Volume 12, Issue 12        Atari Online News, Etc.       March 19, 2010   
                                                                           
                                                                              
                  Published and Copyright (c) 1999 - 2010
                            All Rights Reserved

                          Atari Online News, Etc.
                           A-ONE Online Magazine
                Dana P. Jacobson, Publisher/Managing Editor
                      Joseph Mirando, Managing Editor
                       Rob Mahlert, Associate Editor


                       Atari Online News, Etc. Staff

                        Dana P. Jacobson  --  Editor
                   Joe Mirando  --  "People Are Talking"
                Michael Burkley  --  "Unabashed Atariophile"
                   Albert Dayes  --  "CC: Classic Chips"
                         Rob Mahlert  --  Web site
                Thomas J. Andrews  --  "Keeper of the Flame"


                           With Contributions by:

                                



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                                  =~=~=~=



A-ONE #1212                                                 03/19/10

   ~ China Without Google?!  ~ People Are Talking!    ~ Commodore 64 Awakes!
   ~ Innovation on Display!  ~ Google Leaving China!  ~ Pay for Online News?
   ~ Can IE9 Get Mojo Back?  ~ Teen Internet Addicts! ~ 'Dot-Com' Turns 25!
   ~ National Broadband Fee? ~ Congrats to Mahlerts!! ~ Nintendo DS Invasion?

                  -* Cybersecurity Bill Introduced *-
               -* Texan Accused of Web-Disabling Cars *-
           -* Parents Oppose Philly Webcam Spying Suit!  *-



                                  =~=~=~=



->From the Editor's Keyboard              "Saying it like it is!"
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What a week it's been!!  Over the past month or more, while many areas
well south and west of us continued to get buried under feet of snow, we
were left relative untouched.  For those of us in New England, this was a
rare occurrence, but we didn't mind seeing others being on the snowy
receiving end for a change.  But, as Mother Nature is wont to do, there is
usually an eventual balance.

This past weekend, our area was covered with 6-10 inches of rain.  Dams
strained, and rivers overflowed their banks, flooding many areas under
inches and feet of water.  In my neighborhood, we weren't really directly
affected other than a few who had basements flooded.  Due to a flooded
main street because of feet of water covering a bridge, I couldn't even
take my normal route to work.  I had to take a long and convoluted path
all around town to get to work from the other direction.  During that
drive, I was able to view some of the carnage that resulted from one of
the two rivers that go through my town.  It wasn't a pretty site.

So, I see myself as very fortunate that I didn't have to clear tons of 
snow during February.  And I'm also fortunate that this recent deluge of
rains did little but add a lot of moisture to my yard.

It's all over but the cleaning-up and drying-out for many.  The weather has
been summer-like the past few days; and I've been out enjoying it.  Okay,
so I've also been cleaning up some debris left from a dismal winter, but
that's an annual seasonal occurrence.  It's nice to be outside enjoying the
warmth and sunshine.  I hope that this kind of weather continues!

So, hopefully most of you had an uneventful winter and past few weeks of
drastic weather conditions.  If not, I hope things improve for you soon.
Meanwhile, sit back and relax, and let's enjoy this week's issue!

Until next time...



                                  =~=~=~=



                             PEOPLE ARE TALKING
                          compiled by Joe Mirando
                             joe@atarinews.org



Hidi ho friends and neighbors. Another week has come and gone, and there
is, again, very little from the NewsGroup to talk about, so I thought I'd
take this opportunity to interject a few of my thoughts about this and
that.

First of all, A-ONE would like to give a big ol' shout-out and hearty
congratulations to our friend Rob Mahlert and his wife Berta on the arrival
of their daughter Linneah Rose. From what we hear, Mommy, Daddy and baby
are all doing well, if somewhat sleep-deprived. Hang in there, Rob. It'll
only last for the next, ohhhhh, 18 or 20 years! [grin]

Okay, now that the joyful stuff is out there, I need to tell you something
very sad. Frank Naumann, maintainer of SpareMiNT, has passed away. I don't
have any details yet, and maybe we'll have something more before 'press
time', but for now all I know is that he passed on March 12. Frank has
been a cornerstone in the Atari community for more than a decade now, and
I know he will be sorely missed. Our condolences go to his close friends
and family. If I have the correct information, he was only 34 years old.
That is FAR too young to have been taken from us. 

Okay, now that I've given you good and bad... let's get down to the
nitty-gritty, shall we? Oh, c'mon, you knew this was coming. Health care.

Let's face it, folks, we need to do something about paying for health
care. I've said it before and I'll probably say it many many times again:
Our HEALTH CARE is fine... it's the best in the world. What we need to
figure out is how to PAY FOR IT. What we really need is health care
INSURANCE reform.

C'mon, is there any real reason that health care insurance should
cost what it does today? I mean, in my case, health care insurance is
costing just under $145 a week. Yes, a WEEK! And I'm a fairly healthy
individual with no long-term medical issues.

But let's take a second and do that math. I don't recall what the national
minimum wage is, but the minimum wage here in Connecticut is $8.50/hour.
So a full-time job of 40 hours will get you $340.00 a week gross (yeah, big
whoop, right?). I'm going to guess (and it's only a rough guess) that
taxes and such will take out about 15%, which makes 'take-home' pay about 
$290.

Now, if you have to pay $145 a week for health insurance, that leaves you
with an actual take-home pay of $145 a week, and also reduces your
'effective hourly wage' to $4.87 an hour (that's your pay before taxes but
after health care insurance payments), and means, for all intents and
purposes, that $3.62 of your hourly rate goes directly to health care.

Now surely there's something wrong there, and that's not even taking into
account that under some 'versions' of health care reform you HAVE to have
insurance... and I don't think that's necessarily a bad thing. I think
everyone SHOULD have health insurance, just like everyone pays taxes that
go to pay for schools, fire departments, road crews, etc., regardless of
whether they have kids, have ever had a fire or have ever used the
highway. In many states, you MUST have auto insurance to drive a car.
Massachusetts has done basically the same thing with health care
insurance. While many think this is an adequate solution, I do not. By
mandating health care Massachusetts has simply assured the insurance
companies of tens of thousands of 'extra' customers to over-charge.

What we really need... and I know many of you will groan at this... is a
'public option'. If you're going to MAKE people get insurance, you had
better also make sure it's something they can afford and actually has some
value to it other than just 'covering their butts' in the face of the new
law.

We cannot... should not... simply hand almost 30 million 'conscripted
customers' to the insurance companies without first making sure that
they'll be treated fairly and not taken advantage of just because they
HAVE to have insurance.

Perhaps the biggest problem throughout this whole process has come from
(and I can't believe I have to say this) the White House itself. For far
too many months the President and his staff tried to play the
peacemakers... trying to get "the other side" to come around. Now, I have
no experience in national politics, but once it became clear that the
other side wasn't going to listen no matter what, it should have been time
to say, "Okay, if you won't participate, then just get the hell out of the
way. You lost the majority, sit your butts down for the next term and stay
the heck out of the way".

And when it comes to the 'legislative tricks' that everyone's complaining
about, well there's something just plain wrong about using a 'trick' on
something this important. But when you come right down to it, 'deem and
pass' isn't really a trick, but a procedural process. The 'other side'
would have you believe that this is the basest, most horrendous
miscarriage of justice that's ever been seen. They will, of course, forget
to mention the 'antic' they've pulled over the past three decades or so...
the filibusters, the deem and pass, the midnight quickie votes after
whatever bill it was had only been available for hours (the major reason
that this bill must now be available for 72 hours before a vote can take
place), and the ever-popular 'nuclear option'.

And the really sad part is that while we DO need to do something about
health care, there are some people who don't seem to care about that, but
only about "winning"... or at least "not loosing". There's too much at
stake here to play these little games, whether you believe that something
needs to be done or not.

Well, anyway, the vote is supposed to come up this week, and while it's
not the bill that anyone really wanted, its a start, and maybe now we can
get on to some of the other issues plaguing us... unemployment, the
economy, corporate bail-outs, two wars that are costing us bunches of
money, and a score of other things that we really should be looking hard
and long at, but haven't been able to because of the contentious nature of
the health care debate. Maybe now we'll get to talk about some of the two
or three dozen legislators who have voted against the [queue dramatic
music, please] stimulus package but yet fought to have codicils added
that benefit their districts. How can you be against a bill because it's
wasteful and yet pack it with your own pork? It just doesn't make sense.
But that's politics, I guess.

I wish I had some more uplifting stuff for you this week, and the
birth of Rob's daughter is surely good news! I wonder if she has any idea
of how many ready-made aunts and uncles she's got lined up already. [grin]

Well, that's it for this week, kids. Tune in again next time, same time,
same station, and be ready to listen to what they are saying when...

PEOPLE ARE TALKING



                                  =~=~=~=



->In This Week's Gaming Section  - Innovation on Display at Games Conference!
  """""""""""""""""""""""""""""    The Great Nintendo DS School Invasion!
                                   
                                   


        
                                  =~=~=~=



->A-ONE's Game Console Industry News   -  The Latest Gaming News!
  """"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""



                   Innovation on Display at Games Conference


Motion controls and social gaming were the hot topics at this week's Game
Developers Conference, the annual convention of game designers, programmers
and executives.

Sony shook up the conference with a splashy introduction of the PlayStation
Move, a new wand-shaped PlayStation 3 motion controller system that will
rival Nintendo's popular Wii.

Sony showed off several games that use the new system, which utilizes a
PlayStation Eye camera to detect players' movements. Among them were the
action brawler "Motion Fighter," over-the-top party game "TV Superstars,"
athletic simulator "Sports Champions," mini-game collection "Move Party,"
third-person shooter "SOCOM 4" and wacky downhill racer "Slider."

"It's just scratching the surface," said TechSavvy technology analyst
Scott Steinberg. "If you talk with game developers themselves, they will
tell you they don't know what they're quite capable of doing because
they're just coming to grips - no pun intended - with the hardware
itself. At this point, we're just seeing some very early possibilities."

The biggest buzz, however, seemed reserved for social gaming, a form of
easy-to-play online multiplayer games. With the success of such social
games as the real-time crop-growing simulator "FarmVille" and the
gangster role-playing saga "Mafia Wars," several conference sessions
this year were devoted solely on how to tap into the gaming world's Next
Big Thing.

"I feel like people are motivated more this year," said Game Developers
Conference director Meggan Scavio. "They seem genuinely excited to be
doing what they're doing, and there's an air of anticipation. I think
they've discovered there's still new business models out there. There's
still new ways to develop and make games that they hadn't thought of
before."

There's still wow factor, too. On the sprawling expo floor, attendees
gawked at the VirtuSphere, a huge hamster ball-like virtual reality
doodad that allows users inside to control a virtual character by
walking around inside it. Folks also crowded in front of a mock living
room populated with hipsters rocking out with the upcoming guitar game
"Power Gig."

"Civilization" and "Railroad Tycoon" designer Sid Meier delivered a
keynote address to hundreds of attendees Friday morning about the
psychology of game design, encouraging gamemakers to suspend players'
disbelief without taking them out of the interactive experience. Meier
told the audience that they can "save millions" just by tapping into
gamers' imaginations.

"What it comes down to is we're trying to create this epic journey for
the player where the process of playing a game takes you from one place
to another," Meier later said. "By the end of the game, you've maybe
learned something about the world and hopefully something about
yourself. That's what we're really trying to do with the psychology of
making a game."



                     The Great Nintendo DS School Invasion


Could Nintendo's Mario and Luigi be headed for blackboards and pop-top
desks after decades battling bob-ombs, chain chomps, hammer bros, and
koopa troopas? Mario creator and Nintendo R&D guru Shigeru Miyamoto
certainly hopes so.

Speaking to The Associate Press ahead of today's London-based British
Academy Video Games Awards, where he'll receive a special award, Miyamoto
admitted turning consoles into teaching tools is "maybe the area where I
am devoting myself (the) most."

Miyamoto can lay claim to some of video gaming's greatest franchises.
Donkey Kong. Mario Bros. Zelda. Kid Icarus. F-Zero. Pilotwings. Wave
Race. Star Fox. Pikmin. Metroid Prime. If you're one of the over 30
million Wii owners in the US, you also know him for recent hits like
Super Mario Galaxy, Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Mario Kart Wii, and New
Super Mario Bros.

Add education-related gaming to his resume, if he has his druthers,
courtesy the Nintendo DS. Miyamoto says he wants to convert Nintendo's
bestselling portable gaming device into an educational aid, and pronto.
The DS is already used in Japanese public venues like museums and
aquariums, he says, adding that Nintendo will begin rolling out the DS
in Japanese junior high and elementary schools in the coming school year.

It'll be interesting to see where any of this goes, stateside. Video
games theorist and Georgia Tech professor Ian Bogost just typed up an
op-ed decrying the lack of substantive connectors between
government-endorsed gaming and the actual merits of said games. Nintendo
isn't the US government, but - rose-tinted love-glasses for Miyamoto and
all he is and represents snatched off for a moment - it's certainly just
as susceptible to government influence.

After all, it's already happened in the UK.



                                  =~=~=~=



                           A-ONE's Headline News
                   The Latest in Computer Technology News
                       Compiled by: Dana P. Jacobson



                   Cybersecurity Bill Introduced in Senate


A new version of a cybersecurity bill was introduced in the Senate on
Tuesday that may eliminate some opposition to the measure from the tech
industry.

The bill would give the president a Senate-confirmed national security
advisor to lead "all cybersecurity matters," whether in defense or
civilian areas, according to a summary of the bill.

Cybersecurity touches just about every aspect of the United States, from
military espionage and potential cyber sabotage of U.S. infrastructure
to cyber bank thefts and loss of intellectual property.

The new draft put out by Senators John Rockefeller and Olympia Snowe
reflects consultation with industry groups and some changes to lessen
tech industry opposition, said James Lewis, a technology expert with the
think-tank Center for Strategic and International Studies.

The bill, which has gone through several drafts, had been stiffly
opposed because, among other things, it allowed the president to shut
down the Internet if needed for national security. It also required
certification of cyber professionals.

One major change to the bill is that the president would no longer have
the power to shut down the Internet unilaterally but would have to work
with industry to draw up plans in the event of a national emergency.

"They've said they'll call industry. They've bent over backwards to make
people feel better about that," said Lewis.

One hot button issue that remains is a requirement that cybersecurity
professionals be certified, something the tech industry had fought.

Among the new provisions, the bill would require a process to determine
which portions of the U.S. economy really are critical infrastructure,
and give key private sector officials security clearances so they would
have access to classified threat information, according to the bill's
summary.

A mark-up of the measure has been set for next week.



                 China Without Google: 'A Lose-Lose Scenario'


China without Google - a prospect that looks increasingly likely - could
mean no more maps on mobile phones. A free music service that has helped
to fight piracy might be in jeopardy. China's fledgling Web outfits would
face less pressure to improve, eroding their ability to one day compete
abroad.

The extent of a possible Google Inc. pullout from China in its dispute with
the communist government over censorship and hacking is unclear. But on top
of a local search site that Google says it may close, services that might
be affected range from advertising support for Chinese companies to online
entertainment.

"If Google leaves, it's a lose-lose scenario, instead of Google loses and
others gain," said Edward Yu, president of Analysys International, a
Beijing research firm.

Chinese news reports say Google is on the verge of shutting its China
site, Google.cn, and has stopped censoring results. A Google spokesman,
Scott Rubin, denied censorship had stopped and would not confirm whether
Google.cn might close.

"We have not changed our operations in China," Rubin said by phone from
Google's headquarters in Mountain View, California. CEO Eric Schmidt
said last week something would happen soon, and Rubin said he had no
further details.

Google says it is in talks with Beijing following its Jan. 12 announcement
that it no longer wants to comply with Beijing's extensive Web controls.
But China's industry minister insisted Friday the company must obey Chinese
law, which appears to leave few options other than closing Google.cn,
which has about 35 percent of China's search market.

Such a step could have repercussions for major Chinese companies as well
as local Web surfers. It would deliver a windfall to local rival Baidu
Inc., China's major search engine, with 60 percent of the market. But
other companies rely on Google for search, maps and other services and
might be forced to find alternatives.

China Mobile Ltd., the world's biggest phone company by subscribers,
with 527 million accounts, uses Google for mobile search and maps. Baidu
offers mobile search but China Mobile passed up a partnership with it
earlier after they failed to agree on terms, according to industry
analysts. Millions of mobile customers might lose access to Google's
Chinese-language map service.

A key issue is whether Beijing, angry and embarrassed by Google's public
defiance, would allow the company to continue running other operations,
including advertising and a fledgling mobile phone businesses in China
if Google.cn closes.

China promotes Internet use for business and education but bars access
to sites run by human rights and political activists and some news
outlets. Officials who defend China's controls by pointing to countries
that bar content such as child pornography are stung that Google has
drawn attention to how much more pervasive Chinese limits are.

Chinese Web surfers are blocked from seeing Facebook, YouTube, Twitter
and major blog-hosting services abroad and a Google pullout would leave
them increasingly isolated.

Google hopes to keep operating its Beijing research and development
center, advertising sales offices and mobile phone business, according
to a person familiar with the company's thinking. But the person said
the company won't do that if it believes its decision to stop censoring
search results will jeopardize employees in China. Industry analysts
estimate Google has a work force of 700 in China.

The government says Chinese mobile phone carriers will be allowed to use
Google's Android operating system but there has been no word on whether
efforts to sell its own phones in China might be affected. Google
postponed the launch of two phones with a major Chinese carrier due to
the dispute.

Uncertainty also surrounds Google's China music portal, a free,
advertising-supported service launched last year in partnership with
four global music companies and 14 independent labels. Industry analysts
say it has helped to undercut China's rampant music piracy by offering
an alternative to unlicensed copying.

"Without that, are we back to, `Piracy wins'?" said Duncan Clark,
managing director of BDA China Ltd., a technology market research firm.
"Piracy thrives because of censorship."

The music service is run by Top100.cn, a company part-owned by Google, but
can be accessed only through Google.cn. Top100.cn's executive chairman,
Erik Zhang, said it is preparing for the possibility that Google.cn might
close but said his company has not been told whether that will happen. He
declined to give other details.

The biggest impact of a Google departure could lie behind the scenes, where
Chinese companies, many of them small entrepreneurs, rely on its AdWords
advertising service, Gmail e-mail and documents services.

Those might be disrupted if Beijing turns up Internet filters to block
access to Google's sites abroad. Its U.S. site has a Chinese-language
search engine but is already inaccessible due to government filters.

In an uncomfortable irony for Beijing, Google might suffer little
commercial loss from a pullout while China's own companies are hurt.

The bulk of Google's estimated $300 million in 2009 revenues in China
came from export-oriented companies that would need to keep advertising
on its sites abroad even if Google.cn closes, according to Yu.

"We believe the majority of revenue would still be kept on, with keyword
purchases listed on Google.com instead of Google.cn," he said.

The loss of competitive pressure from Google also might slow Chinese
development in search and other Internet services, Yu said.

"This is definitely a bad thing for Chinese companies that want to go
abroad in the future," he said.

The industry minister, Li Yizhong, said Friday that China's Internet
industry would develop without Google. But even some Chinese industry
leaders who normally toe the government line in public are warning that
controls on Internet companies and media are handicapping their growth.

Beijing has steadily tightened controls over Internet content and
foreign investment in the industry. Video sharing sites must have
state-owned media outlets as partners. People in the industry say it is
getting harder to register privately financed sites.

"Without full and fair market competition, there will be no quality, no
excellence, no employment opportunities, no stability and no real rise
of China," said the chairman of major Chinese portal Sohu Inc., Charles
Zhang, in a speech in February, according to a report on Sohu's Web site.

"How do we do this practically?" Zhang said. "The problem is
complicated, but the fundamental point is to limit the power of the
government."



                         Google To Leave China April 10


US Internet giant Google will close its business in China next month and
may announce its plans in the coming days, Chinese media reported on
Friday, after rows over censorship and hacking.

The China Business News quoted an official with an unidentified Chinese
advertising agency as saying Google would go through with its threatened
withdrawal on April 10, but that Google had yet to confirm the pull-out.

The agency is a business partner of Google, the report said.

The report did not specify whether Google would close all or part of its
operations in the country.

The newspaper quoted an unidentified Google staff member as saying the
company may announce on Monday the details of its exit from China and
compensation for its local staff.

Google China spokeswoman Marsha Wang declined to comment on the report,
telling AFP only that there had been "no update" on the company's
situation.

The report was the latest in a series of clues to emerge recently
indicating Google planned to leave China, which has the world's largest
population of online users, at 384 million.

Google has cried foul over what it said were cyberattacks aimed at its
source code and the Gmail accounts of Chinese human rights activists.

The Financial Times reported last week that Google was "99.9 percent"
certain to abandon google.cn, citing an unnamed source.

Chinese media said Wednesday that Google sent a notice to clients saying
google.cn could close at the end of March.

The issue has sparked a simmering war of words between China and the
administration of US President Barack Obama, which has called on Beijing
to allow an unfettered Internet.

The dispute has exacerbated mounting tensions between the two over a
range of trade and diplomatic issues.

Beijing tightly controls online content in a vast system dubbed the
"Great Firewall of China", removing information it deems harmful such as
pornography and violent content, but also politically sensitive material.

Google has continued to filter google.cn results to abide by Chinese
censorship demands, but says it will eventually stop the screening.

Google confirmed earlier this week that it had received a letter
purportedly from a group of 27 Chinese advertising agencies calling for
the US company to open talks on compensation for possible business
losses if it leaves China.

However, representatives of several of the firms subsequently told AFP
they knew nothing of the letter and Chinese media reports have raised
doubts about its authenticity.

Google's Wang told AFP the company is still "reviewing" the letter.



             Parents Oppose Philly School Webcam Spying Lawsuit


Some suburban Philadelphia parents are seeking to halt a potential
class-action lawsuit accusing their school district of using cameras in
school-issued laptops to spy on students at home.

Three sets of parents of students at Lower Merion and Harriton high schools
filed documents in federal court Thursday asking for permission to
intervene in the case.

The family of 15-year-old Harriton High School student Blake Robbins is
seeking class-action status for a lawsuit accusing the Lower Merion
School District of photographing him in his bedroom. The district has
said it activated the cameras only to locate missing laptops.

Parents who object to the lawsuit say they are angry about the webcams
but are concerned about the financial impact of a class-action
settlement. Nearly 500 district parents have signed a petition opposing
the class-action suit.

"We see no benefit to the school district or to the students if a large
damage award is gained by the plaintiffs," said Larry Silver, one of
several attorneys for the anti-lawsuit group. He also has a child in the
wealthy school district on Philadelphia's Main Line.

"We want a positive resolution to this matter," he said. "We want them
to get back to their educational mission."

In their complaint submitted in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia, they
requested hiring an independent public advocate, permanently banning laptop
webcam use by the district and implementing new regulations on the proper
use of technologies.

The district remotely activated 42 webcams over 14 months, successfully
locating 18 missing computers. School officials have declined to
describe the resulting photographs, and the district has halted the
practice amid the lawsuit and resulting state and federal criminal probes.

In the civil suit filed in February, Robbins said a school official
approached him and warned that, based on webcam photos, he was suspected
of selling drugs. Robbins denies the allegation.

Mark Haltzmann, attorney for Robbins, did not immediately return a call
seeking comment. He has 14 days to respond to the parents' complaint.



               Commodore 64 Awakes From Slumber With Makeover


The vintage Commodore 64 personal computer is getting a makeover, with a
new design and some of the latest computing technologies, as the brand
gets primed for a comeback.

The Commodore 64 was a home computer running on an 8-bit processor
released by Commodore International in 1982. The computer was one of the
most popular models of all time, selling close to 17 million units
between 1982 and 1994, according to the Computer History Museum.

The revamped computer will be available through the Commodore USA online
store, which is set to open June 1, according to the company's Web site.
The computer will be an all-in-one keyboard, with Intel's 64-bit quad-core
microprocessors and 3D graphics capabilities, according to the site.

To conform with the times, the PC also offers up to 500GB of hard drive
storage and 4GB of RAM. Also included are a DVD-RW drive, a touchpad,
four USB ports, a Gigabit Ethernet port and a DVI (Digital Visual
Interface) port to connect monitors. No price information was given on
the Web site.

Commodore USA is a new company that has licensed the Commodore name from
Commodore Gaming, which makes games for PCs and consoles. The PC company
is trying to invoke the glory of the Commodore 64's past to promote the
new PC. On its Web site, the company shows an image of the old Commodore
64 with the caption "you loved us then," and then an image of the new PC,
with the caption "you'll love us again."

The device is small, measuring 17.5 inches (0.44 meters) wide and 2 inches
(0.05 meters) tall, Commodore said. "It's designed to take up far less room
- and use far less energy - than any other desktop computer," Commodore USA
said. The PC will run the Linux, Windows and Mac OS X operating systems.

But will it find buyers? The glorious past of Commodore PCs might not be
repeated for its successor, said Roger Kay, president of Endpoint
Technologies Associates.

"It's a weird legacy thing with modern inerts," Kay said. Commodore PCs
had a heavy following in the 1980s among hobbyists, but the glory days
may not translate to better sales with price-conscious customers today,
Kay said.

Commodore started selling Commodore 64 in 1982 for US$599 and managed to
reduce the price to $199 over time, a revolutionary price then, said
Jack Tramiel, former chairman of Commodore International, during a panel
discussion in late 2007.

During the same panel, Apple co-founders Steve Wozniak and Steve Jobs
approached Commodore with an Apple II prototype, which was much more
advanced in color, graphics, sound and games. Apple at the time didn't
have the money to make and sell the Apple II, and was hoping Commodore
would push the design to market. Commodore, however, preferred to
develop the Commodore 64 as a simpler, lower-cost, black-and-white-only
machine.

Commodore wanted to serve the "masses," not the "classes," Tramiel said
during the discussion. Commodore kept updating the original Commodore 64
design and became the first to sell more than a million PCs, but the
company filed for bankruptcy in 1994 and liquidated its assets. In the
meanwhile, Apple managed to survive, and the Apple II became one of the
most recognized computers in the 1980s.

Commodore computers were made for enthusiasts and came with fairly
arcane software and hardware elements, Kay said. Kay bypassed a
Commodore and bought an Apple II in the early 1980s, as it had software
that made the computer easier to use.

"It wasn't so easy [to use a Commodore], the way Apple always understood
the experience should be," Kay said. That made the Apple II computer
better for new users entering the computer market.



             Can Internet Explorer 9 Get Microsoft's Mojo Back?


With improved speed and support for HTML 5, Internet Explorer 9 could be
Microsoft's next step toward restoring its old mojo.

Microsoft hasn't shown very much of its next Web browser, and hasn't
announced a release date. The most you can do is preview some of Internet
Explorer 9's capabilities, which say nothing about the browser's user
interface. Still, what Microsoft has shown so far is enough to get people
excited.

Previous versions of Internet Explorer have lagged behind other browsers
on speed and support for new technology - the problems that Microsoft
is working on with IE9. While Microsoft used to insist that Javascript
speed wasn't that important, it's now using benchmarks to show that it can
go toe-to-toe with any browser. Support for HTML 5, which is still not a
standard, hardware-accelerated 3D graphics show that Microsoft is thinking
ahead on performance.

What we don't know about yet are user interface and security. Even if
Microsoft overhauled neither, Internet Explorer 9 would still be in
pretty good shape. IE8 got creative with accelerators and Web slices. It
also caught up with the competition on features like drag-and-drop tabs
and private browsing. With the addition of other security features, a test
by NSS Labs, albeit sponsored by Microsoft, found that Internet Explorer 8
was the safest browser.

But users of Chrome and Firefox are likely to say that something just feels
faster about their browsers, and for good reason: PCWorld's speed tests
from last summer put Chrome ahead of the pack, and Firefox in front of
Internet Explorer. With IE9, Microsoft's at least showing a willingness
to join the horse race.

Of course, Microsoft still has a wide lead in the browser wars. In the most
recent market share estimates from NetApplications, Internet Explorer has
61.2 percent, compared to 24.2 percent for its closest competitor, Firefox.
However, IE's share slides every month, and the browser now faces tougher
competition from Google Chrome.

It's possible that Microsoft will be powerless to bring back defecting
users. There may be something about the look and feel of Internet Explorer,
or its standing as the most common target for security attacks, that
drives people away. But at least Microsoft's tackling the issues that have
held its browser back from greatness.



                 Do You Want to Pay a 'National Broadband Fee'?


The recently released national broadband plan has grand ideas for hooking
people up to high-speed Internet. But the plan also crafts a solution to a
problem officials have been trying to solve since 2001 - interoperable
communications.

On the other hand, the plan also floats the idea of a "national broadband
fee," paid for by taxpayers.

The plan, which the Federal Communications Commission presented to
Congress this week, calls on the government to use the power of broadband
to improve public safety. Specifically, that includes the creation of a
nationwide interoperable public safety wireless broadband communication
networks by 2020.

"The country must do better," the FCC wrote. "With broadband, 911 call
centers - could receive text, pictures, and videos from the public and
relay them to first responders, [and] the government could use broadband
networks to disseminate vital information to the public during
emergencies in multiple formats and languages."

In the wake of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, state and local
fire and police officials responded to the call for help, but their
equipment was not interoperable, causing communication problems. Police
could not warn fire department officials about falling debris. Port
Authority police could not tell state police to get out of a building,
and so on.

The creation of a truly interoperable system has been talked about in
Washington ever since, but nearly nine years later, no such thing exists.

The FCC's plan takes a three-pronged approach, the first of which calls
on the FCC to open up some spectrum so networks don't become jammed
during an emergency.

The January 2008, 700-MHz spectrum plan set aside the D-block for public
safety use, but it failed to attract a bidder willing to pay the $1.3
billion reserve price. The FCC report suggests not focusing solely on the
D-block, but engaging in partnerships with commercial operators for public
safety use of wireless spectrum more broadly. Basically, if there's an
emergency, first responders get to hop on available networks - not just
those in the D-block - and are given first priority if that network is at
capacity. However, the plan also doesn't explain how that would happen.

That would be funded by federal grants, the FCC said.

The plan also calls for the creation of an Emergency Response
Interoperability Center (ERIC). Housed within the FCC, ERIC would ensure
that all these apps, devices, and networks work together.

"Focusing on interoperability from the beginning should help the public
safety broadband network to overcome the difficulties faced by other
earlier voice efforts," the report said.

All these suggestions are useless without money, though. While a majority
of the recommendations made in the 376-page FCC report are "budget-neutral"
because they would ideally be funded by spectrum auctions and private
investment, the public safety section is one of several that would require
Congress to okay funding.

The FCC estimates that the interoperable network would require as much as
$6.5 billion over 10 years, with most of that money needed between the
second and fifth year. The costs associated with keeping these efforts
going and sustainable, however, could be between $12 billion and $16
billion. Congress should allocate this money no later than FY2012, the
report said.

Another way to get those funds? Add a surcharge to broadband service.
"Imposing a minimal public safety fee on all U.S. broadband users would
be a fair, sustainable and reasonable funding mechanism. The fee should
be sufficient to support the operation and evolution of the public
safety broadband network," the FCC said.

The FCC would also need an additional $6.9 million and $1.9 million
every year thereafter to continue the FCC's Project Roll Call, which
keeps tabs on the operational status of wireless and broadcast
communications.

The public safety section of the report also touches on cyber-security.
It calls on the FCC to: deliver a cyber-security roadmap to Congress
within 180 days; require broadband and VoIP providers to report all
outages; and create a cyber-security information reporting system with
the Department of Homeland Security, among other things.

Finally, the plan includes proposals for next-generation 911 systems,
which will incorporate broadband into the 911 system. The plan
recommends that Congress tell the National Highway Traffic and Safety
Administration to issue a report on costs, which will be used to develop
of a federal regulatory framework for NG911 deployment.

"The plan's recommendations for advancing public safety and homeland
security draw upon an extensive record and incorporate input from the
public safety community, service providers, vendors and countless
others," Jamie Barnett, chief of the FCC's public safety and homeland
security bureau, said in a blog post. "We truly appreciate the efforts
of all who contributed to development of these recommendations, which we
believe will revolutionize public safety communications and emergency
response."

*UPDATE:* FCC spokesman Rob Kenny said Thursday that any fee assessed
for the public safety network would be nominal and less than $1 per
month, per user.

"The public safety fee would be tens of cents per wireless user per
month (certainly less than $1 dollar)," he said via e-mail. "This is
still being reviewed and no definitive range or figure has been
estimated. We will continue to review this."

"We are confident that the recommendations in the National Broadband
Plan provide a framework to ensure that there is a nationwide
interoperable wireless broadband network for America's first responders.
It is vitally important that we create a broadband network for public
safety that enables them to respond to emergencies rapidly and
cohesively," Kenny concluded.



              Will You Pay for Online News? Pew Study Says No


The average U.S. consumer loves to read news online, but only one in
five is willing to pay for it. And if your favorite news site suddenly
erects a pay wall that requires subscription or pay-per-article fees, more
than four of five of you would simply get your news elsewhere.

Those sobering statistics - bad news, certainly, for newspaper and magazine
publishers intent on charging readers for online content - is from a new
Pew Internet Project study that examines consumer attitudes toward online
media. The report confirms what mainstream media outlets have feared for
years, even if many won't admit it: Getting online readers to pay for
mainstream news will be hard - really hard - and no one has a clue how to
go about it.

The Pew findings don't bode well for upcoming pay wall plans by The New
York Times and other newspapers. The /Times/, for instance, announced in
January that it would implement a hybrid free/fee system for its website.
Beginning in January 2011, readers will be able to view a certain number
of free articles each month, but they'll have to pay a flat fee for full
access to the site. The /Times/ also is developing a fee-based offering
for the upcoming Apple iPad tablet.

The Internet has become a stellar medium for news delivery. According to
Pew, six of ten Americans read some online news every day. Problem is,
most news publishers can't profit from the new medium, despite 15 years
of trying.

And if publishers' Internet operations are profitable, their revenues
aren't enough to support the extensive (and expensive) news gathering
operations that were possible under the dying, print-advertising business
model.

There are exceptions, of course, most notably News Corp.'s Wall Street
Journal, which has succeeded in convincing readers to ante up for online
news. Subscribers pay $79 per year to access the Journal's websites, and
News Corp. chief Rupert Murdoch has announced plans to add pay walls to
the media giant's other news sites. But, as Pew reports, Murdoch has "yet
to take any action on the matter."

Like the Journal, other pay wall success stories are niche publications
(like Consumer Reports) or databases that offer specialized information not
available elsewhere. These publications are quite different from a
general-interest newspaper, which usually includes national and
international news available from a wide variety of online sources.

In the pre-Internet days, your local newspaper had a monopoly on print
versions of syndicated content. (And even in a two-newspaper town, the
competition was minimal.) Today, wire copy from AP, Reuters, and other
syndicators is ubiquitous online. Classfieds? You used to need the local
paper to find a job or sell a car. Today, Craigslist owns the classified
market.

So aside from local news, what does your city's paper have to offer?
What can it charge for an online subscription, and what are readers
willing to pay?

For consumers to pay up, news organizations will have to offer "content
that is unique, and this may require specialization and investment by
news organizations," Pew reports.

In other words, they'll have to get creative - and fast. It remains to be
seen whether the ink-stained wretches are up to the task.



             Texan Accused of Disabling 100 Cars over Internet


A man fired from a Texas auto dealership used an Internet service to
remotely disable ignitions and set off car horns of more than 100 vehicles
sold at his old workplace, police said Wednesday.

Austin police arrested Omar Ramos-Lopez, 20, on Wednesday, charging him
with felony breach of computer security.

Ramos-Lopez used a former colleague's password to deactivate starters
and set off car horns, police said. Several car owners said they had to
call tow trucks and were left stranded at work or home.

"He caused these customers, now victims, to miss work," Austin police
spokeswoman Veneza Aguinaga said. "They didn't get paid. They had to get
tow trucks. They didn't know what was going on with their vehicles."

Ramos-Lopez was in the Travis County Jail on Wednesday with bond set at
$3,000. The Associated Press could not find a working phone number for
his family.

The Texas Auto Center dealership in Austin installs GPS devices that can
prevent cars from starting. The system is used to repossess cars when
buyers are overdue on payments, said Jeremy Norton, a controller at the
dealership where Ramos-Lopez worked. Car horns can be activated when
repo agents go to collect vehicles and believe the owners are hiding them.

"We are taking extra measures to make sure this never happens again,"
Norton said.

Starting in mid-February, dealership employees noticed unusual changes
to their business records. Someone was going into the system and
changing customers' names, such as having dead rapper Tupac Shakur
buying a 2009 vehicle, Norton said.

Soon, customers began calling saying their cars wouldn't start, or that
their horns were going off incessantly, forcing them to disengage the
battery. Norton said the dealership originally thought the cars had
mechanical problems.

Then employees noticed someone had ordered $130,000 in parts and
equipment from the company that makes the GPS devices.

Police said they were able to trace the sabotage to Ramos-Lopez's
computer, leading to his arrest.

Norton said Ramos-Lopez didn't seem unusually upset about being fired.

"I think he thought what he was doing was a harmless prank," Norton
said. "He didn't see the ramifications of it."



                 'Dot Com' Domain Celebrates 25th Birthday


Monday marks the 25th anniversary of the .com domain, according to
VeriSign.

On March 15, 1985, Symbolics.com was the first domain to register via a
".com" address. Though it took another decade for .com to really catch on,
there are now 80 million .com Web sites, including 11.9 million e-commerce
and online business sites, 1.8 million sports-related sites, and 4.3
million entertainment Web sites.

The most popular words to use in domain names are home (1.2 million),
online (1 million), and land (891,000), VeriSign said.

"For anyone under the age of 30, they probably don't remember when the
Internet wasn't in their life. It's become such an essential part of how
we work, live and play," Mark McLaughlin, chief executive and president
of VeriSign, said in a statement. "The 25th anniversary of .com gives us
a moment to step back and realize how deeply the Internet revolution has
transformed our society."

Last year, Symbolics.com was sold to Missouri-based investment company
XF.com, and Symbolics.com currently serves as a blog for XF.com, which
also operates domains like copier.com, copies.com, march.com, HY.com, and
iBlog.com.

As part of the anniversary, VeriSign is launching Project Apollo, an
effort designed to strengthen and scale the .com infrastructure by the
year 2020. That involves scaling and revamping the infrastructure in
order to grow .com capacity to handle 4 quadrillion queries each day by
2020 - up from 4 trillion today.

"Over the last 15 years, there have been numerous predictions of the
Internet's imminent collapse. But the Internet infrastructure has
withstood not only a dramatic increase in both users and usage, but
malicious attacks because of the investment and efforts to continually
scale it," Ken Silva, VeriSign's chief technical officer, said in a
statement. "With the technology roadmap outlined in Project Apollo, we
are building the infrastructure essential to manage the Internet's next
wave of growth as increasing demands put stress on the system and drive
a dramatic increase in traffic."

The .com domain brings in $400 billion each year in economic activity,
according to a report from the Information Technology and Innovation
Foundation (ITIF). That number is expected to grow to $950 billion by
2020.

VeriSign will host a Policy Impact Forum in Washington, D.C. Tuesday as
part of the 25th anniversary celebration, during which former President
Bill Clinton will deliver the opening keynote.

VeriSign has also launched a Web site, 25yearsof.com, to highlight some of
the .com achievements from the past 25 years.



              London Hospital To Treat Internet-Addicted Teens


Teenagers who cannot tear themselves away from the Internet, computer games
or their mobile phone can get help from a new addiction service, a
spokeswoman said Thursday.

A private London hospital has launched Britain's first dedicated
technology addiction service for what it dubbed "screenagers", after
parents complained their children were flying into a rage when told to
turn off their computer.

Help will be offered through intensive in-patient, day care or group
therapy to children as young as 12, although it is aimed at 15 to
17-year-olds, amid increasing concern about the amount of time they
spend in front of a screen.

"I've been contacted by parents who see their children going into a rage
when they're told to turn off their computer," Richard Graham, lead
consultant at Capio Nightingale Hospital, told the London Evening
Standard.

"Some end up having to call the police."

He said children played some computer games for the social contact,
adding: "It gives them a sense of connection so they end up playing all
the time."

Teens will be encouraged to switch off technology and interact with
people face-to-face rather than online, a hospital spokeswoman said, and
also helped with any problems caused by their habits, including
cyber-bullying.

She cited research showing that adults who spent too much time online
suffered physically and mentally, while young people became agitated and
had difficulty concentrating, and ultimately could become depressed.

"Mental health services need to adapt quickly to the changing worlds
that young people inhabit, and understand just how seriously their lives
can be impaired by unregulated time online, on-screen or in-game,"
Graham said.

In a statement, he said he hoped the service "will address the
underlying causes of this addiction to transform screenagers back into
teenagers".



                                =~=~=~=




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