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Volume 12, Issue 06 Atari Online News, Etc. February 5, 2010
Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2010
All Rights Reserved
Atari Online News, Etc.
A-ONE Online Magazine
Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
Rob Mahlert, Associate Editor
Atari Online News, Etc. Staff
Dana P. Jacobson -- Editor
Joe Mirando -- "People Are Talking"
Michael Burkley -- "Unabashed Atariophile"
Albert Dayes -- "CC: Classic Chips"
Rob Mahlert -- Web site
Thomas J. Andrews -- "Keeper of the Flame"
With Contributions by:
Fred Horvat
To subscribe to A-ONE, change e-mail addresses, or unsubscribe,
log on to our website at: www.atarinews.org
and click on "Subscriptions".
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
Now available:
http://www.atarinews.org
Visit the Atari Advantage Forum on Delphi!
http://forums.delphiforums.com/atari/
=~=~=~=
A-ONE #1206 02/05/10
~ Cyberattacks Growing! ~ People Are Talking! ~ JooJoo Tablet Coming!
~ Interest in Blogging! ~ Students Free Speech? ~ Dumb Facebook Crook!
~ Death Tongue for Jag! ~ Demon Sheep Senate Race ~ Xbox Live Is Dead?
-* Google Ends Support for IE6! *-
-* House Bill To Bolster Cybersecurity *-
-* UN Calls for Treaty To Prevent Cyber War! *-
=~=~=~=
->From the Editor's Keyboard "Saying it like it is!"
""""""""""""""""""""""""""
When you live in New England, you always pay attention to the various
weather reports on the news - always! And, when you hear "severe winter
watch", you really pay attention. That usually means that we're going
to be getting one helluva storm soon. But, thanks to the jet stream and
frigid temperatures, that severe snowstorm will stay south of us while
dumping up to (and in some places more than) two feet of snow over the
next couple of days. So, better get in your well wishes to Joe fairly
soon because he's going to get buried in a lot of snow soon!!
It's been another long week here - pretty much the same work schedule for
the past few months. By the time I get out of work late Friday afternoons,
I'm wiped out. It's difficult to put myself in a creative-writing mood
and talk about "serious" topics. It's just hard to get, and remain,
focused. It takes almost everything that I have in reserve to put the
issue together, much less add creative thoughts! So, I hope that you
will bear with me for yet another week. You'll know it once I get a
good burst of creative energy!
Until next time...
=~=~=~=
PEOPLE ARE TALKING
compiled by Joe Mirando
joe@atarinews.org
Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Well, another week has come and gone, and
things haven't changed much. This week I want to talk about a subject
that's near and dear to my heart... NASA. And no, that's NOT a place in
the Bahamas. [grin]
Specifically, I want to talk a little bit about NASA's budget. The
President's budget came out a couple of days before last week's column.
I like to take a little time to look at the numbers myself and sort of
extend out what it might mean for the future.
First of all, it's important to remember that NASA isn't a company and
isn't in a 'regular' type of business. All of what NASA does is on a
timeline. Nothing is just a one-lump-sum-on-delivery kind of thing. It
takes years, sometimes decades, to bring a project to fruition. You can't
just say "okay, we're gonna go to the moon" or "Yeah, let's go see what
the Oort cloud is all about". No, you have to figure out HOW to do what
you want to do, have someone build whatever it is you want to use, and
then test, test, test. Look at the Mars rovers. We're talking about
remote controlled buggies that were designed to last 90 days on an
obscenely cold and dry almost airless world, no closer than 62 million
miles and sometimes as far away as 236 million miles away. At that
distance, it's hard to get the Maytag repairman to fix things that might
go wrong, so those little machines have to built tough and reliable. And
they certainly were, since they outlasted their original missions by
almost six YEARS! So yeah, it takes time to get things proposed, designed,
built, tested, launched, landed and actually used.
Back in the 60's, President Kennedy drove us to land a man on the moon
"before the decade is out". We did it. We did it six times. That era
spurred a generation of us to become interested in space, in engineering,
in computers, in science in general. Then the president, Richard Nixon,
axed the program to save money. And we haven't gone back since. And now
we've got generations that only are not interested in science, a
disturbingly large percentage of them don't even know what it IS. A large
percentage of the population has come to think of science as something
you can believe in or not. A disheartening state of affairs, to be sure.
You may ask why we'd want to go back again, considering the danger and
expense involved, and that's a valid question. There are many answers,
ranging from the old mountain climber's retort "because it's there" to
the fact that there may be resources on the moon that we can utilize to
the idea that the moon is a stepping stone to the next leg of our journey
into space. Shooting things into space from the moon is easier than
blasting off from the Earth, since the gravity is lower. You can do it
with less fuel and, therefore, less weight than from Earth.
My favorite answer, though, is because if we don't someone else will.
Already, China, Japan and India are talking about missions to the moon.
I'm not particularly worried about anyone 'keeping secrets' about what
they might find, but dammit, I want US to be at the forefront. The phrase
"We came in peace for all mankind" comes to mind.
But if you want to take a purely dollars and cents view of things, think
about this: Someone is going to go back to the moon. Someone is going to
claim 'victory'. And I have no doubt but that when other nations begin
making serious strides toward landing on the moon, we will want to play
catch-up if for no other reason than to not let ourselves "come in
second". And rushing to play catch-up is not only risky, it's expensive.
We'd be better off starting now. Starting to get ourselves back to where
we should have been in the 70's.
And now, now that we've landed our marvel machines on Mars, sent probes
to the gas giants, and sent emissaries to the farthest reaches of the
solar system and beyond, we need to re-develop not only the ability but
the will to reach out a human hand into the vastness of space.
Who knows what we may find out there? That wasn't a rhetorical question.
Who knows? Can we even guess what might be waiting for us? We've
recently found that there's water and metals on the moon, water on Mars,
methane and ethane on Saturn's moon Titan, Europa and Encaladus are
covered with water ice. There're all kinds of chemicals throughout the
solar system just waiting for us. It's what we decide to do with them
that's important. We could build bases on the moon and build rockets and
fuel them without having to bring everything with us from Earth. From
there we could go to Mars, again building structures and vehicles, and
again fueling them with hydrogen from the water beneath the ruddy
surface. While it's got 'more' gravity than the moon, it's still easier
to 'blast off' from Mars than from Earth. From there? The moons of
Jupiter and Saturn, that explosive methane from Titan providing more
fuel. Then maybe out of the solar system all together. Perhaps we can
manufacture more effective solar collectors on the moon and use them to
help end our dependence on petroleum.
The sun is what powers everything on earth. Well, almost everything.
There are things in the deep sea that live off of the nasty hot stuff
that spews out of geothermal vents at temperatures way above that of
boiling water. But for the most part, everything living on the surface of
the Earth depends on the sun. Capturing the energy from the sun in space
and transferring it to the Earth would give us all the power we need
forever. Well, at least for the next several billion years until the sun
has swollen and expanded almost to the orbit of Mars, engulfing
everything in the inner solar system. But the farther you get from the
sun the less energy you get from it. So if we're to go to Mars, you have
to 'work' almost 3 times as hard to get the same amount of energy. But
free energy is free energy, right? And the sun is just spitting it out
there into empty space every second of every day of every year. It has
done so for billions of years and will continue to do it for billions
more, well past the point where we can continue to live on the surface of
the Earth. You see, as the sun ages, it's getting hotter. Eventually,
it'll get so hot that the Earth's seas will boil away and nothing we see
around us today will be able to survive. So we'll HAVE to move outward...
if we haven't killed ourselves off already.
Perhaps we'll discover a way to turn the cosmic microwave background
itself into energy we can use. The Cosmic Microwave Background is an...
echo of what we think of as the Big Bang. It's all around us. All around
everything.
Remember when microwave ovens first became popular? Remember "Leakage
Detectors"? They were little electronic gadgets you ran along the seams
of the oven door and, if there was a leak, the needle would jump up the
dial. It seemed odd to me at first that these gadgets didn't need
batteries. Then it struck me: They're MICROWAVE powered! The energy of
any microwaves that were leaking out was what powered them! Now the
cosmic microwave background is much much weaker than even the weakest
microwave oven, but it is literally everywhere. All throughout the
Universe (as far as we know) there is the CMB.. the Cosmic Microwave
Background.
But if you want to be a little less.. farsighted, a little less
pie-in-the-sky, think about the dinosaurs. Current thinking is that their
demise was at least hastened by a comet or asteroid slamming into what it
now the Gulf of Mexico. It threw enough dust and smoke into the air to
block out the sun and change weather patterns and temperatures.
Astronomers estimate that a collision like that occurs once every 60 to 80
million years. The last one... the one that 'killed the dinosaurs'...
happened about 65 million years ago.
It would seem to me that, no matter what we end up having to do to
protect ourselves, the answer resides out there. Or at least the answer
can be found by working on GETTING out there. Maybe it'll be missiles,
maybe it'll be painting the space rock with something reflective and
letting the sun's rays push it out of the way, maybe it'll be blasting it
with a high-powered laser or something. We can't even guess right now
what form it might take. But before we can do anything about it, we have
to, first, know it's there and, second, have some clue about what it's
made of and a plethora of other things like how fast it's going, what its
mass is, what might happen if we blow it up or push it this way or that.
And you can't find those things out by NOT looking... out there.
So yeah, I think we should be spending money in space. I think that our
future lay along the trajectory that leads out of the solar system. I
think it's part of our evolution... hell, maybe even part of some [gasp]
intelligent design. It won't be easy, and it certainly won't be cheap,
but it's something we're going to have to do sooner or later. If not
because we need the resources or to maintain national pride, then maybe
to save our pink fleshy butts... either from an ever-warming and
expanding sun or from our short-sighed selves.
And if we DO have to do this, we'd might as well start on it now. If for
no other reason than to SAVE money. I don't know what it'll be like in
the distant future, but inflation is a fact of life now. Things cost more
now than they did 10 years ago. They'll cost more in 10 years than they
do now. So let's be fiscally conscious and save by starting now, huh?
Did you notice that I did NOT bring up the specter of little green men or
lizard-aliens bent on destroying the world? Heh heh... they asked me not
to. [grin]
Well, that's it for this week, kiddies. Tune in again next week, same
time, same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying
when...
PEOPLE ARE TALKING
=~=~=~=
->In This Week's Gaming Section - Xbox Live Killed Off, Somewhat!
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" Fallout 3 Heading for Sin City!
Death Tongue for the Jag!
And more!
=~=~=~=
->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News - The Latest Gaming News!
""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
Microsoft Kills Xbox Live for Original Xboxes
Microsoft has decided to stop supporting first-generation Xbox games and
consoles on its Xbox Live service, Microsoft disclosed on Friday.
Microsoft "did not make this decision lightly," the company's Major
Nelson blog said, but it's apparently final: gamers who used the Xbox Live
matchmaking service for games of "Halo," for example, will have to find
another way to connect with their friends. The prohibition also applies to
Xbox games played on Xbox 360 consoles.
Why did Microsoft make the change? According to Xbox Live general
manager Marc Whitten, the company plans upgrades to the Live service
that are simply incompatible with the older games and consoles.
Whitten did not reveal the proposed upgrades, but mentioned Microsoft's
Project Natal, scheduled to be rolled out by the holiday season of 2010.
I believe we'll look back on 2010 as a landmark year in gaming and home
entertainment, and I couldn't be more excited about what we have in
store with "Project Natal" and LIVE," Whitten wroteMin a blog post.
"We will contact the Xbox LIVE members directly impacted by this change
and if this includes you, I encourage you to check your LIVE messages
and associated e-mail account over the coming weeks for more details and
opportunities," Whitten wrote. "We view you as a partner in this process."
Videogame Star "Fallout 3" Heading for Sin City
Videogame star "Fallout 3" is taking its devoted fans to nuclear war
ravaged Las Vegas.
Bethesda Softworks on Thursday announced a "New Vegas" chapter in the
award-winning franchise will be available by the end of this year. The
studio posted a video trailer online at fallout.bethsoft.com.
" 'Fallout: New Vegas' takes all the action, humor, and post-apocalyptic
grime and grit of this legendary series, and raises the stakes,"
Bethesda said in a release.
"Fallout 3" was crowned Game of the Year after its release in 2008 and
proved so popular that Bethesda has expanded on it with adventures in an
array of downloadable software.
A "Broken Steel" addition to "Fallout 3" even modified the end of the
original game to resurrect the hero, who had sacrificed himself for the
sake of other survivors in the post nuclear war scenario.
"Fallout 3" players start out as a youth venturing out of an underground
survival bunker to search for a scientist father and make moral choices
shaping his or her destiny.
Players take on quests such as freeing slaves, rescuing hostages, and
integrating an elitist survivor settlement.
Conversations players have with in-world characters affect directions
stories take, with choices regarding whether to do good or evil
determining their reputations, opportunities and allies.
New PlayStation 3 Show Pits Gamer Against Gamer
In the reality show "The Tester," the top prize is a job.
Sony Corp. is launching the show on its PlayStation 3 on Feb. 18. The
premise? Pit a broad swath of video game fans against one another to see
who's the best at testing out games.
The winner will get a job as a real game tester at Sony. It's an
entry-level job, a way to get a start in the industry.
The show's 11 contestants include a writer from Ohio, a cheerleading
coach from California and a used car salesman from Maryland.
Sony says the show is part of its strategy to provide content beyond
games on the PlayStation. This includes music, movies and TV episodes.
=~=~=~=
->A-ONE Gaming Online - Online Users Growl & Purr!
"""""""""""""""""""
Death Tongue Announcement
Death Tongue is coming to a Jaguar near you!
DeathTongue Productions is proud to announce its upcoming release for the
Jaguar.
Before reading any further click the link in the post above to check out a
video. There are both high and standard resolutions for your viewing
pleasure. These are captured right off of the Jaguar's video out.
So what will Death Tongue the game be? A kickass game using a modified Doom
engine. The game will use all new assets. All legacy assets are property of
id Software and will not be used. More info on the actual game will be
release in the days to come.
The above video is a teaser we wanted to release so you could see what we
have accomplished with our Doom hacking. In the video you see many new
textures to replace the standard Doom ones. New sprite assets for things
like health potions, radiactive barrels, armour, and most importantly a new
enemy in the game. This is to show that we can replace any assets in the
game. The only type of asset not replaced in this demo is the level itself.
We haven't got around to working on levels yet, but we wanted to get this
demo out to you now.
We expect in the coming months to release a small demo that will work with
Skunkboards, Flash Carts, Alpines, and possibly BJL and JagCD.
No release date is set yet for the demo or finished product.
We have had a lot of fun working on this. We know how badly the Jaguar
community has wanted something using the Doom engine. We aim to bring it to
you.
Who makes up DeathTongue Productions? Currently we are two members strong.
We have myself doing the coding/level design/sound work. And viMaster
doing the artwork/level design/sound work.
=~=~=~=
A-ONE's Headline News
The Latest in Computer Technology News
Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson
UN Chief Calls for Treaty To Prevent Cyber War
The world needs a treaty to prevent cyber attacks becoming an all-out war,
the head of the main UN communications and technology agency warned
Saturday.
International Telcommunications Union secretary general Hamadoun Toure
gave his warning at a World Economic Forum debate where experts said
nations must now consider when a cyber attack becomes a declaration of war.
With attacks on Google from China a major talking point in Davos, Toure
said the risk of a cyber conflict between two nations grows every year.
He proposed a treaty in which countries would engage not to make the
first cyber strike against another nation.
"A cyber war would be worse than a tsunami - a catastrophe," the UN
official said, highlighting examples such as attacks on Estonia last year.
He proposed an international accord, adding: "The framework would look
like a peace treaty before a war."
Countries should guarantee to protect their citizens and their right to
access to information, promise not to harbour cyber terrorists and
"should commit themselves not to attack another."
John Negroponte, former director of US intelligence, said intelligence
agencies in the major powers would be the first to "express
reservations" about such an accord.
Susan Collins, a US Republican senator who sits on several Senate
military and home affairs committees, said the prospect of a cyber
attack sparking a war is now being considered in the United States.
"If someone bombed the electric grid in our country and we saw the
bombers coming in it would clearly be an act of war.
"If that same country uses sophisticated computers to knock out our
electricity grid, I definitely think we are getting closer to saying it
is an act of war," Collins said.
Craig Mundie, chief research and strategy officer for Microsoft, said
"there are at least 10 countries in the world whose internet capability
is sophisticated enough to carry out cyber attacks ... and they can make
it appear to come from anywhere."
"The Internet is the biggest command and control centre for every bad
guy out there," he said.
The head of online security company McAfee told another Davos debate
Friday that China, the United States, Russia, Israel and France are
among 20 countries locked in a cyberspace arms race and gearing up for
possible Internet hostilities.
Mundie and other experts have said there is a growing need to police the
internet to clampdown on fraud, espionage and the spread of viruses.
"People don't understand the scale of criminal activity on the internet.
Whether criminal, individual or nation states, the community is growing
more sophisticated," the Microsoft executive said.
"We need a kind of World Health Organisation for the Internet," he said.
"When there is a pandemic, it organises the quarantine of cases. We are
not allowed to organise the systematic quarantine of machines that are
compromised."
He also called for a "driver's license" for internet users.
"If you want to drive a car you have to have a license to say that you
are capable of driving a car, the car has to pass a test to say it is
fit to drive and you have to have insurance."
Andre Kudelski, chairman of Kudelski Group, said that a new internet
might have to be created forcing people to have two computers that
cannot connect and pass on viruses. "One internet for secure operations
and one internet for freedom."
US House Passes Bill To Bolster Cybersecurity
The US House of Representatives on Thursday overwhelmingly approved a bill
aimed at protecting the Internet and vulnerable computer networks by
funding cybersecurity research and training.
"Securing cyberspace is vitally important to both our safety and our
national economy," Representative David Wu, a Democrat from Oregon, said
following passage of the Cybersecurity Enhancement Act.
"We cannot stand by and let the most powerful tool for connecting
Americans with each other and the world remain the Wild West of
technology," he added.
The cybersecurity legislation, which was approved by a vote of 422 to
five, allocates funding to improve cybersecurity in the federal
government and the public and private sectors.
It calls for the training of a skilled workforce, cybersecurity research
and development and public education efforts.
The US Senate is also considering cybersecurity legislation which
contains more sweeping measures.
Passage of the House bill comes less than a month after Google revealed
it was the target of a wave of cyberattacks originating in China and
threatened to pull out of the country.
It also comes less than a week after the websites of 49 members of the
House were attacked and defaced by hackers.
US Director of National Intelligence Dennis Blair told Congress on
Tuesday that the attacks on Google were a "wake-up call" about the
vulnerabilities of computer networks to attacks that could cripple the
US economy.
Blair said vital telecommunications and information systems faced
threats from "those who would steal, corrupt, harm or destroy the public
and private assets vital to our national interests."
Representative Daniel Lipinski of Illinois, sponsor of the House bill,
said as "reliance on information technology has increased, so has our
vulnerability to cyberattacks.
"Cybercrime is a major problem for the government, for businesses, and
indeed for every American," Lipinski, a Democrat, said in a statement.
"This bill will increase the security of vital and personal information
by strengthening research partnerships among the federal government, the
private sector and colleges and universities," he said.
The legislation notably calls for the National Science Foundation to
award nearly 400 million dollars in computer and network security
research grants.
The bill is the first major cybersecurity legislation passed since
Barack Obama took office a little over a year ago.
In December, Obama named Howard Schmidt, a former Bush administration
adviser and Microsoft executive, as his cybsersecurity coordinator.
No single US agency is currently charged with ensuring government
cybersecurity efforts and US lawmakers had been calling for the creation
of a powerful cybersecurity adviser reporting directly to the president.
"Alarming" Rise in Cyberattacks at Social Networks
There has been an "alarming" rise in spammers and hackers hunting for
victims at online social networks, according to a report released Monday
by computer security firm Sophos.
A "Social Security" investigation revealed an "explosion" of spam messages
and nefarious software targeting users of social networks such as Facebook
and Twitter.
"Computer users are spending more time on social networks, sharing
sensitive and valuable personal information, and hackers have sniffed out
where the money is to be made," said Sophos senior technology consultant
Graham Cluley.
"Social networks and their millions of users have to do more to protect
themselves from organized cybercrime, or risk falling prey to identity
theft schemes, scams, and malware attacks."
Facebook last month announced an alliance with Internet security
specialty firm McAfee to get members of the world's leading online
social network to better defend their computers.
"Facebook is by far the largest social network - and you'll find more
bad apples in the biggest orchard," explained Cluley.
"The truth is that the security team at Facebook works hard to counter
threats on their site - it's just that policing 350 million users can't
be an easy job for anyone."
Facebook users whose accounts are breached by malicious software or
other cyberattacks will need to have their computers cleansed by McAfee
before returning to life in the online community.
Facebook members are also being offered free six-month subscriptions to
McAfee security software and then discounted prices for continued service.
McAfee and Facebook have collaborated on a free tool for cleaning up
infected computers.
"If we get people's machines this protection, it is better for them, for
Facebook, and the Internet as a whole," Facebook director of
communications and public policy Barry Schnitt said at the time of the
announcement.
The Sophos study found that 57 percent of online social network users
reported getting spam in their virtual communities in what amounted to a
70.6 percent jump from the prior year.
Some 36 percent of social network users queried said they had been sent
software worms, viruses or other types of "malware" in what amounted to
a 69.8 percent leap from the previous 12-month period, according to Sophos.
Sophos's report also indicated that 49 percent of firms allow workers
unfettered access to Facebook in a 13 percent rise from the previous year.
"The grim irony is that just as companies are loosening their attitude
to staff activity on social networks, the threat of malware, spam,
phishing and identity theft on Facebook is increasing," said Cluley.
Google To End Support for IE6
Google will phase out support for Microsoft's Internet Explorer 6 Web
browser starting in March, the company said Friday.
"Many other companies have already stopped supporting older browsers
like Internet Explorer 6.0 as well as browsers that are not supported by
their own manufacturers. We're also going to begin phasing out our
support, starting with Google Docs and Google Sites," Rajen Sheth,
Google Apps senior product manager, wrote in a blog post Friday.
The announcement comes more than two weeks after Google reported that
its servers had been the target of attacks originating in China. Those
attacks targeted a vulnerability in IE 6, for which Microsoft has since
issued a fix.
Support for IE6 in Google Docs and Google Sites will end March 1, Sheth
said in the post. At that point, IE6 users who try to access Docs or
Sites may find that "key functionality" won't work properly, he said.
Sheth suggested that customers upgrade to Internet Explorer 7, Mozilla
Firefox 3.0, Google Chrome 4.0 or Safari 3.0, or more recent versions of
those browsers.
According to StatCounter, IE6 has 18 percent market share among browsers.
JooJoo Tablet PC Promised by End of February
Fusion Garage's JooJoo tablet PC is expected to be in consumer hands by
the end of February, when it will likely give some indication as to the
pu blic's interest in tablets such as the Apple iPad.
According to Venture Beat, Fusion Garage CEO Chandra Rathakrishnan says
that not only have the preorders for the JooJoo tablet exceeded
expectations, but there has been an increase in inquiries since the debut
of the iPad - so it looks like the public may be ready for tablet computers
after all (or, at least, ready to try them out).
The JooJoo tablet, which began its life as the TechCrunch CrunchPad, was
announced in December 2009. The 2.4-pound touch screen tablet has a
12-inch, 1366-by-768-pixel display, 1GB of memory, and a 4GB Solid State
Drive (used to store the OS and cache data). It also features a USB 2.0
port, Bluetooth support, built-in speakers, Wi-Fi, and a Webcam with a
mic. The JooJoo tablet also features a fun (and potentially incredibly
annoying) color-tinted screen--but don't worry, the color can be changed.
Instead of custom-built apps, the JooJoo tablet uses the web as its primary
platform. It also supports Flash and reportedly plays 1080p Youtube
streaming videos fairly well. The JooJoo tablet's price point is close to
that of the iPad's, at $499.
While the JooJoo tablet does beat the iPad in a few ways (notably,
multitasking, Flash support, and the webcam/mic combo), it also falls
short in some pretty major areas. It has a 4GB SSD, but users cannot
directly save files to said drive - it's purely an internet tablet. The
problem with this, of course, is that the JooJoo has Wi-Fi and Wi-Fi
only--there is no 3G option, though Fusion Garage is "not ruling out the
possibility of 3G in the near future." Here's a tip, guys--the "near
future" had better come pretty soon or people are going to start
wondering what the point is of a big Internet-only-device that you can't
store music on.
Because the JooJoo tablet uses the Internet as its platform, the lack of
an "App Store" is another downside. Sure, you don't really /need/ a
Facebook app when you can just go to Facebook itself, but the Apple App
Store is definitely a benefit of having an Apple product. Though some are
critical of Apple's extreme vigilance when it comes to apps, recent
influxes of malware into other, similar app stores suggest that perhaps
Apple is merely being alert. Not only will JooJoo's lack of an app store
make it harder for users to use the platform, but the openness may leave
the JooJoo vulnerable to outside attacks.
The JooJoo tablet is just, quite literally, the internet in your hands
(of course, the iPad is just, quite literally, a giant iPod Touch in
your hands), but if Rathakrishnan's report of increased interest in the
JooJoo after the announcement of the iPad is true, perhaps there *is* a
big market for tablet PCs, regardless of what they do (or don't.
Rulings Cloud Issue of School MySpace Suspensions
Federal appellate judges wrestling with whether schools can discipline
students for Internet speech posted offsite reached different rulings
Thursday in two Pennsylvania cases.
One 3rd U.S. Circuit Court panel upheld the suspension of a Schuylkill
County eighth-grader who posted sexually explicit material along with
her principal's photograph on a fake MySpace page.
However, a different three-judge panel said that school officials in
Mercer County cannot reach into a family's home and police the Internet.
That case also involves a MySpace parody of a principal created by a
student at home.
And, in dissent, a judge in the first case said his colleagues were
broadening the school's authority and improperly censoring students.
"This holding vests school officials with dangerously overbroad censorship
discretion," Judge Michael Chagares wrote in refusing to uphold the March
2007 suspension of a Blue Mountain Middle School student. "Neither the
Supreme Court nor this Court has ever allowed schools to punish students
for off-campus speech that is not school sponsored and that caused no
substantial disruption at school."
School boards, free-speech advocates and others had been awaiting the
rulings for clarity on how far schools can go to control both online speech
and offsite behavior.
"The law was unclear and now it's in a state of chaos," said lawyer Witold
Walczak of the American Civil Liberties Union, who argued the Mercer County
case.
Similar cases have surfaced across the country, with different rulings,
but none have reached the Supreme Court. Judges are therefore left to
rely on decades-old Supreme Court case law on the limits of school
discipline for guidance.
Lawyer Anthony Sanchez, who represents the Hermitage School District in
Mercer County, called the issue ripe for high-court review.
"With technology, ... we're in a very different world than we were when
those other opinions came out," Sanchez said late Thursday. He did not
immediately know if the district would appeal.
In the Blue Mountain case, both the district and circuit courts upheld
the 14-year-old student's 10-day suspension.
Chagares' two colleagues concluded that her lewd, sexually graphic
posting was likely to cause a disruption at school, and could therefore
be restricted under prior case law.
The Web page, which used a fake name but an actual photo of the principal,
was purported to have been posted by an Alabama principal who described
himself as a pedophile and sex addict. The Internet address included the
phrase "kids rock my bed."
The principal and other students at Blue Mountain quickly became aware of
it, discussing it at school the next day, according to testimony.
"Electronic communication allows students to cause a substantial disruption
to a school's learning environment even without being physically present.
We decline to say that simply because the disruption to the learning
environment originates from a computer located off campus, the school
should be left powerless to discipline the student," Judge Michael Fisher
wrote in a footnote.
The ACLU did not immediately know if it would appeal, Walczak said.
Both 3rd Circuit panels upheld lower court decisions.
In the Mercer County case, U.S. District Judge Terrence McVerry had ruled
that Hermitage School District officials failed to show then-senior Justin
Layshock's parody MySpace profile of his Hickory High School principal
substantially disrupted school operations.
"The school's right to maintain an environment conducive to learning
does not trump Justin's First Amendment right to freedom of expression
based on the evidentiary record in this case," McVerry wrote in a 2007
opinion. "Public schools are vital institutions, but their reach is not
unlimited."
U.S. Teens Lose Interest in Blogging
Blogging by teenagers and young adults has dropped by half over the past
three years as they turn instead to texting and social networking sites
such as Facebook, a new study shows.
The study released this week by the Pew Internet and American Life project
also found that fewer than one in 10 teens were using Twitter, a surprising
finding given overall popularity of the micro-blogging site.
According to the report, only 14 percent of teenagers who use the Internet
say they kept an online journal or blog, compared with a peak of 28 percent
in 2006 - and only 8 percent were using Twitter.
"It was a little bit surprising, although there are definitely explanations
given the state of the technological landscape," Pew researcher Aaron Smith
told Reuters.
Smith said the report's authors attributed the decline in blogging to the
explosion of social networking sites such as Facebook, which emphasize
short status updates over personal journals.
According to the study, 73 percent of teens who were online used social
networking sites.
He also cited the ubiquity of cell phones. Much of the communication
between young people now takes place on mobile devices, which don't lend
themselves to long-form writing.
He said teens may be shying away from Twitter because they see it as
designed for celebrities, and because of reluctance to put their thoughts
on such a public forum when they can post them to their Facebook page
instead.
"It was somewhat interesting in the sense that teens tend to be the early
adopters," Smith said. "They were the first to use social networking and
texting. Its certainly unusual compared to what we've seen with other
technology."
Blogging among adults has held steady since 2005, Pew found, but it has
dropped among Internet users between the age of 18 and 29 - while
rising in those over 30.
"Older people are becoming more comfortable with the online environment
and young people in the meantime have moved on to social networking and
text messaging," Smith said.
The teen portion of the study was based on a telephone survey of 800
people, aged 12 to 17, that was conducted from June to September of 2009.
"Demon Sheep" Haunts Senate Race in California
A bizarre campaign ad by Senate candidate Carly Fiorina featuring what has
been dubbed a "Demon Sheep" has transcended California politics to become
an Internet sensation, but analysts wonder if it was such a good idea.
The Internet video, which features a man in a sheep costume with glowing
red eyes crawling around a meadow, has gone viral - with the official
version clocking nearly 450,000 views on YouTube as of Friday.
Since its release on Wednesday, the Demon Sheep also has inspired a
Facebook group, Twitter feeds and a T-shirt line.
But political experts say the point behind the three-minute, 21-second
blurb, attacking Fiorina's top rival for the Republican nomination, Tom
Campbell, as a "fiscal conservative in name only," may have been lost.
"I thought the spot was right on as far as its message, but we're not
talking about Campbell's record, we're talking about sheep and devil
eyes and everything else," said Allan Hoffenblum, a Republican political
analyst and publisher of the California Target Book that tracks state
elections.
The spot opens with seemingly harmless sheep grazing in a meadow before
turning ominous as a white column rises into a darkened sky carrying a
single member of the flock, accompanied by thunder and lightning.
Much of the rest of the ad is devoted to commentary criticizing
Campbell, interspersing his picture with images of sheep, before showing
the red-eyed impostor lurking in tall grass, apparently spooking the
flock.
Fiorina, a former Hewlett-Packard chief executive, is making her first
foray into politics, and her opponents seized on the ad to charge that
she is not ready for prime time.
"Carly Fiorina's campaign is in full Mutton Meltdown mode, with an
increasingly bizarre fixation on farm animals," Campbell, who leads both
Fiorina and state Assemblyman Chuck DeVore in polls, said in a statement
posted on his website.
DeVore, who is running third in the race to challenge Democratic
incumbent Senator Barbara Boxer in the November election, launched a
website for the "society for the eradication of demon sheep from our
political discourse."
A spokeswoman for Fiorina called the video a success.
"We're very happy with how effective this controversial and eye-catching
web video has been because it's drawn attention to Tom Campbell's record
as a fiscal liberal," Julie Soderlund said. "I think you can expect to
see more shocking content out of our campaign moving forward," she said.
"Stay tuned."
Fugitive's Facebook Info Leads to Arrest
Police in western New York say a fugitive all but turned himself in by
posting his workplace on Facebook and MySpace.
Police in Lockport passed along the information about 39-year-old
Christopher Crego to U.S. marshals. He was arrested Wednesday at a tattoo
parlor where he was working in Terre Haute (teh-ruh HOHT'), Ind.
Crego had been wanted since he failed to show up for a sentencing hearing
after pleading guilty in the fall to assault. He was also charged with
drunken driving, drug possession and using a BB gun to kill birds.
Lockport police posted a thank-you note on Crego's Facebook page saying:
"It was due to your diligence in keeping us informed that now you are
under arrest."
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