ST Report: 22-May-98 #1420
From: Bruce D. Nelson (aa789@cleveland.Freenet.Edu)
Date: 06/08/98-03:17:16 PM Z
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From: aa789@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Bruce D. Nelson) Subject: ST Report: 22-May-98 #1420 Date: Mon Jun 8 15:17:16 1998 Silicon Times Report "The Original Independent Online Magazine" (Since 1987 - Our 11th Year) [Image] Silicon Times Report International Magazine Post Office Box 6672 Jacksonville, Florida 32236-6672 R.F. Mariano, Editor STR Publishing, Inc. Voice: 1-904-292-9222 10am-5pm EST FAX: 904-268-2237 24hrs STReport WebSite http://www.streport.com STR Publishing's FTP Support Server 14gb * Back Issues * Patches * Support Files (Continually Updated) ftp.streport.com Anonymous Login ok * Use your Email Address as a Password Check out STReport's NEWS SERVER news.streport.com Have you tried Microsoft's Powerful and Easy to Use Internet Explorer 4.01? Internet Explorer 4.01 is STReport's Official Internet Web Browser. STReport is prepared and published Using MS Office Pro 97, WP8, FrontPage 98, Homesite 3.01 Featuring a Full Service Web Site http://www.streport.com Voted TOP TEN Ultimate WebSite Join STReport's Subscriber List receive STReport Via Email on The Internet Toad Hall BBS 1-978-670-5896 05/22/98 STR 1420 "Often Imitated, Never Surpassed!" CPU Industry Report BORK & Co. "Elated" NetBanks on Rise Cybertax Moratorium Runaway Government! BEEPER Blackout Intel Sidestepping DOJ? Euro Hologram Missing AOL to BUY ICQ? NEW Jaguar Games!?! People Talking Classics & Gaming MS Braces For Landmark Antitrust Suits U.S. vs. MS: The Case at a Glance It's Official -- Win 98 begins shipping STReport International Magazine Featured Weekly "Accurate UP-TO-THE-MINUTE News and Information" Current Events, Original Articles, Tips, Rumors, Gossip and Information Hardware - Software - Corporate - R & D - Imports Please obtain the latest issue from our Auto Subscription, Web Site or FTP Site. Or, read STReport Online in HTML at our Website. Enjoy the wonder and excitement of exchanging all types of useful information relative to all computer types, worldwide, through the use of the Internet. All computer enthusiasts, hobbyist or commercial, on all platforms and BBS systems are invited to participate. IMPORTANT NOTICE STReport, with its policy of not accepting any input relative to content from paid advertisers, has over the years developed the reputation of "saying it like it really is". When it comes to our editorials, product evaluations, reviews and over-views, we shall always keep our readers interests first and foremost. With the user in mind, STReport further pledges to maintain the reader confidence that has been developed over the years and to continue "living up to such". All we ask is that our readers make certain the manufacturers, publishers etc., know exactly where the information about their products appeared. In closing, we shall arduously endeavor to meet and further develop the high standards of straight forwardness our readers have come to expect in each and every issue. The Publisher, Staff & Editors Florida Lotto - LottoMan v1.35 Results: 05/16/98: three of six numbers with no matches [Image] From the Editor's Desk... Have a wonderful Memorial Day Weekend... Traditionally speaking, this is the weekend when all the beaches and "summer fun places" officially open. Hmmmm, watch out for Jaws and those party hounds who insist upon driving. If you're gonna drink don't drive we need the readers! Keepin' it short this week gotta a mess of Ribs and Chicken to marinate and get ready for the BBQ. As I was finishing up this issue, the UPS man drove up and delivered THREE packages... In one was Adobe Photoshop 5.0 look for all sorts of excited babbling in our next issue. I'll tell you about everything in it that trips my trigger! [Image] http://www.streport.com ftp.streport.com news.streport.com ICQ#:1170279 STReport is now ready to offer much more in the way of serving the Networks, Online Services and Internet's vast, fast growing site list and userbase. We now have our very own WEB, FTP and NewsGroup Sites, do stop by and have a look see. Since We've received numerous requests to receive STReport from a wide variety of Internet addressees, we were compelled to put together an Internet distribution/mailing list for those who wished to receive STReport on a regular basis, the file is ZIPPED, then UUENCODED. Unfortunately, we've also received a number of opinions that the UUENCODING was a real pain to deal with. You'll be pleased to know you are able to download STReport directly from our very own FTP SERVER or WEB Site. While there, be sure to join our STR AutoMailer list which allows a choice of either Reading Online or Graphics Rich HTML. STReport's managing editors DEDICATED TO SERVING YOU! Ralph F. Mariano, Publisher - Publisher, Editor Dana P. Jacobson, Editor, Current Affairs Section Editors PC Section Mac Section Shareware Listings R.F. Mariano Help Wanted Help Wanted Classics & Gaming Kid's Computing Corner Dana P. Jacobson Frank Sereno STReport Staff Editors Michael R. Burkley Joseph Mirando Victor Mariano Vincent P. O'Hara Glenwood Drake Contributing Correspondent Staff Jason Sereno Jeremy Sereno David H. Mann Angelo Marasco Donna Lines Brian Boucher Leonard Worzala Scott Dowdle Please submit ALL letters, rebuttals, articles, reviews, etc., via E-Mail w/attachment to: Internet: rmariano@streport.com STR FTP: ftp.streport.com WebSite: http://www.streport.com STReport Headline News LATE BREAKING INDUSTRY-WIDE NEWS Weekly Happenings in the Computer World Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson Microsoft Braces For Landmark Antitrust Suits A defiant Microsoft is braced for a landmark antitrust case that is casting a cloud of uncertainty over its Windows 98 operating system and could distract its executives for years to come. Federal antitrust regulators and attorneys general from 20 states were expected to file closely related lawsuits today after settlement talks collapsed over what Microsoft executives termed "unreasonable" demands for changes in its flagship Windows operating system. The pending lawsuit raised questions about the launch of Microsoft's next-generation Windows 98 computer system, which is scheduled to go on sale worldwide June 25. Microsoft officials said they plan to ship the completed software code to computer makers Monday, but government officials were poised to ask a judge to force changes in the system. Federal and state officials were about to sue Thursday, charging the Microsoft illegally exploits its Windows monopoly to expand into new markets, when the software giant reopened negotiations by offering concessions including a three-day delay in the shipment of Windows 98. But in 11 hours of talks over two days, lawyers for the two sides were unable to come any closer to an agreement. President Clinton said through a spokesman Sunday that he has "full confidence and fully supports the Justice Department officials handling this case." According to Microsoft's account, talks broke down after Justice Department officials demanded that the software maker ship Netscape Communications' competing Navigator browser with every copy of Windows 98. The Justice Department also asked Microsoft to cede all control of the look of the Windows screen "desktop" to computer makers and to remove all Internet browsing functionality from Windows 98, said Microsoft spokesman Jim Cullinan. "These demands were simply unreasonable and we cannot agree to them," he said. Industry analysts said they were not surprised Microsoft Chairman Bill Gates ordered his lawyers to return to Seattle. "In Microsoft's view there are things they're willing to negotiate, but they're not willing to set a precedent in terms of asking permission to integrate new features into the operating system," said Scott Winkler of research firm Gartner Group. David Readerman, analyst for Nationsbanc Montgomery Securities, said Wall Street's reaction would depend on the scope of the state and federal lawsuits. Efforts to block the shipment of Windows 98 would be damaging, as would any move against Microsoft's high-end Windows NT operating system, a rapidly growing and lucrative business focused on corporate and network computing, he said. "There is a lot of uncertainty that could be introduced to Microsoft's earnings model," he said. Any delay of Windows 98 also could affect the plans of dozens of computer hardware, software and retailing companies hoping the sluggish market will get a boost from the upgrade cycle. Cullinan said the Justice Department demands appeared to be chiefly in the interests of Netscape rather than consumers. But Microsoft rivals said that after eight years of government investigation, including a 1995 antitrust consent decree widely seen as ineffective, the time had come to force the company to fundamentally change the way it does business. "Sure, a couple competitors care about this," said Ed Black, president of a Washington technology trade group aligned against Microsoft. "But to say they shouldn't be involved is like saying that victims of a hit-and-run drunk driver shouldn't complain when drunk-driving laws aren't enforced." Indeed the antitrust case is likely to focus on Microsoft's aggressive effort to beat back the threat from the Mountain View, California-based startup. Netscape's browser once was seen as a possible rival to the Windows operating system itself, but the company has seen its profits disappear and market share plummet since Microsoft identified it as a target. In a May 1995 meeting, top executives of the two companies met to discuss a potential partnership including a possible investment by Microsoft. Netscape executives now portray that meeting as an improper attempt by Microsoft to push it out of the market for Windows 95 browsers. "Netscape's allegations about this meeting are completely false and they grow more far-fetched every day," Microsoft's Cullinan said. "There was never any suggestion of illegally splitting up the marketplace." U.S. vs. Microsoft: The Case at a Glance It's a big story. After all, this is the world's most powerful government taking on one of the world's foremost corporations, led by one of the world's richest men. It's a complicated story, too, involving the law, technology, business - even politics. What follows is a quick digest of the case as it's unfolded so far. There are three main parties in the Microsoft antitrust action. They are: * Microsoft Corp., based in Redmond, Wash. * U.S. Department of Justice, Antitrust Division, Washington. * Attorneys general from some 18 states. Based on reports, these are the government's main demands: * Cease integrating Internet access into Windows. * Allow others to customize Windows startup screen and desktop. * No longer require PC makers to accept Internet Explorer browser with Windows. * Include Netscape's Navigator browser with Windows. * Exclude other Microsoft technologies from Windows. * Remove Windows interface seen by users when they boot up for the first time. Computer Groups Applaud Microsoft Suits Computer industry groups applauded the Justice Department and 20 states for filing lawsuits against Microsoft that could result in one of the largest antitrust actions in U.S. history. "Microsoft is a $12 billion business. I don't believe they have to engage in the kinds of practices that have been part of the lawsuits today in order to succeed," said Ken Wasch, president of the Software Publishers Association, at a briefing. Wasch's comments came after lawsuits were filed against Microsoft accusing the software giant of abusing its monopoly power to bully competitors. "The crucial fact here is that Microsoft is a monopoly," said the famed conservative antitrust scholar Robert Bork. He is now representing Microsoft's bitter rival, Netscape Communications. "They are an American success story and nobody should deny that, but success takes you to a certain point," Bork said. The U.S. government and the states in their suits asked the court to stop Microsoft from requiring computer makers to include the Microsoft Internet browser in its Windows 98 operating system. At present Microsoft's operating system dominates about 97 percent of the market, Bork said. The computer industry representatives agreed now that regulators have taken their actions, more misconduct by Microsoft will likely unfold. "The immediate effect of today's filing is the public disclosure of the many anti-competitive business practices which are standard fare at Microsoft," said Ed Black, President of the Computer & Communications Industry Association. It's Official -- Windows 98 begins shipping Microsoft Corp., as expected, has begun shipping its Windows 98 operating system to computer makers for retail sale beginning June 25, a company spokesman said Monday. The software system, which bundles Internet capabilities, has been near the center of an anti-trust dispute between Microsoft and federal regulators. Microsoft has spearheaded a computer industry campaign arguing that blocking Windows 98 would harm the fastest growing sector of the U.S. economy. Following through on its vow to push ahead, the software giant Monday ordered its manufacturing contractors to begin the process of stamping disks, packaging them and shipping them out, Microsoft spokesman Jim Cullinan said. The Justice Department and state attorneys general were expected to announce antitrust action against Microsoft later Monday. The state and federal officials accuse Microsoft of illegally exploiting its Windows monopoly. The lawsuits reportedly will not seek to halt shipment of the disks but will ask for changes in Windows 98 before it is allowed to go on sale. Microsoft had delayed shipping the product on Friday to allow for last-minute negotiations with antitrust regulators. The talks collapsed Saturday. Antitrust officials have several concerns with Windows 98, including its tight integration with Microsoft's Internet Explorer browser, which competes with rival Netscape Communications Corp. Gore Proposes "Electronic Bill of Rights" for Net Vice President Al Gore announced a White House plan Thursday to give people greater protection over how personal information about them is gathered and used via computer. "We need an electronic bill of rights for this electronic age," Gore said in a commencement speech at New York University. Gore, planning to run for president in 2000, was taking up an issue that Americans are increasingly concerned about: their loss of privacy in a world increasingly reliant on computers. Using improved technology, a growing number of companies are gathering information about individual habits and spending patterns. Most of that data is used by marketers, insurers and others. Information brokers on the Internet profit by selling names, addresses and credit histories to other parties. The ready availability of personal information has also led to a growing number of "identity thefts" in which fraud artists assume an identity and run up bills in the names of unsuspecting victims. Gore called on the Commerce Department to convene a summit on privacy within the next month to bring privacy and consumer advocates together with industry officials to explore whether the industry can regulate itself on the Internet to assure privacy, particularly for children. "Americans should have the right to choose whether their personal information is disclosed," Gore said. "They should have the right to know how, when and how much of that information is being used. And they should have the right to see it themselves, to know if it's accurate." President Clinton, in a directive released to coincide with Gore's announcement, ordered each head of a federal agency to ensure that government use of new information technologies sustains, instead of erodes, privacy protections. He directed each agency to appoint within 30 days a senior official to assume primary responsibility for privacy policy. "Increased computerization of federal records permits this information to be used and analyzed in ways that could diminish individual privacy in the absence of additional safeguards," Clinton said. Gore called on Congress to pass strict medical records legislation to restrict the use of such records and to give people the chance to correct theirs. In addition, he unveiled a new Web site sponsored by the Federal Trade Commission and located at www.consumer.gov that will enable individuals to prohibit companies from pre-screening their credit records without their permission; prevent their drivers' license data from being sold to data banks; and remove their name and address from direct-mailing and telemarketing lists. House Committee Approves Internet Tax Moratorium The US House Commerce Committee unanimously approved legislation Thursday to impose a three-year moratorium on new state and local taxes -- a bill aimed at fostering the growth of electronic commerce. The Internet Tax Freedom Act (H.R. 3849) would prohibit the FCC and individual states from regulating subscriber prices for online services and Internet access, as well as setting a three-year ban on state taxation of Internet access and online services. The bill was introduced 12 May by representatives Chris Cox (R-California) and Rick White (R-Washington) to address concerns stemming from a previous Internet tax bill, H.R. 1054, which passed the subcommittee last year. "As electronic commerce emerges as the new marketplace for the 21st century, it's important that we keep the Internet free from unnecessary taxation and regulation," said panel chairman Tom Bliley, a Virginia Republican. Many governors fear that states and localities, which rely heavily on sales taxes to help fund health care, education, and other critical services, will be shut out of the nation's emerging digital economy. A National Governors' Association representative said that the group, which backed a recent version of Cox's bill, is currently reviewing the revised measure. Cox's bill has the blessing of President Clinton, who has called for a US and international ban on new taxes of cyberspace business transactions that the Commerce Department has predicted will hit US$300 billion in the next four years. Last November, the Senate Commerce Committe cleared a tough Internet moratorium bill sponsored by Senator Ron Wyden (D-Oregon) that would curb new state and local taxes on the Internet for six years. Wyden's bill also calls for a study of whether and how the Internet should be taxed in the future. But it does not include language backed by governors in House versions that would permit states to treat a Web shopper's residence as the point of sale for tax purposes. That provision is designed to let states tap lucrative "remote sales" by out-of-state companies to in-state consumers. Wyden said Tuesday that Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott wants his bill brought up for a Senate vote very soon. A study released Tuesday concluded that affluent American households - those most likely to have personal computers and the credit cards to buy all manner of goods and services over the Internet-will benefit at the expense of the poor and middle-class should any of the tax moratorium legislation moving through Congress be adopted. 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A T T E N T I O N ** A T T E N T I O N ** A T T E N T I O N EDUPAGE STR Focus Keeping the users informed [Image] Edupage Contents Microsoft Settlement Talks Collapse Senate Passes Online Copyright Extension Japan Supports Clinton's Market-Focused Approach To Moratorium On Cybertax Online Commerce Call-Waiting On The Net Net Banks On The Rise Court Rejects Effort By Bells To Get Into Electronic Antitrust Suits Filed Against Microsoft Publishing DOE Will Share Technology With FBI-BAFT AT&T Makes Deal With Another Search Engine India Sanctions Could Affect High-Tech Exports Yahoo Replaces AltaVista With Inktomi Search Engine IBM To Push Internet Phone Service MCI May Sell Its Internet Business To Disarm Antitrust Objections Navy Turns To Off-The-Shelf PCs To Power Ships The Internet As Lobbying Tool Beeper Blackout WTO Pledges Duty-Free Internet For One Year Euro Hologram Is Missing U.S. Encryption Policy Could Cost Companies $9 Billion New Wireless Technology For Data Transfer What's Good For Quest Is Good For AT&T Repetitive Stress Injuries To Students Is Microsoft Antitrust Suit A Clever Marketing Trick? Intel Eases Chip Licensing Policy MICROSOFT SETTLEMENT TALKS COLLAPSE Negotiations between Microsoft and state and federal officials have collapsed, and the Justice Department will file a formal antitrust suit against the company. Microsoft says it had made "a number of significant offers to address the government's concerns, but we cannot agree to their demands without undermining our ability to innovate for consumers." A Microsoft executive says that the Justice Department's demand that Netscape's competing Web browser (Netscape Navigator) be included in every copy of Microsoft's new Windows 98 operating system "would be like telling Coke that they have to have three cans of Pepsi in every six pack." A government official said of the failed discussions: "Some of the Attorneys General got the feeling that Microsoft was just fooling around, trying to learn as much as possible about what we planned to do. They really to failed to make any substantive offers. And we're not in the mood to be jerked around anymore." (New York Times 17 May 98) SENATE PASSES ONLINE COPYRIGHT EXTENSION The Senate unanimously approved the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which offers the same protection to online computer software, music, movies and written works that they enjoy in more tangible form. In a key provision, the legislation exempts libraries and online services from prosecution for copyright violations committed by patrons and customers. Individuals who violate copyrights for financial gain will be liable for $1 million in fines and up to 10 years in prison. (Wall Street Journal 15 May 98) JAPAN SUPPORTS CLINTON'S MARKET-FOCUSED APPROACH TO ONLINE COMMERCE Japan has endorsed the Clinton Administration's unregulated, tax-free approach to electronic commerce, as well as its position against theEuropean Union's privacy regulations, which prohibit companies that collect personal information about citizens of European countries from sending that information to any country that doesn't insist on the same degree of privacy as the citizens' own countries. The Clinton view is that such restrictions could hurt U.S. companies trying to collect global marketing data. (New York Times 15 May 98) MORATORIUM ON CYBERTAX The House Commerce Committee voted 41-0 for a three-year moratorium on taxes on Internet sales and services, but allowed state and local governments to keep Internet taxes that were in effect before 1 Mar 98. The bill would also prevent the FCC from regulating subscriber fees charged by online service providers. (USA Today 15 May 98) CALL-WAITING ON THE NET Lucent Technologies has developed software that enables users to receive a call-waiting message on their computer screens while they're using the phone line for data access or the Internet. If a call comes in, a message pops up on the screen and the user can choose to ignore it or log off and take the call. The software will be available this summer. (St. Petersburg Times 16 May 98) NET BANKS ON THE RISE Internet banks are catching on, luring customers with higher interest rates and the convenience of banking at home. According to the Online Banking Report, currently close to 5 million people, or 5% of the U.S. population, do some form of online banking, but by the end of 2001, that number will go up to about 22 million, or 21% of the population. Customers of virtual banks can make deposits, check accounts, pay bills, transfer funds, and apply for loans 24 hours a day, while reaping as much as 4% interest on some checking accounts, compared to 1% to 1.5% at brick-and-mortar institutions. (Wall Street Journal 15 May 98) COURT REJECTS EFFORT BY BELLS TO GET INTO ELECTRONIC PUBLISHING In a decision that blocks BellSouth and the other regional Bell local phone service companies from competing with America Online and similar companies, a Washington, D.C. federal court of appeals rejected a BellSouth challenge to a section of the 1996 Telecommunications Act that prevents the Bells from offering such information "content" services as news, sports, weather, and classified ads. BellSouth had argued that the provision was an unlawful limitation on its freedom speech and on unfair discrimination applying only to the Bell companies. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 16 May 98) ANTITRUST SUITS FILED AGAINST MICROSOFT The federal government and 20 state attorneys general have filed two antitrust suits against Microsoft, accusing it of using monopolistic practices to win control of the Internet and related software products, such as software for browsing the World Wide Web. However, the government did not take any action to halt the release of Microsoft's new Windows 98 operating system, which is being distributed this week. Among other things, the suit demands that Microsoft either sell its browser, Internet Explorer, separately from the Windows operating system, or reconfigure Windows so that users will have a choice between Explorer and the rival product Netscape Navigator. Another demand is that other Microsoft products -- such as the Microsoft Word word processing software and the Microsoft Excel spreadsheet software -- be "unbundled" from Windows 98 and sold separately. Microsoft co-founder and chief executive Bill Gates told reporters: "This is a step backward for America, for consumers and for the personal computer industry that is leading our nation's economy into the 21st century. How ironic that in the United States -- where freedom and innovation are core values -- that these regulators are trying to punish an American company that has worked hard and successfully to deliver on these values." (New York Times 19 May 98) DOE WILL SHARE TECHNOLOGY WITH FBI, BATF In a speech today, Vice President Al Gore is expected to announce that the Energy Department will share some of its valuable technology, which up to now has been used only for Cold War espionage, with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. The technology includes: portable chemical analysis machines to gather forensic crime-scene data; software used to track cell-phone fraud, online copyright violations and Internet fraud; hand-held GPS devices to record video and audio notes; and nuclear-detection technology and drug-analysis labs. "This new partnership will help law enforcement across the country deploy the cutting-edge technologies of our national labs to fight drugs, violent crime and terrorism," says Gore. (Wall Street Journal 19 May 98) AT&T MAKES DEAL WITH ANOTHER SEARCH ENGINE AT&T and Yahoo! have developed an arrangement that will allow users to buy AT&T communications services through buttons located in several places throughout the Yahoo! search-engine Web site; the two companies will also test a new service allowing users to maintain confidentiality in "chats" over the Internet, by establishing a voice link without revealing a chat-participant's phone number. AT&T has recently signed up other search services as well, to offer a variety of "front-ends" for its WorldNet Internet service. (ZDNet 18 May 98) INDIA SANCTIONS COULD AFFECT HIGH-TECH EXPORTS Software and computer companies are scrambling to figure out how the Clinton Administration sanctions in the wake of India's nuclear tests last week will affect them. Cited in the sanctions is a ban on exports of "specific goods and technology subject to export licensing by the Commerce Department." According to Commerce officials, the prohibition would apply to workstation manufacturers seeking to ship upgrades to India, a prime customer for the high-end machines and upgrades. Still unclear is whether the sanctions will be imposed on electronic transmission of software and design information across borders. A number of U.S. high-tech companies have subsidiaries or branch offices in India. (EE Times 19 May 98) YAHOO! REPLACES ALTAVISTA WITH INKTOMI SEARCH ENGINE Reflecting the rise in competition among so-called Internet "portal" sites, Yahoo! says it's replacing Digital Equipment's AltaVista search engine technology with that from Inktomi when AltaVista's contract expires in July. Digital, which has supplied Yahoo! with its search engine for the past two years, says AltaVista's success in snaring a piece of the Internet portal site market is responsible for the rift, because now AltaVista and Yahoo! are competitors. "In the beginning, there was not much conflict, but it changed as the business grew stronger and revenue increased," says AltaVista's communications manager. Digital will now concentrate on selling more ads on its site and increasing content. (TechWeb 18 May 98) IBM TO PUSH INTERNET PHONE SERVICE IBM has cut a deal with Internet service provider IDT Corp., wherein it will promote IDT's Internet phone service by including IDT's Net2Phone software in its Internet access kit and the two companies will share the revenue generated. (Investor's Business Daily 19 May 98) MCI MAY SELL ITS INTERNET BUSINESS TO DISARM ANTITRUST OBJECTIONS To protect itself from criticisms that its planned merger with WorldCom would give it an excessive degree of dominance in high-capacity data network services, MCI is apparently considering selling all or parts of its Internet business. Competitors GTE and Sprint, who are hoping to have the merger blocked by the federal government, say that the combined company formed by MCI and WorldCom would account for 40-60% of the U.S. communications traffic flowing over high-capacity networks. (San Jose Mercury News 19 May 98) NAVY TURNS TO OFF-THE-SHELF PCs TO POWER SHIPS The U.S. Navy, facing pressure from Congress to cut spending, is maintaining its cutting edge by replacing expensive custom-built systems with off-the-shelf products. "If we insisted on military specs, we'd be a generation behind, and they'd cost twice as much," says the intelligence officer on the USS Coronado. The new strategy, called IT-21 or Information Technology for the 21st Century, is the brainchild of the Pacific Fleet commander-in-chief Adm. Archie Clemins. "If you use proprietary systems, you can never stay current with technology," says Clemins. Another advantage is a shortened learning curve: "Everybody knows how to use the technology so training costs are way down." In addition, using off-the-shelf systems makes it a lot easier to coordinate joint operations with U.S. allies. "Proprietary computers were too expensive for our coalition partners." The only downside is that the Navy may be losing some of its computer brain power to the private sector: "Our people are very valuable in the commercial world," says a spokesman. (St. Petersburg Times 18 May 98) THE INTERNET AS LOBBYING TOOL Referring to a U.S. Chamber of Commerce event yesterday demonstrating the use of the Internet as a lobbying tool for communicating with (lobbying) government officials, James Thurber, director of American University's Center for Congressional Studies, says: "This is an example of the future... The linkage between a direct lobbying effort and the Internet is going to improve the capacity of these large organizations to pressure individual members of Congress to do what they want them to do. With these sites, they can just click an icon, and they have programs that will automatically send a letter to the right members of Congress." (Washington Post 18 May 98) BEEPER BLACKOUT A malfunctioning Panamsat-owned satellite late Tuesday caused service disruptions to tens of millions of pagers and other communications devices throughout the nation, and in many states prevented distribution of such televisions programs as "The News Hour With Jim Lehrer" on Public Television. The malfunction was characterized as one that would happen extremely infrequently. Normal paging service may not be restored for a full week. (New York Times 21 May 98) WTO PLEDGES DUTY-FREE INTERNET FOR ONE YEAR Members of the World Trade Organization (WTO) have agreed to refrain from levying tariffs on Internet business for one year -- a partial victory for the U.S., which had pushed for a total ban on tariffs. Arguing against the moratorium were several developing countries that see the Internet as an additional source of much-needed revenue. The WTO agreement calls for no tariffs on items traded via the Internet, but does not include items ordered over the Internet but delivered in a conventional manner. (Reuters 20 May 98) EURO HOLOGRAM IS MISSING Somewhere between Paris and Munich, a unique hologram design, intended to deter counterfeiting of the new euro currency, has turned up missing. The French-made hologram was on its way to a high-security printer near Nuremberg for testing. One European Union monetary official called the disappearance "startling" and there's speculation that the EU may have to change the design of its high-denomination euro banknotes, due to be issued in 2002. The hologram was designed by a small business in Paris and was taken to be loaded onto an Air France flight at Roissy airport by Brink's security services. Officials in Paris say the theft bears the hallmarks of a well-organized crime, as only an expert would understand the significance of the hologram in the note-printing process. (Financial Times 21 May 98) U.S. ENCRYPTION POLICY COULD COST COMPANIES $9 BILLION A study released recently the Economic Strategy Institute shows that U.S. makers of encryption software could miss out on $9-billion worth of sales over the next five years, if the U.S. doesn't revise its export policy. Although the administration has shown some signs of willingness to relax its stance against encryption export, companies remain wary. Government officials "continually play this game of offering some meaningless relief, promising more and never delivering," says RSA Data Security president Jim Bidzos. "They're gridlocked. When pressed to make concessions, the NSA and FBI never find any compromises acceptable." "We need to get a new dialogue started," says IBM's public policy director. "As long as there is posturing by law enforcement on one hand and people advocating total freedom to use and export strong encryption on the other, you're going to end up in this area of paralysis." (Investor's Business Daily 21 May 98) NEW WIRELESS TECHNOLOGY FOR DATA TRANSFER A group of computer and telecommunications companies is backing a new technology for transferring electronic data over short distances, up to 30 feet. The technology, code-named Bluetooth, uses a portion of the radio spectrum that was set aside for industrial, scientific and medical devices, and can transfer data at about eight times the speed of a 56-Kbps computer modem. Bluetooth transmitters are expected to cost about $20 apiece, and will be able to communicate with a number of different devices. Backers include Intel, IBM, Nokia, Ericsson and Toshiba Corp. (Wall Street Journal 20 May 98) WHAT'S GOOD FOR QUEST IS GOOD FOR AT&T AT&T has approached the regional Bell phone companies as well as GTE, another major provider of local phone service, and offered to use those companies as sales channels to market AT&T long-distance service to local companies. Recently, AT&T filed suit against a similar plan offered by long-distance carrier Qwest Communications and two of the Bell companies (U S West and Ameritech), arguing that such an arrangement violated provisions of the 1996 Telecommunications Act that put constraints on local companies entering the long-distance market. If AT&T's attempt to derail the Qwest proposal fails, AT&T at least wants to be able to do the same thing. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 21 May 98) REPETITIVE STRESS INJURIES TO STUDENTS Rising numbers of teenagers and college students are suffering from Repetitive Stress Injury (RSI) as a result of using computer keyboards. A study at Carnegie Mellon University shows that 22% of students, faculty, and staff report symptoms of RSI, and vastly increased increases in RSI problems have been reported by Harvard, MIT, and other institutions. Anita Barkin at Carnegie Mellon says: "Students are using computers earlier and earlier. They are using them in elementary school and in high school. By the time they come here, they've already gotten into some bad habits and have not been aware that RSI is a problem." (Washington Post 17 May 98) IS MICROSOFT ANTITRUST SUIT A CLEVER MARKETING TRICK? Advance sales of Microsoft's Windows 98 have vastly exceeded the company's expectations. An executive of the CompUSA chain of computer stores thinks the surge of buyers can be explained by the antitrust suit filed this week against Microsoft: "The government has created more demand for Windows 98 than could have ever been generated by a marketing program." (New York Times 21 May 98) INTEL EASES CHIP LICENSING POLICY Intel is planning to license its P6 chip-set technology, making life easier for companies like Advanced Micro Devices that make competing products. Intel says it's reached a licensing agreement with one chip-set maker and is in discussions with other potential licensees. Intel says its recent decision to expand its licensing program is unrelated to a probe by the Federal Trade Commission, which is investigating licensing policies and other Intel business practices. (Wall Street Journal 21 May 98) [Image] STReport's "Partners in Progress" Advertising Program The facts are in... STReport International Magazine reaches more users per week than any other weekly resource available today. Take full advantage of this spectacular reach. Explore the superb possibilities of advertising in STReport! Its very economical and smart business. In addition, STReport offers a strong window of opportunity to your company of reaching potential users on major online services and networks, the Internet, the WEB and more than 200,000 private BBS's worldwide. With a readership of better that 200,000 per week, this is truly an exceptional opportunity to maximize your company's recognition factor globally. 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LOOKING FOR TIDBITS ABOUT THE DOJ'S CASE AGAINST MICROSOFT Charles Rule, former head of the Justice Department's antitrust division, says the DOJ lawsuit against Microsoft is the work of a group of "fuzzy-headed academics." Rule thinks the government is overreaching in its case. "It's one thing to ask a company to go the extra mile," he says, "and it's quite another to ask them to walk off a cliff." Industry Giants Back Wireless Standard An industry consortium lead by IBM, Intel Corp., Nokia Corp., and Toshiba demonstrated wireless technology designed to make data communications using notebooks and personal digital assistants simpler and cheaper by eliminating the need for wireless modems and cables. The technology, code-named Bluetooth, will be available commercially during the second half of 1999 in the form of wireless transmitters and receivers that will be included in cellular phones, notebooks, and other devices. Bluetooth devices will transfer data between themselves at 1 megabit per second at up to 30 feet. AOL looking at Mirabilis Ltd America Online is said to be close to signing a deal to purchase Mirabilis Ltd., an Israeli-based software company, for $300 million, the electronic edition of the Wall Street Journal reported. Reston, Virginia based AOL, the largest on-line service in the U.S. is expected to make the deal for the start-up, which doesn't take ads and doesn't charge users, within the next week or two, the Journal said, citing executives familiar with the negotiations. Mirabilis makes a successful Internet chat software program, dubbed ICQ, that allows users to know when their friends are on-line. Reports of the possible deal also appeared in Israel's Globes business newspaper. AOL was not immediately available for comment. Microsoft, Sega to develop new game machine Microsoft announced a tie-up with Japanese gamemaker Sega Enterprises Ltd to develop Sega's new home video game machine, Dreamcast. The new game machine carrying Microsoft's Windows CE operating system is scheduled to be launched in Japan on Nov. 20 and in 1999 outside Japan, Microsoft's Japan unit said. Sega separately announced the planned launch of its new game machine, which it said will carry high graphics capacity and a 64-channel sound system. It will be equipped with a 33.6Kbps modem for fast network connections and online functions, the gamemaker said. Food illness computer web planned All 50 states will be linked together by next year on a computer web to track and respond to outbreaks of foodborne illness under a new Clinton administration initiative. Vice President Al Gore, who is scheduled to formally unveil the network Friday, said it would enable investigators to identify outbreaks five times faster than is possible now. The move is the administration's latest effort to reduce the estimated 9,000 deaths and 33 million illnesses caused by foodborne pathogens each year. Previous efforts include issuing new guidelines to farms and food processors on how to guard against contamination and adopting new inspection techniques at meat and poultry plants. The network, dubbed Pulsenet, will use the Internet to link the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Food and Drug Administration, the Agriculture Department, four laboratories and state health departments together. This will enable officials to quickly identify pathogens like E. coli in illn! ess outbreaks using the DNA of the bacteria found in the contaminated food and in patients who are suffering from gastric problems. Groups target Internet access fees Providing cheap Internet hookups for schools, libraries and rural health care providers is going to cost someone, probably phone users, consumer groups contend. Saying they want to avoid higher phone bills, the Consumers Union and the Consumer Federation of America asked the Federal Communications Commission Thursday to stop collecting money from phone companies to pay for the discounted Internet hookups. The groups said the commission should make deep cuts in access fees, which long distance companies pay to local phone companies, in order to pay for continued funding of the Internet program. Access fees help pay for connecting calls and typically get passed along to long-distance customers. Reductions in those fees are also supposed to flow to customers. But FCC Chairman Bill Kennard said paying for the Internet program and keeping phone bills stable is not an either-or proposition. Web users wary of Internet sites Digital commerce across the Internet offers customers more convenience with 24-hour shopping from their living rooms. But the fledgling industries hawking products online admit they need to persuade consumers that purchases can be trusted and that personal information will be kept private. "The majority of Web users today will not provide personal registration information, and many say they do not trust sites that collect personal information," said Madeline Mooney, a vice president for Lycos Inc., in testimony prepared for a congressional hearing Thursday. She was among executives from some of the nation's companies on the cutting edge of digital commerce describing to members of the House Subcommittee on Telecommunications, Trade and Consumer Protection the awesome potential of the future of Internet trading. The CWSApps Weekly Newsletter Volume 3.04 - May 13, 1998 Contents Introduction New Additions to CWSApps Updated Apps for the Week Top 25 Downloads for the Week Cool App of the Week - DU Meter ---------------- 1. Introduction ---------------- Welcome to the CWSApps Weekly Newsletter. Each week we will be delivering a message to your mailbox that is designed to help keep you up to date with the Internet software scene. The newsletter will offer a summary of the latest and greatest Net software updates as well as breaking software news and revisions made to the CWSApps Web site. As always, any feedback you have on the newsletter will be greatly appreciated. Please send comments (good and bad) to cwsapps@internet.com or fill out our comments form at http://cws.internet.com/comment5.html. Enjoy... ---------------------------- 2. New Additions to CWSApps ---------------------------- * DU Meter v2.0 - a Net Diagnostic Tool CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32diag.html#dumeter Download: http://www.hagel.threadnet.com/download/dumtr200.exe (0.3 MB) Rating: 4 Stars * XiRCON v1.0 Beta 4 - an IRC App CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32irc.html#xircon Download: ftp://ftp.xircon.com/pub/xircon/xirc10b4.exe (0.9 MB) Rating: 4 Stars * Netscape Next Generation Layout Source Code (for developers only) CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32auxx.html#netscom Download: http://www.mozilla.org/newlayout/download.html (4.5 MB) Rating: Untested -- Servers -- * WinProxy v2.1c - a Proxy Server ServerWatch Location: http://serverwatch.internet.com/proxyservers.html#winproxy Download: http://www.WinProxy.com/downloads/WProxy21.exe (1.2 MB) Rating: 4 Stars * Spaghetti Proxy Server v2.2 - a Proxy Server ServerWatch Location: http://serverwatch.internet.com/proxyservers.html#spaghetti Download: http://aVirt.vservers.com/download/spg22.exe (0.7 MB) Rating: 3 Stars ----------------------------- 3. Updated Apps for the Week ----------------------------- * Internet Neighborhood v1.5 Build 3 - a FTP Client CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32ftp.html#ineighbor Download: ftp://ftp.knowareinc.com/knowareinc.com/pub/in32/in32.zip (1.3 MB) Rating: 5 Stars * WebPhone v4.0 - an Internet Phone Client CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32phone.html#webphone Download: ftp://ftp.netspeak.com/pub/wpsetup.exe (3.0 MB) Rating: 5 Stars * DynamIP v3.30 Beta 4 - an Internet Utility CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32win.html#dynamip Download: http://members.xoom.com/DynamIP/files/DynamIPv330b4.zip (3.4 MB) Rating: 4.5 Stars * RAS+ 95 Beta 4 Build 140 - a Winsock App CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32crit.html#rasplus Download: ftp://ftp.cftnet.com/pub/RASPlus/setupras.exe (1.0 MB) Rating: 4.5 Stars * VDOPhone 3.03 - an Internet Phone Client CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32phone.html#vdophone Download: ftp://ftp1.vdo.net/pub/vptrl300.exe (3.9 MB) Rating: 4.5 Stars * WinStock v1.16.2 / Winstock Pro v2.2.2 - Online Stock Tickers CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32stock.html#winstock Download: ftp://ftp.teleport.com/pub/vendors/magoldsm/cb1v162v2.exe (3.7 MB) Rating: 4.5 Stars * OrbitIRC v2.1 Official Release - an IRC Application CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32irc.html#orbitirc Download: http://ftp.dlcwest.com/~orbitirc/download/orbitirc210.exe (2.2 MB) Rating: 4 Stars * Trumpet Winsock v4.0 Beta 3 - a Winsock Package CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32crit.html#tcpman Download: ftp://ftp.trumpet.com/winsock/twsk40b3.exe (1.1 MB) Rating: 4 Stars * PolyView v3.0 Beta 19 - a Graphics Application CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32image.html#polyview Download: http://www.polybytes.com/betafiles/pvbeta.exe (1.2 MB) Rating: 3.5 Stars * Ladybird v2.5 - a 16-bit Mail Client CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/16mail.html#ladybird Download: http://www.iii.org.tw/mforest/ladybird/lbird25x.exe (0.1 MB) Rating: 3 Stars * NewsBin v2.2 - a News Reader CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32news.html#nbin Download: http://www.newsbin.com/nb3222.exe (0.1 MB) Rating: 3 Stars * ThunderBYTE AntiVirus May Virus Definition Update CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32virus.html#tbav Download: ftp://ftp.norman.nl/pub/def/TBSCAN.DEF (0.1 MB) Rating: Untested -- Servers -- * Netscape Collabra Server v3.51 - a News Server ServerWatch Location: http://serverwatch.internet.com/newsservers.html#nscollabra Download: http://home.netscape.com/download/selectplatform_100_20.html (14.5 MB) Rating: 5 Stars * Xitami v2.3b - a Web Server ServerWatch Location: http://serverwatch.internet.com/webserver-xitami.html Download: http://www.imatix.com/html/xitami/download (0.6 MB) Rating: 4.5 Stars ----------------------------------------- 4. Top 25 Downloads - Movers and Shakers ----------------------------------------- The May 11th update for the Top 25 Downloads on CWSApps is now available. Here are the apps that have moved up (the 'movers') or have fallen (the 'shakers') 10 or more places during the past week. For the complete Top 25 results for the past week, check out: http://cws.internet.com/top25weekly.html --The Movers-- * Microsoft Media Player v5.0 Beta 2 - an Audio/Video App http://cws.internet.com/32video#msmedia Debuts this week at #1! * Eudora Pro v4.0.1 - a Mail Client http://cws.internet.com/32mail.html#eudorap Up to #3 from #22 * Microsoft Liquid Motion v1.0 Beta 1 - a Web Graphics Tool http://cws.internet.com/32webimg.html#msliquid Debuts this week at #7 * AtomTime 98 v2.0 - an Internet Utility http://cws.internet.com/32win.html#atomtime Debuts this week at #15 --The Shakers-- * RealPlayer v5.0 - an Audio/Video App http://cws.internet.com/32audio.html#realplay Down from #15 to #25 * TweakDUN v2.10 - a Winsock App http://cws.internet.com/32crit.html#tweakdun Exits the list (#28) from #13 * VirusScan DAT v3104 - a Virus Definition Update http://cws.internet.com/32virus.html#virus Exits the list (#32) from #20 * Outlook 98 - a Mail Client http://cws.internet.com/32mail.html#outlook Exits the list (#30) from #19 ----------------------------------- 5. Cool App of the Week - DU Meter ----------------------------------- CWSApps Location: http://cws.internet.com/32diag.html#dumeter Download: http://www.hagel.threadnet.com/download/dumtr200.exe (0.3 MB) Version: 2.0 Rating: 4 Stars DU Meter (Download/Upload Meter) is an inexpensive utility with one major purpose in mind--to let you know how much of your bandwidth potential is actually being utilized at any given point in time. In addition to supporting all 32-bit Windows platforms (Windows 95/98 and NT 3.x/4.x/5.x), DU Meter also supports all types of Net connections-- from dial-up connections to cable modems to T3 lines and everything in between. The utility even supports LAN network devices. One particularly beneficial use for DU Meter is as a sidekick to TweakDUN http://cws.internet.com/32crit.html#tweakdun . You can use DU Meter to get exact transfer rate results when trying out different MTU and similar settings in TweakDUN. The DU Meter results will then allow you to accurately determine which combination of TweakDUN settings works best for your connection. Another useful feature is DU Meter's stopwatch, which can be used to measure data transfer rates over a given period of time. After pressing start, the stopwatch will track elapsed time, accumulated data (in Kilobytes), maximum transfer rate (in kilobits per second--kbps), and average rate of transfer (again in kbps) until you press stop. The only downside to the stopwatch is that there aren't any user configuration options, i.e., you can't change the average and maximum rates to Kilobytes per second (Kbps) instead of the default kilobits per second. DU Meter isn't the only utility available that will display download and upload transfer rates. One such tool, Net.Medic, displays not only your upload/download speed but also your overall connection status; status of local, intermediate, and host computers; bottlenecks and dead servers; average data transfer speed; and much more. Combined with its extensive reporting capabilities and problem logging, the set of features in the $50 Net.Medic make it a must-have app for advanced users. But for users looking for a less expensive way of monitoring the performance of an Internet connection, DU Meter is definitely the more cost-effective route. Your Web browser is another utility that reports transfer speeds, but only for files downloaded via the browser itself. Both Netscape and Internet Explorer will give you an average rate of transfer for the file currently being downloaded. While being of some use in letting users know the rate of a download, Web browsers aren't designed to provide advanced transfer data rates, so it shouldn't come as a surprise that both Net.Medic and DU Meter offer many more features in this area. Despite some advantages of using other utilities, DU Meter has a number of its own distinctive competencies. While Net.Medic displays transfer information only in kbps, or kilobits per second (one/eighth of a Kilobyte), DU Meter will display speed rates in either kbps (the term often associated with transfer speed in analog modems) or in Kbps (Kilobytes per second--a term that is more useful in terms of relaying how long it takes to download a given file). Like Net.Medic, DU Meter can be configured to scale its graph automatically depending on your connection, or you can use one of several preconfigured values (28.8 kbps, 33.6 kbps, 56 kbps, etc.) In addition, with DU Meter you can manually set your own transfer speed scale, a feature especially useful for cable modem users who are unable to utilize the automatic settings or one of the preconfigured values. Another advantage of DU Meter is its small size--in terms of desktop space used, system resource utilization, and overall footprint--and the configurable ability to make itself even smaller. You can modify the program settings to display numeric and/or graphical results, use a window caption (or not), start minimized, or minimize when idle. DU Meter also offers system traybar icon support with an icon that graphically displays upload and download transfers. DU Meter is not without its shortcomings, but with a price tag of only $10, you won't find a less expensive net diagnostic tool that gives as accurate results for download and upload transfer rates. Users needing more information on transfer speeds than the data provided by their Web browser but a bit less than that provided by the super-deluxe tool Net.Medic will find DU Meter to be an excellent compromise. Pros: Supports all types of Net connections, inexpensive, minimal use of resources/desktop space, stopwatch tool Cons: Few configurable options for the stopwatch, lacks some advanced features found in competing offerings We All Have Questions About ISPs! Internet.com's The List can help answer those questions with the largest and most detailed, accurate directory of Internet Service Providers available on the Net today. A simple point and click allows you to find a provider that offers the access speed and computing services that satisfy your needs and budget. Visit http://thelist.internet.com and find any ISP in the world. GOVERNMENT (STATE & FEDERAL) RUNNING UNCHECKED and DERANGED? An Opinion Part 4 By R.F. Mariano I refuse to harp on things I've already said but... (there's always that but)! The comedy or, should I call it a tragedy of the Hatch Stage Show. Better yet the crybaby instigated persecution of Microsoft has taken a number of daffy turns. At this point in time, the best that can be said is its going to get very interesting. My take on the entire matter is as plain as an open book. If I were Bill Gates, I'd look at it this way. Microsoft has an extreme responsibility to its employees and stockholders. I'd fight to last soo. The Government Control Freaks have got to be put down once and for all. Everything these goofs get their hands on becomes SNAFU'd so bad and became so expensive as to predate the demise of said item(s) being controlled. The likes of Orrin Hatch, who by the way, had to resort to all kinds of "crib sheets" during his interview on TV thus letting the whole world know just how badly informed and ill-experienced he is when it comes to computers and their use, further sunk himself with the personal attacks on MS and Gates. How very professional of the good Senator. While I paid close attention to Hatch .. It "dawned" upon me. What might really be "up". These elderly clowns are vying with each other for immortality!! Incredible as it may sound, the more I think about it, the more it makes sense. Look at Dole with his ill-fated Presidential bid, then his goofy check card commercials, his jumping on the hate MS bandwagon and now his loudly proclaimed love of Viagra! Perhaps just perhaps, its about time we as taxpayers and voters demanded an upper age limit and stiff term limits on the House and Senate. The senility and power bases would NEVER have a chance to set in. Agree? - Disagree? Let us know drop us a line or two at rmariano@streport.com [Image] Special Notice!! STR Infofile File format for Articles File Format for STReport All articles submitted to STReport for publication must be sent in the following format. Please use the format requested. Any files received that do not conform will not be used. The article must be in an importable word processor format for Word 6.0 and/or Word Perfect 7.... The margins are .05" left and 1.0" Monospaced fonts are not to be used. Please use proportional fonting only and at Twelve (12) points. * No Indenting on any paragraphs!! * No Indenting of any lines or "special gimmicks" * No underlining! * Columns shall be achieved through the use of tabs only. Or, columns in Word or Word Perfect format. Do NOT, under any circumstances, use the space bar. * Most of all.... PLEASE! 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On our web download page is a selection for HTML (Read or Download). As you can see, STReport will not be caught in the old, worn out "downward compatibility dodge" we must move forward. Many grateful thanks in advance for your enthusiastic co-operation and input. Ralph F. Mariano, Editor rmariano@streport.com STReport International Online Magazine [Image] Classics & Gaming Section Editor Dana P. Jacobson dpj@streport.com From the Atari Editor's Desk "Saying it like it is!" Vacation!! Today marks the first day of a long-awaited vacation. I'll be spending most of my time doing work around the house, but I'm not looking at it as "work" but some leisurely-spent time in and outside the house. I'm looking forward to do finishing up some yard work, planting some more flowers, starting a vegetable garden, setting up the pool - and that's just the outside work! Some painting inside and some more unpacking and setting up of a couple of rooms will almost complete the "moving-in" stage. And who knows what else I might start! And then the traditional Memorial Day cookout! This will be our first; and we have friends coming over this weekend and some of my in-laws next weekend. It should be fun, especially with the weather cooperating for a change. Speaking of Memorial Day...since this is the traditional "welcome to Spring" weekend, there's likely to be plenty of partying going on. Play it smart and do not drink and drive. There are already enough crazy drivers on the roads this holiday weekend - don't aid in becoming a highway statistic. Be safe and have an enjoyable long weekend. Until next time... Gaming Section * "Centipede"!! 3DO News! * "Monopoly World Cup '98"!! * "Mortal Kombat 4"! Nintendo! * And much more... Industry News STR Game Console NewsFile - The Latest Gaming News! Nintendo Enjoys Healthy Rise In 1997/98 Profits Japan's Nintendo reports a strong rise in profits for the 1997/98 business year thanks to brisk sales of its video game machines in domestic and overseas markets. The company's group net profit rose 27.8 percent to $624 million. Nintendo's earnings were buoyed by a sharp increase in sales of its 64-bit video game player, Nintendo 64, in the United States and Europe, as well as by the popularity of its Gameboy portable video game in Japan. Accumulated sales of Nintendo 64 in overseas markets reached 12.99 million units as of the end of March, while domestic sales totaled 3.15 million units, the company said. For the last business year ended in March, sales of the game machine totaled 8.91 million units in the overseas markets, while sales in the domestic market totaled 1.11 million units, it said. Nintendo said it expected sales of Nintendo 64 in the current business year to March 1999 to reach nine million units in the overseas markets and two million units in Japan. We will seek to expand sales of Nintendo 64 in the domestic market by introducing new software and stepping up advertising activities," a Nintendo executive told a news conference. The company also sold 11.02 million units of Gameboy globally last business year, riding on the popularity of its Pocket Monster game software. Global sales of software for the game machine were seen reaching 54 million units in the current business year, it said. It also forecast global sales of its Gameboy portable video game player in the current business year to reach 11.5 million units. However, uncertainties loom over the business outlook for the current year as parents are likely to tighten their wallets amid prolonged weakness in the domestic economy, analysts said. The company also faces severe competition from Sony, which entered the home-use video game market in late 1994 with its 32-bit game player PlayStation. Sony earlier said it sold 19.4 million PlayStations in the global market last business year, more than double the previous year's volume. PlayStation sales in the current business year are expected to be 18.5 million units, it said. Another rival, Sega Enterprises is suffering from slow sales of its 32-bit game console, Sega Saturn. 3DO Plans Multi-Platform Releases, 'Incredible Growth' May 18, 1998 (MULTIMEDIA WIRE, Vol. 5, No. 95) -- 3DO plans to ship "a handful of PlayStation titles and one or two N64 titles" this year in addition to PC titles as it bids to make its software business profitable by 2000, CFO John Adams tells MMWire. "As we grow from fiscal '98 with three titles, we're looking at 10 to 15 this fiscal year (until April '99) and then 15 to 20 the following year," Adams says. The company will broaden its multi- platform plans the following year. It is investing in infrastructure this year to get there, he adds, and will decrease pace the following year. "The focus is on developing quality games and building franchises." Titles scheduled to ship this fiscal year include Heroes of Might & Magic VII; a sequel to High Heat Baseball; Battle Tanks on N64, a PSX adaptation of Army Men, followed shortly afterward by a release on N64; Requiem (from 3DO's Cyclone Studios); and Vegas Games (from its New World Computing arm). The company has no Project X plans so far, but the platform is "definitely on our radar screen." Sales of Might & Magic VI are "beating all of our initial forecasts," Adams says. "In a number of our retail outlets we're number one in sell through." Army Men is also selling well. "We're in the top five in the retail market for both titles." Sell through on High Heat Baseball is "about where we planned. But if you read press, all the reviewers are saying it's the best game," Adams says. "It's the first in a series of baseball games. We would expect the second and third to go far beyond the initial sales." The company's Team .366 unit has been developing the baseball franchise, but 3DO is also looking at other sporting activities, Adams says. On Thursday 3DO posted net income of $22.5m on revenue of $38.9m. The company also gained $18.0m plus interest from the sale of its hardware business to Samsung in May, which balanced R&D expenses of $19.1m. But with no hardware left to sell, 3DO will have to stand or fall by its software business this year. With Q4 net losses of $6.3m on revenue of only $1.5m, the company is looking to healthy sales and new releases to bring it back into profit. 3DO expects its software business to turn a profit by 2000. "We expect to see profits improve by another 50% year over year," Adams says. The company will get there, he adds, by building primarily on its existing properties instead of relying heavily on the development of new titles. With $9m software publishing revenue in fiscal '98 and a planned $40m in fiscal '99, the goal is $100m in fiscal 2000. "The beauty is that we're doing it with existing titles and developing sequels." Adams says 3DO has succeeded in persuading the investment community to back it as a software-only company. He describes feedback as "overwhelming." "A lot of the concern has been whether CEO Trip Hawkins still has the passion he had a few years ago...His passion is unmatched by anybody. Trip is back and he's here to play." Hasbro Interactive Unveils Its New Centipede(TM) Action Game BEVERLY, Mass., May 21 /PRNewswire/ -- Swarms of pesky spiders, menacing fleas, mushroom-poisoning scorpions and the QueenPede herself are waking up from their decade-long naps, reborn in Hasbro Interactive's new Centipede action arcade game for the PC and video game platforms. Based on the legendary Atari game of the 1980s, Hasbro Interactive's new Centipede will delight nostalgic game players who remember blasting away those irksome insects in the arcades and challenge today's action gamers with its new high-powered 3D adventure modes. Centipede will be Hasbro Interactive's first release from its recent acquisition of the Atari assets from JTS Corporation and is scheduled to ship this fall. "We can't wait for our customers to take a look at our new Centipede game at E3," said Tom Dusenberry, President of Hasbro Interactive. "The game play is a thrill ride and those insects never looked so good in their new 3D worlds," added Dusenberry. "We think Centipede will be one of Hasbro Interactive's top-selling titles in '98." The Story of Centipede... As the tale is told, every hundred years an eclipse occurs which causes a metabolic metamorphosis in the insect kingdom, triggering the awakening of the boss centipede, the QueenPede, and her mindful minions -- the spiders, scorpions, and fleas. Their mission is to wreak havoc on the nearby colony of Wee People. The Wee People, a peaceful sort, must defend themselves against the insects and have built "The Shooter," a powerful vessel especially designed to defeat the creepy crawlers. One very brave soul must man "The Shooter" and this time the faithful town bean counter, Wally, has been chosen to tackle this daunting deed. Wally needs your help in his quest to defeat the Centipede!! Caution -- the squeamish need not apply! The Game Play In Hasbro Interactive's new Centipede game, players have two ways to battle the bothersome bugs -- the Arcade mode and the Adventure mode. In the Arcade mode, the designers of Centipede are modeling the mechanics of the game so it will play exactly like the classic arcade game that fans from the 80s remember -- but the Arcade mode will have a cool 3D perspective. Since the game play is based on the 80s version, the bugs will behave exactly the same way they did in the original game -- centipedes are still winding toward the player, the fleas are still building mushrooms, the scorpions are still poisoning the mushrooms and the spiders...well, they are still as annoying as ever. The most important element in this mode is, of course, to ascend the top ten list with the highest score. In the Adventure mode, players can break out of the classic arcade-style rectangular board interface and take on bugs face to face in six exciting new 3D worlds. Following the story line, players must direct our unsung hero Wally in his mission to exterminate the insects in these magical new lands. In the new Centipede, there will be even more distasteful vermin to conquer -- each one with unique battle powers. In addition to the new game play modes there will be new perspectives that players can choose from including top down, third-person (over Wally's shoulder), and first-person views. Players can switch their perspective whenever they want to help them out of any precarious situation! Centipede will be available this fall. Midway To Launch Mortal Kombat 4 for Nintendo 64 CORSICANA, TEXAS (May 18) BUSINESS WIRE - May 18, 1998 - Midway Home Entertainment prepares for the launch of Mortal Kombat 4(R) (MK4) with the announcement of an aggressive new price point for the Nintendo 64(R) version and a multi-million dollar national TV advertising campaign. Midway is responding to retail buyer and consumer demand for lower priced Nintendo 64 games by reducing the wholesale cost of MK4 for the platform. This reduction will result in a new suggested retail price of $49.95 as opposed to the previous MSRP of $59.95. "MK4 is the type of high profile title that can generate substantial excitement for the Nintendo 64 hardware," said Byron Cook, president of Midway Home Entertainment. "The popularity and huge success of the Mortal Kombat franchise coupled with the new low price and our national TV ad campaign will cause the title to fly off retail store shelves." The sneak previews of the "music video" style advertising spot start Sunday, May 17 (9 p.m. & 11:15 p.m. EST) with the airing of the Mortal Kombat movie on TBS. The spot will be featured four times during each of the five airings of the movie that month. The campaign supports the pre-sale efforts of MK4 for the Nintendo 64 and the PlayStation(R) game console system. The largest portion of the multi-million dollar MK4 TV campaign coincides with the launch of the game on June 29 and continues through July 13 on cable networks including Comedy Central, USA, TNT, TBS, and MTV. The commercial will be featured on programs such as South Park on Comedy Central, Beavis & Butthead and Daria on MTV, WCW Thunder on TBS, and Saved by the Bell and Baywatch on USA. Hasbro Interactive Kicks Off Soccer Summer With Monopoly World Cup '98 BEVERLY, Mass., May 21 /PRNewswire/ -- The wheeling and dealing of the Monopoly(R) game has teamed up with the world's most anticipated sporting event this year! Hasbro Interactive, leading all-family interactive games publisher, announced it is shipping the Monopoly World Cup '98 CD-ROM at the end of the month. Faithful to the original Monopoly game play that everyone in the family knows, players buy and sell the world's 22 best soccer teams in Monopoly World Cup CD-ROM as they compete for soccer supremacy. Game tokens are fully animated 3-D soccer players that kick passes across the board to the next player or dribble the ball elegantly to the next team. Just as on the real field, a soccer player gets heated when he's sent to the bench (jail) or receives a yellow or red card-all with the realistic soccer crowd fanfare in the background. The railroad stations of the original Monopoly game are now the top four soccer stadiums for 1998 World Cup in France and instead of hotels, you're buying stadiums. The goal of the game is to bankrupt your opponent and own this soccer lover's universe. Monopoly World Cup CD-ROM will be available in seven languages and playable on Windows 95 for a suggested retail price of $29.95. For more information on this game and other Hasbro Interactive titles visit www.hasbro-interactive.com. Get Ready to Burn Rubber: ASC Games' Jeff Gordon Racing Peels Out DARIEN, CONN. (May 13) BUSINESS WIRE - May 13, 1998 - Ladies and gentlemen start your engines - the checkered flag is about to fly for the launch of ASC Games' JEFF GORDON RACING, a new video game series developed with NASCAR Winston Cup Champion and racing prodigy Jeff Gordon at the wheel. JEFF GORDON RACING is the first game in which a NASCAR superstar is hands-on in co-designing and co-producing a racing game series. Showcased at this year's Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) trade show from May 28-30 in Atlanta, Georgia by leading video game developer and publisher ASC Games, JEFF GORDON RACING will land on store shelves beginning first quarter 1999 for the PC CD-ROM, PlayStation, arcade, and N64 platforms. "This video game will be the ultimate combination of my two passions - racing and video gaming," says Jeff Gordon, NASCAR Champion. "I'm really looking forward to creating games in which players can virtually experience the pure rush of driving at lightning-fast speeds and the heat of fierce competitive racing. I want gamers everywhere to know the intense thrill of a Victory Lane ride!" JEFF GORDON RACING is a turbo-charged, arcade-style, stock car racing game that features Jeff Gordon as your personal mentor, teammate, and ultimately, your toughest competition. The game combines extreme high speeds with a wild spin on stock car racing and tracks of the future. "ASC Games is developing the Jeff Gordon Racing games to be unlike anything on the market," says David Klein, president and COO of ASC Games. "So gamers -- get ready to shift into high gear because Jeff Gordon Racing will be a new racing experience." A prodigy in the racing world, Jeff Gordon is one of the most successful drivers in NASCAR Winston Cup history. A Winston Cup Series Champion in 1997 and 1995, Gordon was the youngest driver to ever win the coveted championship. Last season alone, Gordon won 10 victories, including the coveted Daytona 500 - as the youngest driver ever. Gordon's awards include the 1998 NASCAR Future Legend Award, Time Magazine's 1996 Top Ten Sports Phenoms of the Year in 1996, a 1995 ESPN ESPY award for Racing's International Driver of the Year, the 1995 National Motorsports Press Association's American Driver of the Year award, among others. Sega to Release New Video Game Machine In November TOKYO, May 21 (Kyodo) -- Sega Enterprises Ltd. said Thursday it will release a new home-use video game machine in Japan on Nov. 20. The machine is equipped with a 128-bit processor produced by Hitachi Ltd. at its central processing unit and a customized Windows CE operating system developed by Microsoft, Sega officials said. The Dreamcast, which carries a Yamaha Corp. 64-channel sound system, will allow users to freely transform stereoscopic pictures on the screen when playing games, the officials said. Sega, which has been fighting an uphill battle in the home-use video game machine industry, is scheduled to release the software for the Dreamcast in mid-September, they said. At the end of March this year, Sony Corp.'s 32-bit PlayStation was the best-selling video game machine in the world with the cumulative total 32.82 million units shipped. Nintendo Co.'s 64-bit NINTENDO 64 ranked second with 16.14 million units shipped. With the shipment of only 8.86 million units, Sega's 32-bit Sega Saturn was far behind the Sony and Nintendo machines. Jaguar Online STR InfoFile - Online Users Growl & Purr! The Jaguar's Domain NEW JAGUAR GAME! Worms has just been released for the Atari Jaguar as of May 15, 1998! Other recent Telegames releases include Iron Soldier II and Zero Five. See www.telegames.com for more details, and show your continued support by ordering a Jaguar game from Telegames. THE WAIT IS ALMOST OVER... BattleSphere, the much-anticipated Jaguar game, is very near to completion! Yes, I know, you've heard that before, but this multiplayer network space combat game will finally be available in 1998. Please fill out the official BS feedback form even if you've done so in the past. 4Play would like to confirm how many carts need to be manufactured for the first run. The form is linked to the below page: http://www.best.com/~sebab/dvidgames/dsphere/sphere.shtml 1998 ATARI SURVEY Please stop by the Jaguar's Domain and fill out my 1998 Atari Survey at: http://www.millcomm.com/~forhan/jaguar.html Hopefully this feedback can be used to convince companies such as ICD and Telegames to continue to release completed Jaguar games that have been sitting on the shelf for several years. Thanks to all who've already completed the form! STILL PURRING IN 1998... Sharpen the claws of your Atari Lynxes... there should be at least two, and possibly more, new releases for the Lynx this year. Stay tuned to the Lynx Domain (linked to the Jaguar's Domain) for details. Thanks for your time, Carl Forhan forhan@millcomm.com http://www.millcomm.com/~forhan/games.html ONLINE WEEKLY STReport OnLine The wires are a hummin'! PEOPLE ARE TALKING Compiled by Joe Mirando jmirando@streport.com Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Another week has come and gone, and it's time to take a look at what's going on in the Atari section of the computer world. Not much as far as new products and things of that nature are concerned, I'm afraid. But that's to be expected since Atari hasn't made or sold a computer in several years. There are, of course, the usual questions and answers that are the mainstay of this column though, and hopefully you've found them informative or interesting. I know I always find some useful information in the posts I grab every week. Before we 'get down to it', I'd like to say a word about all this Government vs. Microsoft business. You might have noticed that I've remained quiet about it recently and wondered why. Well actually, I'm of two minds about it. First of all, I don't believe that Microsoft or any of its minions started out with the idea of driving anyone else out of business. The object of any business venture is to sell as much of your product as you can. In the computer world (as in most other product-oriented businesses), that means continuously upgrading and improving your product.... If you make a product that forever be the best in its class, customers will buy only one. It's much better to produce a product that will, either by design or by nature, wear out or be superseded by another. This, Microsoft has done exceptionally well. The time between products is not too short (three years or so between Windows 95 and Windows 98), the advances are modest and for the most part simply take advantage of new or updated technology. A corollary product (Internet Explorer) is also available which, because it was designed and implemented by the same company, meshes quite well with the new Windows OS. It's probably not Microsoft's fault that other companies sell products like the ones that Microsoft gives away for nothing, but they are the convenient scapegoat simply because of their size. Whether or not Microsoft is deserving of the accusations is a matter that I prefer to leave up to the legal system. On the other hand, other companies do have a hard time competing against this giant. Whether or not Microsoft has an unfair advantage is something best left to the legal and industry experts. And while there's been plenty of chaff thrown around about the Department of Justice and the Attorney General, let's remember that it is their job to investigate. The very nature of our system of justice demands that investigations be thorough and not simply cursory examinations presupposing guilt. I hear one or two people muttering about Waco and Ruby Ridge at the moment (you didn't think I could hear that, did you). Without commenting too heavily on those situations, let me just say that certain portions of our society have begun to think that it is acceptable to simply ignore or disobey laws that we don't like. Let me (and a large portion of the general population) assure you that this is not the case. Great pains have been taken to ensure that there is legal recourse when you feel that you have been wronged. Unfortunately, this means that you will be held to the same standard as everyone else and some people just don't like that idea. So when a law enforcement official, be it Janet Reno or Barney Fife, says "Surrender your weapons" or "Release the children into our custody", you have a legal, moral, and social obligation to do so. Enough said about that. Let's get back to Microsoft. As a less-than-perfect test, I set up my web page 'hit counter' to tell me what operating systems and browsers people who visit my page are using. The results were not surprising. Out of the last 215 visits, 143 computers were using Windows95, 6 used Windows NT, 8 used Windows 3.1 or 3.11, 22 people used the Macintosh OS in one version or another, 1 intrepid soul used Linux, and 35 used 'something else' which includes all other computers. That's a grand total of 157 Microsoft OS users to 58 'something else's. As for the bowsers, 105 people decided that Microsoft's Internet Explorer fit their needs best, while 77 people opted for Netscape Navigator version 3 or 4. There were also 33 others who used alternate browsers which include CAB on the Atari. As usual, this brings more questions than answers to the forefront. Did the people who used Explorer do so because they really liked it better? Or because Microsoft had seen to it that it was included with their computer's operating system CD? Were the folks who used Navigator doing it because it provided them with something that the other one didn't, or because they were practicing their own form of monopoly busting? And those 'others'... what were THEY thinking? If they were anything like me, they were thinking "Just let me browse in peace and make my own decisions while the rest of the world fights it out. Well, let's get on with the reason for this column... all the news, hints, tips, and info available every week... no matter what operating system you use. From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup Kevin Dermott asks for help with formatting an IDE drive on his Falcon: "I've been trying to formatt a 3.2 gig ide with ahdi 6.6 and keep getting the message "reserved sectors are bad" I have used bigger but never needed to format. I do a sector test with hd driver all is fine. Does it look like i have a bad drive? Will anything else formatt ide? Dennis Bishop tells Kevin: "You do NOT format an IDE drive, only Partition it." Chris Gray adds: "I think more recent IDE drives are designed to ignore attempts to format them. Note also that PCs tend to call partitioning "formatting" and formatting "low-level formatting", just to confuse us." Dennis Bishop asks: "Can someone e-mail me a copy of Atari IRC? Does it work with STinG?" *** For those of you who don't know (I didn't until recently), IRC is techie-talk for 'Internet Relay Chat'. It's a type of program that allows you to participate in chats all around the internet. One of these days I'm actually going to have the time to check out how IRC works. Peter Rottengatter, the author of STinG, tells Dennis: "[Work with STinG?]... 'f course it does. Surf to http://www.flinny.demon.co.uk/ which is Flinny's STiK page. You can download it there." Since I've been without a good, solid backup for a few months now, I post and ask for opinions on backup software: "I'm in despirate need of GOOD backup software. I've tried ELFBACK and SYBACK, and found them wanting in several areas. Whatever I end up using should be TT, Geneva/NeoDesk, and MagiC compatable, and fairly fast. I've got a new SyQuest EzFlyer 230 that's just begging for backup data...Any suggestions?" Terry Kelly tells me: "I too have an EZ flyer and use it to backup my TT's harddrive. All I do is set the backup mode in MagiC, select the whole partition and copy it to the flyer. Only updated files will be copied. It takes less than a minute after the initial backup." Matt Faehnle asks Terry: "How do you set 'backup mode' in MagiC? I have never heard of this before." Terry tells Matt: "When you copy files, the dialogue that comes up has a number of options: confirm, rename, overwrite, and backup. If you select backup, MagiC will compare date stamps and only copy the ones with a newer date. It does the comparison very quickly, so even if you select hundreds of duplicates that don't need to be copied as you would in backing up a partition regularly, it zaps through them in a few seconds. It's really very handy, and with the flyer I'd just as soon not mess with compression." Carsten Krumnow adds: "This refers to MGCOPY (one of the special programs called on by MagiC), the file copy client of MagiC 5.0 and above. Before starting to copy it asks for the mode. "Backup mode" means that only these files are overwritten whose last change dates are older than the ones of the files to be copied. Not clear, huh? It means that you can always copy complete folders without the fear that a newer file could be replaced by an older one (presuming that your hardware clock works alright)." Ken MacDonald adds his thoughts: "Kobold is also very good, you can create *.job files to do specific backups, including only backing up changed files. very fast also. This is Kobold 2.5 by the way, Kobold 3.5(German) I can't say." Neil Roughley adds his praise of Kobold: "Buy Kobold v2.5, the high-speed file copier which can also do incremental backups. In NeoDesk, you can even install Kobold by running it as an accessory and having 'Use Kobold for file operations' selected. This way most common file operations in NeoDesk are automatically handled by Kobold instead of the slow GEMDOS routines (something Geneva doesn't replace, unlike MagiC). The difference in speed while copying, moving or deleting files is stunning. This feature alone is worth the cost, but like I say Kobold can also do backups (including the use of batch files). Another nice feature is Kobold's 'identical sequence' mode, perfect for backing-up the boot partition, where running order is important. And, of course, it runs under MagiC (Kobold v2.5 doesn't support long filenames, though). Frank Lockwood tells me: "I just use STZIP 2.6. I have an external hard drive setup (in an ICD expansion box) that I use strictly for backups - it has enough room for two complete sets from my internal hard drive. ZIP archives take up far less space than ELFBACK or DIAMONDBACK archives. Once I've done a complete backup, you can set STZIP to add only those files that have changed since the last backup (update mode). For a third backup, for long term storage, I'll do a complete backup to a ZIP archive, and then segment these large files with "SCHNIPP" to put the segments onto floppies. Doing it this way take far less time than using ELFBACK. I moved a year ago and was very paranoid about losing data while my computer sat in a box in a moving van. I decided not to take my hard drive out of the machine, but rather to take my ZIPed and SCHNIPPed archive in my personal luggage when I travelled. The computer arrived in fine shape, with no data loss, but it was nice to have the archive anyway." John Kormylo, the author of ELFBACK, asks me if I would... "Care to be more specific w.r.t. ELFBACK? I could always use suggestions." I haven't replied to John yet, but I will. I would like to say that I found ELFBACK to be a good piece of software, but it lacks two things that I consider mandatory in backup software.... FAST compression, and the ability to back up several partitions with a script file so that I can start the backup and walk away. Other than that, I highly recommend ELFBACK. A few weeks ago, I included a post about the VDI implementation for the Nova graphics card caused a 'memory leakage' problem with CAB. Neil Roughley tells us: "NOVA VDI has been updated: -2.67: Memory leak detected when playing animated GIFs with CAB Thanks to Alexander Clauss for troubleshooting a problem that wasn't his in the first place, and to Gerhard Huber for updating his VDI." Magnus Kollberg asks Neil: "Aha! Great! Gerhard refused to look at it as long as the author didn't send him a short bit of code with the problem. Great!!! Does anyone have the Falcon/AB040 version yet?" K.Hampf asks about picture viewers for his Falcon: "I would like to know if there's any picture viewer (GIF/JPEG) for Falcon 030 using DSP and that has slideshow capablities. I have been using JPEGView v2.22 and it's great ... but it won't work good enough with MagiC and I can't read big DOS partitions from GEM/TOS due to BigDOS problems. The 1st Guide is not using DSP and it's lacking slideshow capabilites, and so are the Apex viewers I've tried. The JPEG thingie you start up in the AUTO folder and that has this demo-ACC is probably using the DSP but it's also slow. I think I've been a little spoiled by using GraphicConverter on Macintosh, but I no longer have a color Mac, I'm now forced to use my Falcon on a TV-set. That also makes me not using Interlaced resolutions, and gives all programs not switching resolutions this strange tall look." Neil Roughley tells K.Hampf: "Try GrafTool: http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/JJvB It has fast JPEG decoding and a slideshow feature. However, it doesn't support the DSP or progressive JPEGs found on the 'net (these have to be converted beforehand using jpegtran.ttp from The Independent JPEG Group's software). GrafTool also makes an excellent external viewer for use in CAB, as it understands the AV Protocol and is robust while multitasking, among other things." Johan Klockars adds: "If you want to do something with images that don't include drawing, chances are always good that MGIF will handle it. ;-) MGIF can do slideshows directly from the command line or via a 'script' file. Normal wildcards are supported and slideshows can be repeating, random and timed. It's even possible to do some image processing operations on the images before they are displayed, but I can't recall exactly what the limitations are on that (at least scaling should be possible). Naturally, all graphics modes are supported (only 256 colours on graphics cards). JPEG'D (Brainstorm's DSP jpeg decoder) will be used if available and you won't find a faster GIF decoder/viewer anywhere. The latest actual release version is v5.01, which should be available on most ftp sites, but you should really always use the latest 'beta' version available from my ftp/WWW site (the beta archives are not complete, though, so you need a regular distribution as well). The fifth v5.10 beta was released in July last year and is a _lot_ better than v5.01. Speedups, new functions, windowed dialogs etc." Well folks, that's it for this time around. Be sure to tune in again next week, same time, same channel, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when... PEOPLE ARE TALKING EDITORIAL QUICKIES Two Texans were seated in a fast-food restaurant when a young lady seated a few tables away began to choke on a piece of hamburger. She was turning blue and obviously in serious respiratory distress. One said to the other, "That there gal is having a bad time!" The other agreed and said, "Think we should go help?" "You bet," said the first, and with that he ran over and asked, "Can you breathe?" she shook her head no. He asked," Can you speak?" She again shook her head no. With that, he pulled up her skirt and licked her on the butt. She was so shocked, she coughed up the obstruction and began to breathe. With great relief, the Texan walked back to his friend and said, "Funny how that hind lick maneuver always works." John Hole/WUGNET [Enfield,Middlesex,UK] Best experienced with [Microsoft Internet Explorer] Click here to start. STReport International Magazine ICQ#:1170279 [S]ilicon [T]imes [R]eport http://WWW.STREPORT.COM Every Week; OVER 850,000 Readers WORLDWIDE All Items quoted, in whole or in part, are done so under the provisions of The Fair Use Law of The Copyright Laws of the U.S.A. Views, Opinions and Editorial Articles presented herein are not necessarily those of the editors/staff of STReport International Magazine. Permission to reprint articles is hereby granted, unless otherwise noted. Reprints must, without exception, include the name of the publication, date, issue number and the author's name. STR, CPU, STReport and/or portions therein may not be edited, used, duplicated or transmitted in any way without prior written permission. STR, CPU, STReport, at the time of publication, is believed reasonably accurate. STR, CPU, STReport, are trademarks of STReport and STR Publishing Inc. STR, CPU, STReport, its staff and contributors are not and cannot be held responsible in any way for the use or misuse of information contained herein or the results obtained therefrom. STReport "YOUR INDEPENDENT NEWS SOURCE" May 22, 1998 Since 1987 Copyright)1998 All Rights Reserved Issue No. 1420
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