ST Report: 4-Oct-98 #1432
From: Bruce D. Nelson (aa789@cleveland.Freenet.Edu)
Date: 10/11/98-08:46:06 AM Z
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From: aa789@cleveland.Freenet.Edu (Bruce D. Nelson) Subject: ST Report: 4-Oct-98 #1432 Date: Sun Oct 11 08:46:06 1998 [Silicon Times Report] "The Original Independent Online Magazine" (Since 1987 - Our 11th Year) [Image] October 04, 1998 No.1432 Silicon Times Report International Magazine R.F. Mariano, Editor STR Publishing, Inc. PO Box 58094 Jacksonville, Florida 32241-8094 Voice: 1-904-292-9222 10am-5pm EST FAX: 904-268-2237 24hrs streport@streport.com 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 "Often Imitated, Never Surpassed!" - Red Hat Gets BIG Boost - Linking Liabilities?? - Flaw Found in Netscape - Disney "FEARS" - GPS/DGPS Explained - AOL 4 on 1 million Microsoft? CDs - Oracle vs MS Subpoena - Online Service Image UP- WABi Re-Visited - Nintendo vs SONY?? - Battlesphere in Limbo? - MOODY REPORT MICROSOFT TOPS IN BROWSER WAR AOL TO UPGRADE COMPUSERVE PRODIGY TO MAKE PUBLIC OFFERING STReport International Magazine Featured Weekly "Accurate UP-TO-THE-MINUTE News, Reviews and Information" Current Events, Original Articles, Tips, Rumors, Gossip and Information Hardware - Software - Corporate - R & D - Imports 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 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 [Image] From the Editor's Desk... Where did this year go? Its already October!! Halloween, Election Day, Thanksgiving and Christmas are right around the corner. Speaking of holidays... Let me, on behalf of myself and our entire staff, wish all our Jewish friends a Wonderful New Year with Blessings for all. STReport is going strong now in its full new format for well over a month now. And our auto-mailer page on the website is now working like it should. Our new feature, Bits & Bytes is doing well and I might add, keeping me very busy. Like the proverbial "cat doing it and trying to bury it on a tin roof"!! Ahhh but it is a labor of love... or, so I keep telling myself. If you are ever in the area give us a holler. We'll give you the Cook's tour. [Image] http://www.streport.com ftp.streport.com news.streport.com ICQ#:1170279 STReport's managing editors DEDICATED TO SERVING YOU! Ralph F. Mariano, Publisher, Editor Dana P. Jacobson, Editor, Current Affairs Section Editors PC Section Apple MAC Section Shareware Listings R.F. Mariano Help Wanted Help Wanted Classics & Gaming Bits & Bytes Kid's Computing Corner Dana P. Jacobson Ralph F. Mariano 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 Eric M. Laberis 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 eBay Roars Ahead As First IPO In A Month eBay Inc., an online auctioneer that sells everything from Beanie Babies to computers, soared more than 163 percent in its first day of trading as investors heartily welcomed the first initial public offering in a month. eBay gained $29.375 to close at $47.375, as more than 9 million shares traded hands on Nasdaq. With the successful offering, the company has a market capitalization of about $1.88 billion, topping the $1.05 billion worth of venerated art auction house Sotheby's. The stock had an offering price of $18 a share. But excitement from investors, who had recently been too w orried about global market volatility to focus on new deals, sent it sharply higher as trading commenced. eBay, with more than one million registered users, matches buyers and sellers for 650,000 items, ranging f rom Hollywood memorabilia to antiques and computers. Analysts had said that Goldman Sachs, the lead underwriter for the deal, was one of only a handful of firm s that could pull off a smashing IPO in this shaky market. "People want to see big names with stocks that don't equivocate," said David Menlow, president of the IP O Financial Network in Springfield, N.J. "They want someone to be the prophet and lead them into the promised land." Goldman itself has been struggling with the timing of its own high-profile IPO. eBay was seen by some analysts as the catalyst that could breathe new life into a market that hasn't seen much excitement about new issues, especially Internet stocks, since free Web site provider GeoCities went publ ic on Aug. 11. "This is preordained," said John Fitzgibbon, editor of the IPO Reporter newsletter. The price range had increased and there had been a 28-day drought in the IPO market." Many technology firms that started out as hot IPOs are now money-losers. For example, DoubleClick Inc. posted a second-quarter loss in July of $4.7 mil lion on sales of a whopping $17.3 million. But three-year-old eBay is already profitable. It had 1997 net income of $874,000 on sales of $5.7 million "We have a stock that is an Internet company, an Internet IPO that is making money," said Menlow. "This is unheard of." Others saw the fact that Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, ranked by Securities Data Co. as the No. 1 underwriter for new issues, with bookings totaling $3.89 billion in 1999, initiated coverage of eBay with a n outperform rating even before it opened for trading as a sign of the firm's strength. Typically, Wall Street firms will not place a rating on a stock until 30 days from its IPO. While the excitement over eBay was warranted, another analyst was more cautious about touting a rebound in the IPO market. "It's more deal-specific than any signs of recovery," said Ken Fleming at Renaissance Capital Corp. Ther e's a lot of excitement about the company but I don't necessarily think it means a rebound in the market. "But it may help other Internet IPOs that have filed already and haven't gone public yet," Fleming added. Prodigy To Sell Stock In A Public Offering Prodigy Communications Corp., a pioneering online service that has shed its extensive content services to focus on providing Internet access, announced today it will sell shares in a public offering. The news came on the heels of a highly successful public offering by online auctioneer eBay Inc., whose stock soared more than 163 percent in its first day of trading Thursday. eBay Inc. was the first IPO to come to market in a month because investors had been too worried about global market volatility to look at new issues. Prodigy said the size of its IPO has not been set. It said the timing of the offering will be determined by market conditions, but that it does not expect to come to market before November. Prodigy, once the leading consumer online service in the United States with more than 2 million members, was founded in 1984 as a joint venture by International Business Machines Corp., Sears, Roebuck and Co. and CBS Corp. It was the first major effort to make an online service easy for ordinary people to use and presaged the success of a similar approach by America Online Inc. But Prodigy was eventually eclipsed by AOL and the advent of the Internet. In 1996, IBM and Sears sold Prodigy to a group of investors backed by International Wireless, a telecommunications investment group controlled by Mexican industrial firm Grupo Carso SA de CV, for $250 million, far below the more than $1 billion invested by Prodigy's founders. CBS dropped out long before, in the late 1980s. Earlier this year, Prodigy handed content responsibility to Web navigation company Excite Inc. "Although AOL dominates the Internet access space, it's still a highly fragmented industry with opportunities for smaller players, especially one with the brand recognition that Prodigy has," said Ryan Jacob, portfolio manager for The Internet Fund. In July, Mexican phone company Telefonos de Mexico invested $49 million in Prodigy. AOL 4.0 Arrives ... And a Million Free CD-ROMs Are In the Mail If there's one overriding theme to Monday's launch of the latest America Online upgrade it's this: Keep it nice and simple, but don't keep it quiet. AOL 4.0 will be heralded by the same kind of Desert Storm-style marketing campaign that drew such heavy criticism in the past including a major launch party in New York, national TV and radio campaigns, an online $40,000 AOL 4.0 sweepstakes contest, and the mailing of a million free AOL 4.0 CD-ROMs every week. Marketing considerations aside, company officials are upbeat about the online service's new features. The AOL 4.0 user interface offers: * even more tips and instant assistance with using e-mail * accessing the Internet than the preceding version * adding a tool bar that users can customize to provide single-click access to their favorite sites * the ability to switch screen names, or user IDs, without signing off from the service * a spelling and grammar checker for e-mail messages * a tool that allows photo images to be embedded in e-mail messages All the improvements are aimed at making the service easier to use, AOL (NYSE:AOL) officials said. Considering that the simple-is-better strategy arguably has helped the company shut out virtually all rivals in the online service space, these changes are natural, AOL officials said. "AOL has continued its growth momentum by attracting consumers with its convenience and ease of use," said Bob Pittman, AOL's president and chief operating officer. Netizens can be excused for having a sense of deja vu about the 4.0 release -- it actually began nine months ago. To head off potential network access problems, the company released the first AOL 4.0 betas in January, and the beta process continued until the final version was debuted on July 30. The rollout process culminates this week with a return to the company's carpet-bombing marketing program, which will even include delivering AOL 4.0 disks to airline passengers, magazine readers and fans at sporting events. In the midst of the AOL's network access woes last year, the marketing program was suspended when the company was criticized for recruiting so many new members while existing members had trouble accessing the service. While the company brags that more than 5 million members have already downloaded the new software, continuing the momentum after the 4.0 rollout won't be without its challenges, according to observers. Considering that the service has grown to encompass 13 million users 40 percent of all Internet users go online through AOL, by one estimate -- analysts said the company's challenge now is to maintain that growth. With the newbie market now well in hand, this means coming up with an original approach that will continue to grab online neophytes while appealing to more-sophisticated technology users, some observers said. "The next hurdle for them is to get to cable TV audience numbers," said Patrick Keane, a senior analyst at Jupiter Communications in New York. To do this, the company must continue to come up with creative new proprietary content as well as speeding users to the Internet and offering reliable e-mail service -- all crucial aspects of user retention, he said. "Retention of existing users is just as important for AOL as acquisition of new users at this point," Keane said. While some consumers have complained about the aggressive marketing, the service's huge growth over the past couple of years proves the approach works, he added. And AOL should also hope it works because it is much easier to provide support to a user base that is standardized on a single version of client software, said Rob Enderle, an analyst with Giga Information Group in Santa Clara, Calif. "They need to get everybody for support reasons on the (4.0) client," Enderle said. "And while they want you to download it, most folks aren't willing to go through the trouble to make the conversion. It's too big a time suck." The software, which requires 16 MB of RAM and 30 MB of hard disk space, will take anywhere from one hour to two hours for many users to download, AOL officials said. "They got as many people to download as they could, and now they've got to go to the disk," Enderle said. AOL Plans CompuServe Upgrade America Online Inc. plans to upgrade CompuServe, the competing online service it bought earlier this year, saying the move should end speculation about folding the former rival. "Since we announced the acquisition a year ago, there has been talk that this was a conspiracy to buy the competition and shut it down," said Steve Case, the chairman and chief executive officer of AOL. "We are committed to CompuServe as a separate brand," he said Tuesday. The company employs about 500 people at its headquarters in Upper Arlington, a Columbus suburb. AOL's investments include renovations and upgraded computers at the Upper Arlington headquarters, said Mayo Stuntz Jr., president of CompuServe. In January, AOL acquired the content and subscribers of CompuServe from WorldCom, which bought CompuServe for $1.2 billion. AOL, based in Dulles, Va., is the world's largest online service, with 13 million subscribers. CompuServe has about 3 million subscribers. Disney Boss Says He Fears Microsoft Who's afraid of the big, bad ... Microsoft? Michael Eisner is. In his new book, "Work in Progress," the Chairman and Chief Executive of Walt Disney Co. says the Redmond-based software company "may be our most daunting competitor." Unexpected words coming from the man who runs a world-renowned company with annual revenues of $22 billion and stakes in virtually every form of entertainment, communication and tourism. Microsoft, while a giant in its field, has annual revenues of only $14.5 billion and a spotty record in trying to generate entertainment content. But Eisner doesn't see it that way. In a telephone press conference Thursday, he said Microsoft's cash flow, its "enormous buying power," its aggressiveness, and the youth of its employee base are "a formula for competition." Additionally, Bill Gates, the company's chairman, is "a competitor to be watched" because he combines youth, money, intelligence and an interest in the entertainment business, Eisner said. He didn't hazard a guess on exactly how Gates will use his interest and cash in the entertainment field, but said that Microsoft has a tradition of starting slowly in other businesses only to make improvements and become highly successful. Disney has been sufficiently intrigued by the potential of the Internet to add it to its portfolio of theme parks, movies, broadcast and cable television networks, radio, professional sports franchises and even cruise ships. It's already selling merchandise online. In June, Disney agreed to pay $70 million cash plus its interest in Bellevue, Wash.-based Web development company Starwave for a 43 percent stake in Infoseek Corp., the nation's seventh-largest search and directory service. According to Eisner's book, Disney and Infoseek plan to introduce a new "portal" - the first place users would go to find what they want on the World Wide Web - known as Go Network. The portal will act as a "central hub through which people can gain access to every business and every form of information and entertainment that Disney offers," the book said. Universities Fight Microsoft Over Research Harvard University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology are fighting a demand by Microsoft Corp. for research gathered by two professors on Netscape Communications Corp., charging that it threatens their First Amendment rights and ability to conduct research, the Wall Street Journal reported. Separately, Microsoft released some of the evidence it will use in the pending antitrust case to refute a government charge that it tried illegally to carve up Internet-software sales in a 1995 meeting with Netscape, the report said. The case is set to go to trial October 15 in federal court, the report said. The new evidence, and Microsoft's subpoena for the professors' research, reveals the company's likely legal strategy at the trial, the report said. It will use the 1995 evidence to show that such meetings between competitors are common in the software industry, and it hopes to use the research on Netscape to show that Netscape's business misfortunes were caused by its own errors, not by unfair competition by Microsoft, as alleged by the Justice Department and 20 states in lawsuits filed in May, the report said. The universities filed their objections in federal court in Boston on behalf of faculty members David Yoffie, of Harvard Business School, and Michael Cusumano, of MIT's Sloan School of Business, the report said. They are co-authors of a book, "Competing on Internet Time: Lessons from Netscape and its Battle with Microsoft," that is scheduled to be published days before the of the start of the Microsoft trial, the report said. Challenge To Microsoft Get Backing Intel Corp. and Netscape Communications Corp., two of the biggest names in the high-tech business, Tuesday threw their financial weight behind Red Hat Software Inc., an upstart challenger to Microsoft Corp.'s Windows operating system. The two minority stakes in Red Hat drew the attention of Microsoft and rivals who accuse the software giant of trying to muscle the competition to protect its monopoly in desktop operating systems. It also represents a potential new rift in the informal alliance between Microsoft and Intel, whose microprocessors supply the brainpower for 85 percent of the world's personal computers. Red Hat chief executive Bob Young said the companies reached agreement Tuesday. He declined to give details, noting Red Hat is privately held. But he said the backing should help his company meet its goal of doubling its revenues, which ranged from $5 million-$10 million last year. Even more important than money, said Young, are the new relationships with Intel and Netscape, which makes software for browsing the World Wide Web. During the past year, Linux has risen to the forefront among the relatively unknown products that can substitute for the Windows software program. Distributed free over the Internet or sold in a commercial version for $50, the system has an estimated 8 million to 9 million users worldwide, who prefer the flexibility of the system. By comparison, Microsoft's Windows and Windows NT operating systems have about ten times as many users. Red Hat offers a service to Linux customers that Windows doesn't: Sharing the source code over the Internet, which makes it easier to blend in improvements. Clay Ryder, an industry analyst at Zona Research, Inc., in Redwood City, Calif., said that while Linux is a true competitor of Windows and Windows NT, it's important to keep the deal in perspective against Microsoft, the world's most successful technology company. "Even if Red Hat doubled next year, tripled, it's almost a rounding error to Microsoft," he said. At Microsoft, enterprise marketing group manager Edmund Muth said they are closely watching Linux's growth. "We take all competitive threats seriously, and we number Linux among those competitive issues," he said. But Muth said Intel's investment "does not affect the strong and postitive relationship that our two companies enjoy." Neither Intel nor Netscape would discuss details of the investment. Young disclosed the deal after speaking on a panel with Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen, Intel's corporate vice president Sean Maloney and Linus Torvalds, creator of Red Hat's Linux operating system at a trade show in San Jose, Calif. George Weiss, an industry analyst at Gartner Group in Stamford, Conn., said Intel's interest in a company directly competing with Windows "is a little weird if you think that Intel and Microsoft are bedfellows that are tightly coupled in marriage." But Weiss said that relationship has been overstated. Recently, for instance, Santa Clara, Calif.-based Intel began licensing its technology for advanced video software to RealNetworks Inc., which competes with Microsoft. Tuesday's deal could give more ammunition to Microsoft critics who are closely watching the Justice Department's antitrust lawsuit against the company, which goes to trial Oct. 15. In June, for instance, consumer activist Ralph Nader pointed to Linux when urging the Justice Department to make sure Microsoft allows computer makers to sell machines with system software other than Windows. Netscape Wins One, Loses One In Browser War In the past two days, Netscape Communications Corp. has won a deal to distribute its Internet browser to millions of new customers, and lost a major deal to Microsoft Corp. On Thursday, Netscape sealed an agreement with the Internet service Snap to distribute a customized version of the Netscape Communicator. However, the day before Dell Computer Corp. announced a deal to bundle Internet access and services into some of its new PCs, and said it would include the Microsoft Internet Explorer in the package. Both deals are expected to reach millions of new consumers. While this recent activity shows Netscape and Microsoft remain locked in a close competition over the growing Internet browser market, some people are beginning to question what benefit this broad distribution is bringing to either company. Since both Netscape and Microsoft give away their browsers, analysts say their only real value is in helpi ng steer customers to their other products and services. Browsers can be particularly useful in directing people to a company's online directory or "portal." Microsoft's Internet portal, msn.com, and Netscape's Netcenter both generate ad revenue based on the numbe r of visitors and can also serve as a showcase for other software products. The problem with the two recent deals is that neither browser will directly link to the company's Internet portal. Instead, the Microsoft browser in the Dell Computer deal will default to Excite Inc.'s portal, which is actually a competitor of msn.com. Likewise, the deal Netscape entered with Snap, calls for its browser to link customers to the Snap portal, which also is one of its competitors. Some critics say that in the race to expand browser reach, both companies may have lost sight of the real value of their browsers, and may even be helping promote their rivals. "The Netcenter portal is what's important to Netscape," said PaineWebber analyst James Preissler. "If Netc enter is not bundled with the browser, it's a complete wash. The value of the browser is where it defaults to. Still, Netscape said it is important to get its browser to more customers, if only to promote the Netscape brand. "It is a further proof that it's a great product and it reinforces our brand," said Skyles Runser of Netsc ape's Netcenter division. Recent surveys have indicated most Internet users still use a Netscape browser, although Netscape and Microsoft are approaching parity. "From a publicity perspective, not having at least 50 percent would be a big deal for Netscape," said Zona Research analyst Clay Ryder, who tracks the browser business and will release new figures next month. Some Internet Access May Be Limited When Lois Gibbs learned in 1978 that 20,000 tons of toxic chemicals were buried under her Niagara Falls, N.Y., neighborhood, she tried to make sense of all the information and scientific names suddenly thrown at her. She turned to her local library, wading through medical journals and old newspaper articles to understand the chemicals and the diseases they caused. Gibbs credits this immediate access to information with helping her organize parents in Love Canal and spread the word about toxic dumps. Now, thanks to the Internet, there's more information than ever before. But educators and librarians fear that average citizens won't be able to get at it because of proposed changes in copyright laws. Congress is trying to balance protecting the work of authors, songwriters and others with making important information available to students and other researchers. The House and Senate could agree this week on legislation that would implement two copyright treaties adopted in 1996 by the U.N. World Intellectual Property Organization. Current "fair use" laws allow personal use of copyrighted material without obtaining advance permission. Students can quote from books in their research papers and cable systems can relay television programs, for example. The new version could lead to the encryption of some material, keeping it out of the hands of anyone without a password or other authorization. Hollywood and publishing industry officials say they are not trying to keep information from the general public. But they want to protect the work of their artists and writers from being downloaded and mass distributed with a few keystrokes. "Everyone hopes that the Internet will become a great resource for education, entertainment and commerce," said Allan Adler, vice president for legal and governmental affairs at the Association of American Publishers. "But one of the problems is that the medium represents an extraordinary capability for flawless reproduction and instantaneous distribution." Country singer Johnny Cash witnessed this when he came across a Slovenian website that carried his hit, "Ring of Fire." In CD-quality sound, the song was ready and waiting for anyone to download, Cash told Congress this fall. "Maybe I should be flattered that someone in Slovenia likes my song, but when he or she makes it available to millions of people, this hardly seems fair," he said. Both the House and Senate versions of the copyright legislation would limit access, but the House version adds time to consider how to institute the restrictions without limiting fair use. The American Library Association and others say this is an important first step but does not provide a blanket guarantee that citizens will have access to information. "It will remain to be seen whether this rulemaking structure, which can be time-consuming and expensive, adequately protects the public," said Adam Eisgrau of the Chicago-based association. Opponents of encryption devices say they block access even for those who could legally use the material, and those people would be breaking the law if they went around the devices. Some fear copyright holders could start charging for each time someone wants to use or copy material, even if a library or school already has paid for it. "There is this paranoia that anybody who breaks down an encryption algorithm is a crook and a copyright violator," said John Scheibel, vice president of the Computer and Communications Industry Association. "You are trying to fix a watch, but you are using a two-by-four to do it." Industries representing copyright holders deny that these devices would lock up the work from all users. If students and library patrons can't get to the material, Adler says, they will turn to other resources, driving online publishing out of business. But Gibbs says the potential barriers carry a price that average citizens needing information quickly and easily cannot afford. "There is no way local folks are going to be able to jump through those hoops in a timely fashion," says Gibbs, who now heads the Falls Church, Va.-based Center for Health, Environment and Justice, an environmental activist group. "People need that information to move forward with their lives." Annoy.com Proves It Has Right to Annoy on Web The day before the House Commerce Committee approved an Internet anti-smut bill, a federal court upheld a civil challenge to the bill's legislative parent, the Communications Decency Act. "The courts have said that indecent speech cannot be made criminal on the Internet," declared Michael Traynor, who represented ApolloMedia, the publisher of Annoy.com. The site (http://www.annoy.com) is specifically designed to flout a provision of the act that bars "indecent material with intent to annoy" from the Internet. ApolloMedia said that the law amounted to censorship, and brought a lawsuit against Attorney General Janet Reno in January 1997 to challenge the constitutionality of the Communications Decency Act. On Wednesday, a three-judge federal panel handed down a divided ruling to ApolloMedia. The court found that the right to communicate indecent material with intent to annoy over the Internet is constitutionally protected. But two of the judges stopped short of declaring the statute itself unconstitutional, so they did not technically rule in favor of ApolloMedia's lawsuit against the government. Any way you slice it, this is still a victory, said Electronic Frontier Foundation's Stanton McCandlish. "ApolloMedia wins either way. The outcome of this case helps narrow obscenity law, and neatly ties up the loose ends left over from the other lawsuits like ACLU v. Reno, that helped overturn the rest of the Communications Decency Act." The ApolloMedia suit took on the only remaining section of the CDA left unchallenged by other suits. ednesday's court ruling found that while the term "obscene" had a reasonably clear legal definition offering little constitutional protection, the term "indecent" was more vague, and is protected by the First Amendment. Annoy.com was created in January 1997 for the sole purpose of drawing attention to this disparity. The site is aflame with stinging attacks on conservative political targets, and flashing four-letter words. Readers are invited to send lewd hate e-mail, complete with soft-porn images and ransom-note graphics. "Whatever the outcome of this ruling, or whether we challenge it in the Supreme Court, we've still forced the government to apply meaning to vague words affecting free speech," said Annoy.com creator Clinton Fein. "It's been a lot of work, but the only regret that I have is this: The most indecent and annoying thing I have yet to see on the Internet is the Ken Starr report, and with this ruling, we've just saved his ass!" New Web Site Won't Let You Go Pity the soul who comes across a Web site run by Brett Wright. His pages are like ocean riptides, pulling Internet surfers under and whisking them against their will to resurface elsewhere. Three of Wright's Web sites use a high-tech, behind-the-scenes method to route visitors automatically to other commercial sites, which pay Wright for such "referrals." When puzzled surfers try to close those browser windows - for sites they never even intended to visit - other browser windows open automatically. And those can spawn still more browser windows. It can be a nearly endless, frustrating cycle to regain control of the computer. "You fell into my trap," says Wright, who lives near Atlanta. "It bounces you all over the place, doesn't it?" Wright's technique is becoming common among sexually oriented sites like the ones he operates, which boast 250,000 visits daily. But the online porn industry is renowned for its innovation, first to use the Web's newest tools and techniques - from live video to payment schemes - that months or years later become mainstream for the rest of the Internet. So will mainstream Web sites hunting bigger audiences and elusive profits soon lure visitors into this loop? "The whole goal is to move traffic like cattle, which sounds terrible, I know," explains Wright, whose sites use the "window.open" Javascript programming command. "But the easiest way to send traffic somewhere is to not give them the opportunity not to go there." Critics say the notion of even briefly kidnapping visitors is antithetical to the Internet, where the allure is the ability to jump among sites without regard for boundaries, physical distance or software compatibility. On the Web, ideally, you just click and go. "Once you put someone on a path where they can't get out, the natural inclination is to quit," says Jonah Seiger of Washington-based Mindshare Internet Campaigns. Wright acknowledges the practice outrages some visitors - especially those with less powerful computers, which can crash if too many windows are open. Some experts doubt the technique ever will be embraced by mainstream sites, such as the most popular online bookstore. "You won't see Amazon.Com use that. People wouldn't tolerate it," says Michael Willis, who co-wrote a book about the worst Internet sites. "It's almost like if you went through the doors of a Wal-Mart store to buy some pants and walked into a 7-Eleven," Willis says. "You want pants, not a Slurpee. It would create ill will for both parties." Donna Hoffman of Vanderbilt University, an expert on Internet businesses, agrees it is hard to imagine the model working on more traditional sites. "People don't want to be sent places," she says. "They want to choose where to go." A particular concern is children. A young intern at the National Institute on Media and the Family, a nonprofit group that rates video games, searched the Web for a research project using the keywords "teen" and "games." She stumbled instead onto a porn site and could not back out - each time she closed a browser window, two more opened automatically. "Being an intern in her first week, she was concerned that her internship might come to a quick stop," recalls David Walsh, the group's executive director and the intern's boss. "People who kind of wander into those sites find themselves unable to get out." Wright says pages with never-ending loops, while technically possible, are "frowned upon highly." Most sites eventually set visitors loose. There are legitimate uses for what experts call "redirects." Web authors sometimes register several Internet addresses with different suffixes, but prefer visitors to enter through a particular page. Web sites are reorganized or even moved - but the old address can send visitors automatically to the new location. "But that's different than forcing someone through a whole series of sites," Seiger said. Web surfers can disable Javascript commands in modern browsers. But Javascript is among the most common Internet programming languages, so disabling it would kill many other functions computer users may want. Even Wright says he is not happy helping to perpetuate the technique. "I'm one of the people who mainstreamed this," he says, "and every day I wish I hadn't." 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 [Image] LEXMARK OPTRA C COLOR LASER PRINTER Folks, the LEXMARK Optra C has to be the very best yet in its price range. It is far superior to anything weve seen or used as of yet. It is said that ONE Picture is worth a thousand words. The output from the Lexmark Optra C is worth ten thousand words! Send for the free sample now. Drop us an Email with your address. 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 Can Linking Make You Liable? NSF Still Battling Over Internet Fund Legislators Working To Ban Online Pornography Will The Country Lose Its Memory? Lawsuit Involving Software Filtering In Virginia Library China Attacks Its Y2K Problem Pentagon Orders Sensitive Info Removed From Military Web Sites Intel-Netscape Eye Red Hat Software OECD Study Says E-Commerce Future New CD From Kodak And Intel For Is Overhyped Photos On The Net Oracle Resists Microsoft Subpoena Flaw Found In Browser Gateway Merges Retail Sales With FCC Dashes Hopes Of Bells To Enter Direct Model Long-Distance Market Online Service Image Improving U.S. Delays Handing Off Domain Name Registration AT&T- IBM Team Up In Outsourcing Motorola Introduces Voice Deal Technology For The Net Sony And Toyota Challenge NTT For Tapscott Says "E-Business Data Traffic In Japan Communities" Are Wave Of Future Cable Industry To Provide Net Microsoft Edging Netscape In Access To U.S. Libraries Browser War Microsoft Network Branches Out CAN LINKING MAKE YOU LIABLE? If your Web site links to a site that links to a third site and the third site contains illegal reproductions of copyrighted material, can you be sued for damages? So far, the answer is no, because Los Angeles Federal District Court Judge Manuel A. Real dismissed one of the defendants from a case brought by Hollywood glamour photographer Gary Bernstein, charging that such linking is illegal. After the judge's ruling, Bernstein withdrew his lawsuit, but legal experts say the issue will come up for court review another day. Law professor Mark Lemley says that "the consequences of holding an end user liable for copyright infringement would be disturbing for the Net... It might deter surfing. It might also give some unscrupulous groups the power to suppress speech or critics." (New York Times 25 Sep 98)20 NSF STILL BATTLING OVER INTERNET FUND The National Science Foundation is confronting a new challenge from Congress over plans to spend the $60 million collected by Network Solutions Inc. as part of the registration fee paid for Internet domain name addresses. The atest obstacle came when the Senate Finance Committee announced it is considering repealing part of a 1998 law that had cleared the way for the NSF to spend the money, which up until then had been locked up in a court proceeding. "This would put a wrench in the plans we have to help universities connect to high-speed networks," says the deputy director of NSF's office of legislative and public affairs. "There seems to be a problem brewing." The money has been earmarked for the Clinton administration's Next Generation Internet initiative. (Chronicle of Higher Education 25 Sep 98) LEGISLATORS WORKING TO BAN ONLINE PORNOGRAPHY The House Commerce Committee unanimously approved legislation called the Child Online Protection Act which would require commercial Web sites to collect a person's credit-card number or some other adult access code before allowing access to material deemed "harmful to minors." The measure will go to the full House of Representatives, and if passed will be reconciled with a companion bill passed earlier by the Senate. A spokesman for the San Francisco-based civil liberties group called the Electronic Frontier Foundation has criticized the bill of the wide net it casts: "When you look beneath the veneer, you quickly discover that it applied to any Web site that contains a commercial component and material that some community could consider 'harmful to minors.'" (AP 25 Sep 98) WILL THE COUNTRY LOSE ITS MEMORY? Although National Archivist John W. Carlin says he cannot meet a Wednesday deadline for formulating new instructions on which government records must be saved and which may be deleted, he has steadfastly acknowledged the importance of the problem, saying: "How do we identify, manage, preserve and provide ongoing access to e-mail, word processing documents and other kinds of electronic records that are proliferating in formats, mushrooming n quantity and vulnerable to quick deletion, media instability and system obsolescence?" Carlin says he can't meet a court-appointed deadline to deal with the problem because the government has a higher priority: getting its computer programs revised to avoid the Year 2000 problem. But Michael Tankersley, a lawyer representing Public Citizen, the American Library Association, and various other groups accuses Carlin of wasting time: "This is a totally unjustified stall to cover the fact that they haven't done anything for the past 11 months." (USA Today 25 Sep 98) LAWSUIT INVOLVING SOFTWARE FILTERING IN VIRGINIA LIBRARY A federal judge in Virginia will decide next week whether a trial is needed in a suit filed by library patrons who object to the decision of the Loudoun County Library to install filtering software called X-Stop on library computers. The intention of the decision is to protect children from being exposed to pornographic material on the Internet, but the filters also prevent what adults can view and often inadvertently blocks nonpornographic sites, such as the site of the American Association of University Women. (AP 25 Sep 98) CHINA ATTACKS ITS Y2K PROBLEM Although less exposed to the Year 2000 problem because its institutions are less computerized than their Western counterparts, the Chinese are determined to make up for a late start in preparing to avoid Y2K problems. Without specifying possible punishments for failure, China's State Council warned: "Senior officials of government departments and units that fail to solve the bug promptly and create huge losses and serious consequences will be investigated." (C/Net News.Com 23 Sep 98) PENTAGON ORDERS SENSITIVE INFO REMOVED FROM MILITARY WEB SITES Having become aware that some military Web sites were offering "too much detail on Defense Department capabilities, infrastructure, personnel and operation procedures," the Pentagon has ordered the elimination from those sites of all information that might compromise national security or endanger Defense Department personnel. A senior government official says: "One of the things we're finding over time is that, in this new environment, the distinction between classified and unclassified information in some respects is diminishing." (Washington Post 26 Sep 98) INTEL, NETSCAPE EYE RED HAT SOFTWARE Intel Corp. and Netscape Communications have been named as "potential backers" for Red Hat Software, a company that distributes a commercial version of the Linux operating system. No one involved in the deal is talking about it at this point, but industry observers say the move would give Linux a major boost toward becoming a mainstream alternative to Microsoft operating systems. Netscape recently agreed to provide a Linux version of its server software. Intel, in the meantime, wants to keep its options open by investing in operating environments other than its mainstay Wintel alliance. "Intel and Microsoft, regardless of what both companies say, they don't have the closest relationship," says a research director at Giga Information Group. "But I think this has more to do with Intel's generic investment policy, which has them investing irrespective of whether these companies are competing with Microsoft or not. This investment would be consistent with past investments in that it enables a market for Intel and provides a potential for growth that wouldn't exist otherwise." (Computer Reseller News 29 Sep 98) OECD STUDY SAYS E-COMMERCE FUTURE IS OVERHYPED A new report by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) says that despite eye-popping projections of the future of electronic commerce, those numbers, when viewed in the context of overall commerce, are minuscule. The estimated revenue from e-commerce totaled $26 billion last year, but that represents only 0.5% of total retail sales for the OECD's seven largest economies. "There is no other area of technological change with such a discrepancy between the actual, current phenomenon and what people, policy makers and businessmen believe and expect from the future," says an economics professor at Maastricht University. "If you consider the things that are still necessary to really make e-commerce work, it is amazing that people are expecting growth anything near what they are." The projections for e-commerce growth in Europe are especially bleak, where inhibiting factors include narrow bandwidth, expensive phone calls, language barriers, multiple currencies and heavy taxation. Currently, an estimated 80% of global e-commerce sales come from the U.S., and that is unlikely to change much in the future. (Wall Street Journal 28 Sep 98) NEW CD FROM KODAK AND INTEL FOR PHOTOS ON THE NET Kodak and Intel have joined forces to develop a CD that will make it easy for computer uses to edit and e-mail photographs. When dropping off film at a Kodak developing outlets, a consumer would pay an extra $8.95-$10.95 for a CD loaded with developed photos as well as Adobe Systems imaging software that would allow him or her to edit the photos (enlarging, shrinking, brightening flesh tones, etc.) and to send the photos over the Internet as an attachment to an electronic message. The CD, which is called Picture CD, is the first product to include imaging software along with the photographs. (New York Times 28 Sep 98) ORACLE RESISTS MICROSOFT SUBPOENA Oracle has asked a federal judge to quash a subpoena obtained by Microsoft in an effort to get possession of documents Microsoft says will help it defend itself against the antitrust lawsuit brought by the government. Microsoft says the documents are "plainly relevant," whereas Oracle calls the request "far too vast" and charges that Microsoft "apparently believes that its status as an accused monopolist entitles it to use judicial process to delve into its competitors' most sensitive commercial information." Microsoft is seeking information about an alleged 1994 meeting of Oracle, Sun, IBM and other executives to discuss ending competition among themselves; an alleged agreement by Oracle to use Netscape's browser and end development of Oracles's own "PowerBrowser"; and a similar alleged agreement by Sun to use Netscape's browser and end development of Sun's own "Hot Java" browser. (AP 28 Sep 98) FLAW FOUND IN BROWSER A computer consultant has identified a flaw in the Netscape browser that would allow a malicious programmer using JavaScript to read the contents of another user's cache (the temporary storage on a computer's hard drive), and thereby get access to the user's files. However, encrypted information, including credit card numbers, would not be vulnerable from this flaw, because they are not stored in cache. Emphasizing that the flaw is hypothetical and that no one has reported being affected by it so far, a Netscape executive says the company is taking immediate steps to verify and fix the problem. Industry analyst Stan Dolberg says that the next 18 to 24 onths will amount to a normal "shakedown cruise" for e-commerce, and that "this kind of stress-testing is going to discover all kinds of flaws... Today, in and of itself, this particular flaw is not earthshattering." (USA Today 28 Sep 98) GATEWAY MERGES RETAIL SALES WITH DIRECT MODEL While many computer makers are adopting the direct sales strategy pioneered by Dell Computer and Gateway Inc., Gateway is moving in the opposite direction, building an empire of retail outlets. There are already 74 Gateway Country Stores, and CEO Ted Waitt is pushing for 400. But rather than stocking its bricks-'n'-mortar with a PC inventory that can pile up and get expensive, Gateway's stores house sales assistants that perform a function similar to its telephone sales force -- customers walk in, sit down, and order a custom-built computer. The store model simply enables Gateway to try to reach the 30% of computer buyers who are unlikely to use the Net or the telephone to make a purchase. Analysts estimate that the stores cost Gateway about $1.5 million a year apiece, but provide a more tangible profile with consumers: "It's better than being a nameless, faceless entity on the Internet," says an analyst at Gerard Klauer Mattison & Co. "Gateway's putting down some roots in communities. The stores come up to speed pretty quickly and earn their own keep -- typically within six months." (Investor's Business Daily 29 Sep 98) FCC DASHES HOPES OF BELLS TO ENTER LONG-DISTANCE MARKET Citing provisions of the 1996 Telecommunications Act that constrain the Bell operating companies from complementing their local phone service offerings with long-distance ones as well, the Federal Communications Commission has nixed a proposal by Bell companies Ameritech and U S West to offer long-distance service in an alliance with Qwest Communications, a new long-distance phone company. In order to offer long-distance service, a Bell company has to convince the FCC that it has opened its own local markets to competition, but so far none has done so. However, the rules in question pertain only to the Bell companies, and not to companies such as MCI WorldCom, which has announced a plan to combine its local, long-distance, and international networks to offer lower rates to business customers. (New York Times 29 Sep 98) ONLINE SERVICE IMAGE IMPROVING The latest Homefront Study of online usage, conducted by research firm Odyssey Ventures Inc., shows increased consumer satisfaction with online services, with 32% of respondents indicating a favorable opinion, up from 17% a year earlier. Odyssey president Nick Donatiello attributes the increase to an improved image of American Online, which, with 13 million subscribers, leads the industry, with 27% of PC households using its service. Of services based on the Web, Yahoo has maintained its lead, with household awareness rising to 83% in July, up from 77% in January. Meanwhile, Yahoo rivals Excite and Infoseek are gaining market awareness,with 38% and 32% respectively. (Wall Street Journal 28 Sep 98) U.S. DELAYS HANDING OFF DOMAIN NAME REGISTRATION The U.S. government is extending by one week Network Solutions Inc.'s long-standing contract to manage the Internet domain name system. The contract was slated to end on Oct. 1, but government officials say Internet policy makers need a little more time to finalize the new plan for a private corporation to take over the responsibility. The final plan, put together by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority, will be submitted this week, but will still require 10 days of public comment before becoming official. Some of the organizations and individuals that spent the summer helping to create the plan says the Authority ignored reaching a consensus on certain points in making last minute changes, and they have submitted a competing plan that they say more accurately reflects the planning discussions. (TechWeb 1 Oct 98) AT&T, IBM TEAM UP IN OUTSOURCING DEAL AT&T and IBM are joining forces in a $2-billion deal to handle the telecommunications network for BancOne in what is claimed to be the largest telecommunications outsourcing arrangement to date. In addition, AT&T is in talks to acquire IBM's Global Network operation, although both companies acknowledge that there are other telecom companies interested in purchasing the unit. IBM says it hopes to sell only its telecommunications infrastructure, not the network management operations it provides to other companies. If a suitable deal is not reached, the company says it's prepared to make the necessary upgrades to maintain its network. (Financial Times 1 Oct 98) MOTOROLA INTRODUCES VOICE TECHNOLOGY FOR THE NET Motorola Inc. is unveiling its new Voice Markup Language, or VoxML, which will enable people to use simple voice commands over the telephone to retrieve information, such as banking records, stock quotes or weather reports, from the Web. The company plans to distribute a software development kit for VoxML, and hopes to make the new programming language an industry standard. "People don't have the time or inclination to learn how to program things, but they know how to speak," says an analyst with Cahners In-Stat Group. The new technology "could really turn out to be something for Internet connectivity," especially for wireless service providers who need to promote special services in order to differentiate themselves from competitors. (Wall Street Journal 30 Sep 98) SONY AND TOYOTA CHALLENGE NTT FOR DATA TRAFFIC IN JAPAN In a challenge to the Nippon Telegraph and Telephone company, which currently controls more than 90% of the data communications market in Japan, Sony Corporation and Toyota, the car manufacturer, are joining forces to create a company that plans to offer businesses a cheaper way of transmitting data. Sony, which sees the alliance as a relatively low-cost way of melding the audiovisual and technology sides of its business, thinks its use of leased data lines will be more efficient than NTT's phone lines, which were designed to carry voice rather than data communications. (New York Times 1 Oct 98) TAPSCOTT SAYS "E-BUSINESS COMMUNITIES" ARE WAVE OF FUTURE Technology and management guru Don Tapscott says that today's state-of-the-art virtual corporation is really just a transitional structure that's nearly obsolete. What will replace it? E-business communities, which he defines as "networks of suppliers, distributors, commerce providers and customers that carry out a lot of communications and transactions through the Internet and other electronic media." The hub-centric virtual corporation based on the rigid core network technology of electronic data interchange (EDI) will yield to today's more flexible and robust network technologies based on the Internet. "Rather than building internal information systems, companies should embrace the Internet as a new infrastructure in the creation of wealth and the evolution of the business structure." (Computerworld 28 Sep 98) CABLE INDUSTRY TO PROVIDE NET ACCESS TO U.S. LIBRARIES National Cable Television Association executive Torie Clarke says that the cable TV industry is developing plans to provide this country's public libraries with free high-speed connections to the Internet, with the general goal of wiring all public libraries nationwide. (Atlanta Journal-Constitution 1 Oct 98) MICROSOFT EDGING NETSCAPE IN BROWSER WAR International Data Corporation (IDC), a market research firm, says that as of July Microsoft's share of the market for browsing software has grown to 43.8, compared to 41.5 share for Netscape. Three years ago Netscape had more than 80% of the market. IDC says, "It appears that Microsoft's current battle with the U.S. government and Netscape's software giveaway have had little effect in keeping Netscape's share from eroding." A Netscape executive says that there are more important things than browser share: "What's more significant is making our portal the number one site" as the preferred way for surfers to enter the Internet. (Washington Post 1 Oct 98) MICROSOFT NETWORK BRANCHES OUT Microsoft will launch local language versions of its Microsoft Network Internet service in 24 countries by year's end, in addition to the seven countries where MSN is currently available. "This move signals that we aim to be a major global presence," says a company spokesman. "We want to position MSN to be the useful place where people go to get stuff done more quickly and easily." The new sites will be created in nine different languages, and will serve areas in Asia, South America and Africa. Currently, MSN is offered in English, German, French and Japanese. (Wall Street Journal 1 Oct 98) NEW! [BITSBYTES.GIF (64527 bytes)] by R. F. Mariano Georges... what a terror! Below, in most of the pictures, you can see the daily tremendous cloud build-up. It poured everyday this past week. Not all the time, at least an hour or two per day. And to top all that off... it drizzled on and off almost all the time. In any case, we would've been in the water already had it not been for all the rain. You see, the bottom has to be painted with anti-fouling paint before the boat can be launched. We shall see what happens next week. Keep your fingers crossed. [Matt.GIF (63157 bytes)] Matt Smith, pictured above, is the head honcho of Pablo Creek Marina's Service Dep't. He has more going on than a three ring circus in the middle of a Chinese fire drill. As we proceed with coverage of the progress of Bits & Bytes, we shall delve deeper into Pablo Creek Marina and the excellent services they offer. Matt is the man as far as I am concerned. I'll tell you this much... no matter what the problem is with your boat, he'll have an answer for you. As for the revitalization of the Bits & Bytes, whatever came up in the area of repairs, refurbishing, or customizing; Matt had the proper solution to each and every situation. Stop by and say hello to Matt. This is the time of the year the snowbird sailors start their voyages down the Intracoastal on their way to South Florida. There's an open invitation to all ... stop by - say hello, we're right on the Intracoastal just south of the Atlantic Blvd. bridge, you can even stay for a while.... fuel up, top off those Freshwater tanks, do other housekeeping chores or, just kick back have a cold one or two and enjoy Florida weather. As old Tom Dooley used to say... Come on Down! [bnb_port.GIF (45378 bytes)] Above we see the Port side of Bits & Bytes. Please note the DGPS antenna installed on the bulkhead. The Antenna Tower is done. [bnb_port1.GIF (57620 bytes)] Another Port view showing both the DGPS antenna and the Antenna Tower. [bnb_stern.GIF (58136 bytes)] A Stern view that offers a good look at the menacing cloud formations that haunted us all week long. [bnb_strbd.GIF (48414 bytes)] A Starboard view showing again those awesome cloud formations. [northstar1.gif (8273 bytes)] What is GPS? The Global Positioning System is a satellite radionavigation system deployed by the U.S. Department of Defense (DOD). At power on, a GPS receiver roughly determines which satellites are visible and where in the sky they're located. The receiver tracks these satellites, and down loads precise satellite-position data from each one. Using range measurements to each satellite, the GPS receiver calculates position, time, and velocity. Because of intentional DOD signal degradation, civilian GPS horizontal accuracy is limited to about 100 m, with velocity of about 1 to 2 KT (95 percent). This intentional degradation is called Selective Availability (SA) and is a normal characteristic of civilian GPS. What is DGPS ? The U.S. Coast Guard has installed a nationwide system of DGPS base stations to null-out the intentional degradation effects of SA. Each base station is a high-accuracy GPS receiver placed at a precisely surveyed location. The base station then tracks all GPS satellites in view. As the base station knowns its location, it calculates satellite range corrections to line up its known position with the position reported by the GPS satellites. These corrections are then broadcast to remote GPS receivers, which apply them to their satellite measurements. The end result: Northstar DGPS receivers provide horizontal accuracy of 3 meters and 0.1 KT (95 percent). back to products page [nstar_951.GIF (48085 bytes)] [Casts.GIF (10988 bytes)] Got a question relative to something.... * We have covered or reviewed? * Want something reviewed? * Want to tell us a thing or two? * Request a Brochure about a product? * This is the place... [email14.gif (38893 bytes)] [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 in seventeen countries, 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 250,000 per week, this is truly an exceptional opportunity to maximize your company's recognition factor globally. (STReport is pronounced: "ES TEE Report") STR Publishing's Economical "Partners in Progress" Plans! "Partners in Progress" Program.. Call Today! STR Publishing, Inc. (STR, STReport, CPU Report); * maintains a commitment to utilizing the power of the Internet and Web to keep computer users, worldwide, both private and commercial, informed of new trends in equipment, upgrade reports and future planning. * offers highly informative Hardware and Software Reviews, Press Releases, hands-on stories, user experiences and show reports. * presents the NEWS about new hardware, new software and how-to publications within HOURS of its being made public. * is dedicated to keeping the users informed of what your company has to offer at incredibly, almost the moment its offered! * Will maintain the free status STReport has the very best value in online magazines today Take full advantage of STReport's Exciting "Partners in Progress" Programs! MAXIMIZE your Company's Presence Worldwide. TODAY! Your company's color ad, banner or teaser as described/submitted by you or designed by us, will appear in either STReport International Magazine or on our Website (your choice). STReport is published and released weekly on Fridays Evenings. (except for July and August when it is released once a month) Trade-outs and Special Arrangements are available. MAIL us at: STR Publishing, Inc. PO Box 58094 Jacksonville, Florida 32241-8094 Email us at: streport@streport.com or, for quick action call us at: VOICE: 904-292-9222 10am/5pm edt * FAX: 904-268-2237 24hrs The Linux Advocate by Scott Dowdle dowdle@icstech.com ICQ UIN: 15509440 LOGIN: NEWS: Item #:1 Big name backers for Red Hat Software - It seems as Intel, Netscape and a few other big names have decided to put their money where their mouths have been lately... into the Linux community... specifically in Red Hat Software, who still remains a private company. It wouldn't surprise me to see Red Hat Software go public within 6 months but I'm not sure if that's such a good idea or not. Anyway, the most of the computer industry media has picked up on the story, writing about it as a rumor before it was announced, then then after it was announced. I think I ran into somewhere around 15 articles or so but I'll spare you all that. Check out Red Hat's press release at the following URL: Intel, Netscape, Greylock and Benchmark Partners Take Equity Positions in Red Hat Software http://www.redhat.com/news/news-details.phtml?id=163 News.com published an article where Red Hat details what they intend to do with their newly acquired investment capital and more importantly, the other things that come along with the partnerships that these investments build: Connections key to Red Hat deal http://news.com/News/Item/0,4,26946,00.html What I feel is a good analysis of the Red Hat situation is available as the lead story of this week's Linux Weekly News so check it out: http://lwn.net Item #2: I decided to slap together a column this week because of the lead news item: Big name backers for Red Hat Software. After having read so many of the articles before and after the announcement of the investments in Red Hat software, I think the most centered or subjective view of the situation came from Linus Torvalds himself in an online interview. ZDTV News correspondent Lisa Bowman caught up with Linus and filed a 17 minute RealVideo interview. Oddly enough, they even kept in an outtake. Check it out for yourself at the following URL: http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/zdnn_smgraph_display/0,4436,2144165,00.html Item #3: Avalon gets bigger, faster - Remember the press release on Avalon? It was a Beowulf system made up of 70 DEC Alpha workstations that was set up in a matter of days, just in time to submit a performance standing and attain 315th fastest super-computer in the world? Well, they are back at it. They have increased Avalon from 70 nodes to 140 nodes. This increase in hardware, given the linear nature of the Beowulf parallel processing model, has increased their performance drastically. It now runs the parallel Linpack benchmark at 47.7 Gflops (up from 19.7). A new paper that details the use and performance of Avalon when it was still at 7- nodes is available at the following URL: http://loki-www.lanl.gov/papers/sc98/ The Avalon folks have also produced a FAQ which does provide updated performance information. You can find it at the following URL: http://cnls.lanl.gov/avalon/FAQ.html Item #4: Microsoft, legal expert question Linux's free model - It appears to me that the FUD has started flowing... from Microsoft. It's hard to build a business on free software, or so they claim. I, for one, don't believe a word of it. http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/zdnn_smgraph_display/0,4436,2143512,00.html Item #5: Linux Leaps Ahead: New Developments Could Put Linux in the Limelight for Good - Jesse Berst, ZDNet's AnchorDesk Editorial Director wrote a piece where he starts off with, "Okay, I admit it. Linux could be gaining momentum faster than I expected." Seems like he is straddling the fence to me. Find it at the following URL: http://www.zdnet.com/anchordesk/story/story_2587.html Item #6: Microsoft Windows NT 5.0 vs. Red Hat Linux 5.1 - Rex Baldazo from builder.com does a review that compares the NT 5 beta 2 with Red Hat Linux 5.1. While his review gives Linux the winning mark, there are a few things that he overlooked that would have given it even more of a win. For example, he talks about remote administration and limits his discussion to the raw command line system administration as if there weren't any other way to administer the system. I guess he wasn't aware of the linuxconf package that Red Hat adopted with 5.1 that allows for complete administration from every display type you can think of: 1) Full screen text mode, 2) X Window System GUI based, and 3) WWW Form based. Even though he over looked that part, it's still a darn good review so check it out at the following URL: http://www.builder.com/Servers/RexTech/092198/?st.cn.fd.gen.bl Item #7: Transmeta transmogrified by Linux founder - Here's a story that claims, without siting the source, that Linus Torvalds has helped reshaped Transmeta into a company that is designing a CPU specifically for Windows NT 5 and Linux. I find this story questionable but it's all we have for info on what Transmeta is doing so it's worth a read. Treat it with a grain of salt though. http://www.theregister.co.uk/980928-000002.html SPOTLIGHT: Wabi Revisited Last column I neglected to include a screenshot of what Wabi looks like in action so I rectified the situation this column. Below you will see a screen capture from my desktop machine running the X Window System at 800x600 resolution at 8-bit color. I packed a lot into the screenshot but that's KDE as the window manager. [wabi.gif (41461 bytes)] As you can see, I have a number of Windows 3.xx programs loaded. I didn't haven't gotten around to installing any third party software Windows software to run under Wabi yet, so everything you see there comes with Windows 3.x. If you look closely enough you see: 1) the Program Manager, 2) the File Manager, 3) Paintbrush, 4) MS Write, 5) Solitaire, and 6) the Control Panel. I had Mindsweeper running too but couldn't but my display was so cramped I couldn't find room to put it where it too could be seen. If you look at my KDE taskbar you'll see button listed as "???". The windows that Wabi opens up on the desktop don't show up in the taskbar individually and instead show up as a ??? button. That is to say that Wabi doesn't register all of the windows it creates with KDE's panel but that's not a big deal. Anyway, another look at the taskbar shows I'm also running a KDE terminal, and Netscape with two windows open. My point here is that under Wabi, MS Windows 3.x and all of the Windows programs you run under it are just another X Window System window. MS Windows is just another program to Linux. Performance of all of the applications you see in the screenshot was snappy. The windows themselves look a tiny bit different, cosmetically speaking, then the real MS Windows windows but that's by design. LOGOUT: That's enough for this second-week-in-a-row column. Sorry for yet another, "I am in such a hurry to get the darn thing out I didn't get a chance to proof read it very well," column so enjoy my mistakes. Thanks for reading. Scott Dowdle [Image] STR Editor's Mail Call "...a place for the readers to be heard" Editor's MailBag Messages * NOT EDITED * for content From: Frank Sereno fsereno@uti.com To: rmariano@streport.com Subject: Quick comment (for me anyway) About John Mitchell's note in the 9/25/98 issue of STR, it wasn't Clinton's lies about Monica that got Jones' suit thrown out. The judge ruled the Clinton/Lewensky relationship was not relevant to the Jones' suit. I wish I could remember the exact term used when it was tossed out of court. Jones' suit claimed that she suffered emotionally and that she was discriminated against in the work place because of Clinton's sexual advance. The judge ruled that there was no evidence of either and tossed the case. She did not rule on whether Clinton made the advance and I think she basically made the decision considering the allegation of the sexual advance as being true. As I understand it, there are three different stories regarding Paula and none are in agreement. * In the first, Paula claims to be offended by Clinton's lewd request and runs from the room in tears. * Clinton claims to be unable to recall the meeting. * The third, from the state trooper that supposedly took Paula to the room, claims Paula was with the Arkansas governor for 20 minutes, left with a smile on her face and then said something to the effect that if Bill wanted another girlfriend, he knew where to find her. I suppose all three could be wrong... But it is interesting that supposed perjury in a civil case during testimony that was ruled inadmissible in a case that was dismissed are being used as one of the main charges for impeachment of President Clinton. Personally, I wish Clinton would resign for the good of the office and country. The President should be held to higher standard of moral character and Bill Clinton just doesn't measure up to the standards I choose. Al Gore is supposedly capable of performing the duties and at one time had a sterling reputation for his character. Of course, given the nature of Washington at the present, I'm sure he'll be dragged through the mud soon as well (at least one investigation about campaign finance practices is underway). I propose that Paul Simon, the former Senator from Illinois and proponent of bow ties, be selected to fill a possible vacancy in the vice presidency. I don't believe there any skeletons hiding in his closet. Sincerely, Frank Sereno Thanks for the input Frank. In reply: Before I look further I believe the word you are looking for is "germane" as far as the Jones dismissal ruling is concerned. I do not believe Clinton should resign, be impeached or, for that matter, be "anything" but admonished for having been stupid enough to allow Monica Lewensky to entice and ultimately entrap him. (The soiled dress being kept that way for better than six months is enough to hint at "setup" -- Not to mention Starr's RAT, Linda Tripp illegally taping Lewensky's phone calls). Clinton didn't do anything that any other red-blooded heterosexual male wouldn't do. What's the big deal?? I'll tell you what it is the Republican Party is trying to get even with the Democrats over Richard M. Nixon's "forced exit." Get comfortable with that as I'm certain history will bear me out to be correct. I'm sure you've noticed this past week that it was announced by Clinton; the Budget being balanced for the first time in thirty years and that a large surplus exists. A surplus, which by the way I also pointed out, the Republicans are trying to dissipate by pushing through tax cuts that will, in addition to benefiting only the wealthy, most assuredly, put the country right back in the hole. The Republican Party (G.O.P.) has, in pushing and bolstering the Ken Starr (also a rabid Republican) Inquisition, committed Political Suicide. As a result, some good GOP candidates are going to get trounced in the upcoming elections. All because the Newt Gingrich and Orrin Hatch gangs have been screaming for Clinton's head on a platter. What these fools didn't realize and probably still do not is the American Electorate the voters, are more sophisticated and worldly than these GOP clowns and all their demographic studies give them credit for. This gross oversight is going to cost the GOP dearly in the upcoming National Elections. I would not be the least bit surprised if the voters hung the GOP "out to dry" as some sort of a statement making it abundantly clear they are sick and tired of watching the GOP having wasted another four years they could've put to good use in helping this country come closer to solving its social ills. Instead the GOP blew millions on chasing Clinton not to mention the tens of thousands of hours of time lost peering "luridly" into Clinton's ever so private and personal life. Clinton will finish his term out and the GOP will come away with the Starr, Jones, Lewensky, Tripp slime all over them. The GOP lost out on this matter big time. When you mud wrestle with a pig, all you manage to do is piss off the pig and get mud all over yourself. A very wise and learned plain old gent taught me that idiom some time ago. [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. MS Word is Preferred. * Most of all. PLEASE! No ASCII "ART"!! * There is no limits as to size, articles may be split into two if lengthy * Actual Artwork should be in GIF, PCX, JPG, TIF, BMP, WMF file formats * Artwork (pictures, graphs, charts, etc.)should be sent along with the article separately * Please use a single font in an article. TTF Times New Roman is preferred. (VERY Strong Hint) If there are any questions please use either E-Mail or call. Many grateful thanks in advance for your enthusiastic co-operation and input. Ralph F. Mariano, Editor rmariano@streport.com STReport International Online Magazine [image87.gif (45316 bytes)] Classics & Gaming Section Editor Dana P. Jacobson dpj@streport.com From the Atari Editor's Desk "Saying it like it is!" Can you believe that it's October already? Wow... Most of what I had to say was said last week. I've been in a really foul mood the past couple of weeks - "end of fiscal year budget blues" has occurred again and senior administration can't seem to make a decision concerning budgets. Seems they wanted a million dollars out of our budget. When the proposal was submitted, we gave them most of the money but also spelled out what services would have to be eliminated to achieve the goal. Naturally, we were told that these services were necessary and we couldn't eliminate them. Someone has to pay for them! Well, our proposals went into a pile and not accepted. Where that leaves us is in limbo. My guess is that the initial budgets (before we raped them with cuts) will go into effect. Typical bureaucracy at its finest... Until next time... AtariNews: On The Prowl 09/28/98 LATEST HEADLINES: PROTECTOR IS COMING TO A JAGUAR NEAR YOU Protector, a 2D shooter in the spirit of Defender, is making its way to the Jaguar. Carl Forhan has obtained the rights to the complete source and graphics, and estimates it to be about 80% complete. He has everything necessary to finish Protector, and has already made some improvements to the code. This game will offer rendered enemies and explosions, Three layers of parallax scrolling, Enhanced audio and in-game music, Lots of enemies in over 40 levels, and all running at 60 frames per second! If you like classic shooters like Defender and Raiden, this sounds like one game you have to get! http://www.millcomm.com/~forhan/prot.html SEE THE WORLD OF ATARI ON YOUR TELEVISION! As mentioned in a previous AtariNews, Mark Santora is producing a video taped at WOA '98. It is running in at just under two hours, and there are a couple of added bonuses. Stephanie Wukovitz of 4Play and the music of BattleSphere will be producing original music for the video. And a bonus video clip from the future Jaguar game Protector was also added as a way of helping current Jaguar projects. http://home.earthlink.net/~santora/woav.htm STILL MORE CLASSIC FUN FROM TIGER In a continuation of its classic-themed handheld electronic games, Tiger is now offering three titles familiar to any long-time Atari fan: Pitfall, Keystone Cops, and Rampage. Pitfall in particular promises to be a "carbon copy of the original" according to text on its packaging. Check out your favorite toy or discount store for these new titles. LAST CHANCE AT SFX PRE-ORDER FOR THE LYNX Carl Forhan is still taking pre-orders until Sept. 30th for his new audio cartridge for the Atari Lynx called SFX. Check out The Lynx Domain for a description and ordering information. http://www.millcomm.com/~forhan/lynx.html SEE WHAT HAPPENED AT WOA '98 Atari Gaming Headquarters now has a complete recap to what happened at the World of Atari '98, including pictures and audio clips in the Real Audio format. So if you couldn't make it, be sure to check this out. http://www.atarihq.com/atari98/recap/index.html WHERE'S BATTLESPHERE? You may have already heard about this, but there is a problem in the release of BattleSphere. Hasbro seems to have lost the encryption key, and without that, BattleSphere won't work on normal Jaguars. 4Play and a group of people working behind the scenes are trying to correct this situation. AtariNews will keep you up to date. http://www.best.com/~sebab/dvidgames/dsphere/sphere.shtml Send any comments or submissions for "AtariNews: On The Prowl" to: Brian Gudzevich (Editor) at: Brionhold@aol.com Sponsoring web sites: -The Atarian Atmosphere: http://atmosphere.atari.org -The Jaguar's Domain: http://www.millcomm.com/~forhan/jaguar.html Gaming Section * "Wild 9"!! * "Deadly Arts"! * 3Dfx * Playstation vs. Nintendo 64! * Moody's Report! * And more! Industry News STR Game Console NewsFile - The Latest Gaming News! Clash Of The Titans -- Nintendo vs. Sony Sep. 25, 1998 (Computer Retail Week - CMP via COMTEX) -- Sony Computer Entertainment and Nintendo of America are preparing for the next round in their ongoing fight for the hearts and thumbs of console game-players. As they step into the retail ring for another fourth-quarter bout, both vendors are seeking market-share victories in video game and console sales. In Sony's corner, new games featuring well-known characters Lara Croft, Crash Bandicoot and the Rugrats aim to help the reigning champion retain its title. But archrival Nintendo has other ideas, as it prepares to ship an N64 version of its popular Zelda franchise. Industry watchers said the game is unlikely to deliver a knockout blow to Sony, but itcould rattle the champ. Sony and Nintendo threw preliminary punches this summer by lowering prices on their most popular consoles. In the latest round of cuts, Sony and Nintendo in August whittled $20 from the suggested retail prices of the PlayStation 7000 Series and Nintendo 64 systems, which now sell for $129 each. The move fueled sales at a traditionally slow time of year. Next-generation console sales increased 25 percent during the first eight months of this year, compared with the same period of 1997, but the market will likely end the year up only 15 percent, according to The NPD Group's TRSTS video-game tracking service, Port Washington, N.Y. Last year, retailers sold about 11 million PlayStation and N64 consoles, NPD reported. There's also evidence that Nintendo is narrowing Sony's lead in the market. Nintendo's unit share has steadily increased from slightly less than 30 percent in January to about 40 percent in August. At the end of August, the installed base of N64 systems was between 7.5 million and 8.5 million, vs. PlayStation's 11 million to 12 million, NPD reported. "Nintendo has been much more realistic about their market position," said Sean McGowan, senior vice president of Gerard Klauer Mattison, New York. "They know where they stand, and they know what they have to do....They're also a lot more credible than they've been in the past." McGowan predicts Nintendo will sell 5 million to 6 million N64 system units this year, and Sony will sell at least 8 million PlayStation units. This would be an increase over sales of about 4 million N64s and 6 million PlayStations in 1997. Headed into Q4, Nintendo is hopeful that The Legend of Zelda: The Ocarina of Time can further lift its fortunes. A first-party action and role-playing game, it is expected to drive N64 hardware sales, particularly to game-players in their 20s who remember the franchise from previous Nintendo hardware platforms, McGowan said. "Zelda's going to be the biggest title ever for the N64," he predicted. "Each iteration of it in the past was a hardware driver. The 8-bit version was one of the top five games for that platform. People devoted their lives to solving that game." McGowan said the installed base of N64 users is large enough that a blockbuster title could result in sales of more than 1 million units during the holidays. Designed by Shigeru Miyamoto, whose credits include Donkey Kong and Super Mario Bros., the game follows protagonist Link as he travels through forests, mountains, swamps and canyons. The game's dynamic lighting corresponds to the changing weather, time of day and glow of Link's guardian fairy. "I hope this combination of a fantasy-adventure story, exciting action and magical environments will evoke new kinds of emotions in players," Miyamoto said in a Nintendo press release. Zelda is scheduled to ship Nov. 23 with a suggested retail price of $69.95. Conversely, Sony plans to look for incremental hardware sales among game-players in their early teens by launching first-party games such as Cool Boarders 3, a snowboarding title, and Bust-A-Groove, an urban dancing game similar to last year's Parappa the Rapper, according to one product manager for a game distributor. The next installment of Crash Bandicoot, due in November, is also expected to sell well. Meanwhile, stalwart sequels such as Tomb Raider III and Quake II should resonate with PlayStation's action-hungry core audience, and new Electronic Arts sports games are expected to mimic past levels of success, according to several retail buyers. Retailers are also enthusiastic about Metal Gear Solid, a PlayStation action title scheduled to ship in October. The Konami of America military shoot-'em-up is based on an 11-year-old franchise. When it comes to deciding which PlayStation and Nintendo titles will knock out the competition, retail buyers and distributors look for consistency. As with PC games, they bet heavily on sequels to successful titles, and consider the vendor's commitment to television advertising and to producing a video game in high volume. "The bottom line is, if it's on TV, it's going to be a big title," said the product manager for a game distributor. Eric Johnson, senior vice president of North American marketing for Activision, said video games in the sports, driving, fighting and action genres consistently sell well, and many publishers are mixing genres in an attempt to provide players with new experiences. According to a national retail buyer, that's part of Zelda's appeal. The title's action elements make the game play faster than traditional "turn-based" role-playing games, in which players must wait for others to make a move before they respond. Retailers have big plans for Zelda. Electronics Boutique, for example, plans to bundle the Nintendo 64 system, a copy of Zelda (which it also will sell separately for $59.99), an EB gamepad, Nintendo Performance TremorPak, a Zelda strategy guide book and a one-year extended service plan covering the hardware for $199.99. The offer becomes $10 sweeter with Nintendo's Bonus Bucks coupon program for all the company's retailers, which began this month. The coupons, valid through March 31, may be applied to Nintendo 64 controllers, the RumblePak accessory and 23 first-party games, including Zelda. A Nintendo spokeswoman said the $10 rebate is an aggressive move for the conservative company. "That kind of pricing allows new consumers to enter the fray," she said. Prior to the August price cuts, Sony and Nintendo lowered the minimum price at which retailers may advertise the companies' systems. At the Electronic Entertainment Expo in May, Sony announced its PlayStation 7000 series package-a PlayStation system with an upgraded Force Feedback controller-priced at $149. The older 5000 series PlayStation was reduced to $129 to clear inventory from the channel. Nintendo reacted by reducing the price of the N64 to $129 through September, calling it a temporary measure. The company held its minimum advertised price at $149. Nintendo in June reduced its N64 MAP to $129, which let retailers use that price point to draw customers into stores. Meanwhile, Sony held its MAP for both PlayStation systems at $149. But in August, Sony reduced the price of the PlayStation 7000 series to $129. Nintendo followed by announcing its $129.95 SRP would become permanent, and provided a further incentive to buy with the Bonus Bucks program. Moody's Says Sony Leads in Video Game Software War TOKYO, Sept. 29 (Kyodo) -- Sony Corp.'s PlayStation video game machine is outpacing its rivals amid a shift in the game industry to "software-driven demand" from "hardware-driven demand," Moody's Investors Service said in a report released Tuesday. The game industry is undergoing rapid change and the pace is accelerating year after year...The current winners are Sony's PlayStation hardware, and software developers which strongly allied with PlayStation, such as Namco Ltd., Capcom Co. and Square Co.," the U.S. credit rating agency said. "The key to Sony's success lies in PlayStation's software lineup, which it improved through alliances with major video game software developers," Moody's said, noting that more than 500 new software titles were developed for the PlayStation platform in 1997 alone. But Moody's said it is uncertain who will lead in producing the next-generation video game machine, as Sega Enterprises Ltd. is about to launch its 128-bit game machine Dreamcast in November 1998, hoping to recoup losses from sales of Sega Saturn, its current game machine. "The outcome of the next stage is unpredictable, since previous stages have proven that leadership in this industry is transitory," Moody's said. Sega Selects The Duck Corporation's TrueMotion NEW YORK (Sept. 28) BUSINESS WIRE - Sept. 28, 1998 - The Duck Corporation, a major provider of video software solutions for the computer and videogame industries, today announced that Sega Enterprises, Ltd. of Japan has licensed The Duck Corporation's award-winning TrueMotion(R) video compression technology for inclusion in Dreamcast(tm), Sega's ultimate gaming system. With TrueMotion, Dreamcast will provide gamers with theater-quality video sequences. Scheduled to launch Nov. 27, 1998, in Japan and in the fall of 1999 in North America and Europe, Dreamcast has been hailed in the press as "an amazing machine." Dreamcast features a graphics engine delivering 128-bit performance in 3D graphics calculations, a 64-channel audio processor with surround sound capabilities and modem support for point-to-point or massive multiplayer networked gaming. Dreamcast also offers developers a choice of operating systems. One is an optimized version of the Microsoft(R) Windows(R) CE operating system with DirectX(R) services. The other is a set of application programming interfaces provided by Sega. Both options were customized for advanced gaming applications and offer efficiencies in game development. With Duck video compression technology optimized for Dreamcast, TrueMotion delivers superior quality video to this revolutionary gaming platform. "Dreamcast's optimized architecture combines the very best features of console, PC and Internet gaming into one system that outperforms all other in-home gaming technologies. In designing Dreamcast's fundamental tool set, Sega turned to The Duck Corporation with its leadership in digital video to ensure that Dreamcast is equipped with the ultimate in high-performance video," said Mr. Hideki Sato, corporate senior vice president, Consumer Products Business Group, Sega. Dan Miller, president of The Duck Corporation, said: "Dreamcast, with its extremely high-performance architecture and unrivaled level of total system performance, is going to change the competitive landscape in video gaming. We at Duck are pleased to be a partner in this revolutionary development. In selecting TrueMotion, Sega has chosen to provide gamers with a super exciting video experience. In addition, the community of game developers can make their creations even more realistic, more suspenseful - an edge-of-the-seat experience that can come only fromTrueMotion." Reporters covering the video game industry are eagerly anticipating the arrival of Sega Dreamcast. Steven L. Kent, Seattle Times video game reviewer, writes, "With 16 megabytes of memory, a floating point-optimized 200 megahertz processor and an NEC PowerVR graphics chip, Dreamcast is an amazing machine." In the July 1998 edition, Game Informer News predicts, "Right now it seems that the new Dreamcast is poised to make a big splash, with superfast calculating abilities and high polygon counts." And Dean Takahashi writes in The Asian Wall Street Journal, "By all accounts, Dreamcast is expected to surpass Sony and Nintendo in technical capability because it will use the newest graphics, memory and microprocessor chips." Attention PlayStation Gamers...Wild 9 Wants You to Push the Limits LAGUNA BEACH, Calif., Sept. 30 /PRNewswire/ -- Shiny Entertainment, a subsidiary of Interplay Entertainment Corp. and the company who brought you Earthworm Jim(TM), is pleased to announce the release of Wild 9(TM)! This single player, save the universe, action game from Shiny Entertainment was created exclusively for the PlayStation(R) and will hit PlayStaton retail shelves just in time for wild fun this weekend! As Wex-Major, players will join a team of nine ragtag teenagers in their quest to save the universe, torturing their enemies every step of the way. "The Wild 9 development team are a talented group that sought to push the limits of PlayStation gaming," stated David Perry, president of Shiny. "Wild 9 is proof that the days of simple puzzles and side scrolling are long behind us. Gamers want to be challenged; they want unique weapons systems and diverse levels that offer varied game play. Wild 9 delivers this kind of sophistication while never losing track of the fun factor." As Wex-Major, a 21st century earthling teenager lost in the midst of another universe playing host to a galactic war, Wild 9 players will venture through 13 levels in search of the evil Karn. Accompanying him on his voyage are a band of eight other teenage aliens whose homes and families have been destroyed by the evil Karn and his tyrannical organization of LEGM (Little, Evil, Green Men) bent on universal destruction. Gamers will pole-vault walls and chasms, float on air currents, ride a jet bike and a wild beast, launch a kaleidoscope of flashing hoops of fire and explosions and burn their enemies to a crisp using The Rig (the ultimate torture weapon). "Just as it should be, the Wild 9 marketing effort has been a direct reflection of the kind of game it is, unique and HUGE!" exclaimed Karen Schohan, director of marketing at Interplay. "We've created four print campaigns, a pre-sell video direct mail campaign, a now infamous 99 hour marathon gaming contest at the Playboy Mansion and a multi-million dollar national television campaign that begins to air October 6th. We've even partnered up with Sony to include a Wild 9 demo packed into every PlayStation game console through the holiday season. Wild 9 has merited the largest PlayStation marketing campaign in Interplay's history!" For more information about Wild 9, visit the official Wild 9 website at www.Wild9.com. Better yet, head down to your local PlayStation retailer to pick up the complete Wild 9 experience! 3Dfx Gunning For Console Parity Sep. 25, 1998 (MULTIMEDIA WIRE, Vol. 5, No. 186 via COMTEX) -- 3Dfx Interactive believes its brand can transcend the PC platform in gamers' eyes, and is using 3Dfx-optimized software to drive sales of hardware featuring its chips. The company -- probably the first 3D chip manufacturer to recognize the crucial importance of branding -- is working to make 3Dfx a gaming platform in itself, alongside PlayStation and N64. "We believe strongly that software does sell the hardware," says Darlene Kindler, VP, developer relations. "We're keen to educate the consumer." Lacking the margins necessary for significant marketing dollars, the company instead partners with retailers, such as Electronics Boutique and Babbage's. These partnerships can take the form of in-store 3Dfx sections, for example. And this strategy is bearing fruit, the company claims. Sales of hardware and games optimized for 3Dfx technologies at EB (3Dfx's leading retailer) are approaching those of "major console vendors, like Sony PlayStation and Nintendo 64," 3Dfx said this week. That somewhat vague statement could be read as an attempt to throw a sop to anxious investors, whom 3Dfx warned last week could expect less-than-anticipated retail sales for fiscal Q3 due to a larger-than-expected seasonal slowdown. 3Dfx and its competitors are at the mercy of the retail and OEM channels, and tend to experience a lag time of 60-90 days, as chips make their way onto boards and into stores. Nevertheless, 3Dfx sales have been strong, Kindler says. "In the gaming community, console has been king...The fact that we're tracking and challenging those [PSX and N64] numbers really puts us in a platform category." Infogrames Returns To PSX, Boosts PC Sep. 28, 1998 (MULTIMEDIA WIRE, Vol. 5, No. 187 via COMTEX) -- Its US business built largely on the back of N64, Infogrames Entertainment will look to PlayStation and PC for additional growth in the coming year. The company is on target for five times more revenue in calendar 1998 than it generated in 1997. With just under 20% of their worldwide revenues generated in the US this year, the focus is to bump US revenues to 30-40%, VP of Sales and Marketing Mike Markey tells MMWire. Infogrames opted to build its US business on N64 because the competition is less frenetic. "The N64 market for us was [one] that we determined much easier to stand out in," Markey says. Mission Impossible led the charge, with shipments of about 600k units and sell-through of about 85%. 3D action platform game Lucky Luke will be the company's first PSX title in a couple of years, Markey says. It will form part of a renewed commitment to PSX with "realistically four or five" titles slated to launch in 1999. However, Infogrames' PSX support won't equal its N64 offerings next year, which should be between eight and 10 titles. PC is the slow-burner for Infogrames. At this point console represents 65-70% of US sales, with PC the remaining 30-35%. While Markey says Infogrames feels confident about the company's console achievements, "Our real focus is to really grow our PC business and become more of a known entity." Hasbro Interactive Names Gilman G. (Chopstick) Louie Chief Creative Officer BEVERLY, MASS. (Sept. 29) BUSINESS WIRE - Sept. 29, 1998 - Gilman Louie, Chairman of the Board of MicroProse, Inc. has been named Hasbro Interactive's Chief Creative Officer, it was announced today. In his new position Louie will be responsible for developing high level creative concepts and product designs for Hasbro Interactive's growing line of interactive games. In addition, Louie will be supporting the company's online games initiative. "Gilman is a legendary game creator and visionary and we are so pleased he will be joining Hasbro Interactive," said Tom Dusenberry, President of Hasbro Interactive. "Gilman will not only provide us world class expertise in game design and development, but a passion for making the highest quality products in the industry." Gilman Louie has held the position of Chairman of the Board of MicroProse, Inc. since 1992. In 1982 at the age of 22, Louie founded the Nexa Corporation, an entertainment software developer that later merged with Spectrum HoloByte. Gilman Louie broke new ground in the simulation game category with his creation of the legendary Falcon air combat simulation, the most realistic and critically-acclaimed flight sim ever developed for the PC. Louie holds a B.S. in business administration from San Francisco State University and recently completed the AMP program at Harvard University. Konami Ships Deadly Arts, Its First "Create & Train" Fighting Game SEP 29, 1998, M2 Communications - Konami of America, Inc., leading developer of electronic entertainment for the home video game and PC game markets, is now shipping Deadly Arts, a unique fighting game for Nintendo 64. With Deadly Arts, Konami makes history by introducing the first fighting game that allows players to create and train their own fighter. Gamers choose from a dozen versatile characters and have the ability to create new fighters, then change their physical likeness and hone their fighting prowess. Upon creating their fighter, players enter a training mode, where they can sharpen their fighting skills by defeating opponents and learning new moves. In addition, the myriad of realistic backgrounds available are interactive, allowing players to use them to their advantage while fighting. Deadly Arts combines real martial arts moves with full-polygon, 3D fighting, allowing players to go anywhere in the arena. "I believe this new aspect in fighting will have a monumental affect on the gaming circuit," said Jon Sloan, Konami's director of Marketing. "Not only can players choose a ready-made fighter, they can build their own fighter from scratch. The true 3D aspect of the game is amazing and adds an extremely realistic feel." THQ Eyes a Strike With 'Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling CALABASAS, CALIF. (Sept. 29) BUSINESS WIRE - Sept. 29, 1998 - Game publisher THQ Inc. is looking to roll a strike with "Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling," which ships Tuesday to retailers worldwide. The game is available for a suggested retail price of $34.95 for personal computers and $39.95 for the PlayStation game console. The most realistic 3-D bowling simulation on the market, "Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling" features the sport's best known license, including 13 Brunswick pro bowlers, authentic tournaments, state-of-the-art equipment and family fun. "No other game that we've seen compares to the realistic ball and pin action in 'Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling,'" said Germaine Gioia, vice resident, marketing, THQ. "We set out to create a game that was both true-to-life and fun to play. We think we've achieved both of those goals." "We couldn't be happier with the game's honest bowling simulation aspects that will appeal to both competitive and recreational bowlers," said J.T. McDonald, director of marketing, Brunswick Consumer Products. "This game is a strong entrant into the interactive entertainment arena, and provides a great opportunity to extend the appeal of the sport to new and younger fans." In "Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling," play against, or as, any pro. Video introductions of each of the 13 masterful Brunswick Pro Staff bowlers -- each with their unique bowling style -- give insight into their personality and approach to bowling. All of these impressive athletes have talent to spare, but their real genius is rolling strikes. "Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling" features six options for casual fun or high-pressure competition: Exhibition Mode offers friendly competition against the pros. Select Practice Mode to tackle the tough seven-ten split. Try Tournament Mode to see how you stack up against the masters in serious competition. Get funky and play with glow-in-the-dark balls, pins and lanes in Cosmic Bowl Mode. Go for the big bucks in the high-stakes Brunswick Bowling Skins Game Mode. Measure your performance against the pros in Career Mode, as you compile lifelong statistics, tracking average, strike and spare percentages, earnings and more. "Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling" on both the PC and PlayStation provides virtual bowlers unmatched realism and control, including lane and ball selection with six popular Brunswick ball types, adjustable ball spin, and precise power and accuracy meters. The Create a Bowler feature even allows players to create a "cyber self." Players can build their ideal bowler from the ground up, specifying skill level, handedness (right or left), face, build, hair and skin color, shave, shirt, pants and glasses. Up to six players can compete at once in "Brunswick Circuit Pro Bowling," and the personal computer version features a multiplayer Exhibition Mode or Brunswick Bowling Skins Game tournament on mplayer.com, the Internet's No. 1 multiplayer game service. Cyber-bowlers in remote locations can challenge others in real-time. The service is free and features real-time voice chat that allows for verbal taunts for opponents and praise for teammates. ONLINE WEEKLY STReport OnLine The wires are a hummin'! PEOPLE... ARE TALKING Compiled by Joe Mirando jmirando@streport.com Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Well, it's happened again... that look on a PC user's face when I tell them that I use an Atari. This time, it was an acquaintance who does system integration for a living. That's where you interface a machine or group of machines with a computer for the purpose of data recording and/or controlling the machine(s). He's a real wiz-kid and knows things about interfacing that I doubt that I ever will. And yet, he stood there agog when I mentioned that I not only still used an Atari, but that I access the internet with it and used it to create my web pages. The funny part was that he kept looking for loopholes like this was a game of "Twenty Questions". "Did you upgrade the processor to an Intel model"? "Did you switch to a Microsoft OS"? "Did you emulate a PC"? Of course, the answer to all of these questions was an emphatic "no", but he still kept on, steadfast in his belief that Intel and Microsoft were the only way to do anything with computers. You can call me a sadist if you want to (many people have), but I still relish 'the look'. It's always the same. It's always as if the universe is crashing down upon the 'expert'. True, many people do understand what is truly involved in these things and that all that is required is the proper software and some perseverance on the part of the user. But the simple fact is that there is so much information about computers out there today that no one could reasonably hope to know all of it. If someone did take this task upon themselves, I feel sure that one of two things would happen: Either the new facts would push older ones out of his or her ears and they would then dribble down the neck, or the new ones would fail to sink in and would run down the back of the head. Either way, they'd be all wet. <grin> Oh, by the way, that expert I mentioned has asked me for help in designing a web page for his company. Yes, I love 'the look'. Now let's get to the news, hints, tips, and info from the UseNet... From the comp.sys.atari.st NewsGroup In a message thread listing the types of internet applications that people would like to see, Mike Freeman posts: "Here are some internet programs that I'd like to see made (if they are already done, let me know): 1. An ONLINE News reader/viewer/poster besides Newsie or an update to Newsie that can let the user define what programs to use for E-mail, FTP, and Web Browser. For instance, I like Newsie's News handling, but I'd like to use a different program like My Mail for E-mail, and would like any URL links in the Newsgroups to be sent to CAB instead of having to either deal with the incomplete browser in Newsie or write it down and switch programs. Perhaps allow any one of these to be opened automatically (if I want it to check e-mail immediately, for example). This would make an awesome shell program for Internet use. I really hate having to switch back and forth between programs for everything I want to do. 2. An E-mail program that lets you print your e-mails. For one of my classes at the University here, my teacher sends us class outlines for the next lecture, which I have to print out and bring to class. It's a bit of a chore to once again run my E-mail program, save the E-mail to a file (which My Mail doesn't do - or does it and I just can't figure it out?), then switch to a text editor, print, then go back to whatever. This program should also be one that checks E-mail automatically every x seconds. 3. An MP3 player and a Real Audio Player (streaming or not doesn't matter to me) for the Falcon 4. An ICQ chat program for Sting. Then I'd be very happy!" Bill Platt tells Mike: "I believe you can use POPwatch in conjunction with Newsie. As far as saving the URL, enable history logging on Newsie, and use the history file as your default home page. You can use the reply option in Newsie to bring up Everest, or whatever text editor you choose. Newsie will automatically send the E-Mail to the editor. You can then clean it up and print it out Hope this helps a bit." Peter Rottengatter, the author of STinG, tells us: "Apparently Christian Anderson has taken up the challenge to write an ICQ client. His trouble right now is that he hasn't got Internet on his Atari right now, so testing will be difficult. So don't expect it to soon, but stay tuned." Jeff Brown asks about doing backups: "I am trying to backup the data on my Maxtor 7120 Scsi Drive, to a Syquest EZ135. I have a MegaST4 with an ICD Link2 adapter connected to the Maxtor drive and then to the Syquest. When I boot up, only the Syquest is accessible. If I disconnect the Syquest then the Maxtor is available. Is there any info available on getting these two drives running simultaneously? I've searched the FAQ sites and have no manuals or documentation on this Atari stuff. I am an Atari newbie here and any suggestions would be greatly appreciated!" Paul Williamson tells Jeff: "I had a similar problem connecting two Hard drives to an STe. Turned out in the end that they both had the same ID number. This is usually changed physically on the drive, maybe a switch on the case or maybe some dip-switches inside. My Syquest 230 can be changed by a switching sequence using the eject button. Having said that, it came with the default ID set to 4 which I suppose is unlikely for your Maxtor. What HD driver software do you have ? It should have a way of scanning for the drives and telling you what ID's they are set to. With my earlier software I has to "relog hard drives" before it would recognize the extra device." Kevin Dermott tells Jeff: "If it's any help, the ez 135 has no internal termination." Paul Nurminen adds: "Are you sure you have a different SCSI ID set for each drive? This can usually be set with a little numerical switch on the back of the drive(s). Set one to "0" and one to "1" (as an example)." James Haslam adds his views: "Generally with this type of problem on SCSI drives, it tends to be a clash of ID numbers. On the back of each drive, there is usually a single digit in a window, which can be changed using a couple of buttons beside it. Basically these numbers have to be different to each other. Change one or the other and you'll probably find it all works." Dan Willars asks: "I was wondering if it is possible to connect a PC IDE or SCSI drive to an STfm. How would I go about doing this?" Nicholas Bales tells Dan: "IDE is hardly possible, but SCSI is with a SCSI host adaptor such as the ICD Link, the Link'97 or the Top Link. Hundreds of questions. One answer: The Atari ST Quick FAQ." Alan Gauton tells Nick: "I was going to say the The Upgrade Shop did IDE controllers, but now I think about it, isn't that STe only?" Nick replies: "Yep, it is. That's why I didn't mention it. It's in the FAQ though (http://www.mygale.org/~bales/quickfaq.htm)". Remember last week when I mentioned the latest version of NEWSie? Well Charles Mario posts this: "Version 0.92 seems to have a few bugs. I can't edit nick names for example..." John Rojewski, the author of NEWSie, tells Charles: "Edit Nicknames was not changed in 0.92." Roger Cain tells John that... "It gives me 2 bombs when I click on the menu entry." Charles Silver tells Roger and the other Charles: "Ahhh, x-out wdialog.prg from your autofolder. Your welcome <g>. Version 2.00 gave me some problems. Never did understand wdialog very well..." John replies about WDialog: "I don't have wdialog (any version). I just use what is built into Magic 5.03. Do you guys have wdialog.prg and if so, what version? Can you remove it and remove the bombs? It may be some incompatibility with wdialog, but I'm quite sure there were no changes in the Nicknames processing. It still works fine for me." Frank Lockwood tells John about his setup: "Yes. TT030, Magic 5.11, WDIALOG 2.something and Newsie 0.92 = 2 bombs when accessing the Nicknames dialog. Upon removing/rebooting without WDIALOG, the nicknames works fine. Jury's still out whether this has any effect on hard disk cluster corruption/loss." Charles Silver posts: "...If someone feels that they *must* run wdialog from their auto folder, try version 1.98. It doesn't cause the "Nickname" bomb, at least on my Falcon. Of course, that may play games with something else." Roger Cain tells Charles: "Yup, that's right, Charles. I have 2.03 installed (which gives the bombs). I just replaced it with v1.92 and the 'Edit Nicknames' works OK." Trystan Negus asks about memory for his computer: "Having lost my STE manuals a long while ago, I have a question regarding the SIMM RAM: What types do STEs take? Are they readily available in the UK anywhere?" Nick Bales tells Trystan: "Standard 30pin 1Mb SIMMs. Any speed <120ns (ie: ANY speed), and parity doesn't matter. You can find them in any second hand computer shop." Back to the latest version of NEWSie, Dennis Bishop posts: " As you'll note I'm on v.88, because every time I'm done reading and replying to e-mail with v.92, when I close the e-mail widow, the program locks up on me, I can move the mouse pointer but no menus will drop down or anything else and all I can do to get out is hit the reset button. Is anyone reading this bug report?" Charles Silver tells Dennis: "Yes, we all see the posts <grin>. Ahh, try deleting wdialog from your auto folder, if your using it. As I've mentioned before, it seems the TT's have more problems with NEWSie that others. Such is life ;) Using a Falcon, I just can't duplicate your problem, so I can't help much. As a Doctor said when replying to a patient's problem. "Don't do that", (hehehe). Leave the box open and see what happens otherwise when you continue doing the dance." Martin Byttebier tells Charles: "Newsie locks on my Hades too and that without wdialog as I don't use it at all. I noticed one thing however. Under my usual setup, N.AES/freeMiNT 1.15-beta-3/Thing 1.27/NVDI 5 Newsie doesn't hang. It only happens when I use it under singleTOS. I normally don't use Newsie but to solved a few problem a friend of mine had with Newsie I tried v 0.92 a few times offline. Guess what? 2 lost clusters (log files)." "Root" asks for info: "I have been a long time ST user, but know little about any Atari computers above that line. Which is better the TT030 or the Falcon?" Nick Bales replies to Root: "They are different beasts. The TT030 was designed as a professional workstation, whereas the Falcon was designed as a replacement of the ST home-computer range. The TT is a bigger number cruncher, but the Falcon has extra hardware that compensates. Basically, the main differences are: TT030 * Case: Mega STE style desktop case * 68030/32MHz complete 32 bit data path * ST-Ram and TT-Ram memory (I can't remember details) * ST and TT specific screen resolutions * Internal SCSI support * Stereo DMA sound * 68881 coprocessor standard (I think?) * TOS 3.06 (latest) * VME slot Falcon030 * Case: STF/STE style case. * 68030/16MHz 16 bit data path * ST-Ram memory limited to 14Mb * ST and VGA screen resolutions * Internal IDE/External SCSI support * Stereo DMA sound + DSP sound matrix * 68881 comprocessor optional * TOS 4.04 (latest) support for colour icons, etc... I'm sure you'll get other answers to complete this!" Well folks, that's about it for this week. Tune in again next week, same time, same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when... PEOPLE ARE TALKING EDITORIAL QUICKIES Food for Thought.. * If you yelled for 8 years, 7 months and 6 days, you would have produced enough sound energy to heat one cup of coffee. * If you fart consistently for 6 years and 9 months, enough gas is produced to create the energy of an atomic bomb. * The human heart creates enough pressure when it pumps out to the body to squirt blood 30 feet. * Banging your head against a wall uses 150 calories an hour. * Humans and dolphins are the only species that have sex for pleasure. * On average people fear spiders more than they do death. * The strongest muscle in the body is the TONGUE. * It's impossible to sneeze with your eyes open. * You can't kill yourself by holding your breath. * Right-handed people live, on average, nine years longer than left-handed people do. * A pig's orgasm lasts for 30 minutes. * Polar bears are left-handed. * A cockroach will live nine days without its head, before it starves to death. * The male praying mantis cannot copulate while its head is attached to its body. The female initiates sex by ripping the male's head off. * Some lions mate over 50 times a day. * Butterflies taste with their feet. * Elephants are the only animals that can't jump. (thankfully) Best experienced with [ie_animated.gif (7090 bytes)] 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. 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