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Old 02-01-02, 05:40 PM   #1
walktalker
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So There! The Newspaper Shop -- Wednesday edition

AIM hole could let worms wriggle in
AOL Time Warner on Wednesday pledged to close a security hole in its instant messenger application that experts say could provide wiggle room for a widespread and destructive worm. AOL Time Warner said it would implement a server-side fix -- meaning people will not have to download the patch -- by week's end. The security bug affects AOL Instant Messenger (AIM) version 4.7 and the 4.8 beta, or test version. Only AIM users running Microsoft's Windows operating system are vulnerable.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...kpt=zdnnp1tp02

Judge sets date for Microsoft hearing
A federal judge on Wednesday ordered Microsoft and nine states to appear at a hearing next week to discuss a delay to the next phase of the landmark antitrust trial. On Dec. 21, Microsoft asked U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly to extend by four months the date for holding a remedy hearing to decide what sanctions would be imposed for the company's antitrust violations.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...kpt=zdnnp1tp02

ZaCker worm attacks safeguards
A destructive new worm that destroys antivirus software on infected computers was slowly spreading Wednesday. The Maldal.D worm, also known as ZaCker, was written and distributed Dec. 29, according to antivirus software maker Symantec, prompting fears the worm could sneak past security software that wasn't updated over the holiday break.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...kpt=zdnnp1tp02

Is it time for Linux on the desktop?
Another year has gone by--an eternity in software-development terms--and it's time once again for PC users to ask themselves: Is Linux ready for the desktop? A few recent factors may set off this line of thinking, including the hostile reaction to restrictive new software licence terms from Microsoft and new developments in the Linux world. But experts say there are a number of factors aside from the quality of the software itself that can affect the practicality of making the switch.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...kpt=zdnnp1tp02

Next-gen phones hit North America
Wireless Internet surfing using Code Division Multiple Access technology is about to get easier and faster, according to Qualcomm, which announced Wednesday that a new fleet of products based on its CDMA technology has just arrived in North America. Internet-enabled handsets, data cards and data modules based on Qualcomm's MSM5105 Mobile Station Modem chipset and software will be faster, more lightweight and easier to use, the company said.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...kpt=zdnnp1tp02

Analysts see slight IT spending gains
Corporate spending on technology is expected to inch ahead 3 percent in 2002, Merrill Lynch said, as companies refocus their priorities amid ever-tightening budgets and a heightened emphasis on security. Technology spending will continue to be shaped by the effects of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and will be limited to a more select cadre of vendors this year, according to Merrill's survey of 75 chief information officers in the United States and 35 in Europe.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...kpt=zdnnp1tp02

Ten uses for an old PC
Got an old PC gathering dust somewhere? Here are ten ways to reuse it - and maybe even make some cheeky cash in the meantime. We've all got an old clunker in our lives -- some ancient piece of noisy, dust-ridden, grubby stuff that was quite attractive when you first met but now seems an embarrassing reminder of what you used to think was cool. You may also have an old PC. While we can't help with many of your lifestyle mistakes, we're on hand for this one. Here are ten ideas to keep geriatric technology useful for just that little bit longer.
http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/ne...835455,00.html

Internet shrinks to fit
The number of sites on the Internet has slipped along with a recent decline in registrations of addresses ending in domains such as .com, according to a study released this week. The Web Server Survey from Internet consultancy Netcraft found that the number of Web sites dropped by 182,142 from November to December last year. That decline marks only the second time the company's survey, first released in 1995, has found fewer sites online in a monthly period.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200...html?tag=mn_hd

AT&T, MCI boost long-distance fees
Long-distance giants AT&T and MCI rang in the new year with higher phone bills for customers, and Sprint plans to do the same. AT&T raised its universal services fund (USF) fee from 9.9 percent of the customer's monthly long-distance charges to 11.5 percent, a fee increase of 16 percent, according to a company representative. The fund subsidizes Internet access in schools, libraries and underserved populations.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1004-200...html?tag=mn_hd

AOL members set shopping record
America Online members headed to the Web to do their holiday shopping: In 2001, they spent more than $33 billion online, with a third of it coming in the fourth quarter. The total figure is up 67 percent from the preceding year, parent company AOL Time Warner said Wednesday. The $11 billion spent online during the fourth quarter -- a record for AOL -- accounted for a 72 percent increase from the same period a year earlier.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1007-200...html?tag=mn_hd

WebTV founder's next act unfolding
Consumer demand for interactive TV has yet to meet industry expectations, but that isn't stopping another hopeful from gambling on the ill-defined and elusive market. Steve Perlman, who founded WebTV, will show off the technology behind his 2-year-old company, Rearden Steel, at next week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. According to sources, the Palo Alto, Calif.-based start-up is developing software and hardware specifications that could turn set-top cable boxes into multimedia entertainment devices capable of recording and storing digital content.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1006-200...html?tag=mn_hd

Pakistan drops tech support in U.S.
Pakistan has decided to close its recently opened "technology consulate" in Silicon Valley after both business and funding dried up in the wake of the high-tech slump. Toheed Ahmad, who headed the Consulate General's Office for Information Technology Development, said Wednesday he had been told to close shop after seven months in operation. "We don't have a firm date yet as there are some formalities to be done, but I am going to close down and go back," Ahmad said. Ahmad attributed the decision to close the office to both budget constraints in Pakistan -- which has seen pressures rise with neighboring India while serving as a key player in the U.S.-led war on terrorism -- and the worsening business climate in California.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200...html?tag=mn_hd

India becoming world's back office
The chattering young adults, many dressed in Western-style casual clothes, exit a train station in a northern Bombay suburb and look like they should be heading for a college campus. But it is late at night, and they are making their way to a plush office complex nearby. There, in a huge, brightly painted "shop floor'' whose walls and pillars are adorned with colorful posters, they settle down behind computers, pull on headphones and spend several hours speaking English with an American accent.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1003-200...html?tag=ch_mh

Swedish bank customers turning to Internet
Infuriated by deteriorating service and rising charges, many Swedes have grown tired of big banks and are taking their business to financial start-ups, some on the Internet, others at the grocery store. Having dominated the sector for decades, the big four -- Nordea, Handelsbanken, SEB and Swedbank -- must now compete for a new breed of customers less loyal than older generations, for whom, as the saying goes, it is easier to divorce than to change banks.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1007-200...html?tag=cd_mh

Report: Women outshop men online
More women than men now shop online, according to a report released Tuesday that found the average consumer was spending more money on electronic commerce sites. For years, men have been more likely to shop over the Internet than women, but in the 2001 holiday season 58 percent of those making online purchases were women, according to a report by the Pew Internet and American Life Project.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1007-200...html?tag=cd_mh

File-sharing programs carry Trojan horse
A pair of popular file-sharing programs have become privacy time bombs, according to computer experts. Antivirus company Symantec last week reported the presence of "spyware" bundled with Grokster and Limewire, two popular file-swapping downloads. The code evidently does not damage computers, but it surreptitiously sends personal information such as user ID names and the Internet address of computers to another Web address. Advertising software called "Clicktilluwin" that comes bundled with the file-swapping programs carries a program called "W32.DIDer," which Symantec has classified as a Trojan horse--a piece of code that takes over parts of a person's computer unseen in order to carry out its own instructions.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200...html?tag=cd_mh

Commentary: P2P has three heads
Peer-to-peer is an enabling technology that is finding its way to market in at least three distinct forms. In other words, don't expect a single, coherent peer-to-peer market. Like many technologies, peer-to-peer has fallen victim to what Gartner calls "the hype cycle." After rocketing skyward on overblown expectations, it has plummeted into the hype cycle's "trough of disillusionment" because it didn't immediately deliver what it promised. However, the progress of peer-to-peer will be more difficult to track in the future because this one technology will develop in three different directions, each with its own trajectory.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-201...html?tag=cd_mh

Interest rates boost computer orders
Demand for computers and electronic products rose 2 percent in November over the previous month as companies seized on low interest rates to place orders. The tech sector has been bloodied by recession and a brutal downturn this year, and a number of large tech companies have warned of a drawn-out crunch in capital spending next year. Amid those concerns, the tech sector received a slight boost from the November durable goods report Friday, economists said.
http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1006-200...html?tag=cd_mh

More news later on
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Old 02-01-02, 05:56 PM   #2
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Film Shows Heart Surgery's Roots
A documentary scheduled to air on PBS in the next year will tell for the first time the story of Vivien Thomas, an African-American medical researcher who was half of a team that pioneered heart surgery in the 1940s. Although Thomas could not afford a medical-school education -- and even with one, would have been barred by racial segregation from practicing medicine at Johns Hopkins -- his dedication and talent for surgery helped to realize the first operation for correcting a birth defect of the heart.
http://www.wired.com/news/medtech/0,1286,49093,00.html

An Iliad for the 21st Century
What happens when one of the world's oldest stories is wedded to cutting-edge technologies on a stage set? Theater-goers here will discover the answer next summer when UCLA's School of Theater, Film and Television launches a retelling of Homer's The Iliad that incorporates online community, video feeds, digitally projected images, an interactive floor show, and, oh yes, actors.
http://www.wired.com/news/culture/0,1284,49197,00.html

Virtual PC Is Virtually Perfect
Over the last few months a new trend has emerged: More and more Windows users are changing over to a Mac. For the most part, PC users are confident they are making the correct decision, but occasionally, they have serious concerns about whether they will be able to open files and do business on a Mac without a lot of hassles. The fact is, there are very few commercial PC programs that don't have a Mac equivalent.
http://www.wired.com/news/technology...,48964,00.html

Robo Lobster to Sniff Out Mines
Teams of sniffer robots may someday scour land and sea, using their artificial snouts to root out mines in places and situations humans would rather avoid. At least this is the goal of a team studying the lobster -- a creature considered a paragon of odor analysis -- in order to create a robotic version of the lobster's snout.
http://www.wired.com/news/technology...,48892,00.html

E-mail glitch blocks Harvard acceptance e-mails
Dozens of e-mail messages telling Harvard University applicants whether they had been admitted never arrived last month after America Online interpreted the messages as junk e-mail. After anthrax spores were mailed through the U.S. postal system, Harvard began using e-mail to inform applicants quickly of whether they had been rejected or accepted. E-mail was used to notify almost all of the 6,000 students who applied in the school's early admission process.
http://www.usatoday.com/life/cyber/t...rvard-spam.htm

MS struggles to discredit Linux
What's cheaper than an OS you can buy outright once and install on every PC in your shop -- and upgrade cost-free for eternity to boot? Why, a slew of cheesy licenses for Microsoft Windows, 'Doze Division VP Brian Valentine claims in his latest cheerleading effort for his sales associates. That's right; a putatively independent analysis by 'we'll-conclude-anything' whores DH Brown is going to rip Linux a new one and find that Windows is actually cheaper. How Valentine knows this is anyone's guess. Perhaps he has a mole in the Brown organization as good as the one we have in his. Or perhaps MS simply paid for it. We don't know.
http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/4/23518.html

The Universe Might Last Forever, Astronomers Say, but Life Might Not
Life and intelligence could sustain themselves indefinitely in such a universe, even as the stars winked out and the galaxies were all swallowed by black holes, Dr. Freeman Dyson, a physicist at the Institute for Advanced Study, argued in a landmark paper in 1979. "If my view of the future is correct," he wrote, "it means that the world of physics and astronomy is also inexhaustible; no matter how far we go into the future, there will always be new things happening, new information coming in, new worlds to explore, a constantly expanding domain of life, consciousness, and memory." Now, however, even Dr. Dyson admits that all bets are off. If recent astronomical observations are correct, the future of life and the universe will be far bleaker.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/01/01/science/01END.html

IBM Finds New Profit in Recycling Old Computers
IBM Corp. is wringing new profit from old goods by refurbishing leased computers or cannibalizing them for parts when they're turned in. At a hangar-like facility near Raleigh, N.C., truckloads of used personal computers, laptops and servers pour onto conveyor belts and forklifts. The swift, automated process resembles manufacturing in reverse, the aim being to extract value rather than build it in. The refurbished machines and used parts are sold on auction Web sites and to brokers.
http://www.latimes.com/technology/la...s%2Dtechnology

FTC Puts Halt To Site's Cancer-Cure Claims
The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has ordered a Web site that specializes in selling herbal and non-traditional remedies to stop touting one of its products as a cure for cancer. Western Herb and Dietary Products agreed to stop posting online claims that a product called the "Zapper" could be used to cure cancer, AIDS, diabetes and a host of other diseases.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/173327.html

Court Upholds FTC’s Authority To Regulate Internet Ads
A federal appeals court has upheld the Federal Trade Commission’s authority to investigate Internet advertising claims, even in cases where such claims are made by companies already facing scrutiny from securities regulators. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit last week upheld a ruling against Ken Roberts Co., which had been ordered to divulge information supporting claims advertised online about its commodities and securities investment training programs.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/173326.html

U.K. Information Commissioner To Leave In November
Elizabeth France, the U.K.'s Information Commissioner, formerly known as the country's Data Protection Registrar, is not reapplying for a third term in office. England's Guardian newspaper reported that France is quitting after a recent argument with David Blunkett, the British Home Secretary, "over his Draconian anti-terrorist laws."
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/173321.html

Another Scripting Hole In Microsoft IE Exposes Local Files
Bulgarian bug hunter Georgi Guninski has discovered another bug in Microsoft's Internet Explorer Web browser that could allow a malicious hacker to read the contents of documents on the hard drive of a Web surfer's PC. The security hole, closely related to a bug the Sofia-based security consultant uncovered in September 2000, uses simple JavaScript code and Microsoft's ActiveX controls to gain access to local files.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/173315.html

'Storm Chasers' Collide In Domain-Name Dispute
A speedy arbitration process to settle disputes over the ownership of Internet domain names isn't the kind of whirlwind Warren Faidley is used to. But the Tucson, Ariz., photographer known for his dramatic images of bad weather has wrested the address WarrenFaidley.com from a fellow "storm chaser" who became a cybersquatter. A host of celebrities with well-known monikers have been awarded sound-alike domain names under a dispute resolution procedure established by the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to weigh trademark holders' claims to Internet addresses registered by others.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/01/173300.html

New York Strengthens Internet Privacy
New York Gov. George E. Pataki signed into law a bill that requires state agencies to develop policies to enhance online privacy. The Internet Privacy Policy Act requires the state's Office for Technology to develop a model online privacy notice for state Web sites. The legislation bars state agencies from collecting or disclosing users' personal information without their consent.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/173331.html

Hong Kong Govt Readies More Free Internet Centers
The Hong Kong SAR government has promised to open more cyber centers offering free Internet access to the general public. Hong Kong's Home Affairs Department (HAD) envisages at least one "cyber center" in each of Hong Kong's 18 districts, providing nationwide coverage. The centers aim to provide the community, especially the elderly, women and new arrivals, with access to IT and Internet training and facilities.
http://www.newsbytes.com/news/02/173313.html

More news later on
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Old 02-01-02, 05:59 PM   #3
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Damn, I appreciate your gathering of shit we might care about

virtual silver dollar gets flipped to the newsman - 'ting'
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Old 02-01-02, 08:07 PM   #4
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Quote:
Originally posted by ab-NORM-al
Damn, I appreciate your gathering of shit we might care about
Damn, me too! So many interesting stories today - thanks for the great job, Mr. Newsman - you rock!

- tg
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Old 02-01-02, 11:18 PM   #5
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Quote:
Originally posted by TankGirl

Damn, me too! So many interesting stories today - thanks for the great job, Mr. Newsman - you rock!

- tg

You know the helmet thing turns me on....I love a gal in uniform..grrrrrrr!...hehehe
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