; it has the trademark
- bad grammar and excessive punctuation of traditional phishing attempts,
- many of which originate outside English-speaking countries.
-
-
-
- Creator of Web Spots A Flaw in Internet Explorer
-
-
- Tim Berners-Lee, the British-born inventor of the World Wide Web, says
- he doesn't like to express preferences among Web browsers. But he does
- have an issue with one of them: Microsoft Corp.'s Internet Explorer.
-
- Berners-Lee, director of the standard-setting World Wide Web Consortium,
- or W3C, said in an interview this week that Internet Explorer is falling
- behind other browsers in the way it handles an important graphics
- feature for Web pages.
-
- A Web image that is encoded as a scalable vector graphic, or SVG, can be
- resized to fit the computer screen or zoomed into without becoming
- blocky and losing sharpness, as happens with images encoded as the more
- traditional "bitmaps." Maps are one popular use of SVG.
-
- "If you look around at browsers, you'll find that most of them support
- scalable vector graphics," Berners-Lee said. "I'll let you figure out
- which one has been slow in supporting SVG."
-
- That would be Internet Explorer. While Firefox, Safari and other
- browsers have built-in support for SVG, Microsoft relies on a plug-in
- from Adobe Systems Inc. that must be downloaded before Internet Explorer
- can show SVG objects. This applies even to the recently released "beta"
- version of Internet Explorer 8.
-
- "SVG support is something that we have been evaluating for some time,"
- Microsoft said in a statement. "We recognize the demand for vector
- graphics from Web developers, and realize this is a high-priority demand."
-
- The matter is more urgent for Microsoft because on Jan. 1, Adobe will be
- ending its support of the SVG plug-in, and it's unclear if it will be
- available for download after that.
-
- Microsoft supported another format for vector graphics, called Vector
- Markup Language, or VML. However, the World Wide Web Consortium
- recommended SVG in 2001.
-
-
-
- =~=~=~=
-
-
-
-
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